Guest guest Posted October 12, 2006 Report Share Posted October 12, 2006 I was prescribed Prozac in 1995, at the age of eighteen, after a very brief session with a therapist and psychiatrist (no more than thirty minutes between the two of them). I continued taking Prozac and various other anti-depressants over the course of the next eight years. From roughly 1996 on, all my prescriptions for AD's were written by a family practitioner, who, as was the case with the psychiatrist I'd met with first and whom had prescribed the Prozac for the first few months that I was on it, never informed my of any of the side-effects I'd suffer from using the SSRI. In fact, the many times I inquired about the many different side-effects I was suffering from that were different from those listed with the pills from the pharmacy, I was repeatedly told by the physician that the SSRI's I had been given were safe and that I'd probably have to be on them for the rest of my life. A diagnosis he seemed to have made out of thin air considering he wasn't a therapist or psychiatrist, and, in general, spent no more than a few minutes with me every time I came in to see him. And, if you were ever unfortunate enough to be on an SSRI back in the mid to late 90's, you know how little information about side-effects were listed with your prescription from the pharmacy (nausea, drowsiness, dry mouth and very little else, if I recall correctly). Inserts and brochures with samples were, not surprisingly, even less informative about side-effects. I've been off anti-depressants now for three years and it's only been within that time that I've come to realize that the effects I'd been suffering from for those eight years weren't caused by my depression or some natural defect of mine, but instead the drugs that were presented to me as being completely safe with no chance of long-term damage. I was never told about withdrawal and the dangerous consequences of missing doses or not tapering slowly. I was led to believe that I had a chemical imbalance and that the way that I felt and acted on anti-depressants—the good and the bad—was the real me. My physician seemed to think, and certainly suggested to me, that the drugs were entirely safe and that whatever I thought was wrong with me and the medicine were my own paranoid delusions. Maybe because I was too `drugged', brain-damaged, or optimistic that I'd be able to feel again the way I did on these drugs when I first started taking them eight years earlier, that I continued to take them and continued to go to this dangerously ignorant and thoughtless doctor for more prescriptions. More likely, it was because every time I tried to stop taking them--because I was never told about their addictive properties and, in fact, was told that they had none at all--I'd start to get really depressed again. Because of the misleading information I was being fed from my doctor, pharma, etc., I continued to think that the recurrent depression was, indeed, my natural defective-self sans drugs, and continued to return to them to " treat " my " disease " . After nearly seven years of this going on and off the AD's for no more than three weeks to a month at a time (I was on the blessed, long-lasting Prozac ninety-percent of the time; all the more reason not to recognize drug withdrawals as the problem and to instead blame my misery on the " disease " .), I finally decided I had to take my chances without the drugs and decreased my dosage over a few months time until I'd quit completely. Maybe because I tapered too quickly; maybe because I'm brain-damaged from eight years on Prozac, Zoloft, Lexapro, Wellbutrin, Remeron; or maybe because I was on these mind-numbing drugs during eight very formative years of my life (18-26) and didn't develop properly, but I just don't feel right these days: either mentally or physically. Nevertheless, I feel (`feel' being the operative word) a hundred times better than I did ninety-five percent of the time I was on AD's. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 12, 2006 Report Share Posted October 12, 2006 I was prescribed Prozac in 1995, at the age of eighteen, after a very brief session with a therapist and psychiatrist (no more than thirty minutes between the two of them). I continued taking Prozac and various other anti-depressants over the course of the next eight years. From roughly 1996 on, all my prescriptions for AD's were written by a family practitioner, who, as was the case with the psychiatrist I'd met with first and whom had prescribed the Prozac for the first few months that I was on it, never informed my of any of the side-effects I'd suffer from using the SSRI. In fact, the many times I inquired about the many different side-effects I was suffering from that were different from those listed with the pills from the pharmacy, I was repeatedly told by the physician that the SSRI's I had been given were safe and that I'd probably have to be on them for the rest of my life. A diagnosis he seemed to have made out of thin air considering he wasn't a therapist or psychiatrist, and, in general, spent no more than a few minutes with me every time I came in to see him. And, if you were ever unfortunate enough to be on an SSRI back in the mid to late 90's, you know how little information about side-effects were listed with your prescription from the pharmacy (nausea, drowsiness, dry mouth and very little else, if I recall correctly). Inserts and brochures with samples were, not surprisingly, even less informative about side-effects. I've been off anti-depressants now for three years and it's only been within that time that I've come to realize that the effects I'd been suffering from for those eight years weren't caused by my depression or some natural defect of mine, but instead the drugs that were presented to me as being completely safe with no chance of long-term damage. I was never told about withdrawal and the dangerous consequences of missing doses or not tapering slowly. I was led to believe that I had a chemical imbalance and that the way that I felt and acted on anti-depressants—the good and the bad—was the real me. My physician seemed to think, and certainly suggested to me, that the drugs were entirely safe and that whatever I thought was wrong with me and the medicine were my own paranoid delusions. Maybe because I was too `drugged', brain-damaged, or optimistic that I'd be able to feel again the way I did on these drugs when I first started taking them eight years earlier, that I continued to take them and continued to go to this dangerously ignorant and thoughtless doctor for more prescriptions. More likely, it was because every time I tried to stop taking them--because I was never told about their addictive properties and, in fact, was told that they had none at all--I'd start to get really depressed again. Because of the misleading information I was being fed from my doctor, pharma, etc., I continued to think that the recurrent depression was, indeed, my natural defective-self sans drugs, and continued to return to them to " treat " my " disease " . After nearly seven years of this going on and off the AD's for no more than three weeks to a month at a time (I was on the blessed, long-lasting Prozac ninety-percent of the time; all the more reason not to recognize drug withdrawals as the problem and to instead blame my misery on the " disease " .), I finally decided I had to take my chances without the drugs and decreased my dosage over a few months time until I'd quit completely. Maybe because I tapered too quickly; maybe because I'm brain-damaged from eight years on Prozac, Zoloft, Lexapro, Wellbutrin, Remeron; or maybe because I was on these mind-numbing drugs during eight very formative years of my life (18-26) and didn't develop properly, but I just don't feel right these days: either mentally or physically. Nevertheless, I feel (`feel' being the operative word) a hundred times better than I did ninety-five percent of the time I was on AD's. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 12, 2006 Report Share Posted October 12, 2006 I was prescribed Prozac in 1995, at the age of eighteen, after a very brief session with a therapist and psychiatrist (no more than thirty minutes between the two of them). I continued taking Prozac and various other anti-depressants over the course of the next eight years. From roughly 1996 on, all my prescriptions for AD's were written by a family practitioner, who, as was the case with the psychiatrist I'd met with first and whom had prescribed the Prozac for the first few months that I was on it, never informed my of any of the side-effects I'd suffer from using the SSRI. In fact, the many times I inquired about the many different side-effects I was suffering from that were different from those listed with the pills from the pharmacy, I was repeatedly told by the physician that the SSRI's I had been given were safe and that I'd probably have to be on them for the rest of my life. A diagnosis he seemed to have made out of thin air considering he wasn't a therapist or psychiatrist, and, in general, spent no more than a few minutes with me every time I came in to see him. And, if you were ever unfortunate enough to be on an SSRI back in the mid to late 90's, you know how little information about side-effects were listed with your prescription from the pharmacy (nausea, drowsiness, dry mouth and very little else, if I recall correctly). Inserts and brochures with samples were, not surprisingly, even less informative about side-effects. I've been off anti-depressants now for three years and it's only been within that time that I've come to realize that the effects I'd been suffering from for those eight years weren't caused by my depression or some natural defect of mine, but instead the drugs that were presented to me as being completely safe with no chance of long-term damage. I was never told about withdrawal and the dangerous consequences of missing doses or not tapering slowly. I was led to believe that I had a chemical imbalance and that the way that I felt and acted on anti-depressants—the good and the bad—was the real me. My physician seemed to think, and certainly suggested to me, that the drugs were entirely safe and that whatever I thought was wrong with me and the medicine were my own paranoid delusions. Maybe because I was too `drugged', brain-damaged, or optimistic that I'd be able to feel again the way I did on these drugs when I first started taking them eight years earlier, that I continued to take them and continued to go to this dangerously ignorant and thoughtless doctor for more prescriptions. More likely, it was because every time I tried to stop taking them--because I was never told about their addictive properties and, in fact, was told that they had none at all--I'd start to get really depressed again. Because of the misleading information I was being fed from my doctor, pharma, etc., I continued to think that the recurrent depression was, indeed, my natural defective-self sans drugs, and continued to return to them to " treat " my " disease " . After nearly seven years of this going on and off the AD's for no more than three weeks to a month at a time (I was on the blessed, long-lasting Prozac ninety-percent of the time; all the more reason not to recognize drug withdrawals as the problem and to instead blame my misery on the " disease " .), I finally decided I had to take my chances without the drugs and decreased my dosage over a few months time until I'd quit completely. Maybe because I tapered too quickly; maybe because I'm brain-damaged from eight years on Prozac, Zoloft, Lexapro, Wellbutrin, Remeron; or maybe because I was on these mind-numbing drugs during eight very formative years of my life (18-26) and didn't develop properly, but I just don't feel right these days: either mentally or physically. Nevertheless, I feel (`feel' being the operative word) a hundred times better than I did ninety-five percent of the time I was on AD's. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 12, 2006 Report Share Posted October 12, 2006 I was prescribed Prozac in 1995, at the age of eighteen, after a very brief session with a therapist and psychiatrist (no more than thirty minutes between the two of them). I continued taking Prozac and various other anti-depressants over the course of the next eight years. From roughly 1996 on, all my prescriptions for AD's were written by a family practitioner, who, as was the case with the psychiatrist I'd met with first and whom had prescribed the Prozac for the first few months that I was on it, never informed my of any of the side-effects I'd suffer from using the SSRI. In fact, the many times I inquired about the many different side-effects I was suffering from that were different from those listed with the pills from the pharmacy, I was repeatedly told by the physician that the SSRI's I had been given were safe and that I'd probably have to be on them for the rest of my life. A diagnosis he seemed to have made out of thin air considering he wasn't a therapist or psychiatrist, and, in general, spent no more than a few minutes with me every time I came in to see him. And, if you were ever unfortunate enough to be on an SSRI back in the mid to late 90's, you know how little information about side-effects were listed with your prescription from the pharmacy (nausea, drowsiness, dry mouth and very little else, if I recall correctly). Inserts and brochures with samples were, not surprisingly, even less informative about side-effects. I've been off anti-depressants now for three years and it's only been within that time that I've come to realize that the effects I'd been suffering from for those eight years weren't caused by my depression or some natural defect of mine, but instead the drugs that were presented to me as being completely safe with no chance of long-term damage. I was never told about withdrawal and the dangerous consequences of missing doses or not tapering slowly. I was led to believe that I had a chemical imbalance and that the way that I felt and acted on anti-depressants—the good and the bad—was the real me. My physician seemed to think, and certainly suggested to me, that the drugs were entirely safe and that whatever I thought was wrong with me and the medicine were my own paranoid delusions. Maybe because I was too `drugged', brain-damaged, or optimistic that I'd be able to feel again the way I did on these drugs when I first started taking them eight years earlier, that I continued to take them and continued to go to this dangerously ignorant and thoughtless doctor for more prescriptions. More likely, it was because every time I tried to stop taking them--because I was never told about their addictive properties and, in fact, was told that they had none at all--I'd start to get really depressed again. Because of the misleading information I was being fed from my doctor, pharma, etc., I continued to think that the recurrent depression was, indeed, my natural defective-self sans drugs, and continued to return to them to " treat " my " disease " . After nearly seven years of this going on and off the AD's for no more than three weeks to a month at a time (I was on the blessed, long-lasting Prozac ninety-percent of the time; all the more reason not to recognize drug withdrawals as the problem and to instead blame my misery on the " disease " .), I finally decided I had to take my chances without the drugs and decreased my dosage over a few months time until I'd quit completely. Maybe because I tapered too quickly; maybe because I'm brain-damaged from eight years on Prozac, Zoloft, Lexapro, Wellbutrin, Remeron; or maybe because I was on these mind-numbing drugs during eight very formative years of my life (18-26) and didn't develop properly, but I just don't feel right these days: either mentally or physically. Nevertheless, I feel (`feel' being the operative word) a hundred times better than I did ninety-five percent of the time I was on AD's. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 13, 2006 Report Share Posted October 13, 2006 athan, I've been checking out this new thing called You Tube www.youtube.com and also google video http://video.google.com/ and what this looks like to me is a way for everyone to tell their story. A cheap digital computer camera and we could all tell our storys. Flood them with stories, the truth. I think people would listen to another person describing their experiences over a commercial or a doctor even. Maybe even more than all these groups that are fighting so hard over these drugs. Check these out, this has serious potential. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f9n12rVH640 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dHxAtgnSHyM http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zyif64dQq_4 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pbGHyFZqvuc Some of my thoughts: I was prescribed Prozac in 1995, at the age of eighteen, after a very brief session with a therapist and psychiatrist (no more than thirty minutes between the two of them). I continued taking Prozac and various other anti-depressants over the course of the next eight years. From roughly 1996 on, all my prescriptions for AD's were written by a family practitioner, who, as was the case with the psychiatrist I'd met with first and whom had prescribed the Prozac for the first few months that I was on it, never informed my of any of the side-effects I'd suffer from using the SSRI. In fact, the many times I inquired about the many different side-effects I was suffering from that were different from those listed with the pills from the pharmacy, I was repeatedly told by the physician that the SSRI's I had been given were safe and that I'd probably have to be on them for the rest of my life. A diagnosis he seemed to have made out of thin air considering he wasn't a therapist or psychiatrist, and, in general, spent no more than a few minutes with me every time I came in to see him. And, if you were ever unfortunate enough to be on an SSRI back in the mid to late 90's, you know how little information about side-effects were listed with your prescription from the pharmacy (nausea, drowsiness, dry mouth and very little else, if I recall correctly). Inserts and brochures with samples were, not surprisingly, even less informative about side-effects. I've been off anti-depressants now for three years and it's only been within that time that I've come to realize that the effects I'd been suffering from for those eight years weren't caused by my depression or some natural defect of mine, but instead the drugs that were presented to me as being completely safe with no chance of long-term damage. I was never told about withdrawal and the dangerous consequences of missing doses or not tapering slowly. I was led to believe that I had a chemical imbalance and that the way that I felt and acted on anti-depressants-the good and the bad-was the real me. My physician seemed to think, and certainly suggested to me, that the drugs were entirely safe and that whatever I thought was wrong with me and the medicine were my own paranoid delusions. Maybe because I was too `drugged', brain-damaged, or optimistic that I'd be able to feel again the way I did on these drugs when I first started taking them eight years earlier, that I continued to take them and continued to go to this dangerously ignorant and thoughtless doctor for more prescriptions. More likely, it was because every time I tried to stop taking them--because I was never told about their addictive properties and, in fact, was told that they had none at all--I'd start to get really depressed again. Because of the misleading information I was being fed from my doctor, pharma, etc., I continued to think that the recurrent depression was, indeed, my natural defective-self sans drugs, and continued to return to them to " treat " my " disease " . After nearly seven years of this going on and off the AD's for no more than three weeks to a month at a time (I was on the blessed, long-lasting Prozac ninety-percent of the time; all the more reason not to recognize drug withdrawals as the problem and to instead blame my misery on the " disease " .), I finally decided I had to take my chances without the drugs and decreased my dosage over a few months time until I'd quit completely. Maybe because I tapered too quickly; maybe because I'm brain-damaged from eight years on Prozac, Zoloft, Lexapro, Wellbutrin, Remeron; or maybe because I was on these mind-numbing drugs during eight very formative years of my life (18-26) and didn't develop properly, but I just don't feel right these days: either mentally or physically. Nevertheless, I feel (`feel' being the operative word) a hundred times better than I did ninety-five percent of the time I was on AD's. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 13, 2006 Report Share Posted October 13, 2006 athan, I've been checking out this new thing called You Tube www.youtube.com and also google video http://video.google.com/ and what this looks like to me is a way for everyone to tell their story. A cheap digital computer camera and we could all tell our storys. Flood them with stories, the truth. I think people would listen to another person describing their experiences over a commercial or a doctor even. Maybe even more than all these groups that are fighting so hard over these drugs. Check these out, this has serious potential. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f9n12rVH640 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dHxAtgnSHyM http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zyif64dQq_4 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pbGHyFZqvuc Some of my thoughts: I was prescribed Prozac in 1995, at the age of eighteen, after a very brief session with a therapist and psychiatrist (no more than thirty minutes between the two of them). I continued taking Prozac and various other anti-depressants over the course of the next eight years. From roughly 1996 on, all my prescriptions for AD's were written by a family practitioner, who, as was the case with the psychiatrist I'd met with first and whom had prescribed the Prozac for the first few months that I was on it, never informed my of any of the side-effects I'd suffer from using the SSRI. In fact, the many times I inquired about the many different side-effects I was suffering from that were different from those listed with the pills from the pharmacy, I was repeatedly told by the physician that the SSRI's I had been given were safe and that I'd probably have to be on them for the rest of my life. A diagnosis he seemed to have made out of thin air considering he wasn't a therapist or psychiatrist, and, in general, spent no more than a few minutes with me every time I came in to see him. And, if you were ever unfortunate enough to be on an SSRI back in the mid to late 90's, you know how little information about side-effects were listed with your prescription from the pharmacy (nausea, drowsiness, dry mouth and very little else, if I recall correctly). Inserts and brochures with samples were, not surprisingly, even less informative about side-effects. I've been off anti-depressants now for three years and it's only been within that time that I've come to realize that the effects I'd been suffering from for those eight years weren't caused by my depression or some natural defect of mine, but instead the drugs that were presented to me as being completely safe with no chance of long-term damage. I was never told about withdrawal and the dangerous consequences of missing doses or not tapering slowly. I was led to believe that I had a chemical imbalance and that the way that I felt and acted on anti-depressants-the good and the bad-was the real me. My physician seemed to think, and certainly suggested to me, that the drugs were entirely safe and that whatever I thought was wrong with me and the medicine were my own paranoid delusions. Maybe because I was too `drugged', brain-damaged, or optimistic that I'd be able to feel again the way I did on these drugs when I first started taking them eight years earlier, that I continued to take them and continued to go to this dangerously ignorant and thoughtless doctor for more prescriptions. More likely, it was because every time I tried to stop taking them--because I was never told about their addictive properties and, in fact, was told that they had none at all--I'd start to get really depressed again. Because of the misleading information I was being fed from my doctor, pharma, etc., I continued to think that the recurrent depression was, indeed, my natural defective-self sans drugs, and continued to return to them to " treat " my " disease " . After nearly seven years of this going on and off the AD's for no more than three weeks to a month at a time (I was on the blessed, long-lasting Prozac ninety-percent of the time; all the more reason not to recognize drug withdrawals as the problem and to instead blame my misery on the " disease " .), I finally decided I had to take my chances without the drugs and decreased my dosage over a few months time until I'd quit completely. Maybe because I tapered too quickly; maybe because I'm brain-damaged from eight years on Prozac, Zoloft, Lexapro, Wellbutrin, Remeron; or maybe because I was on these mind-numbing drugs during eight very formative years of my life (18-26) and didn't develop properly, but I just don't feel right these days: either mentally or physically. Nevertheless, I feel (`feel' being the operative word) a hundred times better than I did ninety-five percent of the time I was on AD's. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 13, 2006 Report Share Posted October 13, 2006 athan, I've been checking out this new thing called You Tube www.youtube.com and also google video http://video.google.com/ and what this looks like to me is a way for everyone to tell their story. A cheap digital computer camera and we could all tell our storys. Flood them with stories, the truth. I think people would listen to another person describing their experiences over a commercial or a doctor even. Maybe even more than all these groups that are fighting so hard over these drugs. Check these out, this has serious potential. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f9n12rVH640 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dHxAtgnSHyM http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zyif64dQq_4 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pbGHyFZqvuc Some of my thoughts: I was prescribed Prozac in 1995, at the age of eighteen, after a very brief session with a therapist and psychiatrist (no more than thirty minutes between the two of them). I continued taking Prozac and various other anti-depressants over the course of the next eight years. From roughly 1996 on, all my prescriptions for AD's were written by a family practitioner, who, as was the case with the psychiatrist I'd met with first and whom had prescribed the Prozac for the first few months that I was on it, never informed my of any of the side-effects I'd suffer from using the SSRI. In fact, the many times I inquired about the many different side-effects I was suffering from that were different from those listed with the pills from the pharmacy, I was repeatedly told by the physician that the SSRI's I had been given were safe and that I'd probably have to be on them for the rest of my life. A diagnosis he seemed to have made out of thin air considering he wasn't a therapist or psychiatrist, and, in general, spent no more than a few minutes with me every time I came in to see him. And, if you were ever unfortunate enough to be on an SSRI back in the mid to late 90's, you know how little information about side-effects were listed with your prescription from the pharmacy (nausea, drowsiness, dry mouth and very little else, if I recall correctly). Inserts and brochures with samples were, not surprisingly, even less informative about side-effects. I've been off anti-depressants now for three years and it's only been within that time that I've come to realize that the effects I'd been suffering from for those eight years weren't caused by my depression or some natural defect of mine, but instead the drugs that were presented to me as being completely safe with no chance of long-term damage. I was never told about withdrawal and the dangerous consequences of missing doses or not tapering slowly. I was led to believe that I had a chemical imbalance and that the way that I felt and acted on anti-depressants-the good and the bad-was the real me. My physician seemed to think, and certainly suggested to me, that the drugs were entirely safe and that whatever I thought was wrong with me and the medicine were my own paranoid delusions. Maybe because I was too `drugged', brain-damaged, or optimistic that I'd be able to feel again the way I did on these drugs when I first started taking them eight years earlier, that I continued to take them and continued to go to this dangerously ignorant and thoughtless doctor for more prescriptions. More likely, it was because every time I tried to stop taking them--because I was never told about their addictive properties and, in fact, was told that they had none at all--I'd start to get really depressed again. Because of the misleading information I was being fed from my doctor, pharma, etc., I continued to think that the recurrent depression was, indeed, my natural defective-self sans drugs, and continued to return to them to " treat " my " disease " . After nearly seven years of this going on and off the AD's for no more than three weeks to a month at a time (I was on the blessed, long-lasting Prozac ninety-percent of the time; all the more reason not to recognize drug withdrawals as the problem and to instead blame my misery on the " disease " .), I finally decided I had to take my chances without the drugs and decreased my dosage over a few months time until I'd quit completely. Maybe because I tapered too quickly; maybe because I'm brain-damaged from eight years on Prozac, Zoloft, Lexapro, Wellbutrin, Remeron; or maybe because I was on these mind-numbing drugs during eight very formative years of my life (18-26) and didn't develop properly, but I just don't feel right these days: either mentally or physically. Nevertheless, I feel (`feel' being the operative word) a hundred times better than I did ninety-five percent of the time I was on AD's. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 13, 2006 Report Share Posted October 13, 2006 athan, I've been checking out this new thing called You Tube www.youtube.com and also google video http://video.google.com/ and what this looks like to me is a way for everyone to tell their story. A cheap digital computer camera and we could all tell our storys. Flood them with stories, the truth. I think people would listen to another person describing their experiences over a commercial or a doctor even. Maybe even more than all these groups that are fighting so hard over these drugs. Check these out, this has serious potential. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f9n12rVH640 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dHxAtgnSHyM http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zyif64dQq_4 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pbGHyFZqvuc Some of my thoughts: I was prescribed Prozac in 1995, at the age of eighteen, after a very brief session with a therapist and psychiatrist (no more than thirty minutes between the two of them). I continued taking Prozac and various other anti-depressants over the course of the next eight years. From roughly 1996 on, all my prescriptions for AD's were written by a family practitioner, who, as was the case with the psychiatrist I'd met with first and whom had prescribed the Prozac for the first few months that I was on it, never informed my of any of the side-effects I'd suffer from using the SSRI. In fact, the many times I inquired about the many different side-effects I was suffering from that were different from those listed with the pills from the pharmacy, I was repeatedly told by the physician that the SSRI's I had been given were safe and that I'd probably have to be on them for the rest of my life. A diagnosis he seemed to have made out of thin air considering he wasn't a therapist or psychiatrist, and, in general, spent no more than a few minutes with me every time I came in to see him. And, if you were ever unfortunate enough to be on an SSRI back in the mid to late 90's, you know how little information about side-effects were listed with your prescription from the pharmacy (nausea, drowsiness, dry mouth and very little else, if I recall correctly). Inserts and brochures with samples were, not surprisingly, even less informative about side-effects. I've been off anti-depressants now for three years and it's only been within that time that I've come to realize that the effects I'd been suffering from for those eight years weren't caused by my depression or some natural defect of mine, but instead the drugs that were presented to me as being completely safe with no chance of long-term damage. I was never told about withdrawal and the dangerous consequences of missing doses or not tapering slowly. I was led to believe that I had a chemical imbalance and that the way that I felt and acted on anti-depressants-the good and the bad-was the real me. My physician seemed to think, and certainly suggested to me, that the drugs were entirely safe and that whatever I thought was wrong with me and the medicine were my own paranoid delusions. Maybe because I was too `drugged', brain-damaged, or optimistic that I'd be able to feel again the way I did on these drugs when I first started taking them eight years earlier, that I continued to take them and continued to go to this dangerously ignorant and thoughtless doctor for more prescriptions. More likely, it was because every time I tried to stop taking them--because I was never told about their addictive properties and, in fact, was told that they had none at all--I'd start to get really depressed again. Because of the misleading information I was being fed from my doctor, pharma, etc., I continued to think that the recurrent depression was, indeed, my natural defective-self sans drugs, and continued to return to them to " treat " my " disease " . After nearly seven years of this going on and off the AD's for no more than three weeks to a month at a time (I was on the blessed, long-lasting Prozac ninety-percent of the time; all the more reason not to recognize drug withdrawals as the problem and to instead blame my misery on the " disease " .), I finally decided I had to take my chances without the drugs and decreased my dosage over a few months time until I'd quit completely. Maybe because I tapered too quickly; maybe because I'm brain-damaged from eight years on Prozac, Zoloft, Lexapro, Wellbutrin, Remeron; or maybe because I was on these mind-numbing drugs during eight very formative years of my life (18-26) and didn't develop properly, but I just don't feel right these days: either mentally or physically. Nevertheless, I feel (`feel' being the operative word) a hundred times better than I did ninety-five percent of the time I was on AD's. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 13, 2006 Report Share Posted October 13, 2006 I think you are exactly right. Stay tuned for about 10 anti-teenscreen videos from across the country in the next week. Some of my thoughts: I was prescribed Prozac in 1995, at the age of eighteen, after a very brief session with a therapist and psychiatrist (no more than thirty minutes between the two of them). I continued taking Prozac and various other anti-depressants over the course of the next eight years. From roughly 1996 on, all my prescriptions for AD's were written by a family practitioner, who, as was the case with the psychiatrist I'd met with first and whom had prescribed the Prozac for the first few months that I was on it, never informed my of any of the side-effects I'd suffer from using the SSRI. In fact, the many times I inquired about the many different side-effects I was suffering from that were different from those listed with the pills from the pharmacy, I was repeatedly told by the physician that the SSRI's I had been given were safe and that I'd probably have to be on them for the rest of my life. A diagnosis he seemed to have made out of thin air considering he wasn't a therapist or psychiatrist, and, in general, spent no more than a few minutes with me every time I came in to see him. And, if you were ever unfortunate enough to be on an SSRI back in the mid to late 90's, you know how little information about side-effects were listed with your prescription from the pharmacy (nausea, drowsiness, dry mouth and very little else, if I recall correctly). Inserts and brochures with samples were, not surprisingly, even less informative about side-effects. I've been off anti-depressants now for three years and it's only been within that time that I've come to realize that the effects I'd been suffering from for those eight years weren't caused by my depression or some natural defect of mine, but instead the drugs that were presented to me as being completely safe with no chance of long-term damage. I was never told about withdrawal and the dangerous consequences of missing doses or not tapering slowly. I was led to believe that I had a chemical imbalance and that the way that I felt and acted on anti-depressants-the good and the bad-was the real me. My physician seemed to think, and certainly suggested to me, that the drugs were entirely safe and that whatever I thought was wrong with me and the medicine were my own paranoid delusions. Maybe because I was too `drugged', brain-damaged, or optimistic that I'd be able to feel again the way I did on these drugs when I first started taking them eight years earlier, that I continued to take them and continued to go to this dangerously ignorant and thoughtless doctor for more prescriptions. More likely, it was because every time I tried to stop taking them--because I was never told about their addictive properties and, in fact, was told that they had none at all--I'd start to get really depressed again. Because of the misleading information I was being fed from my doctor, pharma, etc., I continued to think that the recurrent depression was, indeed, my natural defective-self sans drugs, and continued to return to them to " treat " my " disease " . After nearly seven years of this going on and off the AD's for no more than three weeks to a month at a time (I was on the blessed, long-lasting Prozac ninety-percent of the time; all the more reason not to recognize drug withdrawals as the problem and to instead blame my misery on the " disease " .), I finally decided I had to take my chances without the drugs and decreased my dosage over a few months time until I'd quit completely. Maybe because I tapered too quickly; maybe because I'm brain-damaged from eight years on Prozac, Zoloft, Lexapro, Wellbutrin, Remeron; or maybe because I was on these mind-numbing drugs during eight very formative years of my life (18-26) and didn't develop properly, but I just don't feel right these days: either mentally or physically. Nevertheless, I feel (`feel' being the operative word) a hundred times better than I did ninety-five percent of the time I was on AD's. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 13, 2006 Report Share Posted October 13, 2006 I think you are exactly right. Stay tuned for about 10 anti-teenscreen videos from across the country in the next week. Some of my thoughts: I was prescribed Prozac in 1995, at the age of eighteen, after a very brief session with a therapist and psychiatrist (no more than thirty minutes between the two of them). I continued taking Prozac and various other anti-depressants over the course of the next eight years. From roughly 1996 on, all my prescriptions for AD's were written by a family practitioner, who, as was the case with the psychiatrist I'd met with first and whom had prescribed the Prozac for the first few months that I was on it, never informed my of any of the side-effects I'd suffer from using the SSRI. In fact, the many times I inquired about the many different side-effects I was suffering from that were different from those listed with the pills from the pharmacy, I was repeatedly told by the physician that the SSRI's I had been given were safe and that I'd probably have to be on them for the rest of my life. A diagnosis he seemed to have made out of thin air considering he wasn't a therapist or psychiatrist, and, in general, spent no more than a few minutes with me every time I came in to see him. And, if you were ever unfortunate enough to be on an SSRI back in the mid to late 90's, you know how little information about side-effects were listed with your prescription from the pharmacy (nausea, drowsiness, dry mouth and very little else, if I recall correctly). Inserts and brochures with samples were, not surprisingly, even less informative about side-effects. I've been off anti-depressants now for three years and it's only been within that time that I've come to realize that the effects I'd been suffering from for those eight years weren't caused by my depression or some natural defect of mine, but instead the drugs that were presented to me as being completely safe with no chance of long-term damage. I was never told about withdrawal and the dangerous consequences of missing doses or not tapering slowly. I was led to believe that I had a chemical imbalance and that the way that I felt and acted on anti-depressants-the good and the bad-was the real me. My physician seemed to think, and certainly suggested to me, that the drugs were entirely safe and that whatever I thought was wrong with me and the medicine were my own paranoid delusions. Maybe because I was too `drugged', brain-damaged, or optimistic that I'd be able to feel again the way I did on these drugs when I first started taking them eight years earlier, that I continued to take them and continued to go to this dangerously ignorant and thoughtless doctor for more prescriptions. More likely, it was because every time I tried to stop taking them--because I was never told about their addictive properties and, in fact, was told that they had none at all--I'd start to get really depressed again. Because of the misleading information I was being fed from my doctor, pharma, etc., I continued to think that the recurrent depression was, indeed, my natural defective-self sans drugs, and continued to return to them to " treat " my " disease " . After nearly seven years of this going on and off the AD's for no more than three weeks to a month at a time (I was on the blessed, long-lasting Prozac ninety-percent of the time; all the more reason not to recognize drug withdrawals as the problem and to instead blame my misery on the " disease " .), I finally decided I had to take my chances without the drugs and decreased my dosage over a few months time until I'd quit completely. Maybe because I tapered too quickly; maybe because I'm brain-damaged from eight years on Prozac, Zoloft, Lexapro, Wellbutrin, Remeron; or maybe because I was on these mind-numbing drugs during eight very formative years of my life (18-26) and didn't develop properly, but I just don't feel right these days: either mentally or physically. Nevertheless, I feel (`feel' being the operative word) a hundred times better than I did ninety-five percent of the time I was on AD's. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 13, 2006 Report Share Posted October 13, 2006 I think you are exactly right. Stay tuned for about 10 anti-teenscreen videos from across the country in the next week. Some of my thoughts: I was prescribed Prozac in 1995, at the age of eighteen, after a very brief session with a therapist and psychiatrist (no more than thirty minutes between the two of them). I continued taking Prozac and various other anti-depressants over the course of the next eight years. From roughly 1996 on, all my prescriptions for AD's were written by a family practitioner, who, as was the case with the psychiatrist I'd met with first and whom had prescribed the Prozac for the first few months that I was on it, never informed my of any of the side-effects I'd suffer from using the SSRI. In fact, the many times I inquired about the many different side-effects I was suffering from that were different from those listed with the pills from the pharmacy, I was repeatedly told by the physician that the SSRI's I had been given were safe and that I'd probably have to be on them for the rest of my life. A diagnosis he seemed to have made out of thin air considering he wasn't a therapist or psychiatrist, and, in general, spent no more than a few minutes with me every time I came in to see him. And, if you were ever unfortunate enough to be on an SSRI back in the mid to late 90's, you know how little information about side-effects were listed with your prescription from the pharmacy (nausea, drowsiness, dry mouth and very little else, if I recall correctly). Inserts and brochures with samples were, not surprisingly, even less informative about side-effects. I've been off anti-depressants now for three years and it's only been within that time that I've come to realize that the effects I'd been suffering from for those eight years weren't caused by my depression or some natural defect of mine, but instead the drugs that were presented to me as being completely safe with no chance of long-term damage. I was never told about withdrawal and the dangerous consequences of missing doses or not tapering slowly. I was led to believe that I had a chemical imbalance and that the way that I felt and acted on anti-depressants-the good and the bad-was the real me. My physician seemed to think, and certainly suggested to me, that the drugs were entirely safe and that whatever I thought was wrong with me and the medicine were my own paranoid delusions. Maybe because I was too `drugged', brain-damaged, or optimistic that I'd be able to feel again the way I did on these drugs when I first started taking them eight years earlier, that I continued to take them and continued to go to this dangerously ignorant and thoughtless doctor for more prescriptions. More likely, it was because every time I tried to stop taking them--because I was never told about their addictive properties and, in fact, was told that they had none at all--I'd start to get really depressed again. Because of the misleading information I was being fed from my doctor, pharma, etc., I continued to think that the recurrent depression was, indeed, my natural defective-self sans drugs, and continued to return to them to " treat " my " disease " . After nearly seven years of this going on and off the AD's for no more than three weeks to a month at a time (I was on the blessed, long-lasting Prozac ninety-percent of the time; all the more reason not to recognize drug withdrawals as the problem and to instead blame my misery on the " disease " .), I finally decided I had to take my chances without the drugs and decreased my dosage over a few months time until I'd quit completely. Maybe because I tapered too quickly; maybe because I'm brain-damaged from eight years on Prozac, Zoloft, Lexapro, Wellbutrin, Remeron; or maybe because I was on these mind-numbing drugs during eight very formative years of my life (18-26) and didn't develop properly, but I just don't feel right these days: either mentally or physically. Nevertheless, I feel (`feel' being the operative word) a hundred times better than I did ninety-five percent of the time I was on AD's. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 13, 2006 Report Share Posted October 13, 2006 I think you are exactly right. Stay tuned for about 10 anti-teenscreen videos from across the country in the next week. Some of my thoughts: I was prescribed Prozac in 1995, at the age of eighteen, after a very brief session with a therapist and psychiatrist (no more than thirty minutes between the two of them). I continued taking Prozac and various other anti-depressants over the course of the next eight years. From roughly 1996 on, all my prescriptions for AD's were written by a family practitioner, who, as was the case with the psychiatrist I'd met with first and whom had prescribed the Prozac for the first few months that I was on it, never informed my of any of the side-effects I'd suffer from using the SSRI. In fact, the many times I inquired about the many different side-effects I was suffering from that were different from those listed with the pills from the pharmacy, I was repeatedly told by the physician that the SSRI's I had been given were safe and that I'd probably have to be on them for the rest of my life. A diagnosis he seemed to have made out of thin air considering he wasn't a therapist or psychiatrist, and, in general, spent no more than a few minutes with me every time I came in to see him. And, if you were ever unfortunate enough to be on an SSRI back in the mid to late 90's, you know how little information about side-effects were listed with your prescription from the pharmacy (nausea, drowsiness, dry mouth and very little else, if I recall correctly). Inserts and brochures with samples were, not surprisingly, even less informative about side-effects. I've been off anti-depressants now for three years and it's only been within that time that I've come to realize that the effects I'd been suffering from for those eight years weren't caused by my depression or some natural defect of mine, but instead the drugs that were presented to me as being completely safe with no chance of long-term damage. I was never told about withdrawal and the dangerous consequences of missing doses or not tapering slowly. I was led to believe that I had a chemical imbalance and that the way that I felt and acted on anti-depressants-the good and the bad-was the real me. My physician seemed to think, and certainly suggested to me, that the drugs were entirely safe and that whatever I thought was wrong with me and the medicine were my own paranoid delusions. Maybe because I was too `drugged', brain-damaged, or optimistic that I'd be able to feel again the way I did on these drugs when I first started taking them eight years earlier, that I continued to take them and continued to go to this dangerously ignorant and thoughtless doctor for more prescriptions. More likely, it was because every time I tried to stop taking them--because I was never told about their addictive properties and, in fact, was told that they had none at all--I'd start to get really depressed again. Because of the misleading information I was being fed from my doctor, pharma, etc., I continued to think that the recurrent depression was, indeed, my natural defective-self sans drugs, and continued to return to them to " treat " my " disease " . After nearly seven years of this going on and off the AD's for no more than three weeks to a month at a time (I was on the blessed, long-lasting Prozac ninety-percent of the time; all the more reason not to recognize drug withdrawals as the problem and to instead blame my misery on the " disease " .), I finally decided I had to take my chances without the drugs and decreased my dosage over a few months time until I'd quit completely. Maybe because I tapered too quickly; maybe because I'm brain-damaged from eight years on Prozac, Zoloft, Lexapro, Wellbutrin, Remeron; or maybe because I was on these mind-numbing drugs during eight very formative years of my life (18-26) and didn't develop properly, but I just don't feel right these days: either mentally or physically. Nevertheless, I feel (`feel' being the operative word) a hundred times better than I did ninety-five percent of the time I was on AD's. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 13, 2006 Report Share Posted October 13, 2006 athan, It's not just your mind that these drugs affect. I hope you are drinking plenty of safe water. Go to the health store or better yet, go to a nutrition specialist. These These drugs are poison. I am forced to take Lyrica, so that they can get RSD under control. I now have more severe and acute back and abdominal pains, spasms through out all my muscles, having a hard time concentrating, and forgetting little things from minute to minute. Since it's a new drug, it will be years before the damages are exposed. My body tells me that it will be just like the other poisons that damage your brain, heart, liver, and kidneys. If I don't take it, I don't get treated. I was supposed to have surgery months ago for radial shortening following a severe Colle's wrist fracture. I've spoken to many people who are feeling much better after being treated by a nutrition specialist. Some of my thoughts: I was prescribed Prozac in 1995, at the age of eighteen, after a very brief session with a therapist and psychiatrist (no more than thirty minutes between the two of them). I continued taking Prozac and various other anti-depressants over the course of the next eight years. From roughly 1996 on, all my prescriptions for AD's were written by a family practitioner, who, as was the case with the psychiatrist I'd met with first and whom had prescribed the Prozac for the first few months that I was on it, never informed my of any of the side-effects I'd suffer from using the SSRI. In fact, the many times I inquired about the many different side-effects I was suffering from that were different from those listed with the pills from the pharmacy, I was repeatedly told by the physician that the SSRI's I had been given were safe and that I'd probably have to be on them for the rest of my life. A diagnosis he seemed to have made out of thin air considering he wasn't a therapist or psychiatrist, and, in general, spent no more than a few minutes with me every time I came in to see him. And, if you were ever unfortunate enough to be on an SSRI back in the mid to late 90's, you know how little information about side-effects were listed with your prescription from the pharmacy (nausea, drowsiness, dry mouth and very little else, if I recall correctly). Inserts and brochures with samples were, not surprisingly, even less informative about side-effects. I've been off anti-depressants now for three years and it's only been within that time that I've come to realize that the effects I'd been suffering from for those eight years weren't caused by my depression or some natural defect of mine, but instead the drugs that were presented to me as being completely safe with no chance of long-term damage. I was never told about withdrawal and the dangerous consequences of missing doses or not tapering slowly. I was led to believe that I had a chemical imbalance and that the way that I felt and acted on anti-depressants-the good and the bad-was the real me. My physician seemed to think, and certainly suggested to me, that the drugs were entirely safe and that whatever I thought was wrong with me and the medicine were my own paranoid delusions. Maybe because I was too `drugged', brain-damaged, or optimistic that I'd be able to feel again the way I did on these drugs when I first started taking them eight years earlier, that I continued to take them and continued to go to this dangerously ignorant and thoughtless doctor for more prescriptions. More likely, it was because every time I tried to stop taking them--because I was never told about their addictive properties and, in fact, was told that they had none at all--I'd start to get really depressed again. Because of the misleading information I was being fed from my doctor, pharma, etc., I continued to think that the recurrent depression was, indeed, my natural defective-self sans drugs, and continued to return to them to " treat " my " disease " . After nearly seven years of this going on and off the AD's for no more than three weeks to a month at a time (I was on the blessed, long-lasting Prozac ninety-percent of the time; all the more reason not to recognize drug withdrawals as the problem and to instead blame my misery on the " disease " .), I finally decided I had to take my chances without the drugs and decreased my dosage over a few months time until I'd quit completely. Maybe because I tapered too quickly; maybe because I'm brain-damaged from eight years on Prozac, Zoloft, Lexapro, Wellbutrin, Remeron; or maybe because I was on these mind-numbing drugs during eight very formative years of my life (18-26) and didn't develop properly, but I just don't feel right these days: either mentally or physically. Nevertheless, I feel (`feel' being the operative word) a hundred times better than I did ninety-five percent of the time I was on AD's. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 13, 2006 Report Share Posted October 13, 2006 athan, It's not just your mind that these drugs affect. I hope you are drinking plenty of safe water. Go to the health store or better yet, go to a nutrition specialist. These These drugs are poison. I am forced to take Lyrica, so that they can get RSD under control. I now have more severe and acute back and abdominal pains, spasms through out all my muscles, having a hard time concentrating, and forgetting little things from minute to minute. Since it's a new drug, it will be years before the damages are exposed. My body tells me that it will be just like the other poisons that damage your brain, heart, liver, and kidneys. If I don't take it, I don't get treated. I was supposed to have surgery months ago for radial shortening following a severe Colle's wrist fracture. I've spoken to many people who are feeling much better after being treated by a nutrition specialist. Some of my thoughts: I was prescribed Prozac in 1995, at the age of eighteen, after a very brief session with a therapist and psychiatrist (no more than thirty minutes between the two of them). I continued taking Prozac and various other anti-depressants over the course of the next eight years. From roughly 1996 on, all my prescriptions for AD's were written by a family practitioner, who, as was the case with the psychiatrist I'd met with first and whom had prescribed the Prozac for the first few months that I was on it, never informed my of any of the side-effects I'd suffer from using the SSRI. In fact, the many times I inquired about the many different side-effects I was suffering from that were different from those listed with the pills from the pharmacy, I was repeatedly told by the physician that the SSRI's I had been given were safe and that I'd probably have to be on them for the rest of my life. A diagnosis he seemed to have made out of thin air considering he wasn't a therapist or psychiatrist, and, in general, spent no more than a few minutes with me every time I came in to see him. And, if you were ever unfortunate enough to be on an SSRI back in the mid to late 90's, you know how little information about side-effects were listed with your prescription from the pharmacy (nausea, drowsiness, dry mouth and very little else, if I recall correctly). Inserts and brochures with samples were, not surprisingly, even less informative about side-effects. I've been off anti-depressants now for three years and it's only been within that time that I've come to realize that the effects I'd been suffering from for those eight years weren't caused by my depression or some natural defect of mine, but instead the drugs that were presented to me as being completely safe with no chance of long-term damage. I was never told about withdrawal and the dangerous consequences of missing doses or not tapering slowly. I was led to believe that I had a chemical imbalance and that the way that I felt and acted on anti-depressants-the good and the bad-was the real me. My physician seemed to think, and certainly suggested to me, that the drugs were entirely safe and that whatever I thought was wrong with me and the medicine were my own paranoid delusions. Maybe because I was too `drugged', brain-damaged, or optimistic that I'd be able to feel again the way I did on these drugs when I first started taking them eight years earlier, that I continued to take them and continued to go to this dangerously ignorant and thoughtless doctor for more prescriptions. More likely, it was because every time I tried to stop taking them--because I was never told about their addictive properties and, in fact, was told that they had none at all--I'd start to get really depressed again. Because of the misleading information I was being fed from my doctor, pharma, etc., I continued to think that the recurrent depression was, indeed, my natural defective-self sans drugs, and continued to return to them to " treat " my " disease " . After nearly seven years of this going on and off the AD's for no more than three weeks to a month at a time (I was on the blessed, long-lasting Prozac ninety-percent of the time; all the more reason not to recognize drug withdrawals as the problem and to instead blame my misery on the " disease " .), I finally decided I had to take my chances without the drugs and decreased my dosage over a few months time until I'd quit completely. Maybe because I tapered too quickly; maybe because I'm brain-damaged from eight years on Prozac, Zoloft, Lexapro, Wellbutrin, Remeron; or maybe because I was on these mind-numbing drugs during eight very formative years of my life (18-26) and didn't develop properly, but I just don't feel right these days: either mentally or physically. Nevertheless, I feel (`feel' being the operative word) a hundred times better than I did ninety-five percent of the time I was on AD's. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 13, 2006 Report Share Posted October 13, 2006 athan, It's not just your mind that these drugs affect. I hope you are drinking plenty of safe water. Go to the health store or better yet, go to a nutrition specialist. These These drugs are poison. I am forced to take Lyrica, so that they can get RSD under control. I now have more severe and acute back and abdominal pains, spasms through out all my muscles, having a hard time concentrating, and forgetting little things from minute to minute. Since it's a new drug, it will be years before the damages are exposed. My body tells me that it will be just like the other poisons that damage your brain, heart, liver, and kidneys. If I don't take it, I don't get treated. I was supposed to have surgery months ago for radial shortening following a severe Colle's wrist fracture. I've spoken to many people who are feeling much better after being treated by a nutrition specialist. Some of my thoughts: I was prescribed Prozac in 1995, at the age of eighteen, after a very brief session with a therapist and psychiatrist (no more than thirty minutes between the two of them). I continued taking Prozac and various other anti-depressants over the course of the next eight years. From roughly 1996 on, all my prescriptions for AD's were written by a family practitioner, who, as was the case with the psychiatrist I'd met with first and whom had prescribed the Prozac for the first few months that I was on it, never informed my of any of the side-effects I'd suffer from using the SSRI. In fact, the many times I inquired about the many different side-effects I was suffering from that were different from those listed with the pills from the pharmacy, I was repeatedly told by the physician that the SSRI's I had been given were safe and that I'd probably have to be on them for the rest of my life. A diagnosis he seemed to have made out of thin air considering he wasn't a therapist or psychiatrist, and, in general, spent no more than a few minutes with me every time I came in to see him. And, if you were ever unfortunate enough to be on an SSRI back in the mid to late 90's, you know how little information about side-effects were listed with your prescription from the pharmacy (nausea, drowsiness, dry mouth and very little else, if I recall correctly). Inserts and brochures with samples were, not surprisingly, even less informative about side-effects. I've been off anti-depressants now for three years and it's only been within that time that I've come to realize that the effects I'd been suffering from for those eight years weren't caused by my depression or some natural defect of mine, but instead the drugs that were presented to me as being completely safe with no chance of long-term damage. I was never told about withdrawal and the dangerous consequences of missing doses or not tapering slowly. I was led to believe that I had a chemical imbalance and that the way that I felt and acted on anti-depressants-the good and the bad-was the real me. My physician seemed to think, and certainly suggested to me, that the drugs were entirely safe and that whatever I thought was wrong with me and the medicine were my own paranoid delusions. Maybe because I was too `drugged', brain-damaged, or optimistic that I'd be able to feel again the way I did on these drugs when I first started taking them eight years earlier, that I continued to take them and continued to go to this dangerously ignorant and thoughtless doctor for more prescriptions. More likely, it was because every time I tried to stop taking them--because I was never told about their addictive properties and, in fact, was told that they had none at all--I'd start to get really depressed again. Because of the misleading information I was being fed from my doctor, pharma, etc., I continued to think that the recurrent depression was, indeed, my natural defective-self sans drugs, and continued to return to them to " treat " my " disease " . After nearly seven years of this going on and off the AD's for no more than three weeks to a month at a time (I was on the blessed, long-lasting Prozac ninety-percent of the time; all the more reason not to recognize drug withdrawals as the problem and to instead blame my misery on the " disease " .), I finally decided I had to take my chances without the drugs and decreased my dosage over a few months time until I'd quit completely. Maybe because I tapered too quickly; maybe because I'm brain-damaged from eight years on Prozac, Zoloft, Lexapro, Wellbutrin, Remeron; or maybe because I was on these mind-numbing drugs during eight very formative years of my life (18-26) and didn't develop properly, but I just don't feel right these days: either mentally or physically. Nevertheless, I feel (`feel' being the operative word) a hundred times better than I did ninety-five percent of the time I was on AD's. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 13, 2006 Report Share Posted October 13, 2006 athan, It's not just your mind that these drugs affect. I hope you are drinking plenty of safe water. Go to the health store or better yet, go to a nutrition specialist. These These drugs are poison. I am forced to take Lyrica, so that they can get RSD under control. I now have more severe and acute back and abdominal pains, spasms through out all my muscles, having a hard time concentrating, and forgetting little things from minute to minute. Since it's a new drug, it will be years before the damages are exposed. My body tells me that it will be just like the other poisons that damage your brain, heart, liver, and kidneys. If I don't take it, I don't get treated. I was supposed to have surgery months ago for radial shortening following a severe Colle's wrist fracture. I've spoken to many people who are feeling much better after being treated by a nutrition specialist. Some of my thoughts: I was prescribed Prozac in 1995, at the age of eighteen, after a very brief session with a therapist and psychiatrist (no more than thirty minutes between the two of them). I continued taking Prozac and various other anti-depressants over the course of the next eight years. From roughly 1996 on, all my prescriptions for AD's were written by a family practitioner, who, as was the case with the psychiatrist I'd met with first and whom had prescribed the Prozac for the first few months that I was on it, never informed my of any of the side-effects I'd suffer from using the SSRI. In fact, the many times I inquired about the many different side-effects I was suffering from that were different from those listed with the pills from the pharmacy, I was repeatedly told by the physician that the SSRI's I had been given were safe and that I'd probably have to be on them for the rest of my life. A diagnosis he seemed to have made out of thin air considering he wasn't a therapist or psychiatrist, and, in general, spent no more than a few minutes with me every time I came in to see him. And, if you were ever unfortunate enough to be on an SSRI back in the mid to late 90's, you know how little information about side-effects were listed with your prescription from the pharmacy (nausea, drowsiness, dry mouth and very little else, if I recall correctly). Inserts and brochures with samples were, not surprisingly, even less informative about side-effects. I've been off anti-depressants now for three years and it's only been within that time that I've come to realize that the effects I'd been suffering from for those eight years weren't caused by my depression or some natural defect of mine, but instead the drugs that were presented to me as being completely safe with no chance of long-term damage. I was never told about withdrawal and the dangerous consequences of missing doses or not tapering slowly. I was led to believe that I had a chemical imbalance and that the way that I felt and acted on anti-depressants-the good and the bad-was the real me. My physician seemed to think, and certainly suggested to me, that the drugs were entirely safe and that whatever I thought was wrong with me and the medicine were my own paranoid delusions. Maybe because I was too `drugged', brain-damaged, or optimistic that I'd be able to feel again the way I did on these drugs when I first started taking them eight years earlier, that I continued to take them and continued to go to this dangerously ignorant and thoughtless doctor for more prescriptions. More likely, it was because every time I tried to stop taking them--because I was never told about their addictive properties and, in fact, was told that they had none at all--I'd start to get really depressed again. Because of the misleading information I was being fed from my doctor, pharma, etc., I continued to think that the recurrent depression was, indeed, my natural defective-self sans drugs, and continued to return to them to " treat " my " disease " . After nearly seven years of this going on and off the AD's for no more than three weeks to a month at a time (I was on the blessed, long-lasting Prozac ninety-percent of the time; all the more reason not to recognize drug withdrawals as the problem and to instead blame my misery on the " disease " .), I finally decided I had to take my chances without the drugs and decreased my dosage over a few months time until I'd quit completely. Maybe because I tapered too quickly; maybe because I'm brain-damaged from eight years on Prozac, Zoloft, Lexapro, Wellbutrin, Remeron; or maybe because I was on these mind-numbing drugs during eight very formative years of my life (18-26) and didn't develop properly, but I just don't feel right these days: either mentally or physically. Nevertheless, I feel (`feel' being the operative word) a hundred times better than I did ninety-five percent of the time I was on AD's. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 13, 2006 Report Share Posted October 13, 2006 Thanks for sharing that . Its good to hear other people out there with similar stories. Congratulations for getting off the drugs. > I was prescribed Prozac in 1995, at the age of eighteen, after a > very brief session with a therapist and psychiatrist (no more than > thirty minutes between the two of them). I continued taking Prozac > and various other anti-depressants over the course of the next eight > years. From roughly 1996 on, all my prescriptions for AD's were > written by a family practitioner, who, as was the case with the > psychiatrist I'd met with first and whom had prescribed the Prozac for > the first few months that I was on it, never informed my of any of the > side-effects I'd suffer from using the SSRI. In fact, the many times > I inquired about the many different side-effects I was suffering from > that were different from those listed with the pills from the > pharmacy, I was repeatedly told by the physician that the SSRI's I had > been given were safe and that I'd probably have to be on them for the > rest of my life. A diagnosis he seemed to have made out of thin air > considering he wasn't a therapist or psychiatrist, and, in general, > spent no more than a few minutes with me every time I came in to see > him. And, if you were ever unfortunate enough to be on an SSRI back > in the mid to late 90's, you know how little information about > side-effects were listed with your prescription from the pharmacy > (nausea, drowsiness, dry mouth and very little else, if I recall > correctly). Inserts and brochures with samples were, not > surprisingly, even less informative about side-effects. > I've been off anti-depressants now for three years and it's only > been within that time that I've come to realize that the effects I'd > been suffering from for those eight years weren't caused by my > depression or some natural defect of mine, but instead the drugs that > were presented to me as being completely safe with no chance of > long-term damage. I was never told about withdrawal and the dangerous > consequences of missing doses or not tapering slowly. I was led to > believe that I had a chemical imbalance and that the way that I felt > and acted on anti-depressants-the good and the bad-was the real me. > My physician seemed to think, and certainly suggested to me, that the > drugs were entirely safe and that whatever I thought was wrong with me > and the medicine were my own paranoid delusions. Maybe because I was > too `drugged', brain-damaged, or optimistic that I'd be able to feel > again the way I did on these drugs when I first started taking them > eight years earlier, that I continued to take them and continued to go > to this dangerously ignorant and thoughtless doctor for more > prescriptions. More likely, it was because every time I tried to stop > taking them--because I was never told about their addictive properties > and, in fact, was told that they had none at all--I'd start to get > really depressed again. Because of the misleading information I was > being fed from my doctor, pharma, etc., I continued to think that the > recurrent depression was, indeed, my natural defective-self sans > drugs, and continued to return to them to " treat " my " disease " . After > nearly seven years of this going on and off the AD's for no more than > three weeks to a month at a time (I was on the blessed, long-lasting > Prozac ninety-percent of the time; all the more reason not to > recognize drug withdrawals as the problem and to instead blame my > misery on the " disease " .), I finally decided I had to take my chances > without the drugs and decreased my dosage over a few months time until > I'd quit completely. > Maybe because I tapered too quickly; maybe because I'm > brain-damaged from eight years on Prozac, Zoloft, Lexapro, Wellbutrin, > Remeron; or maybe because I was on these mind-numbing drugs during > eight very formative years of my life (18-26) and didn't develop > properly, but I just don't feel right these days: either mentally or > physically. Nevertheless, I feel (`feel' being the operative word) a > hundred times better than I did ninety-five percent of the time I was > on AD's. > > > > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- Abra S Ashleigh aka Abra Cadabra abra@... A journey of a thousand miles begins with but a single step. -- Chinese proverb Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 13, 2006 Report Share Posted October 13, 2006 Thanks for sharing that . Its good to hear other people out there with similar stories. Congratulations for getting off the drugs. > I was prescribed Prozac in 1995, at the age of eighteen, after a > very brief session with a therapist and psychiatrist (no more than > thirty minutes between the two of them). I continued taking Prozac > and various other anti-depressants over the course of the next eight > years. From roughly 1996 on, all my prescriptions for AD's were > written by a family practitioner, who, as was the case with the > psychiatrist I'd met with first and whom had prescribed the Prozac for > the first few months that I was on it, never informed my of any of the > side-effects I'd suffer from using the SSRI. In fact, the many times > I inquired about the many different side-effects I was suffering from > that were different from those listed with the pills from the > pharmacy, I was repeatedly told by the physician that the SSRI's I had > been given were safe and that I'd probably have to be on them for the > rest of my life. A diagnosis he seemed to have made out of thin air > considering he wasn't a therapist or psychiatrist, and, in general, > spent no more than a few minutes with me every time I came in to see > him. And, if you were ever unfortunate enough to be on an SSRI back > in the mid to late 90's, you know how little information about > side-effects were listed with your prescription from the pharmacy > (nausea, drowsiness, dry mouth and very little else, if I recall > correctly). Inserts and brochures with samples were, not > surprisingly, even less informative about side-effects. > I've been off anti-depressants now for three years and it's only > been within that time that I've come to realize that the effects I'd > been suffering from for those eight years weren't caused by my > depression or some natural defect of mine, but instead the drugs that > were presented to me as being completely safe with no chance of > long-term damage. I was never told about withdrawal and the dangerous > consequences of missing doses or not tapering slowly. I was led to > believe that I had a chemical imbalance and that the way that I felt > and acted on anti-depressants-the good and the bad-was the real me. > My physician seemed to think, and certainly suggested to me, that the > drugs were entirely safe and that whatever I thought was wrong with me > and the medicine were my own paranoid delusions. Maybe because I was > too `drugged', brain-damaged, or optimistic that I'd be able to feel > again the way I did on these drugs when I first started taking them > eight years earlier, that I continued to take them and continued to go > to this dangerously ignorant and thoughtless doctor for more > prescriptions. More likely, it was because every time I tried to stop > taking them--because I was never told about their addictive properties > and, in fact, was told that they had none at all--I'd start to get > really depressed again. Because of the misleading information I was > being fed from my doctor, pharma, etc., I continued to think that the > recurrent depression was, indeed, my natural defective-self sans > drugs, and continued to return to them to " treat " my " disease " . After > nearly seven years of this going on and off the AD's for no more than > three weeks to a month at a time (I was on the blessed, long-lasting > Prozac ninety-percent of the time; all the more reason not to > recognize drug withdrawals as the problem and to instead blame my > misery on the " disease " .), I finally decided I had to take my chances > without the drugs and decreased my dosage over a few months time until > I'd quit completely. > Maybe because I tapered too quickly; maybe because I'm > brain-damaged from eight years on Prozac, Zoloft, Lexapro, Wellbutrin, > Remeron; or maybe because I was on these mind-numbing drugs during > eight very formative years of my life (18-26) and didn't develop > properly, but I just don't feel right these days: either mentally or > physically. Nevertheless, I feel (`feel' being the operative word) a > hundred times better than I did ninety-five percent of the time I was > on AD's. > > > > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- Abra S Ashleigh aka Abra Cadabra abra@... A journey of a thousand miles begins with but a single step. -- Chinese proverb Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 13, 2006 Report Share Posted October 13, 2006 Thanks for sharing that . Its good to hear other people out there with similar stories. Congratulations for getting off the drugs. > I was prescribed Prozac in 1995, at the age of eighteen, after a > very brief session with a therapist and psychiatrist (no more than > thirty minutes between the two of them). I continued taking Prozac > and various other anti-depressants over the course of the next eight > years. From roughly 1996 on, all my prescriptions for AD's were > written by a family practitioner, who, as was the case with the > psychiatrist I'd met with first and whom had prescribed the Prozac for > the first few months that I was on it, never informed my of any of the > side-effects I'd suffer from using the SSRI. In fact, the many times > I inquired about the many different side-effects I was suffering from > that were different from those listed with the pills from the > pharmacy, I was repeatedly told by the physician that the SSRI's I had > been given were safe and that I'd probably have to be on them for the > rest of my life. A diagnosis he seemed to have made out of thin air > considering he wasn't a therapist or psychiatrist, and, in general, > spent no more than a few minutes with me every time I came in to see > him. And, if you were ever unfortunate enough to be on an SSRI back > in the mid to late 90's, you know how little information about > side-effects were listed with your prescription from the pharmacy > (nausea, drowsiness, dry mouth and very little else, if I recall > correctly). Inserts and brochures with samples were, not > surprisingly, even less informative about side-effects. > I've been off anti-depressants now for three years and it's only > been within that time that I've come to realize that the effects I'd > been suffering from for those eight years weren't caused by my > depression or some natural defect of mine, but instead the drugs that > were presented to me as being completely safe with no chance of > long-term damage. I was never told about withdrawal and the dangerous > consequences of missing doses or not tapering slowly. I was led to > believe that I had a chemical imbalance and that the way that I felt > and acted on anti-depressants-the good and the bad-was the real me. > My physician seemed to think, and certainly suggested to me, that the > drugs were entirely safe and that whatever I thought was wrong with me > and the medicine were my own paranoid delusions. Maybe because I was > too `drugged', brain-damaged, or optimistic that I'd be able to feel > again the way I did on these drugs when I first started taking them > eight years earlier, that I continued to take them and continued to go > to this dangerously ignorant and thoughtless doctor for more > prescriptions. More likely, it was because every time I tried to stop > taking them--because I was never told about their addictive properties > and, in fact, was told that they had none at all--I'd start to get > really depressed again. Because of the misleading information I was > being fed from my doctor, pharma, etc., I continued to think that the > recurrent depression was, indeed, my natural defective-self sans > drugs, and continued to return to them to " treat " my " disease " . After > nearly seven years of this going on and off the AD's for no more than > three weeks to a month at a time (I was on the blessed, long-lasting > Prozac ninety-percent of the time; all the more reason not to > recognize drug withdrawals as the problem and to instead blame my > misery on the " disease " .), I finally decided I had to take my chances > without the drugs and decreased my dosage over a few months time until > I'd quit completely. > Maybe because I tapered too quickly; maybe because I'm > brain-damaged from eight years on Prozac, Zoloft, Lexapro, Wellbutrin, > Remeron; or maybe because I was on these mind-numbing drugs during > eight very formative years of my life (18-26) and didn't develop > properly, but I just don't feel right these days: either mentally or > physically. Nevertheless, I feel (`feel' being the operative word) a > hundred times better than I did ninety-five percent of the time I was > on AD's. > > > > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- Abra S Ashleigh aka Abra Cadabra abra@... A journey of a thousand miles begins with but a single step. -- Chinese proverb Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 13, 2006 Report Share Posted October 13, 2006 Thanks for sharing that . Its good to hear other people out there with similar stories. Congratulations for getting off the drugs. > I was prescribed Prozac in 1995, at the age of eighteen, after a > very brief session with a therapist and psychiatrist (no more than > thirty minutes between the two of them). I continued taking Prozac > and various other anti-depressants over the course of the next eight > years. From roughly 1996 on, all my prescriptions for AD's were > written by a family practitioner, who, as was the case with the > psychiatrist I'd met with first and whom had prescribed the Prozac for > the first few months that I was on it, never informed my of any of the > side-effects I'd suffer from using the SSRI. In fact, the many times > I inquired about the many different side-effects I was suffering from > that were different from those listed with the pills from the > pharmacy, I was repeatedly told by the physician that the SSRI's I had > been given were safe and that I'd probably have to be on them for the > rest of my life. A diagnosis he seemed to have made out of thin air > considering he wasn't a therapist or psychiatrist, and, in general, > spent no more than a few minutes with me every time I came in to see > him. And, if you were ever unfortunate enough to be on an SSRI back > in the mid to late 90's, you know how little information about > side-effects were listed with your prescription from the pharmacy > (nausea, drowsiness, dry mouth and very little else, if I recall > correctly). Inserts and brochures with samples were, not > surprisingly, even less informative about side-effects. > I've been off anti-depressants now for three years and it's only > been within that time that I've come to realize that the effects I'd > been suffering from for those eight years weren't caused by my > depression or some natural defect of mine, but instead the drugs that > were presented to me as being completely safe with no chance of > long-term damage. I was never told about withdrawal and the dangerous > consequences of missing doses or not tapering slowly. I was led to > believe that I had a chemical imbalance and that the way that I felt > and acted on anti-depressants-the good and the bad-was the real me. > My physician seemed to think, and certainly suggested to me, that the > drugs were entirely safe and that whatever I thought was wrong with me > and the medicine were my own paranoid delusions. Maybe because I was > too `drugged', brain-damaged, or optimistic that I'd be able to feel > again the way I did on these drugs when I first started taking them > eight years earlier, that I continued to take them and continued to go > to this dangerously ignorant and thoughtless doctor for more > prescriptions. More likely, it was because every time I tried to stop > taking them--because I was never told about their addictive properties > and, in fact, was told that they had none at all--I'd start to get > really depressed again. Because of the misleading information I was > being fed from my doctor, pharma, etc., I continued to think that the > recurrent depression was, indeed, my natural defective-self sans > drugs, and continued to return to them to " treat " my " disease " . After > nearly seven years of this going on and off the AD's for no more than > three weeks to a month at a time (I was on the blessed, long-lasting > Prozac ninety-percent of the time; all the more reason not to > recognize drug withdrawals as the problem and to instead blame my > misery on the " disease " .), I finally decided I had to take my chances > without the drugs and decreased my dosage over a few months time until > I'd quit completely. > Maybe because I tapered too quickly; maybe because I'm > brain-damaged from eight years on Prozac, Zoloft, Lexapro, Wellbutrin, > Remeron; or maybe because I was on these mind-numbing drugs during > eight very formative years of my life (18-26) and didn't develop > properly, but I just don't feel right these days: either mentally or > physically. Nevertheless, I feel (`feel' being the operative word) a > hundred times better than I did ninety-five percent of the time I was > on AD's. > > > > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- Abra S Ashleigh aka Abra Cadabra abra@... A journey of a thousand miles begins with but a single step. -- Chinese proverb Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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