Yeah, the picture is a bullet point, guys. Maybe it's not a very good one. It was useful to me when I was in a deep, dark hole. I am sorry if it is not useful to others.
I did not mean to cause offence. I know you are trying to help. I guess I was trying to make a serious point in a non-serious way. There is clearly something about what you are saying that bothers a few folks though, and as I'm one of them let me take a stab at figuring out what it is. We are talking about stuff that words don't grab hold of very well, and also I am generalising/simplifying a bit. So please bear with me if you can - I'm not trying to start an argument so much as head one off.
What I think happens in the assertion that tinnitus suffering is 100% caused by the reaction is that an important stage gets missed. That stage can be called
experience. Experience happens before we have an emotional reaction, and yet experience also can encompass that reaction. Reactions are something that it is theoretically possible to control, so it is comforting to identify them as the source of all of the suffering. Experience
cannot be completely controlled (not by oppressed buddhist monks or by T sufferers). So it is less comforting to talk about it.
When we get tinnitus our experience is changed. We don't have a choice in that. From now on we will experience a sound in our heads that we don't want there. At first we react very strongly – lots of anxiety that makes the experience worse (and can make the tinnitus worse). Over time the anxiety hopefully goes down. We can work on improving our emotional reaction further so that it does not compound the unpleasantness of the situation. But the experience of the sound remains.
So our experience of the world is altered. Like many people I choose to own the perception that it is degraded from what it was previously. The degree to which it is degraded no doubt depends on many things – how bad the T, whether we also have H, what our personalities are like, what our jobs or our passions are, etc. Some people cope very well, some folks even manage to come out happier overall than they were before (life is complex!). Their emotional reaction is no doubt a big part of that picture. But consider this: how many of those people would refuse a safe and effective treatment that removed their T? Would you? Would Dr Nagler?
I suspect not, and that is likely because however much you can mitigate your suffering through controlling the emotional reaction, you know at a fundamental level that your experience of living is altered –
and altered for the worse – by having tinnitus. If that were not true then you would be indifferent to the possibility of a cure. There are probably people with mild tinnitus who are indifferent. But I doubt many of us with intrusive tinnitus are - because we suffer from the experience of tinnitus as well as from our emotional reaction to it. My best guess is that you know this if you let yourself. You are brave enough to describe those calls to your parents and what happens when you return from your camping trips to 'normal' life. It can be hard.
This does not mean anyone should give up on life. It is just calling it what it is, thinking clearly, not wanting to be bamboozled. Accepting a delusion can seem comforting to some people (a function that most religions perhaps fulfil). Other people are just inherently uncomfortable with making that choice. We each have different lives, different T, and we each experience things in different ways. One thing that is quite fundamental in providing support is to try not to impose your own worldview on someone who is having a hard time, however great you think that worldview is. Sharing ideas, anecdotes, suggestions is great, but it is also important to listen to what others say and not to assume that your experience can map directly onto theirs (whatever the similarities).
I think it is great to suggest ways of working on one's reaction to tinnitus because that reaction is definitely a part of the overall experience of tinnitus or tinnitus suffering. There is a lot of scope there to improve how people feel and improve coping strategies. The emotional reaction just isn't (I strongly believe) the whole picture. That seems like a reductive, dogmatic assertion and it does not reflect the reported
experience of some people who have been posting here.