Wardy's twin
Well-known member
- Oct 21, 2014
- 8,866
I take Citalapram and often wonder about coming off them but if they aren’t doing me any long term damage I don’t see the point.
same with me....
I take Citalapram and often wonder about coming off them but if they aren’t doing me any long term damage I don’t see the point.
My GP has left it to me to decide and in the absence of side effects (other than weight gain & tiredness) I have decided to continue with them but at a much lower rate and the weight gain and sleepiness are greatly reduced.
You’re evidently quite angry, plus what you’ve subsequently decided to share shows you’ve not had the easiest times with mental health. I hope you manage to find some peace, get help needed and/or perhaps lashing out on NSC helps too. Better here to a stranger than otherwise. Stay safe, be kind to yourself and others too. Life’s a bit short for anything else.
Was originally on Sertraline then moved on to Venlafaxine, with the upcoming arrival of the first Grandchild and my staged retirement, I made the conscious effort in early July after speaking to my GP to come off them, went down to half dose for a month to start with, tomorrow marks a full two weeks without any drugs.
Apart from the aforementioned reasons another factor was a couple of doom merchants told me I would probably always have to take them, which wasn’t an option.
Has anyone else on here done a similar thing?
And do you have any observations or pointers?
Clearly it’s a very personal thing, so if anyone prefers to PM me instead, that’s fine.
In the main, despite the unprecedented national circumstances recently, it’s been all good, doing lots of walking, couple of anxious moments but that’s part of life, one of the things my Doc told was to remove all the deadwood from my life but that takes a bit of time
Thank you for reading.
Harty
Was originally on Sertraline then moved on to Venlafaxine, with the upcoming arrival of the first Grandchild and my staged retirement, I made the conscious effort in early July after speaking to my GP to come off them, went down to half dose for a month to start with, tomorrow marks a full two weeks without any drugs.
Apart from the aforementioned reasons another factor was a couple of doom merchants told me I would probably always have to take them, which wasn’t an option.
Has anyone else on here done a similar thing?
And do you have any observations or pointers?
Clearly it’s a very personal thing, so if anyone prefers to PM me instead, that’s fine.
In the main, despite the unprecedented national circumstances recently, it’s been all good, doing lots of walking, couple of anxious moments but that’s part of life, one of the things my Doc told was to remove all the deadwood from my life but that takes a bit of time
Thank you for reading.
Harty
Good thread. I've always suffered from low mood, put it partly down to just my personality (I enjoy a lot of things but normally from the edges, it's just the way it's always been) and inherited (my mum has big issues). Did have a crisis of stress (a combo, as it always is, of stress from a best man speech at the same time as a failing relationship coming to a head and a hell of a lot of work stress with the CQC at same time as staff man-management issues). Tried a combo of setraline, mindful cbt and dog walking which helped a lot. I thought it was the combination of all 3 at the time but in retrospect I think it was mostly the setraline. Anyway came off too soon (gave myself 12 months, silly restriction I put on myself). Then was made redundant just before covid and elderly parent illness and decline since has meant I'm only just back to doing a bit of part time work. During lockdown I did try the setraline again but unlike the first time i had side effects (mostly lethargy, which really didn't help me at all) and no positive effect at all oddly this time so.... i just stopped them, probably stupidly. But the GPs were only phone consultations and barely got 5 minutes with a different one each time. I've been toying on going back on them but I can't continue stop start stop start and I generally have a mistrust of them really so continue to try other things (maybe unwisely).
As mentioned above I've tried the wim hof methods - I lurve a cold shower and do the breathing but it hasn't had much affect disappointingly, although i do continue. I eat healthily and when i exercise (i've just done 20 mins on the ski trainer) I realise after I feel much better. Must do more. I have a bad knee though so it does limit my exercise nowadays, but the positive effects of something physical should really not be underestimated.
Currently, I'm trying a vitamin b6 supplement as there was a positive study on this vitamin and it's effect on depression and anxiety, if of any interest to anyone.
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/hup.2852
Again though, no change to me yet haha. Sometimes I just think this is who I am, just accept it.
sorry for the ramble but yeah I'm still pondering whether to go back on ad's so it's an interesting thread.
Full respect to you Lenny, for having a damn good go at getting off the anti-depressants and I'm sure you'll succeed pal. What have you felt like in the time you were on them and now coming off fully? When I first started taking paroxetine they were bloody awful. It felt like there was a fog in my head and I lost my libido completely in my mid-twenties. Very frustrating so I stopped taking them after six months. The only withdrawal was electric shocks-like going off in my head. It's hard to explain but once they stopped and I got off them it was such a relief. I now take mirtazapine which act as a sleeping drug and have no nasty side-effects. I've been on them for over ten years and without them I don't know what I'd do. Just one tablet before bed. The reason I started taking anti-depressants was heavy ecstasy use when I was younger which knocked all the serotonin out of my head.
If you don't mind me asking, how well do you get on with your doctor? Do you feel that they devote enough time to what you feel is the best thing going forward? The pressures on NHS doctors are crippling but last week my GP was as good as gold for an urgent blood test. Follow-up was good and she really did her best for me. Quite hot too! She's just started so I requested that I really want her to be my doctor now as my current one at Northlands Wood is soon to retire.
I found a change of diet was as good as an anti-depressant. More fruit and vegetables- even the ones I weren't keen on like spinach! But bananas truly are the best. It's no coincidence you see tennis players get through them like smarties at Wimbledon and all the other tournaments.
Really pleased for you that you're going to be a grandfather! I also hope you have a very happy and long retirement. So the crux of my message is do what you really feel is right for you. If you feel like you need help then look into mirtazapine. Quite a few people I've met over the years at work or other places have taken them to help them out. I have the utmost faith in you that you'll succeed in achieving your goal. I'm sure your family will support you every step of the way.
Best wishes and be kind to yourself.
Thanks to all who have posted on this thread also the mental health one to which I have also these comments - the phrase "a problem shared is a problem halved" springs to mind.
I have been on anti depressants for the past 12 or so years - Citalopran initially but recently changed to Sertraline which seems to help.
My main issue is "catastrophising" - basically worrying about things that mostly never happen. Youngest is off to Uni shortly, oldest is quite content (currently) to stay at home, studying and working a few days a week. Both good girls but am not looking forward to an "empty nest" in the not too far distant future. I am trying to exercise at the gym which seems to help.
I wish you all well with your own issues and hope for a good run of results to cheer us all up!
I've been catastrophizing for a couple of years now, can't stand crowds anymore, don't really enjoy going anywhere as I'm convinced something bad will happen. One of the reason's I don't want kids as I think the world's ****ed.Norm thank you for your post.
"Castrophisng", that old Chestnut, easy to say but I hope this helps, (and it does take time)
Try and get out for a walk or on a bike for a good 30 mins or so.
Everytime the catastrophy comes into your mind, think of red brick wall.
Then when you get home, sit in a quiet room and just right down all the pros and the cons, possibilities and probabilities, and more often than not you will realise you are worrying about either nothing or something you cannot have any bearing or effect on.
He was the most meek looking man when I first encountered him, but my Counsellor said to me "Ian, if you cannot physically change a situation yourself, or it has no bearing or impact on you, your family or your real friends, f****** bin it off, its simply not worth worrying about"
And since he said that too me a few months ago, I've implemented this edict several times and it works.
Good luck and take care old boy.