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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@babydoll
I read many years ago of a folk remedy--you put a bar of soap (unwrapped) under your bottom sheet probably somewhere around your knees. No one knows why this works (when it does). Here's some info off the net: Supposedly gives off magnesium. Not every brand does the trick (folks who try this say Dial and Dove don't work); Dr. Oz recommends soap containing lavender. One site re this says, "One possible explanation for the soap effect is the fragrance. A chemist suggested to us that the most popular soaps all seem to have the fragrant compound limonene in their scent.... We suspect that transient receptor potential (TRP) channels are involved. (Limonene activates TRP A1.)"--https://www.peoplespharmacy.com/2017/11/27/why-put-soap-under-your-bottom-sheet/
@sandij
I'm glad you're taking a breather; during this last year, I learned how beneficial getting natural light to my eyes is to lifting my mood and calming me. How lucky you are to have so many beautiful birds to watch--guess they're delighting in Spring while delighting you. Thanks for the lovely image.
@sandij
The last 5 years of my marriage (40 years) were not the best. We loved each other, but I didn't realize the extent of our financial problems until I found myself $364,000 in debt after he died. That's what changed him and made him drink so much. I had no idea.
I myself was stuck in years of illness compounded by years of MS relapses, hence the huge debt, but I discovered only half of it was mine.
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We were not available to each other because of our own challenges. And when Frank came and kept me alive around valentines day, while I could not see him or hear him, we communicated with our brains. I was stunned as he was the real causes of the emotional sepatation we both felt.
We each did not understand the most important thing the other person was going thru. That was the root of our distance. 5 years is a long time...All that is corrected now. It feels peaceful inside now for us both.
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Sending you some peace. Put it in your pocket and take it out and let it flow thru you, if you choose...then put it back to use another time. There is an unlimited amount in it.
Bright Wings
@merpreb we went to marriage counseling soon after my ailing mother in law came to live with us. We had been married for one year when she needed help, and my two sisters in law wouldn't have her, so I became her caregiver until she died a year later. The counseling only helps to the extent that an individual will address their issues, and to the experience of the counselor to confront them. I thi k this happens far too often, therapists who allow their clients to ramble and never push them to see any deeper.
@brightwings the soap works!
@sandij- Very well put
@sandij
I actually shuttered when I read ailing mother law....just saying... a recipe for disaster. BW
Yes, I had met her only once, before Loren and I got married in 2010. She had her 88th birthday several months after we had moved her in with us, I remember making a celebration and her only response being "I don't want to live to be 89". I admit, I was not empathetic, I had turned my life upside down for a stranger whose own family would not take her into their homes. It was a daily struggle to keep her compliant with her medications and diet and demands, and when she made that statement all I could think of was well...why am I bothering to take care of you at the expense of my health and mental well being, my career, my marriage?
I was the only one with her when she died. Nobody in her family asked if her death was peaceful, if she had last words, nothing. I'll never understand that, because I would want to know that information if it was my parent!
The funeral was held in North Carolina where she had a plot in the veterans cemetary, her deceased spouse, Lorens father had been military. Members of the family came from other states and all rented a house together for several days. I knew I could not participate and hold my tongue and my husband went without me. He has said that it was then he knew he could never count on me for anything, that I didnt have his back. He didn't know the horrible things that his mother would say about him and how I told her never to disrespect him in his own home.
Isn't it the strangest thing the way that our memories come upon us seemingly from nowhere? I hadn't remembered any of that for quite some time. Here's hoping that a larger portion of the memories that will crop up during this process will be of pleasant and happy times. I've had many of those in my life and it would be good to keep those front and center.
8 days effexor free today. Hope everyone is doing well. I'm sorry I dont respond to everyone by name, but it's difficult to keep up with on this phone and I stay away from the computer when I'm not working at it.
Wow.......I mean, really WOW.
I am so sorry. I guess I am speechless.
Death is so painful when relationships are strained...but you already knew that.
I feel the residual pain in you. Can you draw it to get it out of you? You have carried this long enough. Let it go.....
I could not have gone to that funeral either.
This is just sad all around. BW
@sandij
Brightwings said it ... wow, really wow. What a sad story. I am so sorry--upholding and supporting one another is a two-way street and the upholding and supporting is more than just keeping a roof over your head.