I wasn't quite sure where to post this...
...I found out my decision to get clean of opioids sparked that in another friend. He has set his date, and done what he can to prepare. I greatly envy that he has 2 weeks solid with nothing he has to do during that period. I wish I had scheduled my quit with having an entire month of nothing pressing to do.
The two struggles my friend has are cannabis, and morphine. I know the second well, but not the first. He also quit amphetamines, cigarettes, and cymbalta recently. Mentally -- he is all over the place, and there is no doubt that its at the limit of what he can handle some days. Antidepressants can have some seriously nasty effects when you quit them; something I have experienced. So I am worried about him, but less because of him adding one more thing into the mix to have PAWS from, but a certain amount of fear he might just be trying to lower his tolerance enough to be able to kill himself with pain meds. Its not a wholly unreasonable fear, but though I know his depression is deep at times -- I think his desire to get free of the medicines to see if it improves his condition is quite sincere.
I don't expect he will get free of benzo's any time soon. Nor that he will be in any shape to give up the other psyche meds he is on. He was one of those ADHD kids that eventually developed anxiety, and depression after years of amphetamine use. He went off them for awhile, replaced with cymbalta and benzos. He has since quit the cymbalta, but has never cut down the benzos; I actually believe the benzos are making his anxiety worse at this point, but I don't think he fully believes me. Add in chronic pain problems from a car accident, and he found his way into a dark hole rather quickly with quite a few mental problems to boot.
Every time I talk with him since he quit amphetamines I am so glad that I never went down that road with anything approaching the greatest timidity. Even though I have absolutely dreadful fatigue at times -- I couldn't and wouldn't make the decision to use them daily as he did. The PAWS from amphetamines seems even worse than the PAWS from opioids at times, and it certainly seems to linger quite a long time.
...I found out my decision to get clean of opioids sparked that in another friend. He has set his date, and done what he can to prepare. I greatly envy that he has 2 weeks solid with nothing he has to do during that period. I wish I had scheduled my quit with having an entire month of nothing pressing to do.
The two struggles my friend has are cannabis, and morphine. I know the second well, but not the first. He also quit amphetamines, cigarettes, and cymbalta recently. Mentally -- he is all over the place, and there is no doubt that its at the limit of what he can handle some days. Antidepressants can have some seriously nasty effects when you quit them; something I have experienced. So I am worried about him, but less because of him adding one more thing into the mix to have PAWS from, but a certain amount of fear he might just be trying to lower his tolerance enough to be able to kill himself with pain meds. Its not a wholly unreasonable fear, but though I know his depression is deep at times -- I think his desire to get free of the medicines to see if it improves his condition is quite sincere.
I don't expect he will get free of benzo's any time soon. Nor that he will be in any shape to give up the other psyche meds he is on. He was one of those ADHD kids that eventually developed anxiety, and depression after years of amphetamine use. He went off them for awhile, replaced with cymbalta and benzos. He has since quit the cymbalta, but has never cut down the benzos; I actually believe the benzos are making his anxiety worse at this point, but I don't think he fully believes me. Add in chronic pain problems from a car accident, and he found his way into a dark hole rather quickly with quite a few mental problems to boot.
Every time I talk with him since he quit amphetamines I am so glad that I never went down that road with anything approaching the greatest timidity. Even though I have absolutely dreadful fatigue at times -- I couldn't and wouldn't make the decision to use them daily as he did. The PAWS from amphetamines seems even worse than the PAWS from opioids at times, and it certainly seems to linger quite a long time.