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long overdue hello

ivyleaguebitch

Greenlighter
Joined
Jan 19, 2013
Messages
15
Location
Vancouver Island
So i've been a long time lurker and joined a couple months ago but never got around to writing an introduction until now. Most of the delay i can blame on being stuck in rehab for the last 10 weeks though...at least i wasn't too terribly deprived of drug discussion there, even without bluelight.

Anyway... a little bit about me. My father is a doctor who, ever since I can remember, has advocated pills as the solution to everything and anything. For any given problem, there's a pill that will fix it - that's what I grew up being told. And by the time I'd reached my early teens, it had become clear to my father that I had a whole bucket of problems that needed fixing. So off I was carted to a psychiatrist with a pen and a prescription pad - the first of many to come. I don't think I actually had any problems other than the normal teenage confusion and self-consciousness that all my friends were going through as well. But I had a dad who was gung-ho about prescription drugs and - shhhhh - had no ethical issues with prescribing himself and his family controlled substances either. Anyway to cut a long story short, I soon came to learn that all the benzos that I was getting prescribed to help calm me down and all the Ambien I was meant to take when I couldn't sleep, were stuff that apparently alot of people had fun with. And so I started using and the amounts became more excessive and then I think I actually did have some real problems. My dad's answer? More psychiatrists! So I got told that I definitely had ADHD and probably I was bipolar and, here you go, have another handful of pills.

Although I do use illegal drugs sometimes, I've far more caught up with all my prescription ones. I've learned the art of doctor shopping, of sitting on couches and conning psychiatrists; I know the DSM-IV like most pastors know the Bible. It's a problem obviously and alot of it is my own damn fault. But I can't help but feel that if I weren't for my father, none of this would ever have started. I don't know. It's tough.

It's tough when you can't remember a time you've been just 'normal', not medicate or medicating, not sure who you even are without all the drugs. It's tough when you feel like, 'well, maybe I like it this way.' Maybe I don't want to find me, maybe you should just give me all the drugs already!!!

Anyway this is over long already but I'm looking forward to meeting people who use this community. Feel free to shoot me a message anytime!
 
So i've been a long time lurker and joined a couple months ago but never got around to writing an introduction until now. Most of the delay i can blame on being stuck in rehab for the last 10 weeks though...at least i wasn't too terribly deprived of drug discussion there, even without bluelight.

Anyway... a little bit about me. My father is a doctor who, ever since I can remember, has advocated pills as the solution to everything and anything. For any given problem, there's a pill that will fix it - that's what I grew up being told. And by the time I'd reached my early teens, it had become clear to my father that I had a whole bucket of problems that needed fixing. So off I was carted to a psychiatrist with a pen and a prescription pad - the first of many to come. I don't think I actually had any problems other than the normal teenage confusion and self-consciousness that all my friends were going through as well. But I had a dad who was gung-ho about prescription drugs and - shhhhh - had no ethical issues with prescribing himself and his family controlled substances either. Anyway to cut a long story short, I soon came to learn that all the benzos that I was getting prescribed to help calm me down and all the Ambien I was meant to take when I couldn't sleep, were stuff that apparently alot of people had fun with. And so I started using and the amounts became more excessive and then I think I actually did have some real problems. My dad's answer? More psychiatrists! So I got told that I definitely had ADHD and probably I was bipolar and, here you go, have another handful of pills.

Although I do use illegal drugs sometimes, I've far more caught up with all my prescription ones. I've learned the art of doctor shopping, of sitting on couches and conning psychiatrists; I know the DSM-IV like most pastors know the Bible. It's a problem obviously and alot of it is my own damn fault. But I can't help but feel that if I weren't for my father, none of this would ever have started. I don't know. It's tough.

It's tough when you can't remember a time you've been just 'normal', not medicate or medicating, not sure who you even are without all the drugs. It's tough when you feel like, 'well, maybe I like it this way.' Maybe I don't want to find me, maybe you should just give me all the drugs already!!!

Anyway this is over long already but I'm looking forward to meeting people who use this community. Feel free to shoot me a message anytime!

It isn't as though your father physically put the pills in your hand. You chose to take them and no one forced you. Just remember you are the source of your own problems and how you choose to handle them is solely up to you my friend.

In the words of a favorite singer of mine "Your self chosen cure is your self chosen pain" and this rings true with everyone I believe.
 
except he actually did at first...i wasn't too keen on being medicated like some crazy nutcase when i was 13 years old. i am not disagreeing with you though. although he probably introduced me to them earlier than i would have been otherwise, and turned a blind eye to the doctor shopping that was by no means a hidden fact in our household, he certainly never encouraged me to be an addict. the choice to keep on abusing was my own, as was the childish pointing of the finger at him as the cause of my chemical dependency.

in the words of the doctor who runs the treatment centre i just finished at (and is recovered addict himself): "we are not responsible for the circumstances that set us up in our adddictions. we are, however, responsible for the choices we make after we gain awareness of the issues surrounding our disease and the effects that it has upon in, which are countless and all brutally, painful seelf destructive
 
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