i might argree with both ways, the forumn has helped me a lot for w/d relief, but after that, I just am addicted to reading about PAWS and am scared now, whereas before i even knew it existed, i may have attributed it to just being overly-worked or tired, now i am just going to think, damn PAWS....for years even!!! I would say, overall it is better to be educated than ignorant, since the education can explaiin a lot, but being ignorant is bliss, right???
good post to pull up Laurel, this post has some old timers in it, hmm, I often wonder where some of them are! Something to think about for sure.
Don't ask me how i found this old thread... :)
what Mangee wrote then makes sense to me after some posts i have read here ...
" ...Whatever works for you or whatever you think might help is well worth the try. However, we are all made up differently, what works for some may not work for others. ........... Your sense of purpose, your will to succeed, your inner strength all have to take hold and you must make every use of them to propel yourself forward ....... Ninety nine percent of the people here will give you support as much as they can. That is good but the reality is that you and you alone must make that journey and you have the final say on how far you can go ......."
I did not read all of the posts or comments....but i just got back from leaving the forum for a while.....and you might be on to something there.........
Actually, chichi, I've been thinking of leaving the boards for a while, as I deal with getting off of tramadol..I love coming here and the friends I've made...But I'm wondering what good it's doing me reading about what everyone is going through and what it might be doing to my brain..that's not to say anything against anyone who posts on here and goes through the horrors of withdrawal...I'm just not sure if it's doing me any good..
25 years or more ago I had access to all the vicodin I wanted..my then wife worked at a
medical center and I had back problems and they'd give me 60-90 with plenty of refills..she ultimately got fired (for other reasons) the meds stopped..and I can't for the life of me recall any withdrawals..and I was taking at least 10 a day..spring forward
to a little over a year ago when I was trying to quit again and god bless those who helped me, but I wonder..would things have been different had I not found this board? I probably don't make a lick of sense, do I?' But I may drop out for a while while I kick this small problem with tramadol and see if things go differently.
Jim who probably has everyone scratching their heads "what'd he say?"
I think people want to use the word "disease' as a way to ease the word "Addiction" whatever makes you feel better is your choice. My personal belief is that a disease is something that attacks the body from within....not by popping pills. I think possibly a side effect from the drug? Opiates change the brain and they know this can happen to a percentage of people and let it go, as they do with many drugs. Not all that take painkillers get "addicted" so, we are just the ones with the unlucky brains? lol I don't know....Oiy
why jumping ? i think it's a good post and an opinion i can agree with... :)
For me personally I've had to take two different breaks from the group. First was when I was first going through W/D. I couldn't take reading other people still using and tapering and feeling like sh** so I had to leave for a few months go CT and pull myself together and then I wanted to come back. I was proud of what I had accomplished and wanted to share my knowledge and support and thank the ones that helped me.
I left again in June/July I was trying to and still am (Lizzie Lou) sort out my life now that I do not numb myself with pills. I seperated from my husband of 20 years for 3 months and had a plan for divorce and going to school. All of that got thrown out (long story) but I'm back with hubby working on marriage and taking it day by day. I'm a little bitter but a strong gal, I'll work it out.
I do believe you have to stay aware of what W/D are and the menatal stuff that comes after. You should not obsess over it but be aware and have a plan to keep as busy and as active as you feel like you can be during w/d. You also have to be ready to treat the mental stuff that comes after. These are the things you were numbing yourself from and that and can arrise as it did for me 4 months into w/d and now 1year and 8 months later. I'm STILL PILL FREE/CLEAN but with all in my life I could easliy numb myself again. So I have to be careful and be plugged into the friends I love and trust...you guys!!!
I'm still not convinced drug and alcohol addiction are a disease (please dont jump on me) from what I have gone through it was a choice I made to use and a choice I made to stop without other help. But my dad died from Alcohol so maybe he passed this down to me??? I just don't feel the same about it as cancer, HIV other disease like that. Just my opinion. Please don't yell at me.
i can only agree wih you, xru, that this place is also for healing and recovery, i know for sure i wouldn't be in the same position now without it and the people i have found here , have been the best help i could have found ( not only a forum to cope information but a forum with "living" help for me day by day in this time..)
i like what you said , mangee, "i know i can , i know i can " (making suggestion work for good... talking about suggestions :)) yes, now "i know i can" thanks to having found this forum and for a while i will stay here as long as i think it's still helping me...
whoops, going back and reading this post, I already responded 15 days ago. lol, I pretty much said the same thing twice :)
I'll admit that this place scared the h3ll out of me at first. I knew about w/d's already, didn't know so much a PAWS, and I for SURE didn't know a darned thing about Xanax, and other benzos. When I was on here still addicted to painkillers, I was a panicked mess every day, to the point where my fiance didn't want me coming on here anymore. I stayed and made it through that. Now facing the Xanax taper, which has been even more miserable than the vicodin withdrawals... of course I'm sure the PAWS is kicking in with me also, being at 70 days clean from vicodin today. I'm very thankful for all the wonderful people I've met and who have helped me through this mess I've been in for so long. Heres to hoping the rest of this xanax taper can go as smoothly as possible and I'm going to for sure quit reading the benzo site that gives you an A-Z list of 'possible' w/d symptoms. I want to be healthy and I know this forum has helped me along in my mission to do so :)
Whatever works for you or whatever you think might help is well worth the try. However, we are all made up differently, what works for some may not work for others. Recovery is not a walk down a straight path. It is a complexity of trial and error. Where some are able to walk ahead steadilly others may have to crawl. You may be able to jump over the first hurdle or more but as you go forward the hill you are climbing seems to grow higher and higher. Your sense of purpose, your will to succeed, your inner strength all have to take hold and you must make every use of them to propel yourself forward. If you fall or stumble, don't quit, just remember you got that far so why not another day and another and another. Ninety nine percent of the people here will give you support as much as they can. That is good but the reality is that you and you alone must make that journey and you have the final say on how far you can go. When you stumble reach out, there will always be someone here who will hear your call and will be there for you but that is all. This may sound a little trite, even childish but they are actually very big words and every addict should stand by it when they start withdrawal. The owrds come from a children's story about a little train and the words are, "I think I can, I think I can." Just change the word "Think," to the word ,"Know," and you have the words,"I know I can," and then put them to use.
Thought(s) on my conclusion(s). About this Site....
Here's the thing, I already knew, that I was addicted to pain killers. I already knew that withdrawal is real. What I didn't know was the physiological aftermath of quitting and what to expect. On Day 4 of my withdrawal, I was crawling outta my skin and writhing in misery and out of desperation I came here. I learned all kinds of symptom attenuation strategies and all sort of coping mechanisms to minimize the misery..... I also met people who made it thru very much the same thing I was going thru.... Most importantly I learned certain specifics about my DOC (Subs) of which I was completely ignorant. This site informed me and I think prepared me for what I was facing and how it might develop. But on a good day, just after riding a bike for some distance I got to thinking about all this mind over matter stuff and the power of suggestion. I posted this string. Then I decided to put my money where my post(s) were and I swore off this site for a week. I also did everything humanly possible to convince myself I was normal again. It didn't work. A week later I go back on to report this result. Now it appears that about three weeks into withdrawal/recovery, I am finally starting to feel normal again. Why??? Quite simply TIME, good nutrition and Exercise, exercise, exercise. (this is my guess).
This site helped me stick to the fight just an hour longer, just one more day, just another week. I sought out two sorts of people, those, in my shoes but more advanced in their recovery, and real success stories, that is folks who are closing in on a year or more clean and happy and healthy!!! Those folks helped guide me thru my personal fight wirh this thing. They gave me conviction and courage and hope. I tried to stay away from people who seemed to wallow in self-pity and recidivist professional quitters who seem to relapse and re-quit.
I will admit that sometimes I found myself feeling bad for folks just coming on to the site like I did and just starting this healing process, and in, or about to enter, withdrawals. I couldn't resist offering my own a bit derivative insight into making it better. But mostly, I suppose I was selfish, concerned primarily with me and my needs. And the conclusion I have formulated from all this is that YES,..... this site is a tool for healing and recovery, it has made my time in that hell somewhat better and overall it makes for a positive difference.
without doing a great deal of studying and only some brief reading of xru's original note, I find myself agreeing with Nauty. Don't get me wrong..a lot of people helped me a great deal with identifying wht I was dealing with and this place provides a great place to share and learn and I look at it more for that than anything else. I've learned more from this forum about drug addiction (I share Nauty's thoughts re: disease) than I have anywhere else.
Jim
xru11
a lot of double-talk, but you hit the nail on the head with your post. I could not heal as long as I was here are reading the daunting outlook of my addiction existence. When I finally went cold turkey so-to-speak.......I could not even think of looking at the forum, let alone talk to anyone. Misery does love company, and If I had stayed on the duration.....it would have been much worse.
I am undecided whether this forum was of help to me or not. Yes, I have met some great and fun internet friends.....I got a grip and understanding as to what was happening to me....I din't understand why everytime I didn't have any pills ...I got this horrible flu? Well, sometimes not know may be better. I've heard of doctors literally lying to a patient they know is in narc. withdrawal, say after a surgery, or say an elderly patient that is clueless about addiction and withdrawal, or anyone at that matter......the doctor will just tell them they have a flu and to ride it out a few days, that this sometimes happens after procedures....bla bla.......I believe the patient is better off not knowing. If the doctor knows its not life threatening then why not.......Stating to the patient that they are in Narcotic withdrawal could make the experience 1000 times worse......get what im saying?.....
So, i guess what I am trying to say is......Yes. I totally believe that the forum is for informational purposes and not for withdrawal.
nauty
Yes yesterday I thing I turned a corner and today again I feel good
hey, so you're feeling great, right ?
congrats then. each one of us has to deal and find our way, you didn't offend at all ( not me , sure ) .
In the interest of full disclosure, I have come back to Med-Help. In my last post of about a week ago I had reported that I was going try to avoid the sight as an experiment. I wanted to report that despite some serious effort on my part, the whole mind over matter thing did not work. Despite my best effort, my symptoms persisted. then, some good days followed by some bad days.... BUT I am happy to report, that today after 20 days of quitting subs, I finally woke up without that odd queasy weirdness in my stomache that over the day turned into a crescendo of anxiety and restlessness. The anxiety is mostly gone and the lethargy and listlessness appear to be gone too. I credit two things for that (1) TIME; and (2) Exercise and I mean all out hardcore exertion exercise, get you blood flowing, get your heart rate up there, get those endorphins kick-started. Now just in case I did everything else too, I wrote list of so-called secrets that I hoped would help easy withdrawal and expedite recovery. I suppose some of those things on the list helped too.
I aplologize if I offended anyone, but I wanted to know for myself what was real and what was suggestion.
I am going to put money where my mouth is and I am going to leave this website for one week. For one week I will live without obsessing on my recovery,... on my so-called post-withdrawal symptoms. I will not feed my brain with reinforcing data and testimony as to the inevitable,.......... written by others.
Take care all who helped me (and you did!). I will report back in a week.
Look, we as species have evolved, and we are obsessed with compartmentalizing things into neat little boxes in order to make sense of a complicated world we don't really understand completely. That's a disease,...that is not. Drug Addiction is no more or no less a disease than cancer or MS or obesity, or risk taking. In my view, we all start out with a set of genes that define the initial probability(s) for everything. Then environment comes along and either dampens or enhances the proclivity for behaviors or circumstances. And then, well stuff happens. Ya get prostrate cancer or breast cancer or your a risk-taker or a pill popper. Thing is the very act of living is the slow and subtle progression of a very long disease, namely aging and death. I didn't start this post to argue whether or not drug addiction is a disease. I started because whether or not it is or isn't, once you make up your mind to quit, once you've gone through a reasonable withdrawal period, You HAVE TO STOP OBSESSING OVER THE PAST AND THE PROBLEM!!!! We have to stop feeding our brains with input suggesting we still must suffer because Bornagain12 still hurts, I must too,.... because JoeShmo24 is on day 44 and still feels bad so to will I. I never had anxiety, but on this website I learned that that comes with the "Sub Package" of post withdrawal and sure enough I now have anxiety!!!!! How much of it is real and how much of it have I "learned" from you folks????
why does everyone have to use such big words?? I had to get out a dictionary for some of them!!!!!
I tend to use the word "addiction" over disease. Im not sure i really buy the disease thing either. If you have MS or cancer or something like that that is a disease. Everything has to have disease at the end of it anymore. The word is used way to much in my opinion. sara
for me it's a disease while abusing , not after. I have to adapt myself to the new situation of living clean of pills , but no way i'm feeling in the middle of any disease now.
I take way a lot of flack for this, but ......I don't believe it is a disease, unless proven a fact and not theory........
There.....I said it in all little words.......are you proud of me or just trying to annoying me?
Nauty.........:-))
OK Nauty, I'm probably gonna annoy you again with this dictionary entry for "disease," and as you can see, it would not be difficult to apply at least two of the definitions to what people addicted to drugs and/or alcohol go through.
I do think that xru has some very valid points, but until we throroughly understand our brains (and nano-scopic functions of our bodies) and all of the chemical functions and possible abnormalities that may occur in one, I am holding off on saying whether drug addiction is not a disease, obesity is not a disease, alcoholism is not a disease etc.
Certainly each person has choices to make regarding using, but what genetic, biologic and/or chemical factors predispose one person to abuse and another to simple use? I don't know and, so far, neither do the scientists studying such things. yada yada yada......I know.........
Main Entry: dis·ease
Pronunciation: \di-ˈzēz\
Function: noun
Etymology: Middle English disese, from Anglo-French desease, desaise, from des- dis- + eise ease
Date: 14th century
1obsolete : trouble
2: a condition of the living animal or plant body or of one of its parts that impairs normal functioning and is typically manifested by distinguishing signs and symptoms : sickness , malady
3: a harmful development (as in a social institution)