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ForgottenAgain

ForgottenAgain

On the rollercoaster of sadness
Oct 17, 2023
628
A lot has happened these past several months and I feel like I need some input to make sense of all of this...

Here is all that has happened as bullet points:

October 2023:
  • I'm actively suicidal and I contact the NHS Crisis Team
October 2023 to December 2023:
  • I go to the psych hospital 3 times a week, seen by nurse, social worker or psychiatrist
  • The psychiatrist asks if I was ever diagnosed and I tell her my whole life story and that I was diagnosed with severe depression and Borderline PD when I was a late teen
  • I tell her I heard voices for a few years during that time
  • During these months I start developing symptoms that I never had before:
    • Moments of intense panic and terror
    • Would feel like furniture/objects were smiling at me, mocking me or were straight up evil and wanted to harm me
    • Would have firm beliefs that made sense to no one: believing that my computer was sucking the life out of me, that a picture turned another object evil, that my phone could read my mind
  • The psychiatrist said I wasn't psychotic, that I was just having psychotic episodes (whatever that means)
  • I'm prescribed 200mg of Sertraline and 3mg of Risperidone
  • I experience side effects that cause sexual dysfunction, constipation, hard time crying
  • I'm going through hell because of the symptoms above + suicidal ideation but they don't care about my symptoms, only whether I want to die or not
  • I get discharged after 6 weeks and referred to my GP
February 2024:
  • I leave my psychologist of 16 years and start therapy with a new psychologist that specialises in EMDR and deals a lot with people with psychosis
  • From consultations with him, he tells me he doesn't think I have psychosis but rather that my episodes are driven by high stress
  • I stop taking medication cold turkey as I feel that it's not working as it should and I don't want the side effects anymore
  • At this point I don't have a psychiatrist to talk to and the GP can't change my medication
April 2024:
  • The psychosis-like symptoms gradually subside and stop
  • Severe depression and passive suicidal ideation remain
May 2024:
  • I get magically referred to the Mental Health team (thanks to Talking Therapies service) and have my first appointment with a new psychiatrist
  • I retell my whole life story and correct mistakes on the crisis teams' notes
  • The psychiatrist is very concerned about my history of psychosis symptoms and tells me she thinks I have Psychotic Depression
  • Wants to prescribe me other medication but I ask to read the side effects first before agreeing to which she becomes visibly annoyed, gives me some papers about the meds and the appointment ends
  • I tell my psychologist about the Psychotic Depression diagnosis and he thinks it makes sense, albeit a rare condition
  • On the following week I call the psychiatrist to discuss the meds a bit more in depth, as I'm on the fence on taking medication
  • The psychiatrist tells me she re read all the Crisis Teams notes and no longer thinks I have Psychotic Depression but rather that I have Borderline PD, like diagnosed in Poland (I'm not from Poland)
  • I accept taking the damn meds because I'm tired and just want to be left alone
  • Later on that same day, she calls me again and asks me to forget medication and our whole phone chat. Tells me she will speak with a consultant and call me back the next day
  • It's been a week and I haven't heard since
After all this, I don't know what's wrong with me and I feel more alone than ever. I have asked both psychiatrists, if my symptoms are not psychosis then what the hell are they and neither gave me an answer.

They also don't seem to comprehend that, yes, my life isn't bad, it's quite good actually, and I can't feel happy. I can't seem to be happy no matter how good my life is, I'm extremely sad every day, struggling to do the bare minimum. Something is not right with my brain, I even asked if they could do a brain scan but they refuse. They say they do it for people with physical symptoms or with psychosis and I don't fit into any of those categories.

What is wrong with me? Does anyone have similar symptoms? I have such little faith in these doctors, they keep letting me down, I need to feel like I'm not alone, like there's some diagnosis and treatment that makes sense.

Please tell me if you experience something similar... Help me because I don't think they will...
 
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T

Traveller12724

Student
May 14, 2024
113
Hi, if your life isn't really that bad and you are that depressed, then you are right, something is wrong with your brain.I am not a doctor but I don't know if you have read the book "Brain energy by the Harvard professor Christopher Palmer", he puts forth an interesting hypothesis that mental disorders are actually metabolic disorders of the brain, meaning some of your brain cells are not getting energy and that's resulting in symptoms like depression and psychosis. He proposes that by restoring energy to those cells, symptoms can go away.

You can read his book but the fastest way I have used to test that hypothesis and see if it helps is doing something like a 3 day water fast and let your body cleans all your cells via autophagy and activate the ketone system so your cells run on stored fat for a moment, in the past it produced a strong antidepressant effect for me that lasted at least 6 months, again I am not a doctor, I just experimented on myself so take what I say as a single person experiment but that book made a good hypothesis in my opinion.
 
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H

Hvergelmir

Member
May 5, 2024
82
  • Later on that same day, she calls me again and asks me to forget medication and our whole phone chat. Tells me she will speak with a consultant and call me back the next day
  • It's been a week and I haven't heard since
To me it sounds like your psychiatrist have made some kind of grave mistake, while trying to cover it up. (She might have mixed up treatments, patients, or whatever.)
I'd ask another psychiatrist both about that, and about further treatment.

I even asked if they could do a brain scan
Keep insisting. I had one early on after being diagnosed with depression, simply to rule out obvious physical causes. It seemed like a pretty standard procedure in my country.
 
Zazacosta

Zazacosta

Student
Apr 29, 2024
101
To me it sounds like your psychiatrist have made some kind of grave mistake, while trying to cover it up. (She might have mixed up treatments, patients, or whatever.)
I'd ask another psychiatrist both about that, and about further treatment.
I agree with this.

Keep insisting. I had one early on after being diagnosed with depression, simply to rule out obvious physical causes. It seemed like a pretty standard procedure in my country.

Brain scan is not standard in my country for patients with depressions and a lot of other mental diseases. I believe it depends from country to country.

I'm prescribed 200mg of Sertraline and 3mg of Risperidone
I cannot speak for Sertraline, but I have very negative experience with Risperidone. I twice started a therapy with Risperidone and twice I had to end it very soon. I experienced mental feeling like restlessness, always unable to calm myself while also unable to focus on anything and feeling like my head must explode.

Instead I have positive experience with similar med - Quetiapine.

I experience side effects that cause sexual dysfunction, constipation, hard time crying

I had similar side effects from few other medicines... I believe that good psychiatrists will try to give you medicines which will help you and on the other hand will have the least possible side effects to you. It takes a little bit experimentation, time, and a lot of medicines is not effective immediatelly.

It seems to me like you have not found a good psychiatrists yet...
 
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V

Venutius

New Member
Oct 30, 2023
1
A lot has happened these past several months and I feel like I need some input to make sense of all of this...

Here is all that has happened as bullet points:

October 2023:
  • I'm actively suicidal and I contact the NHS Crisis Team
October 2023 to December 2023:
  • I go to the psych hospital 3 times a week, seen by nurse, social worker or psychiatrist
  • The psychiatrist asks if I was ever diagnosed and I tell her my whole life story and that I was diagnosed with severe depression and Borderline PD when I was a late teen
  • I tell her I heard voices for a few years during that time
  • During these months I start developing symptoms that I never had before:
    • Moments of intense panic and terror
    • Would feel like furniture/objects were smiling at me, mocking me or were straight up evil and wanted to harm me
    • Would have firm beliefs that made sense to no one: believing that my computer was sucking the life out of me, that a picture turned another object evil, that my phone could read my mind
  • The psychiatrist said I wasn't psychotic, that I was just having psychotic episodes (whatever that means)
  • I'm prescribed 200mg of Sertraline and 3mg of Risperidone
  • I experience side effects that cause sexual dysfunction, constipation, hard time crying
  • I'm going through hell because of the symptoms above + suicidal ideation but they don't care about my symptoms, only whether I want to die or not
  • I get discharged after 6 weeks and referred to my GP
February 2024:
  • I leave my psychologist of 16 years and start therapy with a new psychologist that specialises in EMDR and deals a lot with people with psychosis
  • From consultations with him, he tells me he doesn't think I have psychosis but rather that my episodes are driven by high stress
  • I stop taking medication cold turkey as I feel that it's not working as it should and I don't want the side effects anymore
  • At this point I don't have a psychiatrist to talk to and the GP can't change my medication
April 2024:
  • The psychosis-like symptoms gradually subside and stop
  • Severe depression and passive suicidal ideation remain
May 2024:
  • I get magically referred to the Mental Health team (thanks to Talking Therapies service) and have my first appointment with a new psychiatrist
  • I retell my whole life story and correct mistakes on the crisis teams' notes
  • The psychiatrist is very concerned about my history of psychosis symptoms and tells me she thinks I have Psychotic Depression
  • Wants to prescribe me other medication but I ask to read the side effects first before agreeing to which she becomes visibly annoyed, gives me some papers about the meds and the appointment ends
  • I tell my psychologist about the Psychotic Depression diagnosis and he thinks it makes sense, albeit a rare condition
  • On the following week I call the psychiatrist to discuss the meds a bit more in depth, as I'm on the fence on taking medication
  • The psychiatrist tells me she re read all the Crisis Teams notes and no longer thinks I have Psychotic Depression but rather that I have Borderline PD, like diagnosed in Poland (I'm not from Poland)
  • I accept taking the damn meds because I'm tired and just want to be left alone
  • Later on that same day, she calls me again and asks me to forget medication and our whole phone chat. Tells me she will speak with a consultant and call me back the next day
  • It's been a week and I haven't heard since
After all this, I don't know what's wrong with me and I feel more alone than ever. I have asked both psychiatrists, if my symptoms are not psychosis then what the hell are they and neither gave me an answer.

They also don't seem to comprehend that, yes, my life isn't bad, it's quite good actually, and I can't feel happy. I can't seem to be happy no matter how good my life is, I'm extremely sad every day, struggling to do the bare minimum. Something is not right with my brain, I even asked if they could do a brain scan but they refuse. They say they do it for people with physical symptoms or with psychosis and I don't fit into any of those categories.

What is wrong with me? Does anyone have similar symptoms? I have such little faith in these doctors, they keep letting me down, I need to feel like I'm not alone, like there's some diagnosis and treatment that makes sense.

Please tell me if you experience something similar... Help me because I don't think they will...
Hi there. :) Yes, I found the NHS to be quite unpredictable. Particularly, when the symptoms are complex, and they can't medicate you into none existence. I've had a lot of your symptoms, particularly those around delusional thoughts, which in themselves can be an intense source of depression and anxiety.

One of the problems is that few psychiatrists have had those thoughts, and they are therefore guessing as to what they are. So they read descriptions that are short and in themselves lack insight, causing many diagnoses to overlap and further confuse the situation. So there you have it :)

I was pretty much completely neglected by my mental health team, after every crisis, they'd let me out of hospital promising a full regimen of follow-ups that never happened.

However, I have fixed myself instead. I am no longer on meds, and I'm leading my best life.

I basically invented for myself a form of self therapy which is very similar to Internal Family Systems Therapy. I decided to make friends with all those negative thoughts and challenging beliefs. It wasn't easy, but I stand here to say it's possible.
 
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sash

sash

f/uk seeking partner to vanish with
Oct 1, 2023
191
Hi.
I wish instead of just prescribing meds they would give people the tools and skills of how to cope, manage their condition. Knowing its shit right now but u can get thru, yes it'll b shit again, but each time u get thru goves u more confidence u will the nxt time.
Trusting just in meds dont work. Trusting in yrself that u can get yrself thru the moments is most useful.
Most general head meds r sposed 2b temporary, to get ur brain able to think enuf to work on yrself.

I been thru the system, meds that messed me, shrinks that sat there nodding, u know.
Coping strategies. Seeing yourself. Knowing yrself.

Nxt time anyone is crying at a shrink, esp in uk where were lucky 2 get an appointment or 6, ask them for coping skills for whatever is yr achilles heel. Make em earn their money, not just nodding at u going uh-huh and scribbling summat down, cos the sessions will end & uve learned nothing on how to help yourself.
 
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ForgottenAgain

ForgottenAgain

On the rollercoaster of sadness
Oct 17, 2023
628
Hi there. :) Yes, I found the NHS to be quite unpredictable. Particularly, when the symptoms are complex, and they can't medicate you into none existence. I've had a lot of your symptoms, particularly those around delusional thoughts, which in themselves can be an intense source of depression and anxiety.

One of the problems is that few psychiatrists have had those thoughts, and they are therefore guessing as to what they are. So they read descriptions that are short and in themselves lack insight, causing many diagnoses to overlap and further confuse the situation. So there you have it :)

I was pretty much completely neglected by my mental health team, after every crisis, they'd let me out of hospital promising a full regimen of follow-ups that never happened.

However, I have fixed myself instead. I am no longer on meds, and I'm leading my best life.

I basically invented for myself a form of self therapy which is very similar to Internal Family Systems Therapy. I decided to make friends with all those negative thoughts and challenging beliefs. It wasn't easy, but I stand here to say it's possible.

Thank you for your comment, it's comforting to read about someone else experiencing similar symptoms and acknowledging how unreliable and confusing the system is. I will check out Internal Family Systems Therapy, I have never heard of that, which is good because something I haven't heard about is exactly what I'm looking for.
Really appreciate this comment, thank you
Hi.
I wish instead of just prescribing meds they would give people the tools and skills of how to cope, manage their condition. Knowing its shit right now but u can get thru, yes it'll b shit again, but each time u get thru goves u more confidence u will the nxt time.
Trusting just in meds dont work. Trusting in yrself that u can get yrself thru the moments is most useful.
Most general head meds r sposed 2b temporary, to get ur brain able to think enuf to work on yrself.

I been thru the system, meds that messed me, shrinks that sat there nodding, u know.
Coping strategies. Seeing yourself. Knowing yrself.

Nxt time anyone is crying at a shrink, esp in uk where were lucky 2 get an appointment or 6, ask them for coping skills for whatever is yr achilles heel. Make em earn their money, not just nodding at u going uh-huh and scribbling summat down, cos the sessions will end & uve learned nothing on how to help yourself.
I think you're very right. I did challenge the psychiatrist, asked several times to know what is wrong with me, that I don't want just random meds, I want to know exactly what is wrong and how to treat it.

They keep going around the "it's psychosis symptoms but not psychosis" carrousel. They don't explain.

Today I spoke with the psychiatrist on the phone and she asked me whether I identified with the Borderline PD diagnosis, that part of it is the person identifying with the diagnosis. That doesn't sound very scientific to me? It's like a doctor saying I have cancer, I say I don't identify with cancer, so suddenly cancer is no longer my diagnosis? I don't get it. It's starting to feel like pseudo science to me...

I wanted at least an explanation for the years of hearing voices and the past 5 months of the symptoms I explained above. It was very painful, I doubted my own sanity, I need an answer, an answer that makes sense.

But anyway, I'm getting out of topic, thank you for your comment, I really want to make them work for it. I'll do the best I can with the energy I have left.
 
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Mirrory Me

Mirrory Me

"Life's a mirror, but 'whose' mirror?"
Mar 23, 2023
716
Would feel like furniture/objects were smiling at me, mocking me or were straight up evil and wanted to harm me
I had that too T_T. I thought it was some sort of "robotic" kind of ancient spirit (or ghost).
Pixy serie
Would have firm beliefs that made sense to no one: believing that my computer was sucking the life out of me, that a picture turned another object evil, that my phone could read my mind
Like "putting spells on someone".

Well, one thing that has helped me to manage my psychotic symptoms was to start a ketonic diet. It's not widely recommended, but it seems promising according to some studies, to manage several mental health issues. It's at least healthier than pharmaceutical medicine.
 
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sash

sash

f/uk seeking partner to vanish with
Oct 1, 2023
191
Thank you for your comment, it's comforting to read about someone else experiencing similar symptoms and acknowledging how unreliable and confusing the system is. I will check out Internal Family Systems Therapy, I have never heard of that, which is good because something I haven't heard about is exactly what I'm looking for.
Really appreciate this comment, thank you

I think you're very right. I did challenge the psychiatrist, asked several times to know what is wrong with me, that I don't want just random meds, I want to know exactly what is wrong and how to treat it.

They keep going around the "it's psychosis symptoms but not psychosis" carrousel. They don't explain.

Today I spoke with the psychiatrist on the phone and she asked me whether I identified with the Borderline PD diagnosis, that part of it is the person identifying with the diagnosis. That doesn't sound very scientific to me? It's like a doctor saying I have cancer, I say I don't identify with cancer, so suddenly cancer is no longer my diagnosis? I don't get it. It's starting to feel like pseudo science to me...

I wanted at least an explanation for the years of hearing voices and the past 5 months of the symptoms I explained above. It was very painful, I doubted my own sanity, I need an answer, an answer that makes sense.

But anyway, I'm getting out of topic, thank you for your comment, I really want to make them work for it. I'll do the best I can with the energy I have left.
Hi.
So the right meds might help you w the voices, chemical imbalances, but its also getting you on the right meds u may have to try a few & they're a rollercoaster getting on & then off.
But the psych saying u have then dont have this n that does not help u at all. Stupid. Spins yr head more than it is already..
Im sorry. Can u change yr shrink? U may get different results. I used to use the 'im sorry but u remind me of someone who hurt me & ive tried to ignore it cos I know ur not them, but I dont feel comfortable around you enough to be myself, im so sorry'.
First time I said that it was true & they understood.
You clearly need help w chemical imbalances, its awful they arent helping and they're confusing you too, which u dont need.
I hope u can find someone who can help you & help u understand.
 
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Linda

Linda

Member
Jul 30, 2020
1,476
A lot has happened these past several months and I feel like I need some input to make sense of all of this...

Here is all that has happened as bullet points:

October 2023:
  • I'm actively suicidal and I contact the NHS Crisis Team
October 2023 to December 2023:
  • I go to the psych hospital 3 times a week, seen by nurse, social worker or psychiatrist
  • The psychiatrist asks if I was ever diagnosed and I tell her my whole life story and that I was diagnosed with severe depression and Borderline PD when I was a late teen
  • I tell her I heard voices for a few years during that time
  • During these months I start developing symptoms that I never had before:
    • Moments of intense panic and terror
    • Would feel like furniture/objects were smiling at me, mocking me or were straight up evil and wanted to harm me
    • Would have firm beliefs that made sense to no one: believing that my computer was sucking the life out of me, that a picture turned another object evil, that my phone could read my mind
  • The psychiatrist said I wasn't psychotic, that I was just having psychotic episodes (whatever that means)
  • I'm prescribed 200mg of Sertraline and 3mg of Risperidone
  • I experience side effects that cause sexual dysfunction, constipation, hard time crying
  • I'm going through hell because of the symptoms above + suicidal ideation but they don't care about my symptoms, only whether I want to die or not
  • I get discharged after 6 weeks and referred to my GP
February 2024:
  • I leave my psychologist of 16 years and start therapy with a new psychologist that specialises in EMDR and deals a lot with people with psychosis
  • From consultations with him, he tells me he doesn't think I have psychosis but rather that my episodes are driven by high stress
  • I stop taking medication cold turkey as I feel that it's not working as it should and I don't want the side effects anymore
  • At this point I don't have a psychiatrist to talk to and the GP can't change my medication
April 2024:
  • The psychosis-like symptoms gradually subside and stop
  • Severe depression and passive suicidal ideation remain
May 2024:
  • I get magically referred to the Mental Health team (thanks to Talking Therapies service) and have my first appointment with a new psychiatrist
  • I retell my whole life story and correct mistakes on the crisis teams' notes
  • The psychiatrist is very concerned about my history of psychosis symptoms and tells me she thinks I have Psychotic Depression
  • Wants to prescribe me other medication but I ask to read the side effects first before agreeing to which she becomes visibly annoyed, gives me some papers about the meds and the appointment ends
  • I tell my psychologist about the Psychotic Depression diagnosis and he thinks it makes sense, albeit a rare condition
  • On the following week I call the psychiatrist to discuss the meds a bit more in depth, as I'm on the fence on taking medication
  • The psychiatrist tells me she re read all the Crisis Teams notes and no longer thinks I have Psychotic Depression but rather that I have Borderline PD, like diagnosed in Poland (I'm not from Poland)
  • I accept taking the damn meds because I'm tired and just want to be left alone
  • Later on that same day, she calls me again and asks me to forget medication and our whole phone chat. Tells me she will speak with a consultant and call me back the next day
  • It's been a week and I haven't heard since
After all this, I don't know what's wrong with me and I feel more alone than ever. I have asked both psychiatrists, if my symptoms are not psychosis then what the hell are they and neither gave me an answer.

They also don't seem to comprehend that, yes, my life isn't bad, it's quite good actually, and I can't feel happy. I can't seem to be happy no matter how good my life is, I'm extremely sad every day, struggling to do the bare minimum. Something is not right with my brain, I even asked if they could do a brain scan but they refuse. They say they do it for people with physical symptoms or with psychosis and I don't fit into any of those categories.

What is wrong with me? Does anyone have similar symptoms? I have such little faith in these doctors, they keep letting me down, I need to feel like I'm not alone, like there's some diagnosis and treatment that makes sense.

Please tell me if you experience something similar... Help me because I don't think they will...
If the NHS isn't helping, one possibility is that you try to be your own doctor. Are you able to do the kind of research that would give you a chance of diagnosing this yourself? To do that, you don't need to be a genius, but you would need to be reasonably intelligent (at least of average intelligence) and well enough educated to be able to understand discussions of fairly complex topics.
There is enough good information online for self-diagnosis to be possible for many conditions. You would, of course, want your own diagnosis to be confirmed by a professional eventually, but you could speed up their task if you can tell them something like I'm fairly sure this is either A or B, and it's definitely not C, D. or E.
I always try to diagnose my own condition before I go see a doctor. I'm not always quite right, but I'm usually close, and it ensures that I know enough about the topic to recognise if a doctor is trying to bullshit me. I recently diagnosed myself, correctly, with a rare form of leukemia, before a hematologist confirmed it. (Don't worry about me. It can be treated.) For many conditions it isn't all that difficult.
 
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needthebus

needthebus

Member
Apr 29, 2024
20
th
A lot has happened these past several months and I feel like I need some input to make sense of all of this...

Here is all that has happened as bullet points:

October 2023:
  • I'm actively suicidal and I contact the NHS Crisis Team
October 2023 to December 2023:
  • I go to the psych hospital 3 times a week, seen by nurse, social worker or psychiatrist
  • The psychiatrist asks if I was ever diagnosed and I tell her my whole life story and that I was diagnosed with severe depression and Borderline PD when I was a late teen
  • I tell her I heard voices for a few years during that time
  • During these months I start developing symptoms that I never had before:
    • Moments of intense panic and terror
    • Would feel like furniture/objects were smiling at me, mocking me or were straight up evil and wanted to harm me
    • Would have firm beliefs that made sense to no one: believing that my computer was sucking the life out of me, that a picture turned another object evil, that my phone could read my mind
  • The psychiatrist said I wasn't psychotic, that I was just having psychotic episodes (whatever that means)
  • I'm prescribed 200mg of Sertraline and 3mg of Risperidone
  • I experience side effects that cause sexual dysfunction, constipation, hard time crying
  • I'm going through hell because of the symptoms above + suicidal ideation but they don't care about my symptoms, only whether I want to die or not
  • I get discharged after 6 weeks and referred to my GP
February 2024:
  • I leave my psychologist of 16 years and start therapy with a new psychologist that specialises in EMDR and deals a lot with people with psychosis
  • From consultations with him, he tells me he doesn't think I have psychosis but rather that my episodes are driven by high stress
  • I stop taking medication cold turkey as I feel that it's not working as it should and I don't want the side effects anymore
  • At this point I don't have a psychiatrist to talk to and the GP can't change my medication
April 2024:
  • The psychosis-like symptoms gradually subside and stop
  • Severe depression and passive suicidal ideation remain
May 2024:
  • I get magically referred to the Mental Health team (thanks to Talking Therapies service) and have my first appointment with a new psychiatrist
  • I retell my whole life story and correct mistakes on the crisis teams' notes
  • The psychiatrist is very concerned about my history of psychosis symptoms and tells me she thinks I have Psychotic Depression
  • Wants to prescribe me other medication but I ask to read the side effects first before agreeing to which she becomes visibly annoyed, gives me some papers about the meds and the appointment ends
  • I tell my psychologist about the Psychotic Depression diagnosis and he thinks it makes sense, albeit a rare condition
  • On the following week I call the psychiatrist to discuss the meds a bit more in depth, as I'm on the fence on taking medication
  • The psychiatrist tells me she re read all the Crisis Teams notes and no longer thinks I have Psychotic Depression but rather that I have Borderline PD, like diagnosed in Poland (I'm not from Poland)
  • I accept taking the damn meds because I'm tired and just want to be left alone
  • Later on that same day, she calls me again and asks me to forget medication and our whole phone chat. Tells me she will speak with a consultant and call me back the next day
  • It's been a week and I haven't heard since
After all this, I don't know what's wrong with me and I feel more alone than ever. I have asked both psychiatrists, if my symptoms are not psychosis then what the hell are they and neither gave me an answer.

They also don't seem to comprehend that, yes, my life isn't bad, it's quite good actually, and I can't feel happy. I can't seem to be happy no matter how good my life is, I'm extremely sad every day, struggling to do the bare minimum. Something is not right with my brain, I even asked if they could do a brain scan but they refuse. They say they do it for people with physical symptoms or with psychosis and I don't fit into any of those categories.

What is wrong with me? Does anyone have similar symptoms? I have such little faith in these doctors, they keep letting me down, I need to feel like I'm not alone, like there's some diagnosis and treatment that makes sense.

Please tell me if you experience something similar... Help me because I don't think they will...
they aren't that oblivious or incompetent

it's a difficult situation. a lot of thing things are you describe are clearly psychosis

and that's difficult, because they can't be sure whether it's early schizophrenia or a temporarily reaction to something. It would be unusual for a schizophrenic to suddenly stop having psychotic symptoms, so they are trying to figure out why that happened

you seemed to think things had special meaning for you, that usually only happens with schizophrenia, but this doctor you had thought it was the result of stress and you've not had psychotic symptoms since then. there are certain symptoms that only happen with schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder, like ideas of reference (like this particular thing means that I need to do the following). It never happens for any other diagnosis ever.

it's an unusual situation. the fact that you haven't had psychosis since then suggests this doctor that said it was just stress was right, but it's strange because it sounds like typical schizophrenia, but perhaps it's not

this wouldn't be an easy or obvious situation for anyone. one of the things you mentioned, not feeling pleasure in anything, could be just regular depression, or it could be ahedonia which can be a negative symptom of schizophrenia

schizophrenia has 3 parts: things that are there that shouldn't be (positive symptoms, like hearing or seeing things not there) and things that aren't there that should be (negative symptoms, like feeling pleasure and normal emotions) etc. schizophrenics also have cognitive problems at times.

did you end up trying the abilify or aripreprozol or did they tell you to stop taking it? it sounds like you are saying they told you to not take it. that would be a decent med for low grade psychosis and it has an anti-depressant effect. it also doesn't mess up your sex life that much. unless you intend to get pregnant or could get pregnant, it may be a decent option because it seems like you have had psychosis before. if are planning to get pregnant soon, don't take any psych meds and just exercise and eat vegtables

borderline people often feel intense emotions. i don't know if that's what this is. i'm not a doctor, but this isn't an easy situation.

if you feel like you are getting worse, you could advocate for yourself and ask them to just inject you with a month of abilify and see if you get better. it's awful to experiment like that, but you could. they would want you to take pills for a bit first

can you exercise and eat healthy right now? exercise does a lot of stuff.

the current mental health perspective is that you either have a disease or you don't, and they don't really tend to do much evaluating of how bad it is. People usually don't discuss low-grade schizophrenia, like someone going back and forth between schizophrenia symptoms and not, which is unusual

You could also have really low grade schizoaffective disorder. I don't get why they suddenly changed their mind on abilify for you.

I know before i've felt depressed and said "oh my life is fine" but I had also had really awful sexual trauma and I just didn't talk about it with anyone. If there's anything like that going on, any horrible experiences that you are just ignoring, and that's making you sad, that could be part of it. Perhaps that's why the EMDR has helped? Are you still doing EMDR or have you stopped?

That's a really long answer, but these people aren't necessarily stupid or incompetent, there are just multiple ambiguities in your situation.

You mentioned in another post about challenging the psychiatrist and wanting to know what was wrong instead of just throwing random meds at you. Actually, trying random meds and just seeing if they work often is a good way of doing things. In your situation, the labels matter less than the outcome, and there's no way to know what the outcome is or have a sense of the label unless you try different things.

Based on all the messages you were getting from inanimate objects, it seems like psychosis which could be treated with something like Risperidone... but you hated that... so they tried something else... working on stress and other things...

They may not have understood that Risperidone is just a terrible medication and lots of people who take it hate it. If someone absolutely needs Risperidone and can do well on it, that's great, but so many people don't like it. They may be afraid you'll react like that to Abilify. But you probably won't.

I think the smart thing would be to go back and say "Let's try the Abilify and see if I get better." Just try a low dose. It works on a lot of different neurotransmitters. Just if you start to feel better, please try to eat vegetables and exercise and do activities that involve being social and don't do things that cause brain damage, like drugs, or eating food with preservatives, or not sleeping properly, or eating foods that cause inflammation. Then, once you feel better, see if you can find something that matters to you to care about. There's so many awful things in this world, if you feel better enough, try to change one of them.

But no, they aren't idiots or not aware of what's going on. They may be busy, so it's fine to be slightly annoying and even let them know your thoughts. Abilify doesn't prevent you from having a sex life or being normal.

It also depends on how you feel. If EMDR is working, and you're getting better, it may just take longer for negative symptoms to resolve. Positive symptoms often go away before negative symptoms of psychosis. The idea that EMDR could resolve both is stunning to me, but I know little about EMDR.

I think it all depends on how bad you feel. If you are still doing EMDR and can tough it out to see if the chronic feelings of ahedonia go away, that may be better. But if you feel like you might suddenly deteriorate and could lose it, get on the Abilify. It seems like you've made a lot of progress on EMDR really quickly, perhaps those people treating you are wondering if you'll make more progress.

I don't know much about EMDR. I just read a bit and it seemed like there's mixed data on it but it does help with PTSD. The big missing piece of all of this is whether you've experienced severe trauma. If you have and you're still doing EMDR and getting better, that would be why they are holding off.

Anti-psychotics change the normal functioning of your brain slightly, which is sometimes helpful if someone's brain isn't working "well" and I put well in quotes because nature just follows physical laws and nothing is really bad or good in nature. If EMDR is working well, they may be concerned about interrupting that with anti-psychotics if they don't know how EMDR and anti-psychotics interact.

So the question becomes, how bad do you feel? If it's terrible, and you feel like you can't continue, perhaps try the Abilify and tell them how bad you feel and let them know EMDR was helpful but you want to try something. You could also try a low dose and see if you feel better or worse. Just please exercise if you can during this time if you are up to it, please. Perhaps you already do.

This isn't a clear situation, and since it's not an "easy" situation to figure out that's why you aren't getting clear answers. Doctors often won't say "well, it's hard to know" and go into a lengthy analysis because it could confuse a patient and the doctor could be wrong.

Hope it goes well, either way. If you are considering suicide, but want to get better, you should ask them about going on Abilify. You could also try a very very very low lithium amount with that. It sounds like it could be low level schizoaffective disorder depressive type, but it's impossible to know these things easily and often the labels don't matter as much. Lithium also tends to decrease feels of suicide ideation.

Your psychosis symptoms are consistent with someone with schizoprenia or schizoaffective disorder, your remission of your psychosis symptoms isn't consistent with either really. If you had low grade schizoaffective disorder or schizoprenia and the EMDR lowered your anxiety, then your positive symptoms could have gone away while negative symptoms remain. Abilify would help negative symptoms slightly.

I would not use the term "negative symptom" when you talk with them. They'll start thinking about schizophrenia and immediately conclude you have that and then want higher doses of meds or strong meds possibly. (You'll be accidentally doing somehting called "priming" if you do that which will result in them thinking about schizophrenia instead of symptom reduction.) You could just say "The EMDR helped, but I still feel bad. I heard great things about Abilify. What if I tried a low dose? I heard the side-effects are low and I'd like to try it." They would be likely to give it to you.

Then, when you are on Abilify, just start jogging or doing vigorous cardio every day. If you have mild schizophrenia and were having negative symptoms, you'd start to feel better from Abilify and cardio, but the problems would return if you stopped those things. You could try it?

Again, not a doctor and could be wrong about everything.
 
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ForgottenAgain

ForgottenAgain

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they aren't that oblivious or incompetent

it's a difficult situation. a lot of thing things are you describe are clearly psychosis

and that's difficult, because they can't be sure whether it's early schizophrenia or a temporarily reaction to something. It would be unusual for a schizophrenic to suddenly stop having psychotic symptoms, so they are trying to figure out why that happened

you seemed to think things had special meaning for you, that usually only happens with schizophrenia, but this doctor you had thought it was the result of stress and you've not had psychotic symptoms since then. there are certain symptoms that only happen with schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder, like ideas of reference (like this particular thing means that I need to do the following). It never happens for any other diagnosis ever.

it's an unusual situation. the fact that you haven't had psychosis since then suggests this doctor that said it was just stress was right, but it's strange because it sounds like typical schizophrenia, but perhaps it's not

this wouldn't be an easy or obvious situation for anyone. one of the things you mentioned, not feeling pleasure in anything, could be just regular depression, or it could be ahedonia which can be a negative symptom of schizophrenia

schizophrenia has 3 parts: things that are there that shouldn't be (positive symptoms, like hearing or seeing things not there) and things that aren't there that should be (negative symptoms, like feeling pleasure and normal emotions) etc. schizophrenics also have cognitive problems at times.

did you end up trying the abilify or aripreprozol or did they tell you to stop taking it? it sounds like you are saying they told you to not take it. that would be a decent med for low grade psychosis and it has an anti-depressant effect. it also doesn't mess up your sex life that much. unless you intend to get pregnant or could get pregnant, it may be a decent option because it seems like you have had psychosis before. if are planning to get pregnant soon, don't take any psych meds and just exercise and eat vegtables

borderline people often feel intense emotions. i don't know if that's what this is. i'm not a doctor, but this isn't an easy situation.

if you feel like you are getting worse, you could advocate for yourself and ask them to just inject you with a month of abilify and see if you get better. it's awful to experiment like that, but you could. they would want you to take pills for a bit first

can you exercise and eat healthy right now? exercise does a lot of stuff.

the current mental health perspective is that you either have a disease or you don't, and they don't really tend to do much evaluating of how bad it is. People usually don't discuss low-grade schizophrenia, like someone going back and forth between schizophrenia symptoms and not, which is unusual

You could also have really low grade schizoaffective disorder. I don't get why they suddenly changed their mind on abilify for you.

I know before i've felt depressed and said "oh my life is fine" but I had also had really awful sexual trauma and I just didn't talk about it with anyone. If there's anything like that going on, any horrible experiences that you are just ignoring, and that's making you sad, that could be part of it. Perhaps that's why the EMDR has helped? Are you still doing EMDR or have you stopped?

That's a really long answer, but these people aren't necessarily stupid or incompetent, there are just multiple ambiguities in your situation.

You mentioned in another post about challenging the psychiatrist and wanting to know what was wrong instead of just throwing random meds at you. Actually, trying random meds and just seeing if they work often is a good way of doing things. In your situation, the labels matter less than the outcome, and there's no way to know what the outcome is or have a sense of the label unless you try different things.

Based on all the messages you were getting from inanimate objects, it seems like psychosis which could be treated with something like Risperidone... but you hated that... so they tried something else... working on stress and other things...

They may not have understood that Risperidone is just a terrible medication and lots of people who take it hate it. If someone absolutely needs Risperidone and can do well on it, that's great, but so many people don't like it. They may be afraid you'll react like that to Abilify. But you probably won't.

I think the smart thing would be to go back and say "Let's try the Abilify and see if I get better." Just try a low dose. It works on a lot of different neurotransmitters. Just if you start to feel better, please try to eat vegetables and exercise and do activities that involve being social and don't do things that cause brain damage, like drugs, or eating food with preservatives, or not sleeping properly, or eating foods that cause inflammation. Then, once you feel better, see if you can find something that matters to you to care about. There's so many awful things in this world, if you feel better enough, try to change one of them.

But no, they aren't idiots or not aware of what's going on. They may be busy, so it's fine to be slightly annoying and even let them know your thoughts. Abilify doesn't prevent you from having a sex life or being normal.

It also depends on how you feel. If EMDR is working, and you're getting better, it may just take longer for negative symptoms to resolve. Positive symptoms often go away before negative symptoms of psychosis. The idea that EMDR could resolve both is stunning to me, but I know little about EMDR.

I think it all depends on how bad you feel. If you are still doing EMDR and can tough it out to see if the chronic feelings of ahedonia go away, that may be better. But if you feel like you might suddenly deteriorate and could lose it, get on the Abilify. It seems like you've made a lot of progress on EMDR really quickly, perhaps those people treating you are wondering if you'll make more progress.

I don't know much about EMDR. I just read a bit and it seemed like there's mixed data on it but it does help with PTSD. The big missing piece of all of this is whether you've experienced severe trauma. If you have and you're still doing EMDR and getting better, that would be why they are holding off.

Anti-psychotics change the normal functioning of your brain slightly, which is sometimes helpful if someone's brain isn't working "well" and I put well in quotes because nature just follows physical laws and nothing is really bad or good in nature. If EMDR is working well, they may be concerned about interrupting that with anti-psychotics if they don't know how EMDR and anti-psychotics interact.

So the question becomes, how bad do you feel? If it's terrible, and you feel like you can't continue, perhaps try the Abilify and tell them how bad you feel and let them know EMDR was helpful but you want to try something. You could also try a low dose and see if you feel better or worse. Just please exercise if you can during this time if you are up to it, please. Perhaps you already do.

This isn't a clear situation, and since it's not an "easy" situation to figure out that's why you aren't getting clear answers. Doctors often won't say "well, it's hard to know" and go into a lengthy analysis because it could confuse a patient and the doctor could be wrong.

Hope it goes well, either way. If you are considering suicide, but want to get better, you should ask them about going on Abilify. You could also try a very very very low lithium amount with that. It sounds like it could be low level schizoaffective disorder depressive type, but it's impossible to know these things easily and often the labels don't matter as much. Lithium also tends to decrease feels of suicide ideation.

Your psychosis symptoms are consistent with someone with schizoprenia or schizoaffective disorder, your remission of your psychosis symptoms isn't consistent with either really. If you had low grade schizoaffective disorder or schizoprenia and the EMDR lowered your anxiety, then your positive symptoms could have gone away while negative symptoms remain. Abilify would help negative symptoms slightly.

I would not use the term "negative symptom" when you talk with them. They'll start thinking about schizophrenia and immediately conclude you have that and then want higher doses of meds or strong meds possibly. (You'll be accidentally doing somehting called "priming" if you do that which will result in them thinking about schizophrenia instead of symptom reduction.) You could just say "The EMDR helped, but I still feel bad. I heard great things about Abilify. What if I tried a low dose? I heard the side-effects are low and I'd like to try it." They would be likely to give it to you.

Then, when you are on Abilify, just start jogging or doing vigorous cardio every day. If you have mild schizophrenia and were having negative symptoms, you'd start to feel better from Abilify and cardio, but the problems would return if you stopped those things. You could try it?

Again, not a doctor and could be wrong about everything.
Thank you for this very comprehensive response, I read it all and it was very helpful.

I didn't consider my case could be difficult, if it is I wish they would just tell me instead of acting like they know everything and consistently going back on what they said. They broke a lot of my trust by not being honest then.

Regarding the meds, the doctor didn't prescribe me those meds yet. We had the phone conversation where she told me to hold off as she would speak with a consultant and call me back the next day. She didn't call me back for the whole week. I called back on the following Monday and then she had another chat with me where she told me she couldn't say what I had since she didn't see my psychotic episodes. I reminded her that the psychiatrist at the psych hospital saw one of my episodes and this psychiatrist quickly replied that they didn't think it was psychosis.

She told me she would call me back on the next day and nothing again. At that point I gave up, tired of chasing her.

I don't have any other trauma that I haven't already told every psychiatrist or psychologist. They know everything. I've always been very honest with everything because I've always wanted to get better. I don't know if EMDR is working, lately my psychologist appointments have just been us talking. I feel like nothing really works with me tbh, neither the meds nor the therapy. I mean, it's nice to talk to my psychologist but beyond that? It hasn't healed me from anything.

I feel very sad as always, that has been the same for 17 years now, feeling depressed. The psychosis symptoms are still gone but I wanted to know what is wrong with me because those symptoms scared me a lot. I don't want to develop some severe illness, I wanted to get it treated. Told the psychiatrist this and she told me that since I'm not experiencing psychosis now that there's no point in investigating further. I don't get it, if it was a physical illness where I randomly had a seizure they would try to know the root cause. Am I wrong? It feels reckless not to.

I'm currently dealing with the shit old depression that makes it hard to take a shower, clean my environment, work, crying almost every day, the usual. I have little faith in all treatments so I don't think I'll pursue anything else anymore, at least for now. When I have more energy I may try a private psychiatrist through my health insurance. My current focus is cleaning the house and trying to feel better by not having a horrible environment, trying to use the little high of yesterday not having been terrible. Doing is something I want to pursue, it's just very hard to do while depressed. I do eat very healthy though.
 
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