My job is very quiet, and I am convinced that working from home allowed me to get better.
I agree, I'd say the same as Bill here, although in my case "from home" also meant moving from the city into the woods which is equally significant.
I never really had the option to stop working, so it didn't occur to me, it was more like "okay, if I am a sweating wreck that is spending all my time outside of work crying and visiting doctors and
not sleeping, how can I also be in an office for 8 hours a day and
act kind of normal and get shit done?!??!?!?!"
I had a lot of anxiety about this but for me trying to tough it out was 100% correct; if I had stopped working I would suddenly have been in a financially unsustainable situation, and, worse,
had a ton more free time to just focus on how bad I felt.
Working through the worst of this (worst so far, anyway!) was
almost impossible, but it was
much easier than what would have happened if I had quit my job and had no income and infinite time to spend stressing online.
I am not trying to throw shade on anyone, or imply I'm especially tough: if things had been somewhat worse, or if I had had a worse support network going in to all of this, it's entirely possible I wouldn't have been able to hold my shit together. As it is, my tinnitus got to its current bad level in 2010, and since then I've more than tripled my annual income (again, at least so far, we live in very uncertain times). I say this less as a brag, than as "I'm not actually very clever or tough so if I can do it most people probably can, given enough support and time". This is one reason my first question to new sufferers is "what is your support like, in terms of understanding and compassionate people in your life?" and if the answer to that is close to zero -- start there. I personally found tinnitus-specific support groups to be pretty useless, but general chronic pain groups were good places to meet people with
other problems who could be sympathetic to yours and start to forge some personal alliances that way.
I realize that not everyone has the same social or financial resources I had to guide me this far, but I think the basic principles that have helped me can be done on a budget with some ingenuity and willingness to change, and might benefit a number of other people who aren't me. I would stop way short of saying that the things that help me, are universal.