Thanks for clearing that up. You seem to have a busy and fulfilling life.
Haha that's one way to describe it.

I'm pretty happy with it, but sometimes I could really use a bit of downtime.
You just dont see much being said about exercise and people on antipsychotics more so than that they have to take it easy on physical activity. Ive yet to see someone that fits the bill of 'muscular' that also happens to take medications that block dopamine production.
I don't think you hear much about ANYTHING and people on antipsychotics. Most people who take them don't talk publicly about doing so. And the kind of things they're prescribed for - schizophrenia, bipolar with psychotic features, chronic drug induced psychosis - are the non-media friendly kinds of mental illness that don't get feel-good feature stories written about them or have celebrity advocates talking about their lived experiences.
Besides, you're again fallaciously connecting weight loss/body sculpting to enjoyment of exercise. I don't know many people who are fully buff who take antipsychotics, either, but most antipsychotics are weight-encouraging in and of themselves. A medication making you gain weight and impairing your glucose response might prevent you getting ripped, but that doesn't mean it's necessarily going to stop you enjoying weight lifting/running/soccer/skateboarding/etc if you enjoyed those activities before you were medicated. If it does, you might want to look into alternate medications.
Also, did you know that low dopamine levels has been linked to fibromyalgia. I just googled it and came upon a few articles that talk about it.
Fibromyalgia has been linked to a lot of things - dopamine, leptin, glutamate, melatonin, cortisol, androgens, etc. You get the point. There's no medical consensus as yet as to what causes it or how it actually works, and it's a syndrome that covers really diverse presentations in different people, so I'd caution against drawing conclusions about what causes it from a google search. It's more common in people with certain mental illnesses and sometimes responds to treatment with antidepressants and mood stabilisers, though, so there's probably a relationship between neurotransmitter levels and the nerve sensitisation that causes pain.