Tips on minimizing withdrawal symptoms from Effexor (aka Venlafaxine)
I have been taking Effexor/Venlafaxine for years and tried to get off it a few times but each time I try to give up the chemical withdrawal symptoms are a horror story and I give up giving up. Anyone got any tips or tried and tested strategies? Thank you
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@farmboy
Hi
Maybe your doctor will put you on a different medication. Hope you let us know what you and your doctor decide to do.
I’m so sorry about your friends. My friend hung himself. I had no clue he was suffering so much. A major problem is some never seek treatment and others wait to long before getting help. I hope your starting to feel better. You are so right when you said “depression is evil.” Hopefully someday soon they will know what actually causes it.
Always thinking about you buddy,
Jake
@effexor you are three weeks out from basically going cold turkey, so you are a great candidate for PAWS. I hope that in all the research you did, you came across some information about that. If not, I suggest you read up and be prepared. Here's hoping you escape it, because it's not pretty. But you may be one of the lucky ones!
I go in and see the Doc Friday. I will let everyone know what she says. As far as are buddies go we just got to remember the good times and remember them that way.
Sandij, what is paws?
@farmboy PAWS is the acronym for post acute withdrawal, here is an explanation from addictionsandrecovery. org website:
Post-acute withdrawal feels like a rollercoaster of symptoms. In the beginning, your symptoms will change minute to minute and hour to hour. Later as you recover further they will disappear for a few weeks or months only to return again. As you continue to recover the good stretches will get longer and longer. But the bad periods of post-acute withdrawal can be just as intense and last just as long.
Each post-acute withdrawal episode usually last for a few days. Once you've been in recovery for a while, you will find that each post-acute withdrawal episode usually lasts for a few days. There is no obvious trigger for most episodes. You will wake up one day feeling irritable and have low energy. If you hang on for just a few days, it will lift just as quickly as it started. After a while you'll develop confidence that you can get through post-acute withdrawal, because you'll know that each episode is time limited.
Post-acute withdrawal usually lasts for 2 years. This is one of the most important things you need to remember. If you're up for the challenge you can get though this. But if you think that post-acute withdrawal will only last for a few months, then you'll get caught off guard, and when you're disappointed you're more likely to relapse.
@effexor
Good Morning,
Congratulations on being able to come off the Effexor!
I am glad you were able to find a way of doing it that worked for you!
Stay well!
Ronnie (GRANDMAr)
Good Morning All!
An update on my Effexor weaning.
As a reminder, I've been on 300 mg of Effexor (2-75 mg pills in the am and pm) for some time.
I am looking to reduce my dosage, not to come off as I believe that my anxiety is genetic (multiple people in my family have it) and I will have to remain on meds for the rest of my life.
I am OK with that as I could not live with being in a constant state of anxiety and other meds have not worked.
Anyway, I have been reducing 1/4 of one tablet over a total of 6 weeks at a time.
A 1/4 reducing every other day for 3 weeks and then every day for 3 weeks.
I am at the point where I was at 1-1/4 tablets every other day.
I completed 3 weeks and was about to go to daily but something inside me (pardon the pun) told me to wait another 3 weeks.
I can't put my finger on it, but I did not feel 100% as I did.
It's no big deal. I have all the time in the world to reduce.
Just want to remind everyone that you have to 'listen' to your body and act accordingly.
Have a good and healthy day!
Ronnie (GRANDMAr)
@sandij
Good Morning!
Thank you for the information!
This is VERY important for everyone in this group to read!
Two years? Wow!!!!!!
I am wondering if there is a way this can be posted so that everyone who signs up to be in this group will be 'greeted' by this information??
I believe that if it was possible, it would clear up a lot of misconceptions.
Thanks again!
Ronnie (GRANDMAr)
I know you mean well and, in my case (I successfully weened off Effexor!) I believe it was because I forced myself to stay busy, work, be purposefully healthy and fit. While Effexor DID assuage my anxiety and depression (for 20 years!) I thought back to my life before Effexor and thought if I could do it then I can do it now. Truth be told, I probably never should have been on it in the first place. I shouldn’t have gotten married so young to a person who made me feel awful about myself. And on and on. I know what you mean about folks being lazy - I feel these are the folks who make up drama and tragedy in the news! But, sadly, there’s also real depression out there. A real chemical thing. And maybe it’s exacerbated by the American lifestyle, but for now, we’re all just doing our level best to feel better 🙂
@effexor Thank you for your post. I’m about where you are. I’m 4 weeks out, tapered on my own. Still get anxiety, but feel I’m over the hump. I quit cold turkey first time, by advice of my psychiatrist, I do not see him any longer , most horrific time in my life! Best to go slow.