Just dropping a message here because I told myself at the end of last year that I am going to stick to my sabbatical from tinnitus forums, and I plan to keep to that.
I guess I am posting now just to share the following two points:
A) Thank you to Susan Shore and her team for the research they have done and the potential treatment they may have discovered. To dedicate their lives to helping sufferers of this cruel condition is nothing short of amazing. Once again, the largest and most sincere thank you to Susan Shore and her research team.
B) On the other hand, Auricle as a company has a lot to prove, a very large amount in fact. Until they can demonstrate their ability to function effectively as a healthcare company, I cannot extend the same gratitude to them. They need to deliver on these four key aspects:
- Prove successful FDA submission and clearance: They must demonstrate that they can successfully submit the device to the FDA and gain clearance.
- Show large scale manufacturing and training competence: They need to manufacture the device at scale and train medical professionals to use it effectively.
- Expand globally: Efforts must be made to extend the device's availability beyond the USA and reach a global market.
- Provide robust large scale efficacy data: Most importantly, they need to show evidence from extended usage among a significant number of patients, proving the device works for a considerable portion of tinnitus sufferers. While Susan Shore's research is an excellent foundation, larger scale data is crucial.
At this stage, Auricle has not achieved any of these points. We are still in the early phases, and while the device may have been submitted to the FDA, there is no evidence of this yet. Awkwardly, we will not even get confirmation until it is approved, due to how the FDA functions.
The reason I am outlining all of this is simple. Until Auricle meets these four points, I just cannot bring myself to care about them, at least not for the foreseeable future. Perhaps I would feel more favorable toward them if they showed even the vaguest signs of communication about their plans, but they have been completely silent. While I understand this is normal for companies at this stage, I still think it is a poor way to start a relationship with their potential client base.
This year has been incredibly rough for me. I have dealt with severe tinnitus and found myself in dark mental places I never thought I would reach. For me, focusing on Auricle, other potential treatments, and visiting these forums regularly did not bring hope. It made me obsessive and worsened my state.
So, I am done with regularly checking tinnitus forums, as I did last year. Going forward, I will check in once a year, at the start of each year, just to see if there is any progress in research or treatment approvals. That is all the energy I am willing to give to this now.
I have set up a monthly donation to Tinnitus Quest (which I hope to increase once my financial situation improves), and I participated in a video interview with them about my experience. I have done my part for now. Moving forward, I need to focus on distracting myself from this condition.
I might make a brief post in the "Introduce Yourself" section of this forum to give more details about my tinnitus journey. However, like this post, I will only update or reply to it annually.
Re-reading this, I realize it sounds more like a downer than I intended. That was not my aim. I truly believe Susan Shore's approach will likely be a viable treatment for many tinnitus sufferers. Maybe it will not bring complete silence in most cases, but it could reduce the sound to a level that is mostly unnoticeable and eliminate the emotional distress caused by fixation. That alone would be more than enough for me, and I am sure for many others.
That said, I remain skeptical of Auricle. Until they have an FDA-cleared device that is in the hands of regular people and proves effective, I am just done investing my energy.
We will get there someday, everyone. I just hope Auricle can prove themselves and help us get there by the end of this decade. Fingers crossed for them, and for all of us here. See you in 2026!