Hello All,
Back again to share an update.
For those not familiar with my username; I've been posting here since ~2015 when I first encountered forced drugging. A lot has changed in the past three years no doubt, but I hope I can help at least some of you.
Quick personal drugging history would be:
- maximum doses of abilify injections for past 3 years
- Epilim for past 1 year
- mix of invega, zyprexa, clopixol, who the fuck knows what else during 2x admissions.
Recovering from these types of drugs is certainly possible. Anyone saying otherwise is simply still experiencing the effects of the drugs.
It's about rebuilding your health in a holistic way: all aspects of your health must improve - there is no individual 'magic bullet' to repair the damage. It's a combination of many things.
I'd be happy to share my experiences on what I've done to heal twice, but all too often the advice is ignored and flushed away by the stream of pathetic, mindless bullshit that occurs in this thread. As such, this is likely to be my last post. I return out of sympathy and desire to help, but, when that's ignored or contested I feel no need to try. Perhaps this is what has happened with the countless many others who have documented their own recoveries in the past.
Feel free to send me a PM if you're in genuine need of help or could use some encouragement. Don't go asking me about my penis, my memory, my motivation, emotions. Nor do I care to listen to any forms of scientific labelling you've given yourself. It's also pointless to speak about 'receptors' or whatever other terms you've read written somewhere amongst the internet: the point I'm making is that I'm a real person who has been thru tremendous suffering. Not only did I survive, but I now thrive.
Neuroleptic drugs are just that: drugs. As with other substances the effects diminish, and genuine healing can occur.
Live the life you loved before you started believing is was over. Waiting for feeling to return, waiting for anything, is futile... It doesn't return and in actual fact creates distance between who you are now, what you do now, and where you want to be.
PS: Watch Joe Rogan interview Kelly Brogan on YouTube. A must-do first step!