You know the funny thing? The week after my T started, or not even a week, like a few days later, a health magazine (produced by the government) had a new theme of the month. On it, it said "TINNITUS". Life is cruel. But yes, maybe I wouldn't have even read the magazine if I had not got T, maybe I would and I wouldn't really care about protecting my ears anyway. It is hard to be afraid of something that you have no perception of. We don't worry about getting chronic diseases everyday because we kind of think like "that's won't happen to me". And I suppose that is sort of the mentality of the general public, like with the plugs offered at the gigs. Nobody think they are the one that might get T, it is just something that "happens to other people". I just felt like I should have known better in hindsight, but maybe it wasn't "why" but rather "when" I would develop T. I can imagine that going in the lifestyle (headphone everywhere with mid-loud music) for years was not leading on a path to somewhere good. But again, maybe I would have gotten T much later or not at all once I lost interest in music. There is a million questions that never will have a good answer, but my point (drifting away little) is that sometimes the government can do a lot to enlighten the masses, but it is still hard to make people understand that they are in the danger zone. T is like I mentioned, "things that happens to other but not to me".