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Finally Got Put On Meds.

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K-9 Al

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So I finally got an appt with the head shrink on base. He is the only one in the mental health section that can prescribe medication. I have been put on effexor xr venlafaxine (anxiety/depression) Lunesta (for sleep, but heard it doesnt help for nightmares) and in 2-3 weeks going to be adding welbutrin to help with quiting smoking and depression stuff.

I understand that SSRIs work "better" I am kind curious about the SNRI I am taking.

Does anyone have any experience with any of these meds? If so, did they help?
 
Mate, different meds work differently on different people. Right now as I have lost over 20 lbs, my whole physiology has changed, so I might have to change my meds.
I have been on SSRI's though for the last 5 years, and different ones.

Anthony might be able to offer advice on SSRI's v SNRI's
 
I ain`t been on meds for almost 1year, but I need to get back to my doc for something to get me sleeping again.

Sorry that I can`t help ya out on this one Al mate.
 
I've tried a few SSRIs, some made me crap all the time and others I couldnt crap at all, as for the PTSD, they seemed pretty good. Now I'm on Venlafaxin max dose and it's working ok. At least I can shit :) Each med affects every individual different.

Good luck and don't be afraid to ask for a change if what they've prescribed isn't working.
 
Medication is a crap shoot at the best of times. Its trial and error, hit and miss, and not a long term solution to manage PTSD overall at maximum doses.
 
Medication is a crap shoot at the best of times. Its trial and error, hit and miss, and not a long term solution to manage PTSD overall at maximum doses.

I see your statement above and have this for you.

Mate, It has been 5 years now since I was put on medication, and it changes all the time. I go to regular therapy and try to work on my traumas. I have also under guidance tried to reduce the amount of medication I am on, but it leaves me ready to tear everyone's heads off.

I also know some Nam vets who have been on one form of medication for the last 20 years, why??

So would it be fair to say that some people will be resigned to the fact that they will be on medication the rest of their lives???

I know once I move out of Townsville, away from Super Hornets, C17's, Bushmasters, and people in uniform everywhere, it will make a difference, and I know once my children have all grown up and we are living a solitary life it will reduce even more stress, so then I may be able to reduce medication, but what guarantee is there??
 
It has been 5 years now since I was put on medication, and it changes all the time. I go to regular therapy and try to work on my traumas. I have also under guidance tried to reduce the amount of medication I am on, but it leaves me ready to tear everyone's heads off.
Some people may be on medication their entire life. Some won't. Some may need it at stressful points within their life only.

The first thing every veteran must understand is that healing trauma will be the most difficult thing you ever do in your life. Its not about just talking about it. Far from it actually. Its about finding resolution to what distresses you, then applying that answer into your life. Change takes time, and especially when you are trying to change things that are useless in society, yet your brain has accepted as required due to it saving your life in combat. Vast difference between the two.

Then you have people who hold onto their military. People go past soldiers, yell out "put your hat on" and so forth... all signs that a person hasn't let go of their past. If you're no longer in the military, then you must let it go and become a civilian to truly understand how to heal. The only thing that makes a soldier feel better with PTSD is by putting them back within the very hostile environment that their brain is used to in order to function.

but what guarantee is there??
There are no guarantee's with mental health and well-being. Every single person is their own best and worst enemy. That may sound blaming, but its true. I am my own best and worst enemy at times. I am responsible for me and my health, nobody else. If I do something that is hurting me, then I must change me, I must let go, I must adapt.

I have mates who sit around the RSL, pub, etc, drink heavily, talk military BS constantly... all been out of the military for years, yet they just cannot let go of it. They wonder why they're still haunted... because they refuse to move beyond their past and history, and continuously and intentionally try to relive it, as though they're still in the military. Its behaviour... and behaviour is hard to change. If you sat in the pub often during the military, talking military, then you either change that behaviour or not.

One of the starting points to healing trauma is shifting past denial. Denial is broad, it encompasses quite a vast and expanse realm of possibilities.

Just working with veterans helping them with PTSD, having PTSD yourself, is enough to keep you within that military mindset if you aren't strong enough to change and say no, showing others you are no longer military, you don't live military now, you are civilian with a military past and combat experience.

There are veterans, especially from Vietnam, who live and function because they bought land, built defenses, tunnels, etc... they replicated their hostile environment, which allows them to function. Put them in a shopping center to choose which cereal and they have no idea.

Moral of the story... people deal with trauma and their military past uniquely. Whether its healthy or not is debatable, but each person finds their unique comfort zone. If that comfort zone is not helping you, instead only hindering you, then you need to change your decisions and choices.
 
I am in a bad way, I am going to the Vet Center for counseling and it (the bastard within) seems to getting worse. The nightmares have increased. Currently I don't have a disability rating as I was trying to keep my diagnosis "off the books". I have had many tell me that a disability rating wont affect my employ yet I do know otherwise. The chance of a PTSD vet staying sober is very low.
I am in the medical field and and we can ask what drugs you are taking before employ. From the list of drugs you put down it is very easy for me to assess what a person has. I have made decisions on this alone to call off an interview. Do you want your ICU nurse taking lortab before she/he starts their shift. ( she needs it for back pain)
The factors that enter this are innumerable. The drug screen prevents the lies on those things that affect performance. I am anti drug in many ways but here I am.
I need to sleep I am not getting any good rest my anxiety is through the roof most day's I can just sit still and take my pulse by just feeling my heart beating in my chest. I just asked my employer to take me off the schedule for a while till I mellow. Thinking time away from the Vet Center and work would help me deescalate would be all I needed yet that hasn't proven true. It has been two weeks.
My wife pleaded for me in tears to get some help, I just am out of options.
I have been debating checking into a local hospital just to help me come down. or at least get my symptoms under control.
Currently I am much conflicted. I want help now but I have to go back to the military to get it. I cant afford a shrink on the outside.
My wife's pleading has me concerned because she and my children are the only reason I am not drinking right now. She seems near break point. Man I am rambling
The question I have is do the drugs work short term? To this date I have not taking a benzo even though they have been prescribed to me. I fear the starting of a new addiction, and that seems it would only compound my problems. My wife is a nurse she wants me to take the drugs and get help beyond the vet center what are your opinions on this.
File for disability get help military? How long would this take on average?
Go in get help Civi -side?
Drugs or no drugs to bring you down?
so many variables but right now I am past caring about consequences.
 
Kevin, at one point you're going to have to make a decision. Addiction to a drug or the full fury of the beast. The VA was giving me no drugs to really treat my PTSD, so the beast completely destroyed my career. And you can come off a drug but you can't just come off PTSD. If you can take the drug, keep your job and benefit from the love and care of your family, what's more important?

As a side note, I was addicted to one of the most difficult drugs to kick, oxycodone, and when the VA refused to treat me anymore, I weaned myself off them. It was uncomfortable, but I did it. Your choice.

Sarg
 
Kevin, maybe something that reduces the background noise of anxiety would help. And I mean assistance, not reliance on. I know from my own experience it was enough to let me start working things out with a helpful reduction in the physical symptoms. You are allowed to have anxiety and you are allowed to get something for it. I understand your fears, I had them, but they evaporated when I went to the doctor's and got something that worked. No detrimental effect on my job, either. Something needed fixing so I did..........
 
Kevin, the problem with Benzo's is the body used to them and like all the benzo's, you might have to up the dosage in a few months or more. Anthony spoke on one of his threads and mentioned that he is on a low level of Valium like 2 mg twice a day. Its enough to take away the anxiety, but does not affect functionality.

I am on Xanax for when I have bad anxiety, but I don't have anxiety every day, but when it hits, wham!!!!, it knocks me around. I am on .5 mg of that and that has only just been increased from .25 mg.
Its something about the receptors in the old brain of ours. So every now and then I come off them for a few months, usually when things are travelling right. I am on them now as chaos is ruling supreme with the silly season.

Benzo's are not all addictive, if you manage them right. Being in the medical field and having a wife who can monitor them, should give you a bit of an assistance.
On the short term side of things mate, if you put yourself on medication and then seek therapy to find what has caused the bastard to come out and then deal with it, you may not have to be on medication permanently.

In the long run though mate, its all your choice.

Just my opinion
 
What with the last couple of months being a right bastard, I eventualy made an appointment with my Psychiatrist. Was allmost 45 minutes with her.

She has now put me back on medication for the first time in about 3 years. Mirtazapin can`t say I have heard of it so we will see tonight and in the next few days what happens.

All I know is that some common side affects are
1: Constipation. Hmm that should help with the Chronic shits
2: Vivid, Bizzare, Lucid dreams or nightmares. This one should be intresting

some Rarer side effects are
1: Agitation, Restlessness, Irritability and Aggression. OK this is just getting better
2: Nocturnal emissions. The misses is gonna love that
3: Spontaneous orgasm. ?! WTF Where the f*ck did this twat come from

Kinda scary when you consider I was telling her I can`t sleep or relax at the moment and am on constant alert looking for a scrap with any f*cker who just happens to be breathing within a 5 mile radius of yours truly.

Any one out there, or in here for that matter, had dealings with Mirtazapin

I wonder if I could drop a couple into the misses`s drink, just to see if nr.3 does actually happen.
 
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