Hi Gang,
i am so surprised with the choises a lot make. Many are supposed to take important psychiatric medication, myself included. These medication take anywhere from 6 to 12 weeks to take full effect. And I have seem lots of posting concerning irregular schedules, skipping doses, and even deciding to quit without any discussion of follow-up.
I have been taking Effexor XR 150mg for the past 18 months. At first I thought it was doing diddly squat and missed a dose. WAS I SICK!?! so I spoke to the doctor and I searched the net for more info... Effexor has a half life of 24 to 36 hours and the XR is a little something to slow down the liver from removing the meds from my system (a longer half life). That's why I was sick right away, I missed the 8pm dose and was sick down-town at 3pm.
Depression causes very real physical changes in us. Parts of the brain shrivel up. There is a chemical imbalance that makes to difficult for the brain to function. Yes the medication has side-effects, those that slow down the chemicals from being processed too quickly, slow the rest of the body down... weight gain from a slow metabolism, sleepiness, etc...
I have seen posting of meds being skipped and quit. of couse there are changes in moods and energy. I have seen posting of irregular doses, of course there will be some withdrawl depending on the half-life... I find these bad habits very worrisome. Psychiatric drugs have a big potential but with the very low motivation that depressives have to start with... will the bad habits only make the condition worse? It takes months for the full potential to be reached, so how can we decide to use not use, start stop without the patience to stick with it?
Finally, I think we need to be better educated to help the people around us need a bit more. If we do not know the basis of out illness. If we do not understand our medications how can we expect our families to jump to our rescue? Our meds do not work like anti-biotics that help us in 3 days and get rid of the infection in 7 to 10 days. they are not instantanious like a bronchdialator for and asmathic in crisis of an epipen for anaphaleptic choc.
It is very difficult for me to understand wanting to be better but not knowing how to get there. I was in the dark for a long time about my true illness; but I always sought out help. I always followed the attempts and experiments that werre proposed; art therapie, phobie-zero, meditations, exercises, medications, etc. I now have a vast tool box of self-help items, I have to learn how to apply them once I learn new survival skills.