M
myopybyproxy
flickerbeat \\ gibberish-noise
- Dec 18, 2021
- 864
Firstly, I will apologise for the disorganisation in this post. My mind is quite scattered as of late. I feel many emotions within a short timespan. I wonder if there are others like me.
I'd encourage everyone to read it, and if you have, what are your views on this book? I have just finished reading it. I have so much I want to say but it all feels pointless. Whitaker ends the book on a hopeful note, but I've seen in my everyday life evidence to the contrary. Most people I know take psychiatric drugs and have negative outcomes. I'm halfway through my third year of a four-year degree and in all my psychology classes (my field of study), we're told about the dopamine and serotonin hypotheses; medication is endorsed as a first-line treatment whereas therapy is seen as lesser. Now I take issue with the current state of therapy as well. Surely there has to be something out there I've yet to come across.
I've been minding the neighbours' children regularly for the last four or so years. It's heartbreaking to watch how they went from gregarious and active to overweight or obese and only interested in sitting in front of the computer. Their twelve year old is on aripiprazole and all three children are on guanfacine. I feel so lucky that my parents are open minded and have tried alternative treatments for myself and my siblings. (The fact that I still wish to be dead can be interpreted in two ways: these treatments do not work or I'm a hopeless cause; or I live in a sick society and in suboptimal conditions. I prefer to believe the latter but I've no clue how to begin building a different society, such that it's easier to just give up.)
My only relatively-long term experience with psychiatric medication was with sertraline (Zoloft) for about eight weeks in 2020. The hospital required me to be on it in order to move from the Eating Disorders unit to the general adolescent psychiatric unit. Midway through my seven week stay at a residential facility, I tapered off of it. From the first week I was on it, until the end, I experienced dissociation (which I'd never struggled with before) that came and went. That exacerbated my eating disorder, as I couldn't tell when I was full, so I kept eating. That also made my self harming much worse, because it was one of the only ways I could feel anything anymore. I ended up self harming far more during my stay in inpatient and residential than at any other point in my life. Being treated like a victim, with no say or input into my future, combined with the dissociative side effects of the sertraline, made me only more depressed and apathetic.
What other books, success stories, and resources are there that take a critical view of psychiatric medication and discuss alternative therapies? Whitaker discusses the approach to treatment used in Lapland, Finland, where they hold an open-dialogue, collaborative type of family therapy for schizophrenic spectrum disorders.
I know of the following:
www.madinamerica.com
www.reddit.com
John Nash's story - professor who recovered from schizophrenia and returned to teaching with the support of his wife and employer, lived psychosis and medication free until his death (the autobiographical movie A Beautiful Mind fictionalises the part where he stays on the meds)
Please share any information you have about these topics, and feel free to include personal experience or observations regarding psych meds.
I'd encourage everyone to read it, and if you have, what are your views on this book? I have just finished reading it. I have so much I want to say but it all feels pointless. Whitaker ends the book on a hopeful note, but I've seen in my everyday life evidence to the contrary. Most people I know take psychiatric drugs and have negative outcomes. I'm halfway through my third year of a four-year degree and in all my psychology classes (my field of study), we're told about the dopamine and serotonin hypotheses; medication is endorsed as a first-line treatment whereas therapy is seen as lesser. Now I take issue with the current state of therapy as well. Surely there has to be something out there I've yet to come across.
I've been minding the neighbours' children regularly for the last four or so years. It's heartbreaking to watch how they went from gregarious and active to overweight or obese and only interested in sitting in front of the computer. Their twelve year old is on aripiprazole and all three children are on guanfacine. I feel so lucky that my parents are open minded and have tried alternative treatments for myself and my siblings. (The fact that I still wish to be dead can be interpreted in two ways: these treatments do not work or I'm a hopeless cause; or I live in a sick society and in suboptimal conditions. I prefer to believe the latter but I've no clue how to begin building a different society, such that it's easier to just give up.)
My only relatively-long term experience with psychiatric medication was with sertraline (Zoloft) for about eight weeks in 2020. The hospital required me to be on it in order to move from the Eating Disorders unit to the general adolescent psychiatric unit. Midway through my seven week stay at a residential facility, I tapered off of it. From the first week I was on it, until the end, I experienced dissociation (which I'd never struggled with before) that came and went. That exacerbated my eating disorder, as I couldn't tell when I was full, so I kept eating. That also made my self harming much worse, because it was one of the only ways I could feel anything anymore. I ended up self harming far more during my stay in inpatient and residential than at any other point in my life. Being treated like a victim, with no say or input into my future, combined with the dissociative side effects of the sertraline, made me only more depressed and apathetic.
What other books, success stories, and resources are there that take a critical view of psychiatric medication and discuss alternative therapies? Whitaker discusses the approach to treatment used in Lapland, Finland, where they hold an open-dialogue, collaborative type of family therapy for schizophrenic spectrum disorders.
I know of the following:

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Mad in America’s mission is to serve as a catalyst for rethinking psychiatric care in the United States (and abroad). We believe that the current drug-based paradigm of care has failed our society, and that scientific research, as well as the lived experience of those who have been diagnosed...
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Please share any information you have about these topics, and feel free to include personal experience or observations regarding psych meds.
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