Because they are done with tinnitus, they are glad to be out of the snake pit and see no reason to crawl back in, and some are also afraid to jinx it so to speak.
These are definitely part of it yeahThat happens on forums for other diseases / conditions as well. People don't want to remember their problems, you know... ugly things. They may also fear that their brains "remember" tinnitus.
Enquiring about somebody's erstwhile severity is not negativity. (That's a stupid word anyway.)Some people who have posted positive stories and resumed doing things they enjoy i.e. using headphones, going to parties or concerts (of course being more careful about these) get met with negativity. So I don't blame people for not wanting to share their success stories.
So if I get better, I will keep it to myself then...I think posting a success story is to some extent equivalent to telling, say, a blind person: "I can see - and you can't." It is like rubbing it in and telling a cancer patient "you are dying and I am not." I realize that if a former cancer patient shares their recovery with the other patients, they give the others a ray of hope. However, the other component is undeniably there, and few would want to boast about recovery to other people who might never recover
This seems to be equivalent to winning the lottery (I am not saying that having tinnitus fade is as unlikely as winning the lottery, I am just saying that in both cases it is random, and some people win and some don't), and telling strangers who haven't won the lottery about your win. There is a reason why the people who organize lotteries have a condition stating that in order to collect the jackpot, one has to consent to being photographed. If not for that clause, many would refuse to allow the lottery to use their name in lottery's promotional materials.So if I get better, I will keep it to myself then...
I still go back to those forums sometimes