Mental Health Coming Off Invega Sustenna (Paliperidone) v4

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I have read the last 60 pages or so of this thread and am amazed at the difficulties everyone is having while on this drug. And getting off of it doesn't seem to be much better. This invega shit must be the strongest AP given, correct? From what I have read on here it seems to be the strongest one anyway.

If you don't want to answer this question I understand and if you do thank you for your reply. What kind of behavior does one have to exhibit to be forcefully put on this shot by Court order. I can only conclude that it must be some type of repeated violence. I haven't known many schizophrenic people in my life but the few I met weren't particularly violent. Maybe frustrated or confused but not hostile. I may have it all wrong though. I just wonder what kind of circumstances people have found themselves in that a Judge has to order someone to get these injections. Is it because you did something once, got a second chance, and did the same thing again? Did you only do something once and then get ordered on it?

What happens if you don't show up for the monthly injection? Do you go to jail? A psych ward? Do they then forcibly restrain you and inject you anyway? The whole thing sounds horrible. And it must be for the people going through these things. This whole thread is just really sad and the posters on here sound absolutely miserable ON and OFF the drug. I just haven't read one post on here where it actually is helping anyone.
They made up some shit about me then court ordered the shots. I did had psychosis but not in any way a threat to myself or others
 
They made up some shit about me then court ordered the shots. I did had psychosis but not in any way a threat to myself or others
Was the psychosis drug related? In other words, if the drug was ceased you would no longer be psychotic? Or was it something that was life challenges related? Like something that happened in your life that was hard to deal with?
 
S
The guy who invented invega is biggest failure earth has to offer...instead of designing some cool drug which you can make feel good they came up with utter rubbish


Get kratom green malay and murucuna containing 50% L-dopa. Green malay kratom for some reason works the best the other ones dont do anything
Do you feel the mental effects from Kratom? Can U get high?
 
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I just haven't read one post on here where it actually is helping anyone.
I had a psychotic episode because of something bad that happened to me and my girlfriend at the time. I was using weed, Kratom, and Coca back then. The doctors are fags and labeled me a drug induced schizophrenic, disregarding the horrible situation I was in that led to me losing it.

My plan is to also use a whole mixture of drugs in a few months when I’m off this garbage to reset my brain function.
 
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I had a psychotic episode because of something bad that happened to me and my girlfriend at the time. I was using weed, Kratom, and Coca back then. The doctors are fags and labeled me a drug induced schizophrenic, disregarding the horrible situation I was in that led to me losing it.

My plan is to also use a whole mixture of drugs in a few months when I’m off this garbage to reset my brain function.
Dont use drugs at beginning, they might slow down recovery. Give yourself 12-6 months, than it will be more effective at reseting.
 
If you still have invega in your system, and you switch to abilify, does that completely stop the invega from working?
 
I have read the last 60 pages or so of this thread and am amazed at the difficulties everyone is having while on this drug. And getting off of it doesn't seem to be much better. This invega shit must be the strongest AP given, correct? From what I have read on here it seems to be the strongest one anyway.

If you don't want to answer this question I understand and if you do thank you for your reply. What kind of behavior does one have to exhibit to be forcefully put on this shot by Court order. I can only conclude that it must be some type of repeated violence. I haven't known many schizophrenic people in my life but the few I met weren't particularly violent. Maybe frustrated or confused but not hostile. I may have it all wrong though. I just wonder what kind of circumstances people have found themselves in that a Judge has to order someone to get these injections. Is it because you did something once, got a second chance, and did the same thing again? Did you only do something once and then get ordered on it?

What happens if you don't show up for the monthly injection? Do you go to jail? A psych ward? Do they then forcibly restrain you and inject you anyway? The whole thing sounds horrible. And it must be for the people going through these things. This whole thread is just really sad and the posters on here sound absolutely miserable ON and OFF the drug. I just haven't read one post on here where it actually is helping anyone.
I was court ordered to take it, but I wasn't violent. I do, however, have a history of suicide attempts. They see me as high risk because of that and they think that I need to stay on antipsychotics because I have a diagnosis of schizophrenia. They think I'm still taking the drug orally now, but I'm not. I wasn't suicidal last year when I was put on the injection either, I was just non-compliant. They did give me chances to take the medication orally, but I didn't take it. I wasn't talking about my delusions to anyone, but they thought that I was unwell because I was too anxious to go outside sometimes. They hospitalised me because I was anxious (I wasn't very anxious though) and I wasn't taking the medication. They said I was guarded and paranoid. They thought I needed treatment. Unfortunately, a family member also told them about strange and paranoid (but harmless) things that I was doing, so I wasn't able to hide the fact that I was ill.

If I didn't show up for the injection, they would have just brought me back to the hospital to forceably inject. I was held down by nurses to have my first injections. It was traumatising.

Being on those injections stopped my delusions (I was getting coded messages from everything - car reg plates, random noises from my neighbours, even the colours that people were wearing), because they stopped me thinking so much. But I think that I would have got better anyway, with a bit of time and a safe place. Schizophrenia (if that is what I have) is an episodic illness. The psychosis comes and goes by itself, and people can recover in full without medication too.

It's only now that I'm off the injections (over three and a half months) that I'm able to really process everything that I went through. My insight is much better now that I'm able to think about things a lot more. I think a lot of things led to me developing delusions, mainly stress. I can remember the exact moments when I began believing strange things and I can understand now why I did. Unfortunately, I'll never choose to get therapy or help from the mental health system again, because I know that they will only force medicate me - so I won't tell them if I get ill. Luckily, I have good friends who I know I can talk to. We've talked a lot about the things I believed and I trust them to tell me the truth and help me to challenge strange beliefs in the future.

I don't think that the people working in psychiatry realise how bad the drug makes us feel. If they did - they wouldn't prescribe it. I was suicidal throughout my time on the injection, but I didn't tell my doctor this because I didn't think that there was any point and I didn't want any more medication or a higher dose. I think antipsychotics are the reason why people with schizophrenia end their lives. They suck up the joy, passion and creativity from your life.

Actually, there was something else. I read in my notes afterwards that my nurse wrote that I threatened to kill someone, but this was completely made up. I asked that person to write a letter to say that I didn't threaten them, which they did. This letter is in my notes now, but by then it was too late. They'd already given me the injection.
 
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And against the mental health workers, we came up with our own saying, We live here, you're just visiting!!..lol
 
The guy who invented invega is biggest failure earth has to offer...instead of designing some cool drug which you can make feel good they came up with utter rubbish


Get kratom green malay and murucuna containing 50% L-dopa. Green malay kratom for some reason works the best the other ones dont do anything
I noticed that only green vein does anything as well. Nothing else does anything at all anymore thanks to this stupid shot
 
You get use to it
No you don’t. I’m “used to it” but still feel like I’m in hell so yes you do technically get used to it but it doesn’t make it any better really. You also get fed up with it too. I’m completely fed up. It’s inhumane to do this to a person.
 
I was court ordered to take it, but I wasn't violent. I do, however, have a history of suicide attempts. They see me as high risk because of that and they think that I need to stay on antipsychotics because I have a diagnosis of schizophrenia. They think I'm still taking the drug orally now, but I'm not. I wasn't suicidal last year when I was put on the injection either, I was just non-compliant. They did give me chances to take the medication orally, but I didn't take it. I wasn't talking about my delusions to anyone, but they thought that I was unwell because I was too anxious to go outside sometimes. They hospitalised me because I was anxious (I wasn't very anxious though) and I wasn't taking the medication. They said I was guarded and paranoid. They thought I needed treatment. Unfortunately, a family member also told them about strange and paranoid (but harmless) things that I was doing, so I wasn't able to hide the fact that I was ill.

If I didn't show up for the injection, they would have just brought me back to the hospital to forceably inject. I was held down by nurses to have my first injections. It was traumatising.

Being on those injections stopped my delusions (I was getting coded messages from everything - car reg plates, random noises from my neighbours, even the colours that people were wearing), because they stopped me thinking so much. But I think that I would have got better anyway, with a bit of time and a safe place. Schizophrenia (if that is what I have) is an episodic illness. The psychosis comes and goes by itself, and people can recover in full without medication too.

It's only now that I'm off the injections (over three and a half months) that I'm able to really process everything that I went through. My insight is much better now that I'm able to think about things a lot more. I think a lot of things led to me developing delusions, mainly stress. I can remember the exact moments when I began believing strange things and I can understand now why I did. Unfortunately, I'll never choose to get therapy or help from the mental health system again, because I know that they will only force medicate me - so I won't tell them if I get ill. Luckily, I have good friends who I know I can talk to. We've talked a lot about the things I believed and I trust them to tell me the truth and help me to challenge strange beliefs in the future.

I don't think that the people working in psychiatry realise how bad the drug makes us feel. If they did - they wouldn't prescribe it. I was suicidal throughout my time on the injection, but I didn't tell my doctor this because I didn't think that there was any point and I didn't want any more medication or a higher dose. I think antipsychotics are the reason why people with schizophrenia end their lives. They suck up the joy, passion and creativity from your life.

Actually, there was something else. I read in my notes afterwards that my nurse wrote that I threatened to kill someone, but this was completely made up. I asked that person to write a letter to say that I didn't threaten them, which they did. This letter is in my notes now, but by then it was too late. They'd already given me the injection.
How many shots you received?
 
If you still have invega in your system, and you switch to abilify, does that completely stop the invega from working?
No but abilify is a dopamine partial agonist and increase dopamine when you are on invega
 
I was court ordered to take it, but I wasn't violent. I do, however, have a history of suicide attempts. They see me as high risk because of that and they think that I need to stay on antipsychotics because I have a diagnosis of schizophrenia. They think I'm still taking the drug orally now, but I'm not. I wasn't suicidal last year when I was put on the injection either, I was just non-compliant. They did give me chances to take the medication orally, but I didn't take it. I wasn't talking about my delusions to anyone, but they thought that I was unwell because I was too anxious to go outside sometimes. They hospitalised me because I was anxious (I wasn't very anxious though) and I wasn't taking the medication. They said I was guarded and paranoid. They thought I needed treatment. Unfortunately, a family member also told them about strange and paranoid (but harmless) things that I was doing, so I wasn't able to hide the fact that I was ill.

If I didn't show up for the injection, they would have just brought me back to the hospital to forceably inject. I was held down by nurses to have my first injections. It was traumatising.

Being on those injections stopped my delusions (I was getting coded messages from everything - car reg plates, random noises from my neighbours, even the colours that people were wearing), because they stopped me thinking so much. But I think that I would have got better anyway, with a bit of time and a safe place. Schizophrenia (if that is what I have) is an episodic illness. The psychosis comes and goes by itself, and people can recover in full without medication too.

It's only now that I'm off the injections (over three and a half months) that I'm able to really process everything that I went through. My insight is much better now that I'm able to think about things a lot more. I think a lot of things led to me developing delusions, mainly stress. I can remember the exact moments when I began believing strange things and I can understand now why I did. Unfortunately, I'll never choose to get therapy or help from the mental health system again, because I know that they will only force medicate me - so I won't tell them if I get ill. Luckily, I have good friends who I know I can talk to. We've talked a lot about the things I believed and I trust them to tell me the truth and help me to challenge strange beliefs in the future.

I don't think that the people working in psychiatry realise how bad the drug makes us feel. If they did - they wouldn't prescribe it. I was suicidal throughout my time on the injection, but I didn't tell my doctor this because I didn't think that there was any point and I didn't want any more medication or a higher dose. I think antipsychotics are the reason why people with schizophrenia end their lives. They suck up the joy, passion and creativity from your life.

Actually, there was something else. I read in my notes afterwards that my nurse wrote that I threatened to kill someone, but this was completely made up. I asked that person to write a letter to say that I didn't threaten them, which they did. This letter is in my notes now, but by then it was too late. They'd already given me the injection.
Thank you for sharing that. You seem like you have a good head on your shoulders and I am glad you have those friends. Good luck moving on with the rest of your life. I hope it can be all that you want it to be in time.
 
I had a psychotic episode because of something bad that happened to me and my girlfriend at the time. I was using weed, Kratom, and Coca back then. The doctors are fags and labeled me a drug induced schizophrenic, disregarding the horrible situation I was in that led to me losing it.

My plan is to also use a whole mixture of drugs in a few months when I’m off this garbage to reset my brain function.
Totally me as well..especially mushrooms microdose them a few times day. I never get those guys that complain they still have invega symptoms after 8 months. If i were them i would use lotsa drugs
 
If you still have invega in your system, and you switch to abilify, does that completely stop the invega from working?
Nothing and I repeat nothing on gods green earth can stop invega from working. No dopamine agonist on this planet can beat it. Not even methamphetamine, which is basically the most powerful dopamine agonist in the world causing insanely huge spikes of dopamine, can counteract this drug. It’s the most powerful drug ever made and that is why it absolutely destroys your brain. They have no idea how powerful what they’re giving people really is.
 
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