Again, and I don't have the patience to say this too many more times, but there is an absolute
wealth of neurological imaging studies which support the basic idea that even very, very severe, very, very protracted chronic pain, is deeply entangled with conscious thought, and that the way the brain plasticizes in response to such pain over time, is modulated to some extent by psychological processes.
Again you're failing to comprehend that
some people who have had "killer reactive" T have
subsequently come to the conclusion that the difference between "killer reactive" T and T which can be lived with, was based on the response they were having to it.
The thing that is frustrating, I think, is that you are
very new to this condition. Your experience of T
will change over time whether you want it to or not, and whether or not you do anything to facilitate that process. The brain changes over time. It is not escapable.
You are not comprehending what
@Beth meant by "silence". She is not saying that the sound is not there.
I have no idea what's going on with you, you have severe hearing loss, you've experienced a shitton of trauma, and your brain is doing all kinds of nasty things and playing tricks on you, as brains do when subjected to massive trauma. Again, and with compassion, it seems like those of us who have been dealing with this shit for years, look at posts like the one you've made here and think "uh huh, here's someone who's in a ton of pain, who has let their ego become an obstacle to their own path towards less suffering. I have also experienced that, and I hope they are able to find a path out of it".
You
can find a way to hear exactly the sounds you're hearing now, and be less bothered by them. And, probably, once you figure out how to do that even a little bit, then a lightbulb will go off and it will become an exponential process. That doesn't mean this will ever "go away". It also doesn't mean that your quality of life will necessarily be the same as it would have been if this had never happened to you, and I am sorry for that, and so is everyone else. Bodies break. It's a fact of life. Finding a way to accept your situation instead of fighting it, is pretty much a requirement for any kind of "healing".
All I am trying to suggest, is that emotions and thoughts are temporary, and the way you feel about your situation will change over time, even if the situation itself does not.
Good luck.