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#1
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I am struggling with depression and am taking Effexor at the moment. Just out of curiosity, I was wondering - what would happen if someone without depression took it? What would he/she experience?
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#2
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I'm curious too. I mean I sometimes think I'm depressed then I think I am just full of it. Is that what you are thinking too?
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#3
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anti depressants are probably one of the most over prescribed medication (a little like antibiotics). GP's hand them out fairly much like candy for anyone experiencing 'problems in living' whether or not they meet dx criteria for depression.
They wouldn't make you super happy (in case that was what you were thinking). It isn't like they are literally 'happy pills'. There would be the same / similar problems with side effects and withdrawal and stuff. I'm not sure on the long term effects and the like. But then... We don't really know about those in the case of depression either... Do we? |
#4
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Both depression and effects of meds are an individual thing; not all antidepressants work for all people, etc. If a non-depressed person took an antidepressant drug, it wouldn't "work" and there would seem to be more side effects. It's like taking any other drug/med. If you take an Advil/Tylenol when you don't have a headache, what happens?
Like Special K implies, the opposite of depressed isn't "happy." It's more like "normal" for you as an individual. You feel less depressed, which we sometimes think of as "sad" but that doesn't mean you feel more happy. There's just a bit more "interest" and energy. If you already have enough of the brain chemicals you need, messing with them can make you nervous or sleepy, etc., like some of the side effects listed usually. That's why those side effects happen; not everyone prescribed a particular med is going to be able to use that one or have it work. They can't "measure" and look at depression like they can other body chemical or hormonal imbalances (they can tell when you're diabetic or have an infection and need antibiotics, for example).
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"Never give a sword to a man who can't dance." ~Confucius |
#5
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I was very surprised the first time I took an antidepressant 21 years ago and it helped. I felt calm and also had some energy; Prior to taking imipramine, I hadnt been sleeping well and although I kept eating, nothing tasted right. I also had all the hopelessness and helplessness that are so emblematic of depression. About a month after I took imipramine for the first time I started sleeping better and food began to taste right. The problem was that about 2 months after that I started becoming manic, or rather hypomanic where I didn't want to go to sleep and needed to talk all the time. That's when I had to add Lithium to my antidepressant.
Although I didn't identify it until much later, I started rapid cycling back and forth with a few days of normal mood, and then hypomania and then severe depression. I was actually worse off with the meds than I was with the chronic mild to moderate depression I regularly had before I started on the imipramine. If I had thought more about it then, I would have tapered off all the meds, which also included xanax for panic attacks and anxiety. Of course that's what I say now but then I lived to have those normal and hypomanic days, because I thought they were better than the chronic dysthmnia, or mild depression I had had since I was 13. Now I take 20 mg Paxil and Focalinxr and clonazepam and sometimes topamaxx to nip the hypomania in the bud. I have still not started to taper the clonazepam per my pdoc's suggestion as I am still reluctant to disturb my mood. I did get a great suggestion from someone at this site to not take the focalin everyday, so I won't develop tolerance. The focalin is for my ADD but I think it also supplements the antidepressant effect of the Paxil which I will probably stay on for life because I have gone to very bad, suicidal places about 4 times in my life and paxil seems to keep the bottom from dropping out. I also go to therapy and 12 step meetings for adult children of alcoholics or any 12 step meeting if I need one since no matter which 12 step group you go to there is about 90% of the same material that is applicable. Even though I am not an alcoholic and are in fact the daughter of an alcoholic I get strength and support from the AA meetings I attend. My preference is for Adult Children of Alcoholics, but those meetings are hard to find, as not many people are aware that even if you grow up and are not an alcoholic, you may very well continue dysfunctional patterns from your childhood. I have a tendency to overeat and also if anyone has ever read the laundry list for adult children of alcoholics, just about everything on the list applied to me before I started the program. Slowly but surely I am ridding myself of the remnants of a dysfunctional childhood. My parents did the best they could but my father was an alcoholic--probably medicating his own anxiety and depression. I believe my mother was bipolar.
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Bipolar disorder with very long depressions and short hypomanic episodes. I initially love the hypomanic episodes until I realize they inevitably led to terrrible depressions. I take paroxetine, lamotrogine and klonopin. |
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