Does Taking Medication Mean I’m Taking the Easy Way Out as an Autistic?

I read this and thought i would share it for your thoughts.....

The obvious answer to my question is no.

However, I didn’t always feel that way. In my 20s, I saturated myself in healthism and orthorexia. I thought I could control and optimize my body and mind simply by addressing my diet, getting enough exercise, and going to therapy.

I incorrectly thought that if someone needed psychiatric medication, it meant they weren’t doing the internal and external work. I assumed they were just treating the symptoms instead of the root cause.

This was further reinforced by a brief stint of anti-depressants I took in college. After a fire that consumed all of my physical items, I entered a deep state of depression. My doctor suggested Prozac, which I took. It didn’t help. It even worsened some of my symptoms.

Worsening symptoms is something doctors watch out for when they prescribe psychiatric medication. I incorrectly thought that if one psychiatric medication negatively impacted me, then all the rest were garbage as well. I didn’t know that certain medications can impact you differently depending on how your body responds to it.

I later took SSRI’s again after my mom died. I entered another deep state of depression. The medication I took that time helped (Zoloft), but I felt like a zombie. It was sooooo weird to barely think anything at all. In some ways it was very calming, and in other ways it was alarming. I didn’t want to Zzombie my way through life, so after three months I weened myself off

I also started therapy at that time, thinking that would be enough. It wasn’t.

Look, I’m a therapist, I clearly believe in the power of therapy. However, it cannot resolve everything.

Some things are just outside of our control.

I didn’t believe that until I learned I am autistic. I realized how different my brain is than a neurotypical brain, and that it’s ok to not measure myself by neurotypical standards. I will always think more and feel more than the average person.

Parents
  • In my experience medication isn't a help anyway. I'm not in any way saying people shouldn't take it, it's just that I react badly to all varieties of medication, and there is some evidence emerging that ND brains respond atypically to medication, so it's not just me 

    Antidepressants (SSRI)- increase dysregulation 

    antidepressants (maoi) - turn me into a complete zombie with a death wish

    Hormonal drugs (period control) -turn me into a monster where I can't self regulate and meltdown daily

    OTC Pain relief largely doesn't work

    Blood pressure pills appear not to be working either getting that looked into

    If anything controlled mood and allowed me to think at the same time I'd probably take it. I have been miserable almost my entire life, with very little concept of joy/happiness. If a pill actually fixed that I'd take it

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  • In my experience medication isn't a help anyway. I'm not in any way saying people shouldn't take it, it's just that I react badly to all varieties of medication, and there is some evidence emerging that ND brains respond atypically to medication, so it's not just me 

    Antidepressants (SSRI)- increase dysregulation 

    antidepressants (maoi) - turn me into a complete zombie with a death wish

    Hormonal drugs (period control) -turn me into a monster where I can't self regulate and meltdown daily

    OTC Pain relief largely doesn't work

    Blood pressure pills appear not to be working either getting that looked into

    If anything controlled mood and allowed me to think at the same time I'd probably take it. I have been miserable almost my entire life, with very little concept of joy/happiness. If a pill actually fixed that I'd take it

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