treezy z
Bluelighter
i get this shit bad, i stay to myself all winter pretty much, do drugs, don't have sex, basically completely withdrawn, i'm feeling good now that winter is pretty much over, and more importantly daylight savings is done.
Okay so it will soon be the time of year when the clocks go back in most places and we get fuck all sunlight. I always get SAD during the winter months and it makes my bipolar depression so much worse. I end up self medicating alot with more morphine then i am prescribed, more benzos then i am prescribed and taking loads of sleeping pills.
I have tried a few medications for this in the past and i have taken Amitriptyline, Trimipramine and bupropion. So far i find Bupropion to work the best which is probably because it is a DNRI thus a stimulating anti-depressant. However it doesn't always work as it should. I was thinking about maybe trying a MAOI like Selegiline but unfortunately in Canada it's only approved for Parkinson's so i doubt my doc would script me the pills. I could get them online easy enough but it's stupid that we don't have the Emsam patch here. Id even be willing to try a old irreversible MAOI like Parnate to avoid the hellish bipolar depression brought on by SAD but it has a rep for causing mania due to it's stimulating effects.
I am just wondering what do people here with SAD do to get through the winter and what if any medications you take.
Yes. I grow bonsai trees and my grow lights help a hellofalot with my depressive nature.Has anyone had luck with light therapy? I've been thinking about purchasing a lamp for SAD for several years now, but they're kind of pricy.![]()
Does anyone else get ravenous as a bear, and lazy as can be when this begins to kick in?
Throughout human history pagan religions in the northern hemisphere have considered this time of waning light and shortened days to be a time when the veil between the world of life and the world of death is the thinnest. Perhaps what we now call a disorder is simply a deep recognition of the sadness and uncertainty connected with impermanence (our own and the world we observe)? I have always felt more vulnerable to sadness in autumn but I can say also that with age has come an acceptance and even a grudging welcome of that emotion at this time of year. Looking at everything as a disorder is the madness of this age IMO.
i enjoy winter and summer makes me depressed
Throughout human history pagan religions in the northern hemisphere have considered this time of waning light and shortened days to be a time when the veil between the world of life and the world of death is the thinnest. Perhaps what we now call a disorder is simply a deep recognition of the sadness and uncertainty connected with impermanence (our own and the world we observe)? I have always felt more vulnerable to sadness in autumn but I can say also that with age has come an acceptance and even a grudging welcome of that emotion at this time of year. Looking at everything as a disorder is the madness of this age IMO.