My Energizer brain, whether powered by hormones or just the ongoing weirdness that is, well, my brain, won't let me get sleepy again. I'll have to resort to my sedative of choice soon, Buffy the Vampire Slayer. It has no undesirable side effects, and I can "go off of it" whenever I want to.
I got into it when I was first sick, and there has always been something about it that helps quiet and focus my mind when other techniques fail me. There has been many a night in the past four years when I've only been able to fall asleep with it on. Maybe it's because the house and the "family" and the coping with extremely bizarre and often scary challenges in a humorous way all seem comfortingly familiar. I know what it is to live on a Hellmouth.
I first learned that I had Serotonin Syndrome when, after all my neurologist and psychiatrist shrugging sessions, I found the Mayo Clinic website actually has a Q&A forum. I wrote in, describing my various symptoms, and the circumstances under which they developed, and the doctor who was doing the forum said "Serotonin Syndrome" with an implied "duh" at the end. (I still have the emails). He naturally said I needed to consult with my doctors for an accurate diagnosis, but at that point I was inclined to take his word for it. I learned that Serotonin Syndrome can actually be fatal, and I had to acknowledge that at least I'd survived. The thing is that, even now, anything that stimulates Serotonin is still problematic for me, even sex. Sex has always made me stay awake a bit longer than my husband (the natural difference between the way women and men respond), but since 2003 I have to be really careful about when I "do it" or I'm up all night. Since I still prefer evening sex, it complicates the matter even further. If I'm actually stupid enough to eat chocolate and have sex on the same night, I can pretty much guarantee a heart roller coaster. At least then I know the cause, unlike all those nights when I have an episode for no apparent reason at all.
I'm still pondering the many drugs that people go through, trying to find the right one, and I feel it's worth noting that -- from where I stand -- the herbal stuff is just as problematic. Whether it's St. John's wort or Guarine, it all affects me just like the prescription ones do. With the exception of my very brief attempt to placate Dr. O's ongoing desire to cure me with drugs by taking one dose of Propranolol last month, I've been pretty much chemical free for three years... nothing stronger than Tylenol or Tums. Okay, and occasionally Ibuprofen. Really, on the whole, I think that's a good thing; it's given my system a little time to heal, regenerate, although I still feel like my nerves were just sort of stripped, I'm still so sensitized to so many things. I still can feel the weather changing when a storm front comes in. My husband thinks I'm just being poetic or something, but it is actually a physiological, experiential phenomenon for me... I can feel it coming. Maybe I should just hire myself out as a human barometer.
As for the lawsuit, I was looking up prospects again, and was struck by how many other people are doing the same. One blog comment to that effect had 955 hits, 538 hits on another, etc. Everybody's wondering, but nobody's doing. I can't help feeling a little frustrated by this, not just because none of us underdog formerly/currently depressed/anxious people seems to be able to summon the strength to really get the ball rolling. Either that or there aren't any lawyers out there who will take us "psychos" seriously, or are just afraid they'll have a hard time proving anything in court with such "unstable" clients. Or possibly, on the conspiracy theory end of the spectrum, the pharmaceutical companies have become really good at quashing any potential threats to their hegemony. There are obviously a lot of people who have been adversely affected by this drug, and I'm at a loss as to how it has just managed to fly under the radar. There was even a site that mentioned a teen suicide - you'd think that might garner some attention (not that I want to seem elated by that).
I don't know... just don't get why nobody's suing. Some firm in Oklahoma, I think it was, Caroline, Patel and Something, hung out a promising shingle back in 2005, but apparently nothing came of it. I emailed them and even called them, and the secretary sounded very bored with the whole thing. How far can a suit go with a bored secretary, er, administrative assistant? Where's my Erin Brokovich?
Well, Buffy beckons.
Tuesday, October 30, 2007
A Great Article
Check out this link:
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/06/magazine/06antidepressant-t.html?_r=2&ei=5087%0A&em=
&en=cdeb03773a3deee0&ex=1178596800&pagewanted=all&oref=slogin&oref=slogin
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/06/magazine/06antidepressant-t.html?_r=2&ei=5087%0A&em=
&en=cdeb03773a3deee0&ex=1178596800&pagewanted=all&oref=slogin&oref=slogin
Monday, October 29, 2007
Flashback - Here's a Lower Place
(from a journal entry in March 2004)
I have to write about this because there just isn't anybody to tell anymore. People just get tired of you being miserable, and they just don't want to hear it anymore, but I still have problems, and nobody seems to be able to do anything about it, and sometimes I just don't know how to take it anymore.
Tonight I got up, my body tremoring, my mind racing, and I tried to do some yoga. While I was stretching, my mouth just started producing a lot of saliva, and I couldn't help drooling. When I tried to close my lips to hold in the spit, my mouth started twitching, and I just couldn't control it. Then, when I went to stand up, my bladder just sort of refused to hold it in too. Could I be less dignified?
(from a journal entry in June 2004)
I have this crazy eye twitch that comes and goes. I wish I could joke about it, but it just seems like one more straw on the camel's back. But that final one, really that came a couple of weeks back. Money has been so tight that there hasn't been much fun in the kids' lives, so I scrounged around the house and finally came up with 99 cents to go rent a kid video for them at Hastings. We got there, picked out the video, stood in line, and found out that my husband had got the last movie back late and we had a late fee. I had no money to pay for it. As we walked out of the store, the kids crying because they couldn't see the movie, me crying because I couldn't get a measly 99 cent movie for them, I thought, we must be the most pathetic sight in the world. I just sat with them on the bench in front of the store, all three of us tear-streaked and whimpering, and all I could think was that there was not a soul who would stop and help us out with a two dollar late fee. What a world we live in.
I have to write about this because there just isn't anybody to tell anymore. People just get tired of you being miserable, and they just don't want to hear it anymore, but I still have problems, and nobody seems to be able to do anything about it, and sometimes I just don't know how to take it anymore.
Tonight I got up, my body tremoring, my mind racing, and I tried to do some yoga. While I was stretching, my mouth just started producing a lot of saliva, and I couldn't help drooling. When I tried to close my lips to hold in the spit, my mouth started twitching, and I just couldn't control it. Then, when I went to stand up, my bladder just sort of refused to hold it in too. Could I be less dignified?
(from a journal entry in June 2004)
I have this crazy eye twitch that comes and goes. I wish I could joke about it, but it just seems like one more straw on the camel's back. But that final one, really that came a couple of weeks back. Money has been so tight that there hasn't been much fun in the kids' lives, so I scrounged around the house and finally came up with 99 cents to go rent a kid video for them at Hastings. We got there, picked out the video, stood in line, and found out that my husband had got the last movie back late and we had a late fee. I had no money to pay for it. As we walked out of the store, the kids crying because they couldn't see the movie, me crying because I couldn't get a measly 99 cent movie for them, I thought, we must be the most pathetic sight in the world. I just sat with them on the bench in front of the store, all three of us tear-streaked and whimpering, and all I could think was that there was not a soul who would stop and help us out with a two dollar late fee. What a world we live in.
Finding the Rhythm
I'm still trying to get oriented after last month's illness marathon. Between the strep, the ear infections, the stomach bug and all, the kids and I missed a total of three weeks of school and work. We're all pretty much caught up now, but it seems to take me a little longer than it used to, once upon a time. Trying to get all the plates spinning at the same time again takes some doing, and one of the greatest tragedies of my "damage" is that I always question myself, question if it's just life or something permanently flawed in my brain. I think it must be easier for other people, because they seem to manage more, or seem somehow more heroic in their pathos. Me? I just manage to deal.
I've been surfing a little on the Web, looking at other people's experiences with Effexor. This blog was interesting:
http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/youropinions.php?opinionid=19018&p=2'
I'm perpetually struck by the ongoing pharmaceutical cornucopia that these people have endured, and continue to endure. I suppose I'm lucky in that I don't have much choice anymore about expermenting. I can't even overindulge in chocolate anymore without having pretty immediate consequences (tremors, heart palpitations, moodiness). It promotes clean living, I suppose. I've notices I feel a lot less neurologically fragile when I'm eating a lot of salads and fresh fruit, less fatty and starchy things. And the yoga really is the best thing I've found to quell the occasional intense nights. Would that I could better manage other stressors in my life, but one can only do so much about other people and commitments. It's always a balancing act, isn't it?
Right now I'm having some interesting hormonal craziness... that is to say my cycle is all over the place. The Effexor Event wreaked merry havoc with all my other autonomic functions for a while, but that part of my life had achieved some equilibrium for a change, until recently. Bad ultrasound: Doctor O's talking biopsy, and my husband is freaking out (after all, his Mom died not two years ago from cancer "from the waist down"). I'm feeling strangely detached, sort of clinically wondering what would happen if I had to have surgery and couldn't take pain meds. After all, my last close encounter with Morphine was not a happy memory. Hopefully, it's just something like endometriosis, or I'm just getting old.
Just a reflective note on the causality of my Effexor experience, still fantasizing from time to time about a law suit (sigh). I know that much of the current dysfunction of my brain is caused by the overdose of the Zoloft which I took the day after my withdrawal symptoms kicked in. I know (I'll explain how later) that this caused me to develop a rather pronounced case of "Serotonin Syndrome." But it is significant, and ultimately definitive in my mind, that I never would have overdosed on the Zoloft if I hadn't had such and extreme psychological reaction the the Effexor withdrawals, which -- among other things -- seriously impaired my ability to accurately assess how much medication I ought to be taking. I still think it ought to have a black label. "Warning: withdrawals from this are so severe that you might want to die or kill someone if you stop taking it. Don't." Which of course would be bully for the company because then anyone who started taking it could never stop... endless dinero.
I've been surfing a little on the Web, looking at other people's experiences with Effexor. This blog was interesting:
http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/youropinions.php?opinionid=19018&p=2'
I'm perpetually struck by the ongoing pharmaceutical cornucopia that these people have endured, and continue to endure. I suppose I'm lucky in that I don't have much choice anymore about expermenting. I can't even overindulge in chocolate anymore without having pretty immediate consequences (tremors, heart palpitations, moodiness). It promotes clean living, I suppose. I've notices I feel a lot less neurologically fragile when I'm eating a lot of salads and fresh fruit, less fatty and starchy things. And the yoga really is the best thing I've found to quell the occasional intense nights. Would that I could better manage other stressors in my life, but one can only do so much about other people and commitments. It's always a balancing act, isn't it?
Right now I'm having some interesting hormonal craziness... that is to say my cycle is all over the place. The Effexor Event wreaked merry havoc with all my other autonomic functions for a while, but that part of my life had achieved some equilibrium for a change, until recently. Bad ultrasound: Doctor O's talking biopsy, and my husband is freaking out (after all, his Mom died not two years ago from cancer "from the waist down"). I'm feeling strangely detached, sort of clinically wondering what would happen if I had to have surgery and couldn't take pain meds. After all, my last close encounter with Morphine was not a happy memory. Hopefully, it's just something like endometriosis, or I'm just getting old.
Just a reflective note on the causality of my Effexor experience, still fantasizing from time to time about a law suit (sigh). I know that much of the current dysfunction of my brain is caused by the overdose of the Zoloft which I took the day after my withdrawal symptoms kicked in. I know (I'll explain how later) that this caused me to develop a rather pronounced case of "Serotonin Syndrome." But it is significant, and ultimately definitive in my mind, that I never would have overdosed on the Zoloft if I hadn't had such and extreme psychological reaction the the Effexor withdrawals, which -- among other things -- seriously impaired my ability to accurately assess how much medication I ought to be taking. I still think it ought to have a black label. "Warning: withdrawals from this are so severe that you might want to die or kill someone if you stop taking it. Don't." Which of course would be bully for the company because then anyone who started taking it could never stop... endless dinero.
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