your struggling with a battle between reality and normieism.According to some meme research I just conducted I have discovered that I am mostly something called a bloomer.
Take the red pill or blue pill John.
your struggling with a battle between reality and normieism.According to some meme research I just conducted I have discovered that I am mostly something called a bloomer.
your struggling with a battle between reality and normieism.
Take the red pill or blue pill John.
i hope Bam's okay.My T is driving me crazy.
Where are Bam and Jack Straw?
I miss their memes Contrast loves so much.
Here? It's hard to ideologically kill the enemy, just make them go underground. Took them long enough to come out of the woodwork.Fck the habituation zombies are at it full infuriating force again FML
ikr? It's a beautiful mess.I'm late to this but I started browsing MPP from page 1. It's like a crazy novel. Some really great stuff back there for some good laughs.
Yah...well some posts are just so sleazy...the logical fallacies are subtle, insidious.Here? It's hard to ideologically kill the enemy, just make them go underground. Took them long enough to come out of the woodwork.
yes, absolutely.Do you think if I visit the Seafoam Islands my T will go away?
My T is driving me crazy.
Where are Bam and Jack Straw?
I miss their memes Contrast loves so much.
I'm still around. In case you guys haven't seen I have been doing a lot behind the scenes working on the Tinnitus Talk Podcast. We have done a couple of interviews already for the podcast and are working through getting them ready. Surprisingly it takes a lot of work so my MPP/ meme time has mainly been spent working on getting that done. I do miss making memes and shit posting and will get back into it once the works for the podcast levels out.
I hope you guys are doing well. I do think about how you guys are doing often and haven't forgotten any of you.
@JohnAdamsonce again, regenerative medicine completely ignored! WHY!?!?!?!
That being said I respectfully disagree with the gating mechanism theory. We should focus on healing the damage to the auditory system, which we are, thankfully. For other cases of tinnitus like those caused by damage to the auditory cortex that cannot be solved by regenerating the auditory nerves and or the cochlea, going after the gating mechanism in the limbic may be an attractive option, if this theory is correct.
a gateway mechanism "possibly due to a damaged limbic system"How do you explain why some people have hearing loss and no tinnitus?
a gateway mechanism "possibly due to a damaged limbic system"
not everyone with a lost limb has phantom limb syndrome.
You know Manny, I worked in clinical research for 27 years. When I developed tinnitus and started trying to understand the state of tinnitus research I suspected that things were not working very well. Now, I feel like many of my suspicions have been validated. However, things like Tinnitus Talk, Danny's fund and this podcast series and being able to interact with David Stockdale are all positive steps in the right direction. But the tinnitus community needs to wake up and be more vocal as a united front. At this point, I am of the opinion that the American Tinnitus Association has an inflated view of themselves and are actually doing very little on our behalf. We need to do something- we can be signing petitions, writing letters and emails to NIDCD and NIH, to medical societies, getting Veterans Associations and AARP to lobby for us and probably other things which are escaping me right now.Is anyone else very discouraged by the fact that Dr. Rauschecker had not ever heard of bimodal stimulation, and by what he said about the current state of tinnitus research in general.
I am very, very discouraged right now. And I think it's accurate.
(Jack Straw and Hazel this is in no way a negative comment on your excellent work)
the vast majority of tinnitus/hearing loss sufferers are NPC's.But the tinnitus community needs to wake up and be more vocal as a united front
Funny you should mention this. I was thinking we might suggest to @Markku that Dr. Liberman might be someone to approach to be a podcast guest. Hyperacusis is often overlooked but there are people who struggle immensely with it. He could also talk about hidden hearing loss, hair cell regeneration and ongoing research at the Lauer Tinnitus Research Center.I was talking to people on reddit that had pain hyperacusis and have never heard of Charles Liberman, Hidden hearing loss, research from Mass Eye and Ear. Just that there ENT told them "no hearing loss" despite a history of noise exposure.
It used to be said that it takes 10-15 years for research results to make its way down the pyramid of influence and reach clinicians in a format they can use. I have to believe that some aspects can be quicker with todays methods of communication, but things like a 12 month clinical trial, if needed, can't be done in less than 12 months. -TCHow long does it take for ENT's and audiologist to keep up to date with research about hearing loss, tinnitus and noise induced pain?