I can't fully explain what happened to me without breaking down. It was terrifying. And my doctor prescribed them and said, "see you in six months."
By then, I was absolutely certain that everyone around me was involved in a conspiracy to drive me to suicide.
I'm so glad I never took up smoking (even though both my parents smoked), because I suspect I would have had a very hard time quitting. I'm not good at quitting bad habits.
BTW, this is a pretty cool graphic comparing OWS and the Tea Party, although I wish it had better demographic analysis:
[link]
And my doctor prescribed them and said, "see you in six months."
WTF?
My doc always makes me see him or call him in a month to see how the new med is doing. He'd also tell me the most common side-effects and to call him if they were bad. I had assumed that was standard practice.
Wow. I'm on Wellbutrin right now merely because it was the only AD I could remember when I told my GP I needed some medication help with my moods. I'm careful to take it early so it doesn't affect my ability to fall asleep, and my motivation has clearly improved, but nothing dramatic--either positively or negatively. No extra energy, no increased libido, no rage, no noticeable impact on the insomnia. It's just that things aren't as molasses bleak and hard to untangle myself from anymore.
As for my memory, I have no idea if I have one or not. So there's that. I wouldn't know
what
to start blaming it on.
I'm fine with Wellbutrin. Effexor, however, made me think more and more about strangling everyone who annoyed me. I thought that ultimately that would be a bad thing.
My hair dryer worked yesterday. Why doesn't it work today?
I wish I had any understanding of what's wrong with my brain, why I can't get out of bed some days, why I will find myself waking up crying with no memory of why.
But the medication has never made things actually better. Only more dull, with an inability to turn a phrase or enjoy music fully. I've come to the conclusion that I'd rather have some bad episodes that might last a few months and have the rest of the year be full of a life I can truly enjoy.
Yeah, obviously, mileage varies hugely w/r/t psych meds. I wasn't being serious about the recommendation, although it worked spookily well for me, in that respect. I no longer got pleasure out of smoking and just looked at cigarettes the way a non smoker does-- they weren't desirable anymore.
I do wonder if I could have ever been a writer or accomplished some of the things I've been able to do without the illness, or if my life would be significantly different/better if my brain wasn't an oozing sore.
Every time I think I have a grasp on it, something happens to prove I don't have a clue.