azurelunatic: "Sanity" St. John's Wort flower.  (St. John's Wort)
Azure Jane Lunatic (Azz) 🌺 ([personal profile] azurelunatic) wrote2009-05-28 12:42 am

Yeah, I've been there.

Something somewhere said reminded me of the meds battle.

So you're depressed, right, and you wind up on meds (for me it's St. John's Wort, for others it can be something else) and you take them and take them and one day you're just living your life and out of the blue you notice hey! you're happy! where did this come from? your life almost feels ... normal!

And you realize, looking back on it, how very much of your personal mental clutter you have worked your way through, that all of those things that bothered you back when you were unmedicated and unhappy, you know how to deal with those now, and things are really not as bad as they were.

So you drop the damn meds (or you taper them, if you're on the hard stuff; I hear brainbuzzes are not funtimes, and if it's the thing where your head zaps like you're turning on an oldschool monitor, then no not at all; I had those in high school) and maybe you convince yourself that you know, you were just going through a hard patch. You don't really need drugs to cope with real life. You were weak, but you can handle it just fine now that you have got all these shiny new skills.

And you sail along without the meds and you're doing just fine. And then either BAM! life hits you out of the fucking blue, and one of those situations comes up and you're down for the count! -- or maybe you're sailing along with each day not much different from the last, and you're living your life and out of the blue you realize that god damn you are MISERABLE -- or even that it's not quite that you're miserable, but you ... just can't seem to remember the last time it was that you were happy.

Maybe this isn't the first time.

And you pick up that bottle again, and you hate yourself a little, but you take them. Day in, day out. And gradually, life starts to sail on again, and the black cloud, or the gray fog, starts to lift. Or there's a way to climb out of the hole. And life is good again, until you realize that hey, perhaps you don't need those meds, since you're doing so well...
1_mad_squirrel: (Default)

[personal profile] 1_mad_squirrel 2009-05-28 02:59 pm (UTC)(link)
It sounds like you're being really hard on yourself. Depression isn't a character flaw. I'm sure you know it's a chemical imbalance. I doubt you'd get down on yourself if you were a type 1 diabetic and your body had trouble producing insulin. You'd just take the meds you needed to take to correct the situation. It might help to think of it that way.

* hugs *
devon: from LARP attack - see 08jul2005 on my LJ (Default)

meds

[personal profile] devon 2009-05-28 04:56 pm (UTC)(link)
Oh, I never stop taking meds. I have had to switch when certain meds stopped working or gave me terrible side effects, but I learned at least 10 years ago that going off meds is a terrible idea for me. I could be fine for 6-12 months, but it's really unpredictable. And being on the meds doesn't hurt me, so I just take them every day like my multivitamin because they improve my life.
triadruid: Apollo and the Raven, c. 480 BC , Pistoxenus Painter  (Default)

[personal profile] triadruid 2009-05-29 10:18 pm (UTC)(link)
Practice, practice, practice.

The more habit-forming the act of taking it is, the easier it will become, but it won't happen overnight (or even over a year).
cleverthylacine: a cute little thylacine (Default)

Re: meds

[personal profile] cleverthylacine 2009-05-30 09:46 am (UTC)(link)
It helps me to remember that if I'm happy and stable, the meds are doing their job. I think of it as being little different from diabetes. And if the side effects are problematic I talk to the doc and we change them around.
triadruid: Apollo and the Raven, c. 480 BC , Pistoxenus Painter  (Default)

[personal profile] triadruid 2009-05-30 03:55 pm (UTC)(link)
My ex used to tie it to getting up and peeing in the morning, whenever that first time was (that's a little dependent on how time-sensitive your dosages are, but from what you're saying it doesn't sound very).
ephemera: celtic knotwork style sitting fox (Default)

[personal profile] ephemera 2009-05-31 04:24 pm (UTC)(link)
oh, I hear you. I so hear you. **hand squeezes**
ranunculus: (Default)

Re: meds

[personal profile] ranunculus 2009-06-03 01:31 am (UTC)(link)
Having just taken my second allergy pill of the day....
You are -so- not alone in this struggle. I think lots of us are taught from a very early age that we should just "suck it up and keep going" which is very helpful if you need to finish that hike out of the canyon before it gets dark, and you are tired and a bit hurt. The attitude itself isn't at all helpful when we are a bit glum, can't think quite straight and so forth.

It has helped me a good deal to have my partners -tell- me when they think I'm not doing well. Somehow it makes it more "real". M is very sweet about it he doesn't say "you look like hell and have no energy" he says "you look very impacted today".

Oh, and HI welcome to the Bay Area!
ext_78: A picture of a plush animal. It looks a bit like a cross between a duck and a platypus. (Default)

[identity profile] pne.livejournal.com 2009-05-28 09:04 am (UTC)(link)
I wonder whether a journal helps for that kind of thing... so that you can look back and correlate "times I was happy" with "times I was taking my meds" on the one hand, and "times I was miserable" with "times I had gone off them", and put one and one together, and make a considered decision whether to go off them again this time or not.

[identity profile] ladyofthelog.livejournal.com 2009-05-28 09:16 am (UTC)(link)
It's a heartbreaking and deceptive lure, the thought of wellness when you have a chronic health problem of any kind.

I haven't had this experience with bipolar meds, but bipolar is also not one of those things you really want to do without meds, ever, no matter how stable you feel.
moniqueleigh: (Acceptance)

[personal profile] moniqueleigh 2009-05-28 09:30 am (UTC)(link)
That describes exactly what (my, as opposed to your) JD experiences. He hates being on meds, but he desperately needs them. Add in the recent death of a beloved uncle (who did more to raise him than the actual father-type being), the illness of that uncle's wife, & the current financial insanity. Yeah.... My poor love. At this point, he's considering electro-shock but is worried about the potential memory loss, etc.
pauamma: Cartooney crab wearing hot pink and acid green facemask holding drink with straw (Default)

[personal profile] pauamma 2009-05-28 11:07 am (UTC)(link)
Yay for self-awareness?
ext_10: books and tea (Default)

[identity profile] marcelle42.livejournal.com 2009-05-28 11:38 am (UTC)(link)
I know we don't know each other, but I had a family member go through electro-shock. It was a godsend. He had a little memory loss, generally of the few hours before the procedure. Since it's a procedure that's done repeatedly over time, he quickly learned not to do anything of import over those few hours. Other than that.... it helped a LOT, and he got to be completely off meds for a while, which, for him, was amazing. It's not One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, or anything like that at all. Which is not to say it's not a serious procedure, or that it's right for your JD. Just that it's not as scary and awful as a lot of people make it sound.

Good Luck!
ext_10: books and tea (Default)

[identity profile] marcelle42.livejournal.com 2009-05-28 11:44 am (UTC)(link)
I guess I'm a minority in the way I feel about medication. I don't mind it at all, and don't have any real desire to get off it. I'm happy to be on it, just because I'm so happy to feel better (and this is some three years into taking it). I mean, it would be cheaper to not take it, but... I take meds for my allergies. I take meds for my thyroid. I'm taking pills every day of my life, whether I'm on anti-depressants or not. Meanwhile, I went 10 years with untreated anxiety and depression. The pills gave me my life back.

But I see a lot of people saying, "I know I feel crappy, but I don't want to rely on some pill," with enormous contempt, like they're going to become addicted to narcotics. Or, else, the much less angry, "I'm feeling so much better, I think I'll stop taking these pills." I just... I don't feel any desire to give them up, especially. But I think most folks don't agree with me.

[identity profile] betweenthebliss.livejournal.com 2009-05-28 12:54 pm (UTC)(link)
i was in a relationship for two years with someone who went through that cycle over and over again-- and she was on meds for stuff way worse than just depression, so when she stopped taking them (somehow always without mentioning she was doing so) things would get really, really bad. so now in my own medicinal life (i take sam-E for mood stuff, thinking about adding st. john's to it) i find it's good to have that to look back on, to remind myself that i take them for a reason. >.>;;;

[identity profile] betweenthebliss.livejournal.com 2009-05-28 12:57 pm (UTC)(link)
myself, i got really tired of changing meds all the time, b/c every prescription antidepressant i went on had side effects that really made them not worth the compensation (ie: needing to sleep 11 hours a day (celexa), having no sex drive (prozac), being high strung and unable to fall asleep (zoloft)) so now i'm on a more natural/supplement style mood booster, and it is amazing the difference it makes. it's really easy to remember to take a pill when you don't have to dread the side effects. also yes, taking four other supplements a day helps, lol. i just put it in that little daily pill case and it's just another vitamin. XD

[identity profile] maidenus.livejournal.com 2009-05-28 02:53 pm (UTC)(link)
Story of my life! Only I haven't gone back on the meds in a few years because I've found that using a lamp which creates natural lighting helps more - and has less horribe side-effects.

[identity profile] betweenthebliss.livejournal.com 2009-05-28 03:36 pm (UTC)(link)
yeaaaaahh tell me about it. took me a long time to realize that it was just never going to end no matter how long i stayed with her and tried to help her get help, but thankfully i did finally realize. >.>;;; but it has definitely helped me not fall into the trap myself-- which i would definitely be prone to otherwise.

[identity profile] starbrow.livejournal.com 2009-05-28 04:37 pm (UTC)(link)
I'm, frankly, really cynical about medication for myself, partly because Prozac FUCKED ME UP, partly because I don't see how taking a happy pill is going to make me not hate myself and want to die.
moniqueleigh: (Acceptance)

[personal profile] moniqueleigh 2009-05-28 05:15 pm (UTC)(link)
And mine for you. *hugs*

It's good to hear (read) another perspective on this sometimes. It really helps me know what to say/do when he starts another cycle. I admit that I was pretty clueless at first. I go through my own cycles certainly, and there were absolutely periods where I could've gone suicidal had certain people (notably my mother) not noticed & stepped in to nudge me another direction. But mine have never been as... deep-seated as to need medication. So, initially, my reactions were fairly basic: "You need this. Take it. Stop being an idiot." Now those are tempered with "You know, you seem to consistently feel better when you take this. Perhaps experimentation (under the guidance of somebody qualified!) to find a better cocktail/dosage/whatever would be better than stopping cold-turkey without even informing your doctor?"

So. Thank you for sharing your experiences. You've helped more than you know.
moniqueleigh: 2yo brunette caucasion child sleeping (Sleepy Madi 02/24/2008)

[personal profile] moniqueleigh 2009-05-28 05:20 pm (UTC)(link)
Ooo, thank you! May I share this info with him? He's been seriously worried about forgetting major events & such.
ext_10: books and tea (Default)

[identity profile] marcelle42.livejournal.com 2009-05-28 05:28 pm (UTC)(link)
Of course you may. Though, of course, I am not a doctor, so YMMV.

They also sedate the patients before the procedure now, so it's no longer such traumatic thing. My relative would go very early in the morning, and then maybe not be able to tell us what he did the night before. Which... y'know, sometimes I don't really know what I did the night before, either ;) (waste it away messing about on the Internet, most likely) Nothing like "gee, I don't remember my best friends or my wedding" or anything like that.

Long-term serious depression is such a bear to treat. I hope you all find the right solution.

[identity profile] kestrelct.livejournal.com 2009-05-28 08:02 pm (UTC)(link)
I feel the same way. I had years of untreated depression before I finally "came out" about it and got on meds, and the difference in my life is radical. I have zero interest in going back to that, and I have no illusions that my state now is due to anything else than the meds.

Part of it could be that I don't think of the meds as changing who I am, but as bringing me up to normal -- I really do think of it like it were a lifelong physical-health drug. I wouldn't stop taking my insulin if I were diabetic and felt better. I am of the opinion that I get depressed primarily because of a neurochemical imbalance, not because of anything I do or think (though those certainly can affect it). So medication only makes sense.