Started last night
#1
Posted 10 September 2008 - 08:49 AM
I took 30mg last night instead of 60mg. My nausea is tolerable, but already I feel foggy. My wife does not know that I'm doing this and she asked me what was wrong this morning. Maybe it's wrong to leave her in the dark, but I want to know what mental changes I go through over the weaning period and need a non-bias opinion. The only thing I really am worrid about is if my anger comes back. Then what do I do?
-T
#2
Posted 10 September 2008 - 02:01 PM
The only reason I started Cymbalta is to control my temper. It seemed to really help, but so many things were changing for me personally and professionally that it's hard to imagine Cymbalta could take credit for all of it. My biggest fear is that I will become a jerk again. I have a 2 and 4 year old and when I'm not a work, I have them until the weekend when my wife is off as well. Great kids, but trying on my patience at times. Don't want to be one of those dads you see in Walmart yelling at his kids for being kids.
Guess I'll just see how things progress. Don't have much of a choice besides staying on the drug, and I don't want to take anything else right now.
Thanks
-T
#3
Posted 28 September 2008 - 12:18 PM
I have never felt "depressed". What happens with me is for no reason at all, when I wake up in the morning I'm mad, and ready to rip some heads off. I hate the feeling. My wife and kids get barked at by me all day long. I've tried everything in my power to focus the energy elsewhere but that, so far, has been unsuccessful. Working 12hr shifts, don't really have the energy to workout when I get home, and on my days off I have the kids until my wife comes home. There again, chasing a 2 and 4 year old around the house all day almost wears me out more than work. I don't smoke, and I've cut back on drinking over the last few months to maybe a beer or two a week. Don't know what else I can do to help besides getting back on a medication which I don't want to do. Feels like I don't have a choice. Wifey wants me to join one of the martial arts programs, but just like every other blue collared family, we are pinching every penny and I just don't have the money. Any suggestions. I am open to anything at this point. Thank you.
-T
#4
Posted 28 September 2008 - 12:58 PM
In the long run- if "the anger comes back"....you can start now to plan daily activities that help you cope...as lazy as we get, I believe daily exercise is vastly overlooked. My long walks after work (four miles in an hour) helps me unwind tremendously. Figure out what helps you. It isnt easy but it is worthwhile.
I have also heard the best reading on this for men is a book titled "The Irritable Male Syndrome: Understanding and Managing the 4 Key Causes of Depression and Aggression" by Jed Diamond. Its on Amazon.com. Have not read it myself but may be worth checking out.
I am not happy with how the mental health field has us all turning to drugs for the entire answer to our problems. Cymbalta helped me when I was severly clinically depressed, thank God it did. But it's up to me to do want I have to on a daily basis to remain mentally healthy too.
#5
Posted 28 September 2008 - 01:17 PM
Good Luck with your withdrawal I posted under "weaning off Cymbalta" if you want to know what my experience was. You'll make it, but don't get nervous about anger sx during the immediate withdrawal period. I am pretty laidback and I became impossibly irritable and edgy for about a week. My family hid when I got home. :evil:
In the long run- if "the anger comes back"....you can start now to plan daily activities that help you cope...as lazy as we get, I believe daily exercise is vastly overlooked. My long walks after work (four miles in an hour) helps me unwind tremendously. Figure out what helps you. It isnt easy but it is worthwhile.
I have also heard the best reading on this for men is a book titled "The Irritable Male Syndrome: Understanding and Managing the 4 Key Causes of Depression and Aggression" by Jed Diamond. Its on Amazon.com. Have not read it myself but may be worth checking out.
I am not happy with how the mental health field has us all turning to drugs for the entire answer to our problems. Cymbalta helped me when I was severly clinically depressed, thank God it did. But it's up to me to do want I have to on a daily basis to remain mentally healthy too.
Thanks for the support. Maybe I should have the wifey hide in the closet :roll:
I'll check out that book, couldn't hurt right?
-T
#6
Posted 28 September 2008 - 05:53 PM
None of us asks for the burden of having to deal with anxiety, depression, anger, it just happens. Sucks it happened to us...why couldn't we be struggling with the demands of handling a multi-million dollar inheritance?
(I understand all about work demands and financial pressure, I am a divorced mom working two jobs.)You are lucky to have a supportive wife who is willing to work with you on things. I hope you do the same for her. People stop trying in relationships way too fast these days. There is no perfection out there.
Personally, I am abit angry at myself at having become dependent on medication to help me cope with life. Until I fully came off it, I did not realize how powerful a drug it was. Xanax is nowhere near as strong as this stuff. I wonder why docs dont talk to us about getting off this stuff at some point?
I think alot of us have lost our way...we truely need to figure out what helps us to to feel less angry or less anxious and follow through with it every day. There's no more time for the self, we exist just to get by. What have we done to ourselves?
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