CHAPTER
SIX
Your Life and Tinnitus
Anne-Mette
Mohr, MA
Tinnitus
can be quite an overwhelming experience
that may have a major impact on all aspects
of your life. Since the onset of tinnitus
many of my patients experience that their
daily life now consists of almost nothing
else but the intrusive sound(s) and their
constant and hopeless fight of reducing
the impact of tinnitus. If this is how
you’re doing it is quite natural
that you, in addition, will feel anxious,
worried, stressed, emotionally unstable
with emotions going from anger to grief,
hopelessness, meaninglessness and aloneness.
Because how can one imagine existing in
life with nothing else but the disturbing
and invading sound of tinnitus?
Therefore,
when tinnitus patients come to me for
psychological treatment, they have the
feeling that they have come to a dead
end. They cannot see the possibility of
a new start. This chapter addresses patients
who feel like this, who are suffering
from tinnitus.
In most of this chapter I will let my
patients speak through me. In this way
I want to describe how tinnitus sufferers
initially experience their tinnitus and
how it influences the different dimensions
of their lives. Perhaps you’ll recognize
some elements of your own story in my
description. Perhaps you’ll find
out that you’re not alone in your
experience and that your reactions are
known and natural. Also I want to describe
the typically needs of tinnitus patients
bringing some practical (and non-psychological)
suggestions on how to meet these.
In order
to give you an idea on how psychological
therapy can help, the last part of this
chapter is devoted to describe the therapeutic
course of one of my tinnitus patients,
Martin. You’ll follow him in his
travel from the point of being fixated
on tinnitus to a new point where life
came to overshadow his tinnitus so much
that it ceased troubling and worrying
him.
Martin’s
therapeutic course and outcome in many
ways represent that of most of my patients.
Patients like Martin repeatedly have shown
me that if they expand their fixated focus
from tinnitus to exploring the way they
presently are living their life, many
unknown resources and possibilities emerge
that make it possible for them to co-exist
peacefully with tinnitus. This typically
is one outcome of psychological therapy.
Many of my patients also realize they
can co-exist with tinnitus; through tinnitus
they have gained an enriching perspective
on their life. In other words, they have
moved from a position where they –
due to tinnitus - could not imagine a
life really worth living, to a position
where tinnitus is present and life indeed
is worth living.
I hope
to be able to give you an understanding
of how this can happen. I will also try
to provide you with hope through this
chapter. To make you trust that each dead
end contains the possibility for a new
and fruitful beginning.
|