although heaven and hell dont exist. even if, adolf will for sure not be in heaven@Fangen @Zora @glynis @undecided @derpytia
maybe i get into austrian-heaven and see uncle Adolf there
although heaven and hell dont exist. even if, adolf will for sure not be in heaven@Fangen @Zora @glynis @undecided @derpytia
maybe i get into austrian-heaven and see uncle Adolf there
You're not gonna stop with these threads are you?
In every thread you open on TT you are lookin for the "OK" to kill yourself, based on some internet posts.
In your other thread you asked for advice, people took their time and posted you super long answers and you dont even read them. Even if these answers came from people who where in your shoes (people of your age with T& hearing loss, hearing aids) But you chose to ignore it and just went on opening more threads.
This is your second thread about suicide within a week (The last one was "how many people on TT commited suicide) or so and you made it pretty clear that you dont even have debilitating tinnitus and some medium hearing loss.
seeing your senseless posts make me even more mad because a TT user with a debilitating T and a condition which made her bedridden (sadly a real reason wanting to die, unlike you) probably left this world the last days (I hope not).
@Markku Can you stop this nonsense please? Jdj09 needs to stop this.
Talking about death in such a frivolous way when some of us are fighting to stay alive makes a mockery of us who suffer with chronic debilitating tinnitus.So, my question is what do people think happens ? Also is there any studies or good evidence that gives hints what happens?
I know a university in Virginia has done 1000+ case studies on reincarnation, and it done by medical branch of the university.
Just curious is all.
Be more than fantastic. I would let someone chop my arm of with an axe if it would stop the buzzing noise in my brain.
I think a little self-control is needed in your life Jd. You haven't done anything terribly wrong, but it's just sometimes keeping your thoughts to yourself are much better than speaking about them to others.I'm asking a legit question...I'm not saying I'm doing anything...if you don't like the thread then don't read it.
Well, you know what they say: Heaven for climate, hell for atmosphere.Who wants to go to heaven?sitting on a cloud all day,looking around and got shit to do.It's fucking boring.
I just want a cure for the ringing. I can live just fine with my hearing loss. Just stop this noise.
I don't understand why people out there have hearing loss 10x worse than my 10db loss and NO TINNITUS but I have a screech and a hot fullness sensation in my left ear and a warbling whistle in my right. I will NEVER be able to accept this.
Yes, I've tried very hard to debug my tinnitus. If you're interested in what I have done to try and fix my tinnitus, read on. My problems all started at the age of 12, I suddenly woke up one day very lightheaded and weak, the feeling was like I had just exhaled a TON of air very hard, or had the wind knocked out of me. I told my dad what had happened. I described a feeling of "dreaminess" or being "spaced-out" to him. It wasn't anxiety related, because I had never suffered from anxiety before this, and at the time I was relaxing in Florida on vacation. This feeling hasn't left since, and over the next few years I developed primary T, giant eye floaters, persistent nausea, and bruxism (tooth grinding).You're not the only one not understanding this. In some ways you can (should?) feel "lucky" that you "only" have T. Some of us have the T, but also perceivable hearing loss and hyperacusis. T is no fun, but when you tack on HL and H, it takes you to a new kind of hell.
Have you tried to debug your symptom?
Good luck.
I can easily change my tinnitus, which is why I am convinced it has an underlying cause.
Despite this, every single test I've had has come back great. I have had multiple audiograms (my biggest hearing loss is 20 dB at 16 kHz, which is way outside of speech range, and good for being 21) an otoacoustic emissions test (100%), an MRI of the head (all good), a CAT scan of the neck (had that today, I have a history of postural and spine problems).
I don't know how many different doctors you've gone through. I've had some radiology results come back "normal" and confirmed "normal" by half a dozen doctors (from the same medical center), but when shown to a very experienced surgeon (from another center), he spotted an anomaly and was spot on (surgery confirmed his suspicion). If people can't find what's wrong with you, try other (more experienced) people.
Most patients don't drive their debugging, or require a lot of hand-holding to take care of their health. I go to my appointments with my surgeon with my computer full of questions (we go down the list one by one), references to studies, proposals for treatments, etc. Engage your doctors and be the driver of your health. Read up on your symptoms and bounce ideas off of them. My surgeon is impressed at how prepared I am every time I show up. His time is very valuable, so I need to make the most of it when we meet.
I'm not sure that all hearing loss can be picked on an audiogram unfortunately. It's not just a matter of range tested (whether it stops at 8 kHz or higher): there's granularity (what if you have a narrow loss? there's only a handful of sample points), but also volume (the tests are typically conducted with normal/low volume), and maybe other factors (how the test is conducted, etc).
I'm really sorry to hear about your general health issues. I am sympathetic.
The simultaneous arrival of T, floaters, nausea, bruxism should give a clue to some doctor. Did you see a neurologist when this happened? Who did you see and what did they tell you?
Good idea. However, I've tried that a few times already, but it doesn't seem to matter how well-prepared I am. I show up with my envelope stuffed full of tests and scans, very prepared to ask questions; but despite this preparation I often find myself barely able to even get the doctor's undivided attention, because after I tell them I'm there for tinnitus there is a 90% chance they will just frown at me, "shut their ears" so to speak, and tell me "I'm sorry, I don't treat that," whilst showering me with useless sympathetic platitudes.
It is often able to detect reduced input to the brain through the auditory nerve. When the nerves that transmit sound in the ear are damaged, not the haircells, (what we call "hidden hearing loss"), certain waveforms on an ABR (often I or V) are reduced, and latencies (the time it takes for the brain to "receive" a sound) are increased. Read this, you'll find it equally interesting and relevant: http://www.tinnitus.org.uk/tinnitus-and-hidden-hearing-loss