Quitting Zoloft

Posted by 9ar @9ar, May 17, 2020

Hello, I’ve been taking between 25 and 50 milligrams Zoloft for about 14 years for anxiety. It helps but I’ve become increasingly worried about the long term effects. I have quit cold turkey and tried tapering off several times and I always return within a couple of weeks because of the withdrawal symptoms.. dizziness, crying, fogginess, and agitation mostly. The agitation is the worst part. I find myself so irritable I can’t bear it. And then I feel horrible for having been short with my husband or family. But I struggle with if I need medication and worry about the long term side effects. I wonder if it has changed who I am. I’d like to be off it. My doctor has also prescribed .25 mg Xanax which I rarely use. It gives me comfort just to know it’s there if I need it. Any advice or insight for stopping Zoloft? And thoughts on if taking Zoloft for this long changes your personality and who you are? Thank you!

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@daveshaw

Zoloft is one of the most well tolerated SSRI’s out there. If you truly suffer from depression add Wellbutrin and it should help.
You don’t just snap your fingers and your anxiety and your depression goes away. It is like being an alcoholic. If you are an alcoholic you are an alcoholic the rest of your life. You just make a conscious decision not to drink every morning when you get out of bed.
If people on this site would just realize that and stop trying to get off your medications life would be so much simpler. Heaven forbid you might even find Clonazepam helps if you can take it and not abuse it.
Years ago they had no medications to treat depression and anxiety. Just be glad they do and enjoy your life.
I wish you all the best.

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Dave: Just to clarify, a lot of this thread is about attempting to get on these medications. Unfortunately, it is not that straightforward. Some individuals with mixed states (agitation, anxious depression) can actually do worse on SSRI medications. Then, there are the situations where someone has used an SSRI long term and a crises comes along where the body and brain register trauma, and the SSRI medications are no longer effective. Zoloft is generally well tolerated. But some of the dynamics mentioned above can prove to be problematic.

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@didymus237

Thanks. I do still experience sleep as a side effect of the sertraline, but it isn't a good, restorative sleep, its actually disturbing, but I'm hoping it is doing some good. I was encouraged by the Lord the past few days by these verses. I pray He will bless you with them too: Romans 9:15-16; Hosea 14:4; 1 Peter 5:7; Isaiah 41:13; Matthew 11:28-29 and 1 Peter 1:8-9. Have a weekend filled with faith that your healing is coming. God bless.

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Are planning on staying on The Zoloft?

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@jschwing

Are planning on staying on The Zoloft?

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NO!

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In reply to @didymus237 "NO!" + (show)
@didymus237

Why do you ask?

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@jschwing

Dave: Just to clarify, a lot of this thread is about attempting to get on these medications. Unfortunately, it is not that straightforward. Some individuals with mixed states (agitation, anxious depression) can actually do worse on SSRI medications. Then, there are the situations where someone has used an SSRI long term and a crises comes along where the body and brain register trauma, and the SSRI medications are no longer effective. Zoloft is generally well tolerated. But some of the dynamics mentioned above can prove to be problematic.

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Your point is well taken. I just think some people don’t realize that depression is genetic and it never really goes away. Before I knew what depression was I just found that at times everything was so easy and then there were periods when everything seemed so hard. I was in commission sales and raising two kids with a wife that didn’t work so I just struggled through the bad times.
Talk therapy is kind of like seeing a chiropractor. Once you see them they have a patient for life.
Depression and anxiety are real and passed on from generation to generation. Both my children are very successful but one suffers from depression and one suffers from anxiety. I was very open with both about my depression so when it surfaced for them they got help and are coping very well. I am just grateful that we have medications that treat these diseases and my hope is they only get better. They can never cure it but they can make it very manageable.
I wish everyone on this post the best.

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In reply to @didymus237 "Why do you ask?" + (show)
@didymus237

Why do you ask?

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I was just wondering if you were going to continue it with tapering that’s all. I am just wondering if just stopping after a short period at a low dose would cause significant issues. Of course, The Dr. says to just stop and it shouldn’t be a problem.

That is why I asked,

Thanks.

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@daveshaw

Your point is well taken. I just think some people don’t realize that depression is genetic and it never really goes away. Before I knew what depression was I just found that at times everything was so easy and then there were periods when everything seemed so hard. I was in commission sales and raising two kids with a wife that didn’t work so I just struggled through the bad times.
Talk therapy is kind of like seeing a chiropractor. Once you see them they have a patient for life.
Depression and anxiety are real and passed on from generation to generation. Both my children are very successful but one suffers from depression and one suffers from anxiety. I was very open with both about my depression so when it surfaced for them they got help and are coping very well. I am just grateful that we have medications that treat these diseases and my hope is they only get better. They can never cure it but they can make it very manageable.
I wish everyone on this post the best.

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Thanks for reply Dave. I had a great run with a low dose of Paxil CR over the past 18 years. I never considered going off of it. Now, following a surgery, I have debilitating anxiety heaped upon now worsening depression. Still taking the Paxil, but the Dr. is now attempting to get me on other SNRI and SSRI medications which has proved problematic. I totally agree there is a significant genetic component. And based on The Genesight test there are a bunch of headwinds including the genetics that can limit the effectiveness of the medications in general as well as a very short list of well metabolized medications. My Doctor is really struggling with being able to provide any proper guidance now. He recommended Ketamine therapy but was declined due to cardiac issues. Now, he is thinking anticonvulsants to assist with the anxiety. My wife would like me to get off all the medications, but she also has no idea of the intensity of both emotional and physical pain is involved with daily life. Not sure what to do next. None of the options seem really solid at this point.

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@jschwing

Thanks for reply Dave. I had a great run with a low dose of Paxil CR over the past 18 years. I never considered going off of it. Now, following a surgery, I have debilitating anxiety heaped upon now worsening depression. Still taking the Paxil, but the Dr. is now attempting to get me on other SNRI and SSRI medications which has proved problematic. I totally agree there is a significant genetic component. And based on The Genesight test there are a bunch of headwinds including the genetics that can limit the effectiveness of the medications in general as well as a very short list of well metabolized medications. My Doctor is really struggling with being able to provide any proper guidance now. He recommended Ketamine therapy but was declined due to cardiac issues. Now, he is thinking anticonvulsants to assist with the anxiety. My wife would like me to get off all the medications, but she also has no idea of the intensity of both emotional and physical pain is involved with daily life. Not sure what to do next. None of the options seem really solid at this point.

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I have a good friend who suffers from depression and after she retired thought she could stop taking her antidepressant. The result was terrible and my friend felt like he was walking on eggshells around her.
She started taking her antidepressants again and things have improved dramatically.
Years ago my psychiatrist put me on Zoloft, Wellbutrin and Buspar. He also added 1mg of Clonazepam in the morning and 1mg before bed time. I have actually cut my Zoloft from 100mg a day to fifty milligrams.
As far as Clonazepam I have never increased my dosage for the last 25 years. Give this a try and hopefully it works for you.
Best of luck and let me know what happens.

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I was diagnosed with a suicidal clinical depression in 2016 and took Wellbutrin which had nasty side effects (my hands shook so much I couldn't write) and I went to a therapist for two years. He would not work with clients who wanted drugs because he said the drugs "masked" their symptoms and he couldn't get at the root problem. I felt somewhat better but went to a Catholic Church and confession - told the priest I was having "bad thoughts" but hadn't done anything (my idea of sin was legalistic - I thought you had to DO something) - and he said "bad thoughts were sins" and after I told him what the repetitive deadly thoughts were, he abruptly put out his hand and rebuked the demons - and something flew off my head - and the thoughts vanished. I thought it was just a temporary psychological cure and the repetitive suicidal thoughts which I had suffered for a couple years would be back the next day, but nope. So if you are having "bad" thoughts, you might try a good confession. Worked for me. Cheap and fast. Find a good Catholic priest and tell him all your "bad" thoughts. That was 10/18 - and it has been 7 years. No problem ever since.

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@carmelite

I was diagnosed with a suicidal clinical depression in 2016 and took Wellbutrin which had nasty side effects (my hands shook so much I couldn't write) and I went to a therapist for two years. He would not work with clients who wanted drugs because he said the drugs "masked" their symptoms and he couldn't get at the root problem. I felt somewhat better but went to a Catholic Church and confession - told the priest I was having "bad thoughts" but hadn't done anything (my idea of sin was legalistic - I thought you had to DO something) - and he said "bad thoughts were sins" and after I told him what the repetitive deadly thoughts were, he abruptly put out his hand and rebuked the demons - and something flew off my head - and the thoughts vanished. I thought it was just a temporary psychological cure and the repetitive suicidal thoughts which I had suffered for a couple years would be back the next day, but nope. So if you are having "bad" thoughts, you might try a good confession. Worked for me. Cheap and fast. Find a good Catholic priest and tell him all your "bad" thoughts. That was 10/18 - and it has been 7 years. No problem ever since.

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Tried to understand what had befallen me and found a book: Slaying Dragons by Charles D Fraune. It was very informative. People suffering from depression should know about this because depression IS like a dragon. My Mayo MD said it was "the best news I've heard all day" and was very happy for me. I think more people suffering from serious mental health issues (particularly if they are hearing voices urging them to become self destructive and suicidal) really need to find a good priest that they can reveal their own "bad thoughts" to. Today whenever I read about a suicide, I view it very differently than I did before my own unusual cure/liberation. There is help for anyone suffering from mental health afflictions and it can be found inside the confessional. Not necessarily in a bottle of pills. A good and thorough confession is the best. I had absolutely no expectations and didn't even know the priest. He was a total stranger, new to our church and I didn't believe much in confession either. So it was a total shock when I was "cured".... but it seems worth sharing the knowledge this total healing is really possible.

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