I'll go a step further than Dr. Nagler did, and say "Well, more or less, yes..."
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Think about the discipline involved in
calmly self-immolating as an act of protest. You think that dude would have been fazed by some head noise?
That said, clearly there is a difference between physical pain and sensory distress. I have some (fairly mild, thankfully) chronic pain problems, and I also have more severe, non-tinnitus sensory issues: I see 'visual snow' and static everywhere, on everything, at all times. I do not see still surfaces, if I look at a white wall I see something that vaguely looks like TV static. It has been like this for a decade and a half. During the first year, it drove me absolutely insane. Now I think about it perhaps twice a week. It is the exact visual equivalent of tinnitus: I am completely incapable of seeing darkness, instead I get a stimulating fireworks display, at all times. When I was stuck in a loop of perceiving this as a threat/problem, I was completely convinced it would drive me mad and ruin my life. Whether or not I am mad is a matter of opinion, but it clearly hasn't ruined my life.
Tinnitus has been a somewhat tougher cross to bear, but at the points in my life that I've reacted to it well (meaning, not at all), it is much the same -- just sensory background data.
To come down off my high horse for a moment, I want to be very clear that I have a ton of empathy for
@Telis,
@NiNyu , and everyone else who is suffering terribly from this ailment, because I've been there, I know it feels like the bottom of hell, and I know that it can completely blot out the sun and seem to consume the world. Relative to how well I was doing in the fall/early winter, I'm in pretty rough shape right now. Overall, often the thing that has been the most helpful to
me is a slap in the face, someone having the tenacity to say "yes I hear what you're saying, but you're completely bonkers right now and not thinking at all rationally, and I'm not going to go down that hole with you". So, that is all I have tried to do with all my replies here that I have invested some time and effort in. If you feel that I am condescending to you or belittleing your problem, I am very, very sorry; that is not my intent, but I tend to be abstract and wordy when I try to express myself in text, and I know that can come off as being sort of aloof. Believe me, I am not aloof. I'm not some superstar tinnitus patient wh0 has this all figured out and thinks life is all roses. Life is fucking HARD! But, it's hard for every living creature on earth. The number of things that can or are actively trying to kill or maim us every minute is dumbfounding.
I have no idea if your tinnitus is objectively louder, worse, or more unpleasant than mine... but I've read many, many accounts on here and elsewhere from people who's tinnitus is
clearly louder, worse and more unpleasant than mine, who none the less love life and have found a way to share space with the ringing without being consumed by it.
Trite as it is, I think a lot of this really does come down to the conscious thoughts we
choose to have, minute by minute. We all want the ringing to just stop, on some level, sure. I have read accounts of various yogis who basically cultivate tinnitus and
love it because they experience it as the "cosmic sound". Well, that's not me. At best, I am slightly annoyed by my head noise when I think about it -- but at
worst, I
hate it, I am
terrified of it, I am
consumed by it, etc. And I've been through this enough to understand that for me, my own behavior and the thoughts I let myself think minute to minute, have an impact on which way the wind blows.
I'm not saying, exactly, that we're creating our own hells that we can just step out of at a moment's notice by changing our thinking...
because deeply established thought patterns cannot be changed quickly. As an analogy, those thoughts are a river slowly cutting through rock, digging a canyon over a long period of time. If you want to change the direction of the river very early on, before the bed is very deeply carved, it's relatively easy. If you wait until the canyon is a hundred feet deep, it takes a lot more determination, effort, energy, time and patience to change the way it flows...
but it can still be done.
I don't think that chronic pain/tinnitus comparisons are necessarily off base, because there's plenty of research to suggest that
they have similar underlaying mechanics (link)... but so what? People learn to live with chronic pain.
@Dr. Nagler, I guess there may be a certain feminine slant to some of my wordiness, but I assure you that I am a man