Panda Bear
Platinum Member
To start, I got off easy....sorta. My sons psychiatrist, that we've used for about 2.5yrs agreed to take me on as well. She is somewhat familiar to me and not as scary as a complete stranger. But I still had to talk :eek:
Anyways, I learned some very interesting things and wanted to share them with you all.
One, SSRI's...no no! She told me to stay away from them, as well as Welbutrin, Effexor, Cymbalta and the like. I have every f*cking side effect on SSRI's and the withdrawals are pitiful and horrid. She told me they just aren't a match for me and should never be an option.
She described my like this "a brain that is deeply souped in trauma" can be very difficult to treat. The PTSD brain is unforgiving, random and just plain hard to match to the right types of drugs. She also told me "smart brains mixed with that deeply souped trauma can also cause issues". I guess higher intelligence equates to higher rates of side effects and more places and connections in the brain for things to get stuck and lost. The downside to being smart and having a trauma ridden brain? It's a mess in there! I don't consider myself smart.
I will likely always experience harsh side effects from meds, unfortunately. And I do, but always though something was wrong with me. That I needed to try harder to be a friend to pills :tup: turns out my PTSD and trauma brain just doesn't mix with pills. It's common, I Guess?
Last, she hasn't treated may patients with as much "Long term, and layered trauma" as me. So, this is new for her. She isn't scare away, but just upfront. She's only had a few patients with as much exposure as me.
The ball is in my court as far as meds go, she went down a lot of options and why she felt we should try or not try something. I am the deciding factor, she is at my side to support me. She gave me two options that she felt would be a good place to start and they're cued up and ready to when I'm ready.
She was great! Open, honest, empowering, cautious, slow and down to earth.
Anyone have similar experiences?
Anyways, I learned some very interesting things and wanted to share them with you all.
One, SSRI's...no no! She told me to stay away from them, as well as Welbutrin, Effexor, Cymbalta and the like. I have every f*cking side effect on SSRI's and the withdrawals are pitiful and horrid. She told me they just aren't a match for me and should never be an option.
She described my like this "a brain that is deeply souped in trauma" can be very difficult to treat. The PTSD brain is unforgiving, random and just plain hard to match to the right types of drugs. She also told me "smart brains mixed with that deeply souped trauma can also cause issues". I guess higher intelligence equates to higher rates of side effects and more places and connections in the brain for things to get stuck and lost. The downside to being smart and having a trauma ridden brain? It's a mess in there! I don't consider myself smart.
I will likely always experience harsh side effects from meds, unfortunately. And I do, but always though something was wrong with me. That I needed to try harder to be a friend to pills :tup: turns out my PTSD and trauma brain just doesn't mix with pills. It's common, I Guess?
Last, she hasn't treated may patients with as much "Long term, and layered trauma" as me. So, this is new for her. She isn't scare away, but just upfront. She's only had a few patients with as much exposure as me.
The ball is in my court as far as meds go, she went down a lot of options and why she felt we should try or not try something. I am the deciding factor, she is at my side to support me. She gave me two options that she felt would be a good place to start and they're cued up and ready to when I'm ready.
She was great! Open, honest, empowering, cautious, slow and down to earth.
Anyone have similar experiences?