- Jan 31, 2020
- 4
- Tinnitus Since
- Variable over the years, persistent 2019
- Cause of Tinnitus
- Unknown
Hi there - first post and all. I registered a while back but then just couldn't work up the muster to say much. Now I'm facing a bit of a crossroads and feeling very stuck. Luckily remembered this site existed, so hoping for any suggestions.
Pardon the long read. I tend to write too much. TL;DR version is I need to find a new job/career entirely and would love any suggestions on jobs/careers that don't involve much listening/talking communication because I just can't anymore.
The long version: My tinnitus is (likely) caused by Neurofibromatosis 2 (NF2), though my NF2 docs are a bit perplexed because the tumors in that region haven't really grown or shifted that we can tell from the MRIs in recent years. Docs at first thought the tinnitus was part of withdrawals from Cymbalta, that my PCP had ordered a low dose of to try to manage some of my nerve pain. I missed a dose and that was the first time I heard the whooshing sound and felt vertigo from it. Been off the Cymbalta for over a year now, no change in the tinnitus.
Deaf in one ear entirely for about 20 years now from NF2. Tinnitus started about 1.5 years ago. It started as intermittent high pitched beeping, and "whooshing" when I moved my eyes from side to side. Like if I'm looking left, then look right, it sounds like a wave sloshing along in my ear. The beeping then wanted some company and added a gong sound now and then, and now any movement of my arms/shoulders triggers what sounds like chimes - you know those little metal balls with chimes in them that you swirl in your hands to relax? I forget what they're called - but it sounds like that. Anyway, now my tinnitus has settled to a constant loud high pitched squeal that is persistent at all times, chimes/gongs when arms/shoulders move, and whooshing. Sometimes vertigo with the whooshing. The frequency the tinnitus is squealing at is causing a significant dip in my comprehension of speech. The audiologist and ENT said it's right at the frequency that we often hear vowels, so I spend a lot of conversations playing auditory madlibs and trying to guess at what I think I heard.
It doesn't go away at all, but I have been luckily able to distract myself for periods of time to keep functioning. Where I'm falling apart is my career.
I'm a therapist - so of course I listen to people all day, every day, and when your therapist is struggling to hear your words clearly, they're not going to be very helpful. While I have been getting by, the tinnitus is to a point where I don't think I can do this much longer. My anxiety is through the roof before every session, and honestly if I could afford to, I'd put in my notice immediately. Phone calls are virtually impossible for me at this point, even if the person has a mostly clear connection. I'm exhausted, depressed, and feeling trapped.
I feel like I'm in this in-between place of being not functional enough to do my job, but too functional to get help. I'm desperately seeking something else financially viable (I don't make a lot as a therapist but anything below $40k is going to be unsustainable long term) that doesn't involve phone calls at all, and not a lot of time listening. Physically I'm pretty limited due to other parts of NF2, so can't be on my feet or physically active. On top of that, given the pandemic, work from home is important as well, as I have other mitigating health issues and have been working from home for nearly a year now.
I never thought I would leave the mental health field, but with the tinnitus, I just can't sustain it any longer, and for my own well being (as well as my clients) feel that it's time to find a new path. I don't know what else to do with myself, have no idea where to start looking or what jobs would work, and feel like my requirements are too high to even have hope of finding something.
Anyway - any suggestions on fields/careers/jobs that don't require any phone use or talking directly to people that a soon to be defunct therapist could explore and maybe dig into would be simply amazing. I just don't know where to start.
Pardon the long read. I tend to write too much. TL;DR version is I need to find a new job/career entirely and would love any suggestions on jobs/careers that don't involve much listening/talking communication because I just can't anymore.
The long version: My tinnitus is (likely) caused by Neurofibromatosis 2 (NF2), though my NF2 docs are a bit perplexed because the tumors in that region haven't really grown or shifted that we can tell from the MRIs in recent years. Docs at first thought the tinnitus was part of withdrawals from Cymbalta, that my PCP had ordered a low dose of to try to manage some of my nerve pain. I missed a dose and that was the first time I heard the whooshing sound and felt vertigo from it. Been off the Cymbalta for over a year now, no change in the tinnitus.
Deaf in one ear entirely for about 20 years now from NF2. Tinnitus started about 1.5 years ago. It started as intermittent high pitched beeping, and "whooshing" when I moved my eyes from side to side. Like if I'm looking left, then look right, it sounds like a wave sloshing along in my ear. The beeping then wanted some company and added a gong sound now and then, and now any movement of my arms/shoulders triggers what sounds like chimes - you know those little metal balls with chimes in them that you swirl in your hands to relax? I forget what they're called - but it sounds like that. Anyway, now my tinnitus has settled to a constant loud high pitched squeal that is persistent at all times, chimes/gongs when arms/shoulders move, and whooshing. Sometimes vertigo with the whooshing. The frequency the tinnitus is squealing at is causing a significant dip in my comprehension of speech. The audiologist and ENT said it's right at the frequency that we often hear vowels, so I spend a lot of conversations playing auditory madlibs and trying to guess at what I think I heard.
It doesn't go away at all, but I have been luckily able to distract myself for periods of time to keep functioning. Where I'm falling apart is my career.
I'm a therapist - so of course I listen to people all day, every day, and when your therapist is struggling to hear your words clearly, they're not going to be very helpful. While I have been getting by, the tinnitus is to a point where I don't think I can do this much longer. My anxiety is through the roof before every session, and honestly if I could afford to, I'd put in my notice immediately. Phone calls are virtually impossible for me at this point, even if the person has a mostly clear connection. I'm exhausted, depressed, and feeling trapped.
I feel like I'm in this in-between place of being not functional enough to do my job, but too functional to get help. I'm desperately seeking something else financially viable (I don't make a lot as a therapist but anything below $40k is going to be unsustainable long term) that doesn't involve phone calls at all, and not a lot of time listening. Physically I'm pretty limited due to other parts of NF2, so can't be on my feet or physically active. On top of that, given the pandemic, work from home is important as well, as I have other mitigating health issues and have been working from home for nearly a year now.
I never thought I would leave the mental health field, but with the tinnitus, I just can't sustain it any longer, and for my own well being (as well as my clients) feel that it's time to find a new path. I don't know what else to do with myself, have no idea where to start looking or what jobs would work, and feel like my requirements are too high to even have hope of finding something.
Anyway - any suggestions on fields/careers/jobs that don't require any phone use or talking directly to people that a soon to be defunct therapist could explore and maybe dig into would be simply amazing. I just don't know where to start.