I’ve been off my meds for at least a month now. It’s not as terrifying as I initially thought it would be. I remember when I initially started taking them. There was one weekend when I completely forgot to pop my pills every morning and by the end of it, my head felt really weird–the only way I can describe it is that electric jolts would go through my brain when I moved too much–and I started getting those ugly thoughts of despair again. My doctor started me out in April of last year saying that he wanted to keep me on it for a year and then we would see what to do after that. If all was well, he would wean me off the meds and my brain would go back to being non-drugged. Well, funny things have happened since then, namely not so funny things like losing my health insurance. I haven’t been to the doctor since the last time I needed to get my prescription refilled, and once I lost my insurance, my dad started sending me my meds. I don’t know how he got them. I never asked. Long story short, when the year was up, I started weaning myself off my meds. I don’t really know if this was the wise thing to do, but it’s not as though I had a choice since I couldn’t go see my doctor without paying a bajillion dollars. They probably wouldn’t have even taken me since I didn’t have health insurance. Boo to that. Anyway, the way I weaned myself off was by starting to take my meds every other day, then every third day, etc. The time would lengthen, until I was going two weeks without having electric brain storms. There was this really bad time at work, though, where I could barely function without my brain feeling like it was going to explode. That was bad. And every once in a while I get headaches at the top of my head, although I can’t say that they’re related. But I’m completely off Lexapro now, and I don’t get the electric brain storms anymore, and I don’t have ugly dark thoughts anymore.
I can say, though, that I am much healthier emotionally than I was a year ago. I’ve come a long way since that night writing my paper and then having a breakdown and crawling into bed. I can remember what my day-to-day life was like before being medicated and getting couseling. That was the year I walked everywhere, which was bad because it made me disappear into my head. I would walk over the train tracks and wonder what would happen if I just stood there and let one run me over. I would listen to really depressing music and have really awful thoughts about how my life wasn’t really worth anything, and I would dwell on all the ways that I had failed. It didn’t take much to set me off into hysterics when anything went wrong. I was a complete mess. The semester during which I realized that I needed to do something about myself was the one that tanked my GPA and the one when I wrote a long letter to the jerk. I can remember sitting in my apartment all alone during Spring Break for days without going anywhere waiting for him to call me and then losing it when I found out that he wasn’t coming to visit me like he said he would because he “lost my number.” Any normal person would kick his ass to the curb and move on. But not me. Instead I told him that I loved him, which was one of the stupidest moves of my life. I know that would never happen now because I’ve become the kind of person who doesn’t accept that shit. There are times when I get so angry about all that that I wish I could do something vindictive like tell his (now) wife about various things. In the end, though, I’m not that kind of person and I don’t care enough. The point of all this, though, is that I’m not that person anymore. I went through a lot during my sophomore and junior years of college, and they really affected me, but I worked through them and I’m moving on with my life. I’m more balanced now, and I don’t let things get to me as much as I used to. I’m also more capable of not letting bullshit get through to me. I don’t blame myself anymore for the way that other people treat me, and if they treat me like crap, then I tell them so instead of letting them continue to hurt me. I’m not responsible for the way other people act.
Anyway, I’ve barely even noticed that I haven’t been on my meds anymore. Every once in a while, when something potentially damaging happens, I handle it much more calmly than I used to. These are moments when I step back and allow myself to be impressed with my progress. I can also concentrate now on all the good things that are going on instead of weighing myself down in the morass of the shitty stuff. It’s actually really great.
There are some regrets, though, such as my GPA, which could’ve been better had I not been depressed. Also, I would’ve never written that damn letter. Motherfucker I wish I could take that letter back. But what is done is done, and I’ve dealt with it, and I’m a stronger person for it. So, goodbye lexapro, and hopefully, goodbye depression.