Funny, I suspected your reply would be along those lines. For all of that you do have quite an insight into life. Not much else I can really say except that for all that you are worth as much as the best of us.
Funny, I suspected your reply would be along those lines. For all of that you do have quite an insight into life. Not much else I can really say except that for all that you are worth as much as the best of us.
@jdjd09, I think a lot of us think of ending it all at some time, but our survival instinct is so strong. I am currently experiencing a very loud awakening spike that I don't know what to do about. Meds don't seem to work very good lately for me.
Our bodies are a bit broken, but what can we do? It would be nice to vanish into thin air, but that is impossible, so we continue on trying to cope.
I have not much insight other than to see how low it can go. Not in "the mess in the middle East" low, but low as in how little this western society cares about its fellow human, throughout my years. There are exceptions, but there isnt enough of them.
How much of life is just a cosmic lottery. The truth is no one really cares about me. Yes, many people have been helpful on here. Not just in these threads but via other messages as well. But, reality is that I didnt have family support when I needed it. I didnt have doctors guidance when I needed it the most. Doctors didn't care and I saw how low they can all go when a human is in need of help. I watched how easily life can go from on the right track to having me probably ending it sometime this year.
Unfortunately, this life is a cosmic joke and I'm tired of it. I feel I'm better rolling the dice and seeing what comes next than sit here and just suffer for nothing.
Trust me, if I was gone tomorrow (for example), people might slightly notice, but would move on the next day. I'm just a random person on the internet and know that.
Some people get a "normal" or good life thanks to some cosmic lottery luck. Some don't. Normal isnt free of suffering either, but temporary suffering thar one can tough through and become stronger on the other end. Not permanent health problems that teach person nothing other than how low life can go and how little many people can care. Also, how many "strong" people aren't all that strong, they just got the right lottery numbers in this life.
I'm saddened that this happened. That my life had to take, once again, another stupid turn for the bad. But, this seems to be life and it seems life wasn't meant for me to be here.
I used to be highly deterministic and motivated until I turned 15 and developed tinnitus and floaters. Up until this point, I believed that I was the master of my own destiny and had full control over my quality of life. Sure, maybe eventually I'd develop cancer and die or something, but I had many bright decades ahead of me.
Then, my hearing and sight in my left ear and left eye suddenly shit the bed with two untreatable, horribly distracting conditions, and I gave up on life, my determinism and stoicism shattered instantly. I remember thinking on my 16th birthday that I wouldn't survive to adulthood.
Tinnitus strikes randomly and hard. It is an illogical condition that hurts the healthy and the ill, the old and the young. You can be 21 years old, sit at home every day for a decade in silence and still get tinnitus, whereas your father can go out to deafening metal concerts monthly in the front row, take ototoxic drugs, wear headphones, and never develop it in over 40 years.
I'm not going to shower you with pointless platitudes and "go git 'em, champ" sentimentality, because it would be a lie. I'm suffering just as much as you. I'm just going to tell you this:
The reality is that you're not "just some person on the internet," you're a real person who really suffers from a real auditory condition. I've spent a third of the last decade of my life addicted to games and the internet to escape my health problems. I have had the exact same feeling. Don't delude yourself into thinking your suffering is unimportant. Many of us are in the same situation and benefit from each others' company.
Money shot right there.How much of life is just a cosmic lottery.
You can indeed be a "giver" in life, and many of us are/were/will be again, but sometimes an Acme brand anvil will still fall from a ledge somewhere, somehow. That's why Muslims (and others) use the phrase "God willing" a lot. It covers that bit of open space between "life is a lottery" and "life is what you make it".just ... it's NOT a lottery. It just is what it is. And there is a way to find love and magic in it. But it's an active process, not a passive one. And it involves being a giver.
jdjd09 - My father and uncle committed suicide. I never understood. I was angry with my father for 30 years until I, after a lot of misfortune with my health, went into major depression half a year ago. Now I understand. I think the way you do.
Your hearing problem has pushed you over the edge. But your hearing is not the problem. Depression is. You will adapt to your hearing problem. Not today, probably not before december but you will.
Don't give up without a fight. Go see a therapist, maybe try anti depressants. I know it's hard to hear people being so positive all the time when all you see is pain. But you will get your rose colored glasses back some day and maybe fall in love.
Please choose to believe that.
A friend of mine is a very successful computer programmer. He suffered from sudden single side deafness with loud tinnitus. He was depressed for three years and lost his will to live. Got into therapie, started using Saint Johns Worth (natural anti depressant) and started exercising. Today he lives a happy life is married and has two children.
This could be you.
My friend is completely deaf in one ear and has loud tinnitus. I think he was in his mid twenties when this happend.
And feel that no one is really trying to find a cure sadly. I just feel like everything is meaningless research, with no intention of putting anything out for human use.
That doesn't make any sense. There are labs that work on curing hearing loss, with the goal of applying the cure to people, millions of people. If it wasn't for people, who would they be curing hearing loss for? Rats?
Stanford is one one of them. Watch their videos, you'll see what they do, where they're at, and what their goals are.
Could there be more labs and resources towards it? Sure, but saying no-one is really trying to find a cure is a completely false statement. Stanford isn't the only one, either.
I expect that one day the technology around cochlear implants is going to be so good that we'll be able to replicate the function of the inner ear with enough quality to make you feel like your ear is "normal" (and without T or H!). That's a much longer term deadline I'm afraid, but bypassing the cochlea means we can replace the whole pipeline from the ear drum to the nerve, so a lot of ailments that affect parts of this pipeline will essentially be sidestepped.
Have you asked those friends in your current location, how much they care?Actually, the funny thing is, is I have been moved around so much in my life that honestly no one really cares all that much. I have not that many long term connections in this world. Family doesn't really care, they have basically told me to get on with it if I'm going to do it and has already said they semi expect it at this point.
Not really anyone to hurt in this life due to my odd upbringing. Sure, I have a few "friends" in my current location. But I can tell they wouldn't care all that much either. Extended family could care less as well because no one in it really talks to each other hardly either. Again, my upbringing seems unique compared to everyone else I have talked to over the years. Not saying I'm the only one, but usually families are more connected to each other in my experience.
Have you asked those friends in your current location, how much they care?
and more important, how much you care? about yourself?
i can relate, my family is very loving and all, but at the end of the day, the have their own issues.
and thats is like that for everyone, not even your family is gonna care a big time for your issues.
but i do this for myself, there are more things to see, feel and experience.
support yourself, you dont need anybody else.
not easy, but not impossible.
I realize that those and other organizations say they are doing research. But, I rarely see much of any progress reports of any real moment with it. I understand medical research can move slow, but it feels like its moving at a complete snails pace.
And feel that no one is really trying to find a cure sadly. I just feel like everything is meaningless research, with no intention of putting anything out for human use.
If progress is being made, awesome. It would be nice to see what that progress actually is though. I just seems to always read the same thing over and over though with no real progress.
jbjb I think you should look into CBT self help. If you do the CBT exercises, after a while you'll find out that a lot of you're thinking is repetitive. These are thought patterns your brain is used to follow, they are ingrained because you go down that same road again and again. In your case they are very negative about your hearing. You are in fact teaching your brain to think this way because you practice it all day! But are these thought helping you? Are they always true? Is there another way to look at your situation that brings more joy or hope and is more realistic? Try and teach yourself to think differently. Correct yourself. Write down what you would want to think and every time you catch yourself going down the negative spiral try and replace those thoughts with more realistic ones. That might be hard work but it pays off because your teaching your brain to go down a different road and after a while your feelings will follow. Try to be an observer of your own mind.
It's like throwing a basketball into the bucket. If you think: this won't work, this won't work, I will miss. Guess what happens...?
Btw my friend is in his forties now. He used the 3 years to study programming (he's an autodidact), that took his mind of his tinnitus and depression.