Hey everyone! It's been forever since I posted here. I used to post back in 2020, all the way back in the V3-4 versions of this thread. I just randomly thought about this place, and decided I should post a long term recovery update. I've fully recovered and surpassed my previous self. Since I recovered and left, I got married and I got a job making more than I made pre-Invega. I also go to the gym, and surpassed my pre-Invega strength. Currently I'm 6ft, 230lbs, and I bench 305 lbs for 5 reps, and deadlift 405 for 5. I'm also able to feel smart, creative, and social again. I can feel the effects of weed, caffeine, alcohol, psilocybin, etc. However, once your brain heals, you should also more easily be content with your sober self. I was constantly attempting to feel alcohol while on Invega, just to get my dopamine receptors going. But I would drink and feel nothing. These days, I can feel all the expected effects of alcohol. However, I also did dry January this year and felt great doing it.
Feel free to go through my post history if you want to get caught up on everything I went through. Poverty of thought, major anhedonia, complete removal of emotions, erectile dysfunction, you name it. This was definitely one of the hardest challenges of my life, and there were periods where I was extremely suicidal and hopeless. I can see why people leave and never look back, or even come back and delete their old posts. It's pretty embarassing. However, I remember that when I was going through it, seeing recovery stories was one of the only things that kept me going. I'll try and stick around for a bit to answer questions.
Overall, it took me about a year and a half to get to a point where I felt recovered. Five years later, I'm thriving. Making it through the experience really gave me a new perspective and appreciation for life itself. And taught me to not take a functional brain and dopaminergic system for granted. Being on invega felt like a chemical lobotomy where my mind and soul were in a prison. When you finally recover, it truly feels like you get a second chance at life.