So the question I posed was whether or not there is anything you can do to pretty much guarantee that next week will not be as bad as this week.
Well, people who truly suffer from tinnitus (as opposed to those who happen to have tinnitus but do not suffer) quite naturally tend to view the world through the prism of their tinnitus. And it makes perfect sense that they do so. So when wondering what they can do to make next week better than this week, their first thought goes to what they might do to get their tinnitus to settle down a bit so that they will have a better week.
I have been at this a long time now - twenty years next month. And I can tell you that in most cases the search for a way to predictably lower the volume of tinnitus for any appreciable length of time is much more apt to be frustrating than it is to be successful. Just when you think you have found the solution, your tinnitus is apt to change the rules. Moreover when you see the world through the prism of your tinnitus, you are allowing your tinnitus to drive the bus. You are making compromise after compromise because of your tinnitus.
So my suggestion for making next week a better week than this week has nothing to do with your tinnitus. I want you to little by little start driving your own bus. I want you to little by little start moving your tinnitus towards the back row of seats. And I want you to do it regardless of how loud or pitchy your tinnitus might be at any given point in time.
If you want next week to be a better week than this week, then make a firm commitment to devote a few hours next week to improving the life of somebody in your community less fortunate than you. As I suggested in another thread - drive for Meals on Wheels one day a week or serve in a soup kitchen or help out in a battered women's shelter or take a panhandler to lunch instead of tossing a dollar his or her way or ... well, any number of things. Make a commitment to do it, and then keep that commitment. Just do it for a few hours next week. And the following week. And the week after that. Do it week after week - and then, over time, you cannot help but begin to see the world more as a person who happens to have tinnitus and less as a person whose tinnitus has him (or her). Best of all, this principle holds true regardless of how loud your tinnitus might be!
In my opinion.
sp