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A Year Off Meds

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This is not a criticism or judgement of the use of antidepressants or other meds in the management of symptoms, nor is it intended as a debate starter of the subject or of the pros and cons of meds. I am a believer in 'if you find something that works for you, use it'. It is just a personal accomplishment for me to be off, and stayed off, meds* for this length of time.

I was on a combination of two SNRIs (mirtazapine and duloxetine) for around three years. I was never particularly happy with my decision to go on them but I do think that, for me, it was a necessary step at the time, and probably the thing that made it possible for me to find my path into therapy. I don't know if I would have been able to motivate myself enough to do that without meds, and no one was going to do it for me. I think at the time I went on them they probably helped to cap my emotions and keep me safer (from myself) than I would have been off them. So I guess they bought me a bit of time to find another way through.

In the longer term though, I didn't feel that the benefits of them, for me, outweighed the more negative effects I experienced from them, and I was feeling more and more that the capping of emotions, that had been necessary initially, was now more of a hindrance than a help and getting in my way in therapy.

Coming off them has been no more of a magical fix than going on them was, but I don't think I am any worse off them than I was on them, and I feel like I have been better able to engage with therapy since I came off. It's possible that that would have been the natural progression of things anyway just based on time and the building of the therapeutic relationship, I don't know. I do know that I am pleased to have been able to take this break from meds to be able to assess where I am at without them.

I'm not sure if it will be a permanent thing. I am a long way from 'fixed' or in a place I am comfortable and there may well be a point in the future where I decide that I have gone as far as I can with therapy and that it wasn't enough. But for now.....ONE YEAR!!!!! :D

*just to add in the last month or so I have been using nytol (diphenhydramine) for sleep to give me a break from chronic insomnia, so when I say 'off meds' I am referring to the antidepressants I was on. Sleep has been an on going problem though throughout.*
 
Congratulations! I believe in whatever works for you - period. I have been through the same thing. I went through a list of meds that didn't work, finally found ones that did, and now I'm off the antidepressants. I still have to take Xanax at night to help me sleep and sometimes, when a very stressful situation is at hand, I will break off a small piece of one to help me get through it, but that it only once in a blue moon. I am proud of being off almost everything and you should be very proud of your accomplishment. If we can go without putting chemicals in our bodies and still be healthy, it's a good thing. Also, if we need them, we need them and shouldn't get off them if it's something that it needed for mental health. I don't judge anyone who's on medications if they are needed. I think some people get off them on their own and shouldn't. It sounds like you made good judgements and have gotten off your meds in a healthy way at a good point in your healing, but you're still open to knowing if you need to get back on them, that may be the best decision too. Anyway, congratulations on being off your meds and staying healthy at the same time. It's a big deal! :-)
 
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