Mental Health Coming off Invega (Paliperidone, Xeplion) injections v 6.0

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This is a very interesting discussion. I have a great way to settle this and I am pursuing this also as legal evidence in my own litigation against mental health providers, the leadership of psychiatry, the pharmaceutical companies, etc. The solution is to take a biopsy/tissue sample of nervous tissue and brain tissue, especially subcortical brain tissue, of people like myself, who have multiple permanent, incurable, untreatable injuries from both antidepressants and antipsychotics. We take my tissues, and we take the tissue of people who are healthy, i.e. have never taken psychiatric drugs like antidepressants and antipsychotics and do not suffer from any of these injuries that I speak of. We examine both under an electron scanning microscope, not merely a regular microscope, in order to see cellular structure and neurochemistry receptors at the finest level. No doubt an honest, competent examination would reveal many signs of cellular and receptor damage in cases like mine versus the control, the completely healthy people, having no damage whatsoever. Since I have been subject to so much antidepressants and antipsychotics and so much damage, it would likely be impossible to discern which damage came from which drug although it may be possible to determine which damage came from which class of drugs.

It is overwhelmingly likely in cases like mine that antipsychotics and antidepressants have caused permanent damage to neuroreceptors. There is no other explanation for my injuries, that have no cure, no treatment, are all long-term and many permanent, whatsoever.

I mentioned this before:
I have long-term and likely permanent heartburn, incurable, from fluoxetine and wellbutrin.
I have long-term diarrhea, likely from wellbutrin (although someone else mentioned the possibility it could have been paliperidone and they are right, any other of the psychiatric drugs could have contributed or even caused this, although since it started when I started wellbutrin, wellbutrin is the most likely candidate especially since the official drug label actually acknowledges diarrhea as caused by wellbutrin at considerable rates)
I have long-term, incurable, untreatable central breathing problems from abilify
I have long-term, treatable eye irritation/itchiness/dryness from escitalopram (loteprednol, a steroidal eye drop, has proven to be a miracle treatment for this)
I have permanent, incurable, irreversible, untreatable obesity from abilify
I have permanent, incurable, untreatable depression and sexual dysfunction from paliperidone
For the vast majority of antipsychotic and antidepressant injuries, there are no known cures, no known treatments and in most cases no effort has been made to find any.

These drugs all work by affecting the neurochemistry receptors. For anyone to insist that these drugs cannot permanently damage neurochemistry receptors is a total joke and a complete insult to the suffering, permanent injury, disability and injustice I (and many others) have suffered. Of course, we need to do scientific tests like the one I mentioned (I can't imagine what other method there might be) to prove it, but I have no doubt once this testing is done that I advocate for, it will prove it. There is simply no other explanation and the cause to believe this, even without this direct testing, is overwhelming.

Paliperidone induced permanent depression and sexual dysfunction, such as the same that I suffer from, is sufficient to drive most people to suicide. I not only have that problem but all these other problems. I have no intentions to commit suicide, however, and every intention to bring all the guilty parties to the fullest justice possible by the law and every intention to either persuade someone in the world to find a treatment/cure for these problems or find them myself. I have the every intention to persuade the entire world to take the dangers of these medications seriously and to persuade the entire world to desire positive change in our mental health system.

There is absolutely no reason our antidepressants and antipsychotics, i.e. all those developed in the last 70 years, should be so dangerous and should not be very effective. If scientists and psychiatrists wanted to, they could have long ago developed truly effective and truly safe antidepressants and antipsychotics. With today's technology--electron scanning microscopes, genomic technologies, biochemistry understanding, supercomputers and artificial intelligence, there is no excuse to not have developed much safer and much more effective antidepressants and antipsychotics. I hope to one day get involved in research to develop such truly safe and effective medications, but I will need my health to improve and need to acquire independent means of financing such research, which I have plans to--I have plans to treasure hunt and find a great treasure, whose name I will not mention but which belonged to a famous pirate whom all Americans probably know of. This treasure will finance such research as well as other measures of justice and quality control to make mental health and medicine in our country and the world better. The only problem is the US government will confiscate 100% of the treasure in most cases (except in a few they let the finders keep 100% of it, which seemed to be completely arbitrary and as unlikely as lightning striking someone five times while they win the lottery five times in a row).

There is a severe problem of morals in the mental health profession that too many people deny but which I continue to gather irrefutable proof of. Again, I must say, I am the truest advocate and defender of psychiatry, psychology, mental health, medicine, science and the law, because I know what they should be about: human values and virtues and following all the rules and having safe and effective therapies. Instead, there is (I have irrefutable proof of this and I have every intention to gather as much as possible) a lot of illegal emergency mental health detentions conducted, a lot of malicious falsification of medical records and mental health records, a lot of breaking of the rules of the DSM, a lot of false diagnoses, a lot of deception and sabotage regarding the dangers of antidepressants and antipsychotics and efforts to get injuries from them recognized and treated, etc.

I have two proposals for solving the two chief problems in mental health today and they are simple, and would simply require many members of the public, like ourselves, to put united pressure on lawmakers and government agencies to see this proposals through.

The first is to solve most non-medication related misconduct in our mental health system: this is to require, by law, audio and video evidence mandates for all mental health allegations and diagnoses and for recording meetings. Especially the audio aspect would be very cost efficient, although it would be unable to stop lying insofar as visual allegations are concerned (allegations of "improper" eye contact, allegations of patient shaking, etc.). This would either eliminate all false allegations and diagnoses, or at least give us irrefutable evidence of these wrongdoings when they do occur. The latter is likely to be the case, because in my experience, I have found that in our day and age, many wrongdoers do the most blatant and obvious misconduct but since they are practically invincible and justice departments do nothing, they simply have no shame or remorse and carry on!

The second is to determine somewhat conclusively the true danger of antidepressants and antipsychotics. The problem with almost all existing side effects studies is not only can they be flawed, biased, possibly fraudulent (since there is no third party oversight that I know of that makes sure that the patients in studies actually exist, that their reported results correspond with what authors and researchers claim, etc.)* and so on, but such studies do not, to my knowledge, ever measure long-term side effects (1-10 years or more post discontinuation of medication) and the sample sizes are a joke, never amounting to more than thousands to tens and maybe rarely hundreds of thousands of people max. 16 million unique Americans are on antipsychotics in recent years, and 34 million unique Americans are on antidepressants in recent years. 260+ million unique people worldwide are on antipsychotics in the last 10 years and many more on antidepressants.

What we must do is pressure a government agency, preferably the Centers for Disease Control, who have lawful and mandatory access to all medical records, to collect all health records, mental health records and regular ones, from all Americans who have taken antidepressants and antipsychotics in the last 10 years. Collect all data points related to psychiatric drug use and compare them to all possible data points, for each person, related to common and concerning side effects/injuries, like the ones I mentioned I suffer from, as well as other ones, like suicidality/mood problems/sexual problems/physical pain for antidepressants and neuromuscular problems for antipsychotics. I guarantee you, an honest and non-corrupt full investigation of millions of (those who have taken antidepressants and antipsychotics) Americans' real world medical records will reveal results that will change the way the world thinks about existing antispychotics and antidepressants. I promise you that the rates of these side effects and injuries will be far greater than the rates reported in side effects literature. We'll at least get a better picture of how common palipieridone induced depression and sexual dysfunction is--these threads on the bluelight.org forum suggest this problem is universal and far in excess of what side effects literature and most psychiatrists and doctors acknowledge, which makes complete sense from a neurochemistry standpoint. Neurochemistry scientific consensus suggests that antipsychotic induced depression and sexual dysfunction should be extremely common, since it links one of the primary mechanisms of antipsychotics, dopamine inhibition, with the primary mechanism/explanation of depression and sexual dysfunction, being dopamine inhibition/deficits, as well as the same for subsymptoms like general anhedonia, musical anhedonia, sexual anhedonia and loss of sensitivity to coffee.

Therefore, ask your local lawmakers to demand audio and video evidence mandates.

Contact the CDC via email and phone to demand they collect real world patient data of the health records of Americans who have taken antidepressants and antipsychotics.

If I'm the only one asking, they are going to ignore me of course. Additionally, if I'm the only one reporting psychiatric drug side effects, like from paliperidone, to the FDA's Medwatch, they won't do anything--they told me personally that if thousands of people make such reports they will take action, although corruption is always a possibility and they could still refuse to do anything even if thousands do make such reports. But all these efforts are worth giving them a try! And as I've said before, the more of us can contact local and national news media and tell them our stories and demand news coverage and demand change, the more likely news media and investigative journalists are to actually do something.


*independent quality control and review, such as conducted by myself, of such studies takes a lot of time. In my brief efforts, I have found disturbing red flags: I have seen studies that list no sample size, I have seen studies that list placebo side effects rates that are way to high to not be suspicious and possibly fabricated and I have seen meta-studies that claimed some studies it referred to supported claims of efficacy whereupon those studies actually did not! Additionally, I often talk about the hundred million dollar/billion dollar penalties exacted upon psychiatric pharmaceutical companies in successful lawsuits regarding falsifying safety science, concealing dangers and illegal marketing of their antidepressants and antipsychotics.
Have you tried exercising and dieting now that you’re off antipsychotics? Usually when you’ve been off antipsychotics for a long period of time you lose weight? Maybe you’re eating too much and it’s all adding up? You really have to be strict when dieting like eat 1200 cals a day and exercise like crazy if you want to lose weight.
 
How long are/have you taking 1.5g
I could only do it for 2.5 months consecutively
1 out of 3 times I would get sick. It tastes awful, like rancid urine in a urinal. It was high quality NAC as well, I bought capsules and made the pills myself.

I did it for a total of 6 months. You need breaks from it,

Ecgc tastes awful as well but is needed for 5htp supplementation.

Realistically they all taste awful, but only NAC exploded my back tooth. It's that good.
 
.Vitamin K2 will help protect against damage invega does to teeth.


K2 (K2) has been shown to have an antioxidant potential in the brain and may prove to be a potent way to preserve the endocrine controlled centrifugal dentinal fluid flow. Stress, including oxidative stress, magnifies the body's inflammatory response. Sugar can not only increase oral bacterial acid production but it can concurrently reduce the tooth's defenses through endocrine signaling. Saliva production is the exocrine function of the salivary glands

 
This is a very interesting discussion. I have a great way to settle this and I am pursuing this also as legal evidence in my own litigation against mental health providers, the leadership of psychiatry, the pharmaceutical companies, etc. The solution is to take a biopsy/tissue sample of nervous tissue and brain tissue, especially subcortical brain tissue, of people like myself, who have multiple permanent, incurable, untreatable injuries from both antidepressants and antipsychotics. We take my tissues, and we take the tissue of people who are healthy, i.e. have never taken psychiatric drugs like antidepressants and antipsychotics and do not suffer from any of these injuries that I speak of. We examine both under an electron scanning microscope, not merely a regular microscope, in order to see cellular structure and neurochemistry receptors at the finest level. No doubt an honest, competent examination would reveal many signs of cellular and receptor damage in cases like mine versus the control, the completely healthy people, having no damage whatsoever. Since I have been subject to so much antidepressants and antipsychotics and so much damage, it would likely be impossible to discern which damage came from which drug although it may be possible to determine which damage came from which class of drugs.

It is overwhelmingly likely in cases like mine that antipsychotics and antidepressants have caused permanent damage to neuroreceptors. There is no other explanation for my injuries, that have no cure, no treatment, are all long-term and many permanent, whatsoever.

I mentioned this before:
I have long-term and likely permanent heartburn, incurable, from fluoxetine and wellbutrin.
I have long-term diarrhea, likely from wellbutrin (although someone else mentioned the possibility it could have been paliperidone and they are right, any other of the psychiatric drugs could have contributed or even caused this, although since it started when I started wellbutrin, wellbutrin is the most likely candidate especially since the official drug label actually acknowledges diarrhea as caused by wellbutrin at considerable rates)
I have long-term, incurable, untreatable central breathing problems from abilify
I have long-term, treatable eye irritation/itchiness/dryness from escitalopram (loteprednol, a steroidal eye drop, has proven to be a miracle treatment for this)
I have permanent, incurable, irreversible, untreatable obesity from abilify
I have permanent, incurable, untreatable depression and sexual dysfunction from paliperidone
For the vast majority of antipsychotic and antidepressant injuries, there are no known cures, no known treatments and in most cases no effort has been made to find any.

These drugs all work by affecting the neurochemistry receptors. For anyone to insist that these drugs cannot permanently damage neurochemistry receptors is a total joke and a complete insult to the suffering, permanent injury, disability and injustice I (and many others) have suffered. Of course, we need to do scientific tests like the one I mentioned (I can't imagine what other method there might be) to prove it, but I have no doubt once this testing is done that I advocate for, it will prove it. There is simply no other explanation and the cause to believe this, even without this direct testing, is overwhelming.

Paliperidone induced permanent depression and sexual dysfunction, such as the same that I suffer from, is sufficient to drive most people to suicide. I not only have that problem but all these other problems. I have no intentions to commit suicide, however, and every intention to bring all the guilty parties to the fullest justice possible by the law and every intention to either persuade someone in the world to find a treatment/cure for these problems or find them myself. I have the every intention to persuade the entire world to take the dangers of these medications seriously and to persuade the entire world to desire positive change in our mental health system.

There is absolutely no reason our antidepressants and antipsychotics, i.e. all those developed in the last 70 years, should be so dangerous and should not be very effective. If scientists and psychiatrists wanted to, they could have long ago developed truly effective and truly safe antidepressants and antipsychotics. With today's technology--electron scanning microscopes, genomic technologies, biochemistry understanding, supercomputers and artificial intelligence, there is no excuse to not have developed much safer and much more effective antidepressants and antipsychotics. I hope to one day get involved in research to develop such truly safe and effective medications, but I will need my health to improve and need to acquire independent means of financing such research, which I have plans to--I have plans to treasure hunt and find a great treasure, whose name I will not mention but which belonged to a famous pirate whom all Americans probably know of. This treasure will finance such research as well as other measures of justice and quality control to make mental health and medicine in our country and the world better. The only problem is the US government will confiscate 100% of the treasure in most cases (except in a few they let the finders keep 100% of it, which seemed to be completely arbitrary and as unlikely as lightning striking someone five times while they win the lottery five times in a row).

There is a severe problem of morals in the mental health profession that too many people deny but which I continue to gather irrefutable proof of. Again, I must say, I am the truest advocate and defender of psychiatry, psychology, mental health, medicine, science and the law, because I know what they should be about: human values and virtues and following all the rules and having safe and effective therapies. Instead, there is (I have irrefutable proof of this and I have every intention to gather as much as possible) a lot of illegal emergency mental health detentions conducted, a lot of malicious falsification of medical records and mental health records, a lot of breaking of the rules of the DSM, a lot of false diagnoses, a lot of deception and sabotage regarding the dangers of antidepressants and antipsychotics and efforts to get injuries from them recognized and treated, etc.

I have two proposals for solving the two chief problems in mental health today and they are simple, and would simply require many members of the public, like ourselves, to put united pressure on lawmakers and government agencies to see this proposals through.

The first is to solve most non-medication related misconduct in our mental health system: this is to require, by law, audio and video evidence mandates for all mental health allegations and diagnoses and for recording meetings. Especially the audio aspect would be very cost efficient, although it would be unable to stop lying insofar as visual allegations are concerned (allegations of "improper" eye contact, allegations of patient shaking, etc.). This would either eliminate all false allegations and diagnoses, or at least give us irrefutable evidence of these wrongdoings when they do occur. The latter is likely to be the case, because in my experience, I have found that in our day and age, many wrongdoers do the most blatant and obvious misconduct but since they are practically invincible and justice departments do nothing, they simply have no shame or remorse and carry on!

The second is to determine somewhat conclusively the true danger of antidepressants and antipsychotics. The problem with almost all existing side effects studies is not only can they be flawed, biased, possibly fraudulent (since there is no third party oversight that I know of that makes sure that the patients in studies actually exist, that their reported results correspond with what authors and researchers claim, etc.)* and so on, but such studies do not, to my knowledge, ever measure long-term side effects (1-10 years or more post discontinuation of medication) and the sample sizes are a joke, never amounting to more than thousands to tens and maybe rarely hundreds of thousands of people max. 16 million unique Americans are on antipsychotics in recent years, and 34 million unique Americans are on antidepressants in recent years. 260+ million unique people worldwide are on antipsychotics in the last 10 years and many more on antidepressants.

What we must do is pressure a government agency, preferably the Centers for Disease Control, who have lawful and mandatory access to all medical records, to collect all health records, mental health records and regular ones, from all Americans who have taken antidepressants and antipsychotics in the last 10 years. Collect all data points related to psychiatric drug use and compare them to all possible data points, for each person, related to common and concerning side effects/injuries, like the ones I mentioned I suffer from, as well as other ones, like suicidality/mood problems/sexual problems/physical pain for antidepressants and neuromuscular problems for antipsychotics. I guarantee you, an honest and non-corrupt full investigation of millions of (those who have taken antidepressants and antipsychotics) Americans' real world medical records will reveal results that will change the way the world thinks about existing antispychotics and antidepressants. I promise you that the rates of these side effects and injuries will be far greater than the rates reported in side effects literature. We'll at least get a better picture of how common palipieridone induced depression and sexual dysfunction is--these threads on the bluelight.org forum suggest this problem is universal and far in excess of what side effects literature and most psychiatrists and doctors acknowledge, which makes complete sense from a neurochemistry standpoint. Neurochemistry scientific consensus suggests that antipsychotic induced depression and sexual dysfunction should be extremely common, since it links one of the primary mechanisms of antipsychotics, dopamine inhibition, with the primary mechanism/explanation of depression and sexual dysfunction, being dopamine inhibition/deficits, as well as the same for subsymptoms like general anhedonia, musical anhedonia, sexual anhedonia and loss of sensitivity to coffee.

Therefore, ask your local lawmakers to demand audio and video evidence mandates.

Contact the CDC via email and phone to demand they collect real world patient data of the health records of Americans who have taken antidepressants and antipsychotics.

If I'm the only one asking, they are going to ignore me of course. Additionally, if I'm the only one reporting psychiatric drug side effects, like from paliperidone, to the FDA's Medwatch, they won't do anything--they told me personally that if thousands of people make such reports they will take action, although corruption is always a possibility and they could still refuse to do anything even if thousands do make such reports. But all these efforts are worth giving them a try! And as I've said before, the more of us can contact local and national news media and tell them our stories and demand news coverage and demand change, the more likely news media and investigative journalists are to actually do something.


*independent quality control and review, such as conducted by myself, of such studies takes a lot of time. In my brief efforts, I have found disturbing red flags: I have seen studies that list no sample size, I have seen studies that list placebo side effects rates that are way to high to not be suspicious and possibly fabricated and I have seen meta-studies that claimed some studies it referred to supported claims of efficacy whereupon those studies actually did not! Additionally, I often talk about the hundred million dollar/billion dollar penalties exacted upon psychiatric pharmaceutical companies in successful lawsuits regarding falsifying safety science, concealing dangers and illegal marketing of their antidepressants and antipsychotics.
This would literally be a full time job to do this. Jansen owns all the people you want us to call.
 
ALRIGHT IM OUT, GOOD LUCK TO EVERYONE.
RECOVERY CAN HAPPEN, SO CAN GETTIN REINJECTED SO BE CAREFUL


EARLY INVEGA:
NAC,GLUTIATHIONE,SJW

SYMPTOMS:
BENADRYL, BENZOS(FOR SOME), TART CHERRY EXTRACT( MAXIMUM DOSE FOR EFFECTIVENESS)

POST INVEGA RECOVERY:
GABA , 5HTP/EGCG, L TYROSINE

EXTRA:
R ALA CYCOLDEXTRIN , TESTERONE FROM DOCTOR

TEETH:
VITAMIN K2

CALMING:
L THEANINE, JASMINE TEA, LAVENDER SCENTS

PROLACTIN LEVELS:
7 DAYS OF ABILIFY PILLS

EYE HEALTH/INFLAMATION:
AREDS MULTI VITAMIN 1 OR 2, TART CHERRY EXTRACT, LUTEIN

COLD WEATHER:
WALKS, SHOWERS

LIBIDO:
HORNY GOAT WEED, 5HTP AND EGCG
 
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I don’t know if this is just a window or not but I feel really good right now, I took a long walk and the sunset is beautiful the birds are chirping too and I can actually feel the vibe of this nice night and it’s bussin I feel almost 100% recovered 😌, life is good light is at the end of the tunnel you guys will get better eventually.
 
Have you tried exercising and dieting now that you’re off antipsychotics? Usually when you’ve been off antipsychotics for a long period of time you lose weight? Maybe you’re eating too much and it’s all adding up? You really have to be strict when dieting like eat 1200 cals a day and exercise like crazy if you want to lose weight.
So the obesity was from abilify, which I took twice. First, around 2011-2013, wherein I gained the weight in late 2012. I was only on abilify and fluoxetine in that time and then on no psychiatric drugs whatsoever until July 2021, or a period of 8 years. For those 8 years, even though I was obese, I didn't have problems exercising and in fact, did tons of it, enjoying it and benefiting from it (with the exception of losing weight). In those eight years, I exercised and dieted religiously: running, sprinting, weight lifting, yoga, team sports, dog walking, housekeeping, cooking, you name it, every single day, in addition to working jobs where I often was standing for long periods of the day and sometimes doing manual labor. I often did bouts of vegetarianism, sometimes did one day food fasts, sometimes did bouts of raw veganism, and ate really healthy in general, covering all bases: omega 3s from fish, plenty of fiber and grains, leafy vegetables, fresh fruits, home cooked food with fresh produce, salads, nuts, eggs, occasional red meat, adequate protein, vitamins, minerals, etc. I was unable to lose the majority of the weight.

After my paliperidone induced permanent, incurable, untreatable depression and sexual dysfunction that has gone on since December 2021, I have not been able to exercise much at all nor eat as healthy as I used to. I've been off any antipsychotics (I was on abilify from Jan 2022 to Oct 2022 and gained weight, yet again, in Fall 2022) since the end of October 2022 and all antidepressants since the end of December 2022. Those previous 8 years I mentioned, from roughly 2013-2021 were proof positive that exercising and diet do not work for the abilify-induced permanent, irreversible, incurable, untreatable weight gain. I was doing such intensive exercise actually for most of my life before 2013, so it's more than 8 years, but it was 8 years while I was not on any psychiatric drugs.

Now, I didn't maintain a 1200 calorie a day or less diet for any considerable period of time, except sometimes during extended stays at a Raw Vegan Institute, typically for 1-3 weeks.
1200 calories a day or less is pretty low, especially if one is exercising a ton. Obviously, very harsh measures starting to approach quasi-starvation could work for weight loss but would be inhumane and could have negative health consequences. Most normally functioning people should be able to lose massive amounts of weight and/or at least achieve a normal, non-overweight BMI with heavy exercise and reasonable dieting. At any rate, a 1200 calorie a day diet was only possible pre-paliperidone. Now, my faculties and strength are so destroyed (including religious faculties important to my ability to fast and diet), in addition to all the health problems and psychiatric drug injuries I've mentioned, that such a restrictive diet of 1200 calories a day or less is really not practical.

I appreciate your input but I think my weight loss (from obesity to overweight and ultimately to normal weight) is a lost cause unless a treatment/cure is found for antipsychotic-induced injuries. All antipsychotic and antidepressant induced injuries should come from their effects and possible damage on neurochemistry receptors. How this translates into permanent, irreversible, untreatable, incurable obesity and weight gain is an interesting question which seems almost unsolvable for the time being--perhaps it damages subcortical structures in the brain responsible for regulating metabolism, but this raises more questions than it answers! Besides my weight, there have never been indicators of an abnormal metabolism: I wasn't really eating more than normal and I was exercising heavily and eating healthy the first time I gained weight from abilify and to my knowledge, my health readings were all normal. Even now, my health readings are normal across many parameters: blood lipids, thyroids, other blood measurements, hormones, although I have elevated liver enzymes and an allergic reaction in my esophagus. The second time I gained weight from abilify, I was of course not exercising but I still was eating normally.
 
So the obesity was from abilify, which I took twice. First, around 2011-2013, wherein I gained the weight in late 2012. I was only on abilify and fluoxetine in that time and then on no psychiatric drugs whatsoever until July 2021, or a period of 8 years. For those 8 years, even though I was obese, I didn't have problems exercising and in fact, did tons of it, enjoying it and benefiting from it (with the exception of losing weight). In those eight years, I exercised and dieted religiously: running, sprinting, weight lifting, yoga, team sports, dog walking, housekeeping, cooking, you name it, every single day, in addition to working jobs where I often was standing for long periods of the day and sometimes doing manual labor. I often did bouts of vegetarianism, sometimes did one day food fasts, sometimes did bouts of raw veganism, and ate really healthy in general, covering all bases: omega 3s from fish, plenty of fiber and grains, leafy vegetables, fresh fruits, home cooked food with fresh produce, salads, nuts, eggs, occasional red meat, adequate protein, vitamins, minerals, etc. I was unable to lose the majority of the weight.

After my paliperidone induced permanent, incurable, untreatable depression and sexual dysfunction that has gone on since December 2021, I have not been able to exercise much at all nor eat as healthy as I used to. I've been off any antipsychotics (I was on abilify from Jan 2022 to Oct 2022 and gained weight, yet again, in Fall 2022) since the end of October 2022 and all antidepressants since the end of December 2022. Those previous 8 years I mentioned, from roughly 2013-2021 were proof positive that exercising and diet do not work for the abilify-induced permanent, irreversible, incurable, untreatable weight gain. I was doing such intensive exercise actually for most of my life before 2013, so it's more than 8 years, but it was 8 years while I was not on any psychiatric drugs.

Now, I didn't maintain a 1200 calorie a day or less diet for any considerable period of time, except sometimes during extended stays at a Raw Vegan Institute, typically for 1-3 weeks.
1200 calories a day or less is pretty low, especially if one is exercising a ton. Obviously, very harsh measures starting to approach quasi-starvation could work for weight loss but would be inhumane and could have negative health consequences. Most normally functioning people should be able to lose massive amounts of weight and/or at least achieve a normal, non-overweight BMI with heavy exercise and reasonable dieting. At any rate, a 1200 calorie a day diet was only possible pre-paliperidone. Now, my faculties and strength are so destroyed (including religious faculties important to my ability to fast and diet), in addition to all the health problems and psychiatric drug injuries I've mentioned, that such a restrictive diet of 1200 calories a day or less is really not practical.

I appreciate your input but I think my weight loss (from obesity to overweight and ultimately to normal weight) is a lost cause unless a treatment/cure is found for antipsychotic-induced injuries. All antipsychotic and antidepressant induced injuries should come from their effects and possible damage on neurochemistry receptors. How this translates into permanent, irreversible, untreatable, incurable obesity and weight gain is an interesting question which seems almost unsolvable for the time being--perhaps it damages subcortical structures in the brain responsible for regulating metabolism, but this raises more questions than it answers! Besides my weight, there have never been indicators of an abnormal metabolism: I wasn't really eating more than normal and I was exercising heavily and eating healthy the first time I gained weight from abilify and to my knowledge, my health readings were all normal. Even now, my health readings are normal across many parameters: blood lipids, thyroids, other blood measurements, hormones, although I have elevated liver enzymes and an allergic reaction in my esophagus. The second time I gained weight from abilify, I was of course not exercising but I still was eating normally.
Maybe try going on Topamax, it has some side effects but it could jump start your weight loss…you might hate the side effects though. You’d have to do your research. Take the goods with the bads…
 
This would literally be a full time job to do this. Jansen owns all the people you want us to call.
Yes, it is true. I am doing this type of work all day, from the time I wake to the time I sleep, every day, week after week for months on end and I don't plan to stop. It is a full-time job and someday I hope to start a non-profit so I can start giving myself a deserved salary for this work. But I guess I can't expect others to do such work or even a small fraction of it, but without the help and pressure/actions of others, I'm not sure how change is remotely possible.

As for Janssen "owning" all the people/contacts I mentioned, the general gist and sentiment may be correct but this may be worthy of articulating more specifically. It isn't just Janssen but the other leading psychiatric pharmaceutical drug makers (leaders in market share and market revenue and leaders in penalties suffered in litigation!), like Eli Lilly, Otsuka, Bristol Myers Squibb, etc. It is certainly reasonable to believe they exert a lot of influence and perhaps even control but I believe that the widespread corruption that I suspect and for which evidence and even irrefutable proof exists for, is more of a collaboration than something for which centralized power and command exists. I believe this collaboration in corruption involves not only mental health care providers but hospitals, clinics, medicine at wide, medical schools, pharmacy, law enforcement, justice departments, private law firms, the legal profession, law schools, lawmakers, executives, elements of corporate news media, social scientists, social work and criminology. These non-pharmaceutical company professions irrefutably originate a lot of corruption and wrongdoing on their own accord, both related to mental health and outside of mental health and even outside healthcare in general.

Were I not so busy with struggling against corruption in mental health care, the psychiatric pharmaceutical companies, I would be addressing corruption elsewhere that exists independently and deserves work and attention. Unfortunately, we have a wider, obvious problem with corruption in our society/societies! Which seems to make the challenge of addressing and solving any particular systemic injustice and corruption all the more difficult.

I've appealed to many religious leaders about these problems, giving impassioned and sound arguments based on holy texts, figures and traditions, for why they should be concerned and get involved but alas, I have always been ignored and nobody has committed to providing any help.
 
Maybe try going on Topamax, it has some side effects but it could jump start your weight loss…you might hate the side effects though. You’d have to do your research. Take the goods with the bads…
I appreciate all your suggestions, including Topamax and will continue to research Topamax.

However, I am hesitant about using any drugs for weight loss. For instance, semaglutide has been making waves in the news, being touted and fawned over for its weight loss potential. However, a week or two ago, I compiled a list of side effects for it from the official drug label as well as side effects claimed by various members of the public as well as some doctors and researchers which are not listed in the official drug label. My doctor and others have said that semaglutide induced weight loss, were it to happen, often is completely lost once semaglutide is discontinued. There have been no long term side effects studies for this drug, to my knowledge and the side effects list is long and severe enough to inspire me to never touch the drug at all.

Additionally, I of course have every reason to also be skeptical of any and all psychiatric drugs and their side effects, not just antidepressants and antipsychotics, although, having taken, at various points in my life, benzodiazepines, anxiolytics and sleep medications without any noticeable side effects, a drug like topamax would seem to be somewhere in the middle, between innocuous and safe and extremely, unbelievably dangerous. Ultimately, I just don't have enough reason to believe Topamax could break through abilify-induced permanent, irreversible, untreatable, incurable obesity which has not responded to anything. There is just nothing in its mechanism of action and pharmacology which would lead me to believe it would be effective in my situation. I simply have too many other health problems, additionally, to want to add a medication like Topamax to my regimen.

I should say that I enjoyed and drank coffee and tea a lot between 2012 and 2021, which was a time when I was mostly off all psychiatric drugs, was very obese from ability, but still able to exercise like crazy and eat healthy. Coffee is supposed to also favorably facilitate weight loss and yet during that 8 year period I mentioned before, I didn't lose the majority of my weight (I did lose a small amount though). As I may have said, before abilify, I was a skinny athlete all my life and then became quite obese forever after, after abilify came into my life. Coffee, of course, very sadly, no longer has any discernible benefits for me post-paliperidone induced permanent, incurable, untreatable depression and sexual dysfunction (December 2021 to the present, so ~16 months straight now).
 
If you watch porn do you feel dopamine like you did before the injection??? lol but its a serius question
 
There are several ways to potentially speed up the recovery of dopamine receptors after taking antipsychotics. Some strategies include:

  1. Gradually reducing the dose of the antipsychotic medication under the guidance of a healthcare provider. This can help to minimize withdrawal symptoms and allow the brain to gradually adjust to changes in dopamine activity.
  2. Engaging in regular exercise, which has been shown to increase dopamine release and promote the growth of new dopamine receptors.
  3. Eating a healthy, balanced diet that includes foods rich in vitamins and minerals that support brain health. For example, foods that are high in omega-3 fatty acids, B vitamins, and antioxidants may be beneficial.
  4. Engaging in activities that promote mental stimulation and social connection, such as reading, learning a new skill, or spending time with friends and family.
  5. Talking to a mental health professional about additional strategies that may be helpful for your specific situation.
 
There are several ways to potentially speed up the recovery of dopamine receptors after taking antipsychotics. Some strategies include:

  1. Gradually reducing the dose of the antipsychotic medication under the guidance of a healthcare provider. This can help to minimize withdrawal symptoms and allow the brain to gradually adjust to changes in dopamine activity.
  2. Engaging in regular exercise, which has been shown to increase dopamine release and promote the growth of new dopamine receptors.
  3. Eating a healthy, balanced diet that includes foods rich in vitamins and minerals that support brain health. For example, foods that are high in omega-3 fatty acids, B vitamins, and antioxidants may be beneficial.
  4. Engaging in activities that promote mental stimulation and social connection, such as reading, learning a new skill, or spending time with friends and family.
  5. Talking to a mental health professional about additional strategies that may be helpful for your specific situation.
You just answered your own question.
 
There are several ways to potentially speed up the recovery of dopamine receptors after taking antipsychotics. Some strategies include:

  1. Gradually reducing the dose of the antipsychotic medication under the guidance of a healthcare provider. This can help to minimize withdrawal symptoms and allow the brain to gradually adjust to changes in dopamine activity.
  2. Engaging in regular exercise, which has been shown to increase dopamine release and promote the growth of new dopamine receptors.
  3. Eating a healthy, balanced diet that includes foods rich in vitamins and minerals that support brain health. For example, foods that are high in omega-3 fatty acids, B vitamins, and antioxidants may be beneficial.
  4. Engaging in activities that promote mental stimulation and social connection, such as reading, learning a new skill, or spending time with friends and family.
  5. Talking to a mental health professional about additional strategies that may be helpful for your specific situation.
That’s a very good way to do it all natural no meds.
 
If you watch porn do you feel dopamine like you did before the injection??? lol but its a serius question
I can get a pretty good dopamine hit from it if I smoke weed before but not if I’m sober I can’t get any euphoria from it at all, porn is an addiction for me though that makes my brain less sensitive to dopamine the same way drugs do I have been trying to quit currently 12 days without it going strong.
 
Paliperidone neurotoxicity evidence:
https://prnt.sc/dEugF2uZY_aL - source: https://go.drugbank.com/categories/DBCAT004545
drugbank.com is routinely used by the general public, educators, pharmacists, pharmacologists, medicinal chemists, pharmaceutical researchers and the pharmaceutical industry.

The use of brain antagonists, or any type of medication that affects receptor activity in the brain, can potentially cause changes to receptor proteins. Receptor proteins are complex molecules that are embedded in the cell membrane and play a key role in transmitting signals into and out of the cell. When a drug or other ligand binds to a receptor protein, it can cause changes in the shape or conformation of the protein, which can affect its function and make it less receptive. Changes on receptors do stack over time so long exposure can make the receptors useless.

Sources used for the quote:
"Principles of Pharmacology: The Pathophysiologic Basis of Drug Therapy" by David E. Golan
"Drug Receptors and Pharmacodynamics" from the National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI): https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK531489/
"Drug Receptor Interaction" from ScienceDirect: https://www.sciencedirect.com/topics/neuroscience/drug-receptor-interaction
@Serhat96 paliperidone also has long and strong effects on receptors because of its forceful molecular structure and size+mass which is much larger than dopamine neurotransmitters. Size and mass of paliperione is not for what receptors proteins are made to handle with no friction which does cause change on shape or conformation of the proteins. Do you want more evidence?
 
Is the shitty taste like Xanax? I almost vomited one time when when I kept a Xanax on my tongue too long it was nasty & it differs for everyone some people get side effects from zoplicone and given the situation maybe it’s worth @sweetheart123 to try and see what her mental state is like without any drugs.

It's far worse tasting then xanax in my opinion.
 
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