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My First Real Panic Attack

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EvenStrongerNow

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Hey guys, I haven't been here in a few months. I know I posted a little bit about it back then, but I went back to the Psychiatrist and told him I wanted off of risperdal because it was completely blunting my emotions and caused me to go into a deep depression.

He told me I could just quit taking it even though I was on it for four months. Well, within 24 hours, I experienced my first real panic attack. I actually thought I was going to die. It felt like my brain was going to detach from itself and I was afraid of what I might do to myself. Also, I started thinking about how we are all going to die someday and I freaked out. I've never thought about my own mortality before in such a deeply dark way. My husband realized how irrational I sounded and was smart enough to go get me a half of a dose of risperdal. Within 30 minutes, I was stabilized.

I went to the emergency room. The doctor there was shaking her head that a Psych would tell someone to stop taking an antipsychotic cold turkey. She explained to me that what I had was a panic attack--"your symptoms are textbook", that I wasn't going to die and that it was completely normal given the withdrawal. She wrote down a tapering method and gave me ativan to help with symptoms.

I had a really long and hard road the first couple of months. I was down to 108 lbs because I couldn't eat, couldn't sleep and I feared the thoughts which set off the panic attack for a long while. I finally was able to get completely off of the risperdal and then I suffered some withdrawals getting off of the ativan. I was terrified of everything, even seeing the elderly around me because it reminded me of what I experienced. It was pretty traumatic.

I was determined though. I forced myself to get dressed and got out and walked every day, sometimes three or four times a day to keep the anxiety at bay, I talked to my family every single day, and I forced myself to go somewhere in the car to be around people in some public place every day. When the feelings of panic came over me, I didn't run. I self talked and made myself keep going. I made myself eat even if I could only stomach milk shakes, bottles of Boost, fruit smoothies with protein powder...and comfort foods...I just ate whatever was appealing to me.

Anyway, I have gained weight again, my menstrual cycle (it was absent for almost 12 months) returned finally and I am feeling better than I have in a very long time. Facing my own mortality at such a young age (even though it was just a panic attack) taught me a lot of things, one of them being, that I never want to go back to isolating myself from the outside world ever again.

I am never going to live in so much fear of being triggered and keep from having a full life ever again. Also, I have reconnected with my faith in a very major way. It has been holding me up, keeping my mental health in a balanced state and I have a completely new perspective on life.

Recently, I had the opportunity to assist my mother in law who was experiencing her first panic attack when we went on vacation to see family. I knew just what to say and was able to bring her down from it. I am very grateful that I knew exactly what it was like...for her...that I could use such a horrifying experience to help somebody else.

So, I just wanted to come here and post to say hello to everyone and also, I hope this story helps someone here.
 
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I had my first real panic attack in a laundry room on base. Looking back. I think I dropped the lid closed on the machine. My Sgt. found me there, an eternity later, just a shaking disaster in a corner. Completely disconnected from the real world. He totally did the ankle/knee/hip/shoulder full on body contact thing. Non threatening. Could lock me down if he needed to, connection if he didn't need to. Just kept repeating "Everything is temporary" until I rejoined the human race & could make out what he was saying. We were there for hours.

Once things were sorted he laughed. First one? Yup. Expect a lot more. Just remember everything is temporary. And you'll learn to deal with them on the fly. Everyone gets them. Won't even slow you down, none. But they'll wipe you out later. Just keep moving.

Everything is Temporary & Just Keep Moving have become something of my life's mantras.
 
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