Your hearing getting worse does not necessarily mean your T will get worse. There are people (like me) with good hearing who also have T and there are deaf people without T. I am a young man but older than you; take comfort in knowing that hearing and T research became very fast moving in 2016. You will not spend your life with T; either it will go on it's own, you will habituate, you will find the solution for your T (you NEED to speak an audiologist/hearing therapist who specialises in T to find this along with a psychiatrist, not just an ENT) or a medical solution to T will be found sooner or later. I am having a bad few days, I am new to T, my T resonates through my head, it makes me panic, fearful, sad, angry. I've been in cold sweats, body shaking, feeling terrified and alone, feeling as though I couldn't go another hour, feeling as though I couldn't get myself out of bed without vomiting. But I have medication and support now. Does it magically remove all my worries? Nope. I can feel my stomach rising with anxiety right now, I can feel my fear growing, but I know I haven't taken my medication or left my house today; I will force myself to do this as I need sensory stimulation (seeing things, hearing other things - even though it doesn't mask my T -, smelling things). Think of it this way - there are people that need you around. I had the big 'S' word float into my head more than once, but what does that do? It simply moves your problems from you onto the ones you love. The worse of your T is temporary. I'm new to all this, but I now know the power of positivity. I know how important it is to the plasticity of the brain. Be positive even if you don't feel it. Smile even if you don't feel like doing it. Trust me - I know how you feel. Be positive and refuse to read negative posts or let negative thoughts dominate your view of T. Good luck and God bless your recovery.