By ANONYMOUS
I take a pill every day to feel normal.
Over the weekend I forgot to get my prescription refilled and missed my medication for a couple of days. The result is that today I have had that light-headed feeling that you get when you haven’t eaten enough – as well as the sensation of sporadic mild electric shocks. I am experiencing SSRI Withdrawal Syndrome.
“What’s an SSRI?” I hear you ask. It stands for Selective Serotonin Re-uptake Inhibitor – in other words, an anti-depressant.
It’s a pretty serious medication. But it helps me. And at the moment, I’m struggling to imagine my life without it – a dangerous dependency, perhaps but my other options are being too fatigued to get out of bed in the morning and too anxious to even leave my apartment.
Anxiety and depression are a two-headed beast.
I suffered with both throughout high school and university – where I had a very casual fling with anorexia and a serious relationship with self- harm. It all came crashing into one big meltdown when I returned from a year living overseas as part of an exchange program.
I felt like my whole world had been turned upside down. All the friends I’d made, the serious relationship I’d embarked on and a home I’d created – all collapsed and I had to return to my old life as if nothing had happened. This whole other world I’d lived in became just a blip on the radar and the brand new person I’d become was gone. Now I was back at home – it felt as if the whole wonderful experience had been a cruel dream.
Top Comments
Thank you for sharing. I look forward to when your byline is there too. Beautiful writing by the way. I think society is slowly getting there, so I'm hopeful. I do believe the more we talk about it and read stories like yours, the better off we all are.. It creates a greater understanding for those who suffer and those who care for them, their friends, family, workmates etc.
Thanks for your courage and awesome that you're feeling better.
Are you sure we are not the same person? Everything you wrote resonated with me.
Is it Cymbalta you talk of?
I'm currently weaning off it now, attempting to get off it for approx the 7th time. Withdrawing is hell. Pure and utter hell.
I'm tired of being on it (like all the other times). It is finally time to let go and be brave. I'm not living behind the facade anymore. I want to be clean. I think I can safely use the tools on my own now to sustain a fulfilling life.
It is so hard withdrawing though. I'm used to now so the symptoms aren't as frightening. But it is still a nightmare. My only wish is that my doctor told me more about the reality and severity of withdrawal. Apparently it equates to coming off a narcotic.
Like you, hardly anyone in my life knows about it. It's just my secret, and I struggle with the horror of withdrawal alone.
I'm used to it.