What Has Tinnitus Taught You?

Sgguy46

Member
Author
Sep 13, 2015
145
Tinnitus Since
05/2015
Cause of Tinnitus
Stress
a. there is no known cure
b. patience.. lots of patience
c. how to tolerate imperfections
d. how to be brave and face the day
e. how to keep my problems to myself
f. its possible to suffer and be happy at the same time
g. ...

what has it taught u?
 
To stay calm and push hard to stay happy .

Its ok to shed a few tears at times but make extra effort to get out and enjoy life.

Don't let tinnitus take away your smile and laughter as depression is a tough road to travel. ......lots of love glynis
 
Since my T is always worsening and multiplying

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Well it's a rather depressing atmosphere here..
I have learned to not let small issues affect me anymore and that I appreciate the small things in life that makes you happy. I have taken that for granted or just overlooked that before T. :)
 
How to appreciate what I have.

Before tinnitus, I didn't appreciate silence. Now I think about all those other things in life we take for granted, but would miss dearly if they were gone.
 
I have learned that I was unaware and unappreciative of my life before T.
I had an awesome life and kind of blew it.
If I ever get over T and get my life back that will not happen again.
Until then I am making the best of it :)
 
- That everybody has a battle of their own we don't know about
- How to detec and manage stress in your body and mind
- Life is ultimatelly about coping
- One can not continue from where they were, but where they are now
 
Well it's a rather depressing atmosphere here..
I have learned to not let small issues affect me anymore and that I appreciate the small things in life that makes you happy. I have taken that for granted or just overlooked that before T. :)
If you're new to T, this is quite often one of the worst places that you can go to. Concentrate on the success stories. (Even those here can devolve into some depressing stuff) Just know that support sites for T are not at all indicative of the larger distribution of people who have T. (I have very loud T) Most people (myself included) with T are happy as clams and have gotten on with our lives. But because of that, many of us spend precious little time on sites like this helping out newbies. (Which is a shame) If you need any help with anything, don't hesitate to ask.

Good luck,

Eric
 
Death is no longer to be feared.
At some point in the future, you will look back at this time (when you were new to Tinnitus) and wonder why you ever worried about it so much. Getting to that time is (of course) incredibly difficult. Overcoming intrusive tinnitus is the hardest thing I've ever had to do. But I did it, and so can you.

Good luck,

Eric
 
-Human beings are extremely fragile.
-The medical establishment is a big corporation selling mostly fake products.
-The human brain was designed by engineers that did not know about failure mode analysis.
 
It has taught me that taking care of your health and staying away from traditional noise exposure (guns, loud music, etc.) makes no difference if you don't understand how tinnitus can strike. In my case, I had no idea that my adrenalin surges in response to the frantic barking of the new dogs next door was wreaking havoc in my limbic system. I would have worn earmuffs for sure whenever I stepped outside to let my dog go potty, or to feed the birds. :(

It has also taught me that you can appreciate something to the point of almost worshipping it, which is how I felt about silence, and it doesn't matter once it's gone. You miss it just as much as if you had never appreciated it at all. Maybe more.
 
That fighting 1 year on onset to live with tinnitus and living 3 years happy with it was not enough fighting.
Did not expect to be back to square one after almost dying the first time learning to live with this garbage, now its even worse.

Also taught me that biology sucks, never been exposed to loud sounds in my whole life, yet I got severe tinnitus.

Also taught me that the past 3 years with Tinnitus not being a major problem I would rather take T over lets say Chronic pain like fibromyalgia.
Right now I would trade it for most chronic "diseases" that can be controled, like chronic pain with pain pills.

That I am very week mentally, but I already knew that before T, just got even more highlighted after T.
 
You don't realize how much you loved something in life until it's gone....silence.

The most ironic thing is I knew I loved silence before I got T. I would relax in silence. I'm someone that has always liked quiet and noises have always bothered me since I was young. This is a special kind of Hell for me.
 
If you're new to T, this is quite often one of the worst places that you can go to. Concentrate on the success stories. (Even those here can devolve into some depressing stuff) Just know that support sites for T are not at all indicative of the larger distribution of people who have T. (I have very loud T) Most people (myself included) with T are happy as clams and have gotten on with our lives. But because of that, many of us spend precious little time on sites like this helping out newbies. (Which is a shame) If you need any help with anything, don't hesitate to ask.

Good luck,

Eric


I'm curious about that. You could be right. Do you think the majority of people get better and/or habituate when they have severe onset of tinnitus, and those that don't linger around these places? I keep holding on to hope that this gets quieter, but success stories of tinnitus going away are few and far between, more often it's just people habituating.

A lot of people have tinnitus for sure, but I think the majority would fit into mild tinnitus, not the screeching unmaskable kind.
 
I'm curious about that. You could be right. Do you think the majority of people get better and/or habituate when they have severe onset of tinnitus, and those that don't linger around these places? I keep holding on to hope that this gets quieter, but success stories of tinnitus going away are few and far between, more often it's just people habituating.

A lot of people have tinnitus for sure, but I think the majority would fit into mild tinnitus, not the screeching unmaskable kind.
I do believe exactly that. My tinnitus is quite loud. Unmaskable in almost any situation. Can even be heard outside in the streets of Manhattan. 9 months ago I would have said I think about my T 100% of my waking hours, and that it made me sad 100% of the time I was awake. I needed ambien and masking tracks to sleep. Now I'd say that I think about my tinnitus 30% of the time, and it makes me sad maybe 5% of the time. I sleep like a baby without any masking. I have full confidence that it will continue to get better. I wish you the same. Good luck,

Eric
 

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