AardvarkGoodSwimmer wrote:
Hi, I've struggled with bouts have depression, have never tried anti-depressants, but am much more open to them than I used to be.
What I've read is that anti-depressants are trial and error in a respectful sense. Just that everyone's biochem is a little different. That it typically takes about 8 weeks to tell if a particular medicine is going to work. And if and when you're going to stop a medication, don't do it cold turkey, but rather phase down in steps.
So, to test a drug, you pay for eight weeks and then have an addiction problem. If you do a little research, you'll see that anti-depressants only work in rigged trials. Drugs are tested against a placebo, but in the case of a psychoactive drug, the subjects can tell if they are in the control group and just getting sugar pills. If the control group is given any random drug that affects the mind perceptibly, they are just as likely to improve.
Taking drugs with the intent to change one's mood is basically a catalyst that gives you the permission and expectation of change, and the psychoactive part just helps unstick the old patterns. However, to achieve healthy change, friends or counsellors are almost essential. Unfortunately, paying a counsellor does not result in a kickback to a politician, so the drugs are sometimes the only thing available, no matter how poorly they perform, and the damage done.