...If you make a mistake it can ruin you. To have the quiestest tinnitus possible you cannot make mistakes. You have to be omniscient which is just not possible.
How many people already habituated just end up back here again...
Or get new tones...
Or get permanently worse tinnitus...
It might be possible to adapt to a constant level of T (provided the volume is not too loud). If it keeps getting louder as a result of accidents, adaptation is more problematic.As time passes by, you do adapt and move forward.
It might be possible to adapt to a constant level of T (provided the volume is not too loud). If it keeps getting louder as a result of accidents, adaptation is more problematic.
How on earth do you start being positive it's enough for me right now to leave mrs & 4 kids a sorry note then just disappear
That's life. We all make mistakes and move on. Your tinnitus is new for you guys, so you are still getting used to it and still very shocked. As time passes by, you do adapt and move forward. It's up to you, if you want to accept it or keep fighting it. Fighting it, does no good. I see no cure coming soon, so why have that negative energy inside.
it takes time to adjust, and it applies to all
@fishbone I understand where you are coming from. I think that you are an outstanding caring person. As difficult as it is for me, I consult a few people with very serious diseases. My new T is getting louder due to 10 of 12 degenerative diseases. I was once very physical with outdoor activities. Now I can't turn my neck or pick up anything over a pound. I can't take medications for all my other very painful conditions. Right now my entire scull is an electrical storm. Sometimes it's a bit less and that's when I post. So forgive me for any bad sentence structure. I know that you can understand that a few of us here can't do much but try to survive.
When I had my first onset of T, it was very loud. It took sometime, but when it dropped to the sound of a loud microwave, I went on with life with no fear and hardly ever thought about it. I can't do this with my loud untreatable high pitch electrical head and neck somatic tinnitus. I know that you can understand that there is some exceptions to living a functional life.
@fishbone I understand where you are coming from. I think that you are an outstanding caring person. As difficult as it is for me, I consult a few people with very serious diseases. My new T is getting louder due to 10 of 12 degenerative diseases. I was once very physical with outdoor activities. Now I can't turn my neck or pick up anything over a pound. I can't take medications for all my other very painful conditions. Right now my entire scull is an electrical storm. Sometimes it's a bit less and that's when I post. So forgive me for any bad sentence structure. I know that you can understand that a few of us here can't do much but try to survive.
When I had my first onset of T, it was very loud. It took sometime, but when it dropped to the sound of a loud microwave, I went on with life with no fear and hardly ever thought about it. I can't do this with my loud untreatable high pitch electrical head and neck somatic tinnitus. I know that you can understand that there is some exceptions to living a functional life.
@Red thank you. I'm just having a bad emotional night. My head had stopped turning into electrical storms, but now it's back. That's hard to deal with. I wish that I could blame that on stress, but it has very little to do with that.
I can still think pretty clear, but then my entire spine is in pain from top to bottom. I also have ruptured disc in lower back, vein disease and dead veins in legs besides a really messed up neck. All my joints in my entire body hurt. What ticks me off is that my education is in this stuff, but I can't solve all my problems. Thank you again.
I can speak for myself, when I say this. life has thrown me a monkey wrench since day 1. I never had it easy and then I get hit with tinnitus as a teen. I had no TT to come to and to get advice, so I blasted my walkman, went to concerts, went to great parties and lived this life to the fullest. Now, I have beyond menacing tinnitus that is just plain old ugly. Life has taught me TONS of lessons about either deciding to accept hardships, as they come or just being down about it and not living my life.
My skin is super tough and I carry myself in that manner. Positivity comes from inside, its your willpower to live life, no matter what. I go to the gym and people drop weights, I go to martial arts class with people kicking punching bags..it's all loud. My tinnitus could possibly even get louder. I careless, I will live my life and not have tinnitus live it for me. I am different than most and I have always had that fighting spirit and tinnitus or my 247 body pain from fibromyalgia will NEVER take that away
I deal with my pains and my garbage tinnitus/hearing all alone and I am trying to date and find someone to be with me. People that have a family and someone to love them, are very lucky! Count your blessings...... I make no excuses about my life and i accept what has come my and adjust.....
This is how I live, I am not advising anyone, just want you to see from my side and if it helps you wonderful...
I come here, so YOU folks don't damage your ears like I did. I did not know any better and I hope my messages reaches and teaches and help folks protect their ears and hearing!
You nailed it man !I can speak for myself, when I say this. life has thrown me a monkey wrench since day 1. I never had it easy and then I get hit with tinnitus as a teen. I had no TT to come to and to get advice, so I blasted my walkman, went to concerts, went to great parties and lived this life to the fullest. Now, I have beyond menacing tinnitus that is just plain old ugly. Life has taught me TONS of lessons about either deciding to accept hardships, as they come or just being down about it and not living my life.
My skin is super tough and I carry myself in that manner. Positivity comes from inside, its your willpower to live life, no matter what. I go to the gym and people drop weights, I go to martial arts class with people kicking punching bags..it's all loud. My tinnitus could possibly even get louder. I careless, I will live my life and not have tinnitus live it for me. I am different than most and I have always had that fighting spirit and tinnitus or my 247 body pain from fibromyalgia will NEVER take that away
I deal with my pains and my garbage tinnitus/hearing all alone and I am trying to date and find someone to be with me. People that have a family and someone to love them, are very lucky! Count your blessings...... I make no excuses about my life and i accept what has come my and adjust.....
This is how I live, I am not advising anyone, just want you to see from my side and if it helps you wonderful...
I come here, so YOU folks don't damage your ears like I did. I did not know any better and I hope my messages reaches and teaches and help folks protect their ears and hearing!
...If you make a mistake it can ruin you. To have the quiestest tinnitus possible you cannot make mistakes. You have to be omniscient which is just not possible.
How many people already habituated just end up back here again...
Or get new tones...
Or get permanently worse tinnitus...
are you married? kids? just wondering how they are taking this? I am worried about my kids and my actions.@fishbone I understand where you are coming from. I think that you are an outstanding caring person. As difficult as it is for me, I consult a few people with very serious diseases. My new T is getting louder due to 10 of 12 degenerative diseases. I was once very physical with outdoor activities. Now I can't turn my neck or pick up anything over a pound. I can't take medications for all my other very painful conditions. Right now my entire scull is an electrical storm. Sometimes it's a bit less and that's when I post. So forgive me for any bad sentence structure. I know that you can understand that a few of us here can't do much but try to survive.
When I had my first onset of T, it was very loud. It took sometime, but when it dropped to the sound of a loud microwave, I went on with life with no fear and hardly ever thought about it. I can't do this with my loud untreatable high pitch electrical head and neck somatic tinnitus. I know that you can understand that there is some exceptions to living a functional life.
That's life. We all make mistakes and move on. Your tinnitus is new for you guys, so you are still getting used to it and still very shocked. As time passes by, you do adapt and move forward. It's up to you, if you want to accept it or keep fighting it. Fighting it, does no good. I see no cure coming soon, so why have that negative energy inside.
it takes time to adjust, and it applies to all
That's life. We all make mistakes and move on. Your tinnitus is new for you guys, so you are still getting used to it and still very shocked. As time passes by, you do adapt and move forward. It's up to you, if you want to accept it or keep fighting it. Fighting it, does no good. I see no cure coming soon, so why have that negative energy inside.
it takes time to adjust, and it applies to all
Some people worry so much about their T, once that bus hits them while crossing the street they may wonder why they feared it so much. People keep forgetting T is just a noise. It can't hurt you. The only thing that hurts you is how you make yourself feel about it.
Some people worry so much about their T, once that bus hits them while crossing the street they may wonder why they feared it so much. People keep forgetting T is just a noise. It can't hurt you. The only thing that hurts you is how you make yourself feel about it.
That's some serious big boy talk for a guy who said his tinnitus is improving.
Some people worry so much about their T, once that bus hits them while crossing the street they may wonder why they feared it so much.
Sure my, hopefully, continued improvement helps but having the mindset that your life is doomed because you have a constant noise in your head certainly doesn't help. I think I would say the same things if my T wasn't improving because I know how the doom-n-gloom mindset works. Hell, I'm well aware that tomorrow my T could be worse.
People on here that poo-poo themselves seem to have trouble with perspective though. They wallow in their current misery and exaggerate how awful their life will now be. It's easy to do, I know, but as I said in other posts you gotta give it TIME. In this day and age of instant gratification, and dopamine highs when someone "likes" your comment 5 mins after you post it, people are just to focused on finding some quick fix for T that doesn't exist.
I had a bad bout of acid reflux that ended a month or two before I got my T. Before I figured out what was giving me issues and corrected it I had awful nights where I couldn't sleep. I went through the same motions. I wallowed in the misery that I will never be able to drink booze again, or eat pizza. I found it hard to eat anything without acid shooting up into my esophagus. Guess what happened though? Time happened. After a couple weeks I was able to tolerate those things a bit more. After more than a month I was back to normal, but now I had the knowledge of what caused it(having a mixed drink every night), so I could be more cognizant of what I'm throwing down my throat. You think a noise in your head that doesn't physically harm you is bad? Try sleeping with a harsh burning in your chest. I can get to sleep fine with T ringing in my head, not so much with a burning in my chest. Maybe you can't sleep well with T, I dunno, people are different. Sorry for the inexplicably long post