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Old Jun 30, 2014, 09:47 AM
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amandalouise amandalouise is offline
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Member Since: Mar 2009
Location: 8CS / NYS / USA
Posts: 9,171
Quote:
Originally Posted by Jleesey View Post
It was suggested to me that I come here to look for help. I joined today when I was browsing the internet, looking for something that would explain what is happening in my mind. Where better to ask?

I started what I call hallucinating for want of a better word. It is an altered reality. One that I have trouble describing because I want to be completely accurate and clear. I'm afraid that I will be categorized incorrectly if I'm misunderstood.

They started a year ago. It was day 6 in rehab, where I had voluntarily gone to withdraw from suboxone. Against my wishes I was also taken off Klonopin. It felt like I had taken acid. A beautiful choir was singing and the sound came out of the air conditioning vent. I sat on my bed and saw in my minds eye amazing things and had epiphanies that I was convinced were life-changing. They became episodes that came and went during the 30 days in rehab and continued for many weeks after I got home. I became incapacitated. My doctor had my husband take me into her office every morning before it opened (to protect my dignity) where she tried to figure out what was wrong and juggle medication, etc. My husband and sister had to take turns caring for me because I was not lucid, could not walk without falling, picked things out of the air, talked to myself. I barely slept but when I did I would fall out of bed. If I woke up and needed the bathroom I would crash into a wall or fall. I ended up breaking a rib and my nose. They took turns sleeping so that I was never unattended. I lost 20 lbs and was too weak to stand in the shower or wash my hair. Around three months in I started to come back, but I never felt completely right.

However, a couple months later I had another, quite different event. I was minding my own business, watching Downton Abbey (seriously?) when I felt strange and I knew something was "coming over me". At first I felt completely detached from reality, as though I was an indifferent observer, looking on, aloof and untouched. Again, it was as though I had taken a powerful drug and I was transported into a world of weirdness that I could no more control than if I had told the sun to stop shining. But this was different from the withdrawal hallucinations. I felt like I was flipping back and forth between euphoria and abject terror, sometimes several times in one minute. Example: "(me talking to husband) I feel like I'm losing myself and I can't stop it... But no, I'm fine, don't worry, no wait, oh my #&@ this is it, I may never come back...there's nothing to fret about, if I don't come out of this I'll still be ok...tell the kids that I love them.."--even as I write this it does not begin to describe the bazaar-ness of that night! It slowly dissipated over a couple hours and I was ok--exhausted but ok.

I did nothing about that episode--didn't go to the doctor. For a couple weeks I was ok. Two months ago I started having similar but not as intense spells. Usually in the AM and then later in the evening. The doctor started seroquel. As the dose went up it started to help. The episodes are not gone but it's easier to cope and they aren't as intense.

I'm sorry for this long-winded monologue. But I'm afraid and I think this is a safe place. Maybe most are long-winded when they can finally say "this is what is happening".
Im not sure what you are looking for in your post...if you are wanting to know whether this hallucinating is a form of dissociation the answer is no, not in my location...hallucinations and dissociation are two different things.

hallucinations are seeing, hearing ....something that isnt real...
dissociation is feeling things like numbness, spaced off/out, feeling detached from others or your environment but reality stays intact you dont see or hear things that are not real.

it is quite common for people to have hallucinations and other problems associated with medications /with drawing from medications and withdrawing from medications, and lasting side effects from medications. Some of these problems ....used...to be called medication induced dissociation, but with the new standards medication side effects are no longer included in the dissociative grouping of problems. short version the way the DSM 5 diagnostics for dissociative disorders is wrote up medication problems now have to be ruled out before a problem can be called a dissociative problems.

I do know that some people with dissociation problems do have a place in their mind they can mentally retreat to, where it used to be called dissociation, but now that creation isnt called a dissociation problem. its now an accepted coping tool that treatment providers, yoga instructors, religious instructors use to help their clients/class., some people call it visualizing, some people call it meditation, .... treatment providers here in the USA are actually teaching their clients to imagine a place in their mind where it gives them comfort, in the hard times....

I do know that there are other mental disorders that have symptoms of hallucinating like...psychosis, schizophrenia, bipolar disorder....

medications can also cause this if the person is on the wrong meds or the wrong dosage....

the fact that this has just started with you since your meds have been taken off and changed Im taking a guess (not a diagnosis) that this is a medication reaction.

my suggestion is if this continues to bother you, contact your treatment providers, they can diagnose the problem and help you so that this stops happening to you.
Hugs from:
Crew
Thanks for this!
Crew