Understandable. But also a solid plan. Give yourself time, and it may turn out things turn for the better. If not, ending the suffering will be perfectly understandable.
Tinnitus improved or went away for some people after general anesthesia. Rare, but not unheard of. So there is that as well.
This is why I envy people living in the U.S. They have access to guns, so they have the luxury of ending their lives quickly and decisively. But in the UK, we don't have this privilege. In my home country, obtaining a gun license can be difficult, but I could still obtain one illegally or end my life at a shooting range. However, I wouldn't do that because it would be selfish to traumatize others in such a way.
I wish euthanasia were available worldwide. Before my ear problems started, I had never considered suicide, but now I realize that the right to die should be a fundamental human right. None of us chose to be born, nor did we choose to suffer in pain, yet we cannot end our lives whenever we wish. It feels like we are owned by our governments, living to keep the state running, and even our bodies belong to the state. Even in the UK, many people who requested euthanasia have been denied by the government.
I really can't believe it. There was a paralyzed man in constant pain, every moment of his life torture, who requested euthanasia, but the government refused. In other backward third-world countries, euthanasia is entirely taboo. People oppose it on religious grounds, saying it's a sin, and many are content that euthanasia is not legal. But they don't realize that one day, they too could find themselves in a situation where they wake up every day wishing for death.
When a very dear family member passed away a few years ago, I felt this way because he spent the last years of their life in pain and hardship. Even though I loved him dearly and missed him terribly after he was gone, I was more relieved than sad because I knew he was no longer suffering. Life is beautiful when filled with memories. But when a person can no longer create memories and is instead forced to endure pain every day, they should be able to choose death, and this decision should be solely theirs, not anyone else's—not even their family's.
If I am not given the right to euthanasia, and if I cannot access a firearm, I don't want to try methods that could leave me disabled. I also don't want to traumatize others by jumping from a great height. I want the authorities to help me end my suffering in a proper, legal way since I can no longer live with this illness. All I want is for this pain to end—either through treatment, euthanasia, or suicide. If treatment isn't possible, which it seems it isn't under current circumstances, then by death.
For this reason, I will have to save money for a long time just for euthanasia because I'm barely getting by on benefits right now and can't work. When I finally get to a point where I can work, I will be saving up for my own legal death. It's really absurd. If someone had told me four months ago that I would be waking up every day wanting to die or that I would be planning to work for years to save up for euthanasia, I would have laughed it off.
Death, or even a disability, can happen to anyone. I always knew that. But to imagine that I would one day suffer from an ear condition that would make me wish I were dead every time I woke up, even in my worst nightmares, would have terrified me. I could imagine having a heart attack, getting cancer, being in a car accident, or dying suddenly—but never in a thousand years did I think I would be afflicted with such a vile, cursed, trolling illness that turns life into a living hell.
I hope I can escape this pain as soon as possible.