Linasmom, I will try and answer your question the best I can (I don't know how to take portions out like you did). As I am not here to argue, just to share my experience and my knowledge. Yet, one must remember we all have different experiences and we are from all over the world, and certain things are looked at differently. There are many out there who do not believe addiction is a disease, that it is a choice. I live with that. As I also live with individuals that believe that I should be able to walk out my front door with no fear.
Addiction represents harmful, long term chemical changes in the brain that can lead to tolerance, physical dependence, and uncontrollable cravings. However, the symptoms we feel coming off antidepressants, the anxiety, sadness, depression, headaches, dizziness, nausea, vomiting and diarrhea are all very real. As I have experienced them. They also will sometimes last months and are horrible!
Tritating off very slowly helps with the withdrawal symptoms.
Wow, now I'm really confused! Sooooooo, the withdrawal symptoms are very real but it's not considered an "addiction"? Is it because one does not experience "uncontrollable cravings" for an antidepressant like they would a benzo (a "feel good" drug)? Because all of the other "representations" you listed for addiction also apply to antidepressants.
Yes, that is it. It does not have those cravings that are uncontrollable, the one thing that makes it different. I never stole money from my family to get more effexor. Although that was a quite common occurrence when I was using benzo's & opiates.
Do you also know that the anti-depressant Effexor, does the same thing - it creates a tolerance requiring larger and larger dosages which is why a lot of people taking this drug end up maxing out on it at 300 mg. As for feelings of "well being", hmm, that's a bit subjective but okay. Do anti-depressants not create that feeling as well? In my own experience they do. I've described in an earlier post the difference between the two drugs and their specific sensations.
I was on effexor. I know this. Yet, as I stated before there are none of the cravings. Yes, you are correct for some people anti-depressants do create a feeling of well being. I used the word "well being" for my own use of ativan.,as it calms my anxiety. I have been on many combinations of anti-depressants and nothing has worked with me. Peter Levine mentions in "Waking the Tiger" that many with PTSD have a difficult time with medications because their nervous systems are frozen in a panic state. So for some the anti-depressants just have no effect.
As far as Anti-depressant they are not considered addictive substances.
By Whom??
I have heard it from many professor’s in different classes throughout my years in school. I have to take a pharmacology class every two years for continuing education to keep my degree. As I take these at UCLA where they have research doctors teaching I trust what they say. Also having been on this myself, I have experienced the differences. Hence the reason I rarely take the ativan.