Guest guest Posted June 6, 2002 Report Share Posted June 6, 2002 Was: Safe Drug Doses Eddie White: <I will share a personal experience here. Sometime ago my wife and I were having some problems which prompted a voluntary separation. This led to something I had seldom experienced in my life -- deep depression and an accompanying loss of weight and sleeplessness. My doctor prescribed a ten-day supply of sleep medicine and also gave me some Paxil. The sleep medicine worked fine and my health improved, but the depression on one particular day became very difficult. I took one of the Paxil tablets before bedtime only to awaken a short time later very sick. I was sweating profusely, very nauseated and dizzy. For a short while I thought I might be dying. I recovered several hours later and never took the drug again. I pretty much stuck to an ibuprofen and a Bud-light after that. My point is that I am a very healthy person who generally spurns medications and most supplements and yet I had a very bad experience with one of those quick help drugs that doctors so readily give out. If one is sick then medication may be the only remedy. Often, however, we want that quick fix or easy road which is how we get involved with drugs. Sometimes we just need to be a little more patient, tougher and definitely use better judgement. When you look at the abuse of over the counter supplements and drugs, as well as prescription drugs prevailing in our society how can any of us thumb our noses at athletes who succumb to the temptation of drugs. I always believe in cleaning up my own back yard before I worry about someone else's.> *** Note that anxiolytic (anxiety decreasing) drugs can precipitate fearful depression and conversely, anti-depressants can precipitate anxiety, so that, in cases where one is suffering from " reactive " mood change (which often involves elements of depression, anxiety and other emotional states), the medication can diminish some symptoms, but profoundly worsen or even create others. Thus, when one is very stressed mentally, it is clear that you are trapped somewhere between a rock and a hard place, especially if drugs are being used to help control a perfectly natural, though horrendously disturbing, state of mind. It is very important to use every stress in one's life, no matter how small, as challenge to help us train for the inevitably greater stresses to which we will be exposed in our lives. In a society where children are rarely " failed " at school or allowed to have their self-esteem even slightly dented at sport, school, home or play, or are given medication to handle minor crises, where people take great exception at any of their ideas being slightly questioned, where frivolous legal cases are used to manage stress that many other countries wouldn't even take seriously, where political correctness has gone overboard to protect some exaggerated sensitivities, where psychiatric aid is often sought for things that normal adults should be able to handle for themselves, and where fast-fixing drugs are given little more thought than a packet of French fries, we are setting ourselves up for exceptional susceptibility to stress and gross inability to handle the really major stresses of one's lives. Life is a series of challenges - use those challenges, don't avoid them. You don't develop great strength of body by avoiding physical stress -- similarly, you don't develop great strength of mind by avoiding mental stress. Never ever forget this! If we look at life bluntly - so what!! -- you lost your spouse, you lost your parents, you lost your child, you lost your health, you lost your car ... who has not or will not at some stage of one's life? I continue to lose so much in life, and I loath and despise, wail and lament, every time that it happens, but the underlying understanding of what life is -- and not what I would like it to be -- helps me to continue, because the other side of life is so very rewarding and special. My dear very disabled wife continues to teach me daily about how life can go on fully and lovingly -- and my own miraculous recovery after a near fatal heart attack continues to teach me some very close personal lessons about stress and its management in life. Even then, I know that one day I will be faced with even greater stresses and that my limits are going to be tested to the extreme. I certainly don't look forward to that day and the prospect of it makes me question what life, this planet and all religion is really about, but I just have to accept that is the way it is and that is the way life here is going to be, no matter how much I philosophise and moan about it. All that I can do is not make things worse by adding any further negativities and pains to the experience - and to rely implicitly on better philosophies, faiths, hopes and spiritual depths to see me through those darker moments. Stress, pain and suffering are major characteristics of life on planet Earth and to think otherwise is looking for trouble. Elvis Presley once sang " If you are looking for trouble, you came to the right place... " We came to E arth in some way or another - we sure came to the right place - we really did, as far as trouble is concerned. Yet, in between those troubles are some really ineffable people, friends, families, jobs, joys and loves - revel in them, too, and let them help you cope with stress! Dr Mel C Siff Denver, USA Supertraining/ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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