Psycho-Babble Medication Thread 3400

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Re: Skeptic? Not anymore...

Posted by David on March 9, 1999, at 13:04:28

In reply to Re: Skeptic -hallucinogenics, posted by Seedwoman on March 9, 1999, at 10:50:20

Hello everybody,

Having read all the debate above and sometimes
not explicitly civil arguments I realized that
the thread that I started has taken on
an undesirable direction for some of us...

The next time I'd better not be skeptic about
antidepressants and therapy...

Thank you all.

David

 

Re: Skeptic? Not anymore...

Posted by Jim on March 9, 1999, at 17:59:48

In reply to Re: Skeptic? Not anymore..., posted by David on March 9, 1999, at 13:04:28

Pardon the sarcasm, Dave (if you're there)...

For my part, I do lend my support to
Seedwoman's very sensible position and
cautions about psychedelics, however.
I'll even throw in another 2 cents and
venture the claim that people with
depression/anxiety problems should be
*extremely* careful tinkering with such
stuff for good reason: the serotonin-related
actions of LSD can pack an unpredictable
wallop for people whose receptors have been
conditioned into a heightened sensitivity!
Talk about playing with fire...

 

sensitive to side effects - Pat

Posted by Elizabeth on March 9, 1999, at 22:24:41

In reply to Re: Skeptic - Seedwoman, posted by Sean on March 6, 1999, at 14:24:54

Pat,

You may want to start at a very low dose and then increase it *slowly*. Many people have a hard time dealing with the side effects of antidepressants at first; the good news is that most of the side effects get better with time, and if you start low and go slow, you may never have any side effects at al.

-elizabeth

 

LSD therapy & stuff

Posted by Elizabeth on March 9, 1999, at 23:14:18

In reply to Re: Skeptic? Not anymore..., posted by Jim on March 9, 1999, at 17:59:48

Nobody knows how LSD works any more than any of the antidepressants. There is even some confusion, apparently, about its action at serotonin receptors (is it a 5-HT2 agonist or antagonsist? I've heard both from equally respectable sources).

It's an interesting drug. I would be very cautious about taking it if you are very emotional (anxious, agitated, tearful, etc.) as a feature of your depression, as it tends to intensify whatever you happen to be feeling already.

On the other hand I will say that I know of an individual who dropped acid as a last-ditch attempt to crawl out of "the hole" while feeling extremely suicidal. This person stayed in a safe environment with other people around who knew she was tripping, and managed to get through the experience and feel somewhat better for a while afterwards. It wasn't a permanent effect, and she said she would not do it again, but it did work (both in her subjective experience, and based on what others observed) for a little while (and it probably kept her out of the hospital).

I also knew of a guy who took LSD alone while depressed and jumped off a building.

Sadly, just as predicted, many people here are falling into the trap of judgementalness (is that a word?). Try to stick to the facts. LSD is a drug just like Prozac and Parnate and Remeron and imipramine are drugs. People do take it to get high, but that does not mean that getting high is its only use. People also take drugs like Xanax and Valium to get high.

Pej: I was particularly upset by your need to resort to name-calling. There is no need, nor any excuse, for that.

Seedwoman: I wouldn't call the state of a person on LSD a "psychosis," in that the person has *insight* - he or she is aware that a drug is causing the odd effects. A psychotic person does not have insight. He or she will believe, no matter what, in the reality of the perceptions (hallucinations) and beliefs (delusions) that he or she is experiencing.

Pat says:
>I feel that being depressed just naturally makes people want to get high.

That's not my experience of being depressed, although I know that there are some people who become very impulsive and "thrill-seeking" when depressed. But anyway, I don't think that LSD psychotherapy uses LSD as a "high." I'm taking a drug for depression that works similarly to morphine (an opioid) - that doesn't mean I'm using it to get "high," and in fact, it doesn't make me high. I'm taking it as prescribed under the care of a physician. Although I don't know too much about LSD therapy, I believe it is the same way: that is, it is not something you do on your own, but rather it involves being guided through the "trip" by your therapist.

I hope people will try to take a rational look at this interesting issue. Amd David, I hope the behavior of one or two people here did not scare you off permanently.
-Elizabeth

 

Re: LSD therapy & stuff

Posted by Gringo on March 10, 1999, at 1:50:47

In reply to LSD therapy & stuff, posted by Elizabeth on March 9, 1999, at 23:14:18

Hey there!

This was like a warm breeze on my soul, seeing that there actually are people having information. And also I'd like to thank you Elizabeth for addressing most of the uncorrect expressions in above messages. (Excellent point about "other" drugs like prozac etc...)

I was not going to go on with this because sometimes you simply cannot make things clearer and people won't see. I only wanted to add that being rude and sarcastic in responses to the question of a man in depression is probably the best to describe the attitude of those people. Anyway, let them walk in peace.

Just to add a little bit to your message, there is excellent theoretical basis for lsd *therapy* in a book with the same name, I mentioned it in previous message. Maybe I did not make it clear enough in my first post so that it might have seemed that I meant to try lsd on people's own... which is in no way recommended!
I was just trying to speak about *directed* psychotherpay, even David mentioned in his post that he was looking for a psychotherapist eager to perform a psychedelic therapy.(there are such people, though ballancing on the edge of illegal activity, but eager to do that, don't you know why...? there is a psychotherapist using illegaly ibogaine to treat opiate addictions, because she got rid of such addiction after one directed session with ibogaine...of course she is not in the usa...)
Of course, do not try to take any of the psychedelics on your own, especially when you're depressed and alone. That is the worst condition for such activity ever.
In short, when in psychedelic therapy, the very first time people are introduced and informed with possible effects of the substance and patients are diagnosed by a psychotherpaist, there are certain condiitons not allowing a person to undergone such a therpay - these people are not allowed to participate. People are chosen depending on their diagnosis and other criteria, for example a "certain intellectual capacity" is required. People can base their opinion on what they have heard and decide whether to chose or not such a therapy. If a person choses it, the session is conducted in a peaceful and relaxed atmosphere, person
lying on a bed under a cover, with "ambient" relaxing music in the background...and speaking to the therapist from time to time, although there are variations to this. It actually is true that the mechanisms of "protection" (sorry, non-english person i am and do not know all these words in english) are totally weakend, they are weakend to the rate which spoken psychotherapy reaches *very rarely*. In such a therapy a therapist is bringing a patient slowly step by step to the age of let's say three years, to the age of a strong emotional deprivation, to make him remind it, face it
and finally "solve it" (someone breaks into tears, someone may be angry etc.) One wrong step and all the effort is gone, there's too much rational mind in it, a patient protects him even before himself. These mechanisms are put aside and with minimum effort the patient can come to such areas of his own life, that ordinary thereapy would reach after half a year or even longer. Anyway, some of you will say I am too fascinated by a drug use, but I say this is more radical but more effective way of solving one's own miseries. The patient is not there to see colorful illusions, he's there to go deep inside himself
and with a help of unordinanry state of consciousness that "sinking inside" and releasing that material is much easier. Of course there certainly are disadvantages of this type of therapy, aggressive reactions of uninformed people here being the first one... One of the most frequent objections is that lsd intoxication lasts fot too long but there are ways to bring the patient back when something turns wrong. So there are efforts in researching other, less powerful substances allowing deep introspection and insights. And whether some of you will go to panick or not, swiss institutes are actually on the way of researching mdma, which most of you probably heard of as "ecstasy", which is misused and abused by
teenagers and youngsters in rave parties. Speaking about the drug policy is not an issue here. And swiss scientists have got the "bliss" of their government, if Switzerland was depending on the international business contacts with the usa (it is not), I'd worry about that research because it might be well forbidden in near future...well, but that's also not an issue.

I could go on with this for longer but there's quite nice amount of information there and if somebody's interested, get the facts. Try to search for new ways of treatment, standing on different basis. Your ever-all-knowing science doesn't even exactly know why you're in depression because it looks for the reasons where there are no explanations. And, as I said before, today's science understands depressions and other disorders as sicknesses having organical reasons in one's brain. Actually, depression is a state when a person in their life came to the point where unreleased unconscious underlying material is sponatneously released to certain, usually small extent. Instead of allowing you to release that material always affecting your life considerably science gave you
drugs to "push it back", while therapist encourages you to speak about it, which makes a pretty mess, don't you think? After all, you're not only victims of emotional lackness in your lives, you're victims of today's science and profit-based healthcare services. Is that ok?

OK, that's all from me, if you have comments, I'd appreciate them. Please, think about things and try to imagine that you're not so fully relying on the "wisdom" of the western science (I am not denying the successes of it, but these days it turned out somehow wrong, but to realize that you'd have to grow up somewhere else than in usa)


Regards,

Gringo

 

Re: Skeptic about antidepressants/drugs?

Posted by David on March 10, 1999, at 4:51:25

In reply to Re: Skeptic about antidepressants/drugs?, posted by Jim on March 8, 1999, at 17:54:39

> David wrote:
>
> >The psychiatrist gave me Zoloft 50mg, twice a day
> >Lexaurin 1.5mg (Bromazepamum), a total dose of
> >3mg a day. At the same time he said that my
> >depression has its roots in the structure of my
> >personality, my character. And he added that a
> >psychotherapy for me would be difficult and
> >complicated.
>
> Hmm... perhaps he meant the kind of *character*
> that decides that chronic depression gets cured
> through the primrose path of psychedelic healing?

Well, actually NO, he attributed it to Avoidance
Personality Disorder that he diagnosed in me.

> If so, I wish you all the best with your pursuits,
> Dave! ;-)
>
> - Jim

Do you think that any person in general who
considers psychedelics (ooohh ... they are
scary!) as a last resort to finding solution
to his/her misery deserves treatment, professional
advice, understanding and support of human beings
around him/her or mockery, rejection, denial, and
condemnation...?
Consider your attitude... does it reflect all the
human warmth, understanding, tolerance, empathy,
and love within you?

This post seems to be outdated, since you have
already apologized, but anyway, just try
contemplating a little while for yourself...

Wishing you all the best,

David

 

Do you really believe that?

Posted by Gringo on March 10, 1999, at 5:30:23

In reply to Re: Skeptic about antidepressants and therapy..., posted by pej on March 4, 1999, at 16:16:28

Pej in his message wrote:

>First of all, therapy is hard for anyone! That's why people resist it and why they give up so fast.
>They realize it is a painful journey and want no part of it. We all have behaviors that make our recovery difficult because we are all human beings.

This seems to be your fundamental understanding of why the therapy is so difficult. No wonder, if you ask anybody, most of people would say the same. But there is an expression hidden
that causes unability to doubt it and think about different things. That frequent and yet *powerful* expression 'we are all human beings...' And it's said so and never will or can be different, we are those poor human beings and it's written in our genes
that we are like that and therefore it's usual that people *protect* themselves against facing the "painful journey". Never, no doubts? It's a generally spread belief but that doesn't necessarily mean it's right, plus when
it's supported by wisdom-patent having science unable to help people. Because depresson as well as many other diagnosis are far beyond the scope of the science and beyond of what science is able to take as 'scientifical'. We grew up in such conditions
but that doesn't mean we could not doubt it. You're obviously talking about those 'self-protection mind mechanisms' that won't let you in and won't let you face what's hidden inside.
And unordinary state of consciousness (denied by you when denied lsd as a drug for junkies on the streets) , induced either by psychedelics or by other methods is what *will* let you in, it will even
release the blocks resident within you and it *will not* give you(or your ego) too many chances to protect.

Just a little thought about being undoubtful. It's shocking to see how all these people here discuss about switching from the fourth med to fifth and combining them together (and accepting all the side effects) without even a pinch of a thought 'what if..?'. Maybe that is different from what I say but your discussions are showing only this.
I do not want to convince you about my opinions here, I'd like to inform you a little bit and to tell you that it's probably a neverending circle you're rushing around and many people will in near future.

An idea to think about:
Did you know that turnover of meds producing companies reach hundreds of millions of dollars every year? And did you ever hear of marketing practises and 'co-operation' between such companies and docs? No? These are the facts that common people are not to hear about, it's said in most of the internal 'Public relations' materials of such companies.
Okey, that's business, well, if a detergents producing company makes millions of profit every year... you could say. But this is about people and their mental health. Did you know that the usa are known as the country with the strongest influence of profit making in health care sector?

Regards,

Gringo

 

Re: Skeptic about antidepressants/drugs?

Posted by Pat on March 10, 1999, at 7:39:34

In reply to Re: Skeptic about antidepressants/drugs?, posted by David on March 10, 1999, at 4:51:25

Sorry for my part in the controversy. I still think psychedelics are extremely dangerous no matter who is handling them, but I'm realizing from the posts that people certainly have a right to seek out any legitimate treatment when they are sick. I should not have spoken at all, since you guys are all obviously way more informed about all this stuff than I.

 

Re: LSD therapy & stuff

Posted by pej on March 10, 1999, at 8:06:12

In reply to Re: LSD therapy & stuff, posted by Gringo on March 10, 1999, at 1:50:47

>>First of all, thank you Elizabeth for the additional shame for my name calling. I do believe Dr. Bob had already addressed it.
The reason this whole thing set me off is that David appeared to be more excited about the acid than the acid/therapy.
Gringo, I dropped acid, mescaline, mushrooms, peyote, etc. many times in the early seventies.
These drugs, at their best, do give insight impossible to understand unless you've tried them.
However, in all my years of recovery I have yet to meet one person who has benefitted from this type of therapy.
I enjoy your enthusiasm but impressionable people can easily be misled. Give me tangible, not in a book but a real person, proof that this works long term for depression and I will cruise over to Sixth St. here in Austin and get us all a bucketload of acid.


Hey there!
>
> This was like a warm breeze on my soul, seeing that there actually are people having information. And also I'd like to thank you Elizabeth for addressing most of the uncorrect expressions in above messages. (Excellent point about "other" drugs like prozac etc...)
>
> I was not going to go on with this because sometimes you simply cannot make things clearer and people won't see. I only wanted to add that being rude and sarcastic in responses to the question of a man in depression is probably the best to describe the attitude of those people. Anyway, let them walk in peace.
>
> Just to add a little bit to your message, there is excellent theoretical basis for lsd *therapy* in a book with the same name, I mentioned it in previous message. Maybe I did not make it clear enough in my first post so that it might have seemed that I meant to try lsd on people's own... which is in no way recommended!
> I was just trying to speak about *directed* psychotherpay, even David mentioned in his post that he was looking for a psychotherapist eager to perform a psychedelic therapy.(there are such people, though ballancing on the edge of illegal activity, but eager to do that, don't you know why...? there is a psychotherapist using illegaly ibogaine to treat opiate addictions, because she got rid of such addiction after one directed session with ibogaine...of course she is not in the usa...)
> Of course, do not try to take any of the psychedelics on your own, especially when you're depressed and alone. That is the worst condition for such activity ever.
> In short, when in psychedelic therapy, the very first time people are introduced and informed with possible effects of the substance and patients are diagnosed by a psychotherpaist, there are certain condiitons not allowing a person to undergone such a therpay - these people are not allowed to participate. People are chosen depending on their diagnosis and other criteria, for example a "certain intellectual capacity" is required. People can base their opinion on what they have heard and decide whether to chose or not such a therapy. If a person choses it, the session is conducted in a peaceful and relaxed atmosphere, person
> lying on a bed under a cover, with "ambient" relaxing music in the background...and speaking to the therapist from time to time, although there are variations to this. It actually is true that the mechanisms of "protection" (sorry, non-english person i am and do not know all these words in english) are totally weakend, they are weakend to the rate which spoken psychotherapy reaches *very rarely*. In such a therapy a therapist is bringing a patient slowly step by step to the age of let's say three years, to the age of a strong emotional deprivation, to make him remind it, face it
> and finally "solve it" (someone breaks into tears, someone may be angry etc.) One wrong step and all the effort is gone, there's too much rational mind in it, a patient protects him even before himself. These mechanisms are put aside and with minimum effort the patient can come to such areas of his own life, that ordinary thereapy would reach after half a year or even longer. Anyway, some of you will say I am too fascinated by a drug use, but I say this is more radical but more effective way of solving one's own miseries. The patient is not there to see colorful illusions, he's there to go deep inside himself
> and with a help of unordinanry state of consciousness that "sinking inside" and releasing that material is much easier. Of course there certainly are disadvantages of this type of therapy, aggressive reactions of uninformed people here being the first one... One of the most frequent objections is that lsd intoxication lasts fot too long but there are ways to bring the patient back when something turns wrong. So there are efforts in researching other, less powerful substances allowing deep introspection and insights. And whether some of you will go to panick or not, swiss institutes are actually on the way of researching mdma, which most of you probably heard of as "ecstasy", which is misused and abused by
> teenagers and youngsters in rave parties. Speaking about the drug policy is not an issue here. And swiss scientists have got the "bliss" of their government, if Switzerland was depending on the international business contacts with the usa (it is not), I'd worry about that research because it might be well forbidden in near future...well, but that's also not an issue.
>
> I could go on with this for longer but there's quite nice amount of information there and if somebody's interested, get the facts. Try to search for new ways of treatment, standing on different basis. Your ever-all-knowing science doesn't even exactly know why you're in depression because it looks for the reasons where there are no explanations. And, as I said before, today's science understands depressions and other disorders as sicknesses having organical reasons in one's brain. Actually, depression is a state when a person in their life came to the point where unreleased unconscious underlying material is sponatneously released to certain, usually small extent. Instead of allowing you to release that material always affecting your life considerably science gave you
> drugs to "push it back", while therapist encourages you to speak about it, which makes a pretty mess, don't you think? After all, you're not only victims of emotional lackness in your lives, you're victims of today's science and profit-based healthcare services. Is that ok?
>
> OK, that's all from me, if you have comments, I'd appreciate them. Please, think about things and try to imagine that you're not so fully relying on the "wisdom" of the western science (I am not denying the successes of it, but these days it turned out somehow wrong, but to realize that you'd have to grow up somewhere else than in usa)
>
>
> Regards,
>
> Gringo

 

Re: Skeptic about antidepressants/drugs?

Posted by Jim on March 10, 1999, at 9:22:32

In reply to Re: Skeptic about antidepressants/drugs?, posted by David on March 10, 1999, at 4:51:25

Once again, Dave, I apologize if my comments were hurtful to you. As pej wrote, it came mostly from the sense (perhaps mistaken) that you seemed more excited about the drugs themselves than in the actual therapy side of things. Having had my share of experience with various substances in the past, I have a built-in skepticism about their therapeutic potential in restoring people's overall well-being, even after having read numerous claims and reports to the contrary. And I'm not sure I'd even agree with the easy assertion made by some people here that, hey, Prozac is a drug just like lysergic acid is. Granted, they are both drugs, and just because something is legal doesn't mean that its perfectly safe--hardly!. But their mode of action (not to mention the chronic effects) of both substances is different enough to justify their different status in the world today, even when we all know that the so-called "war on drugs" has mostly been a pathetic sham. But everyone eventually has to follow their own inner voice with these things.

With this said, I wish you all the best--in all sincerity this time.
--Jim

 

Re: LSD therapy & stuff

Posted by saintjames on March 12, 1999, at 2:52:09

In reply to Re: LSD therapy & stuff, posted by Gringo on March 12, 1999, at 2:21:25

. Only one more recommendation: www.mentalhealth.com, look for actual side effects of meds used commonly today and for current state of scientifical knowlegde on long-term effects of these meds...
>
> Regards,
>
> Gringo

james here.....

I have been on AD's since 1985 and the only long term effect I can report is a great life, the ability to feel all the emotions anyone could and should want to have.

james

 

Re: LSD therapy & stuff

Posted by Gringo on March 12, 1999, at 3:47:40

In reply to Re: LSD therapy & stuff, posted by saintjames on March 12, 1999, at 2:52:09

> . Only one more recommendation: www.mentalhealth.com, look for actual side effects of meds used commonly today and for current state of scientifical knowlegde on long-term effects of these meds...
> >
> > Regards,
> >
> > Gringo
>
> james here.....
>
> I have been on AD's since 1985 and the only long term effect I can report is a great life, the ability to feel all the emotions anyone could and should want to have.
>
> james

 

Re: LSD therapy & stuff

Posted by Toby on March 12, 1999, at 12:51:33

In reply to Re: LSD therapy & stuff, posted by Gringo on March 12, 1999, at 3:47:40

Hello, just a comment on something that appears to have been talked to death...

I know some people who have done the LSD reasearch in England from the 1960's and it was indeed beneficial according to these researchers but most of it got suppressed after Timothy Leary did his stuff. I also know former patients who received LSD therapy in the US in the late 1960's and some had a really eye-opening experience that set them on the path to enlightenment and future good functioning and some had a really horrifying experience. I also have been reading about the Ibogaine treatments currently being done and it appears that, there too, are some outstanding experiences that result in complete sobriety and new insights for some and absolutely terrifying experiences for others. I even have to admit that my pet treatment, EMDR, has made some people feel worse even though 95% feel much better.

I think that any treatment, whether FDA-approved, illegal, herbal, or something out of your front lawn, will work great for some, not great for others. I think it is always best to stick with things that are well-researched and documented to work, but how can anyone fault someone who has "been there, done that" and moves on to experimental or fringe treatment? I just hope that if that is the case, that as much care as possible will be taken to insure that help is available if something goes wrong. And if you are doing both traditional and nontraditional drugs, please tell your health care person so they can be prepared if there is an adverse reaction or a drug-drug interaction.

 

Re: LSD therapy & stuff

Posted by Terry on March 12, 1999, at 19:55:07

In reply to Re: LSD therapy & stuff, posted by Toby on March 12, 1999, at 12:51:33

Toby -- what is EMDR? Terry

> Hello, just a comment on something that appears to have been talked to death...
>
> I know some people who have done the LSD reasearch in England from the 1960's and it was indeed beneficial according to these researchers but most of it got suppressed after Timothy Leary did his stuff. I also know former patients who received LSD therapy in the US in the late 1960's and some had a really eye-opening experience that set them on the path to enlightenment and future good functioning and some had a really horrifying experience. I also have been reading about the Ibogaine treatments currently being done and it appears that, there too, are some outstanding experiences that result in complete sobriety and new insights for some and absolutely terrifying experiences for others. I even have to admit that my pet treatment, EMDR, has made some people feel worse even though 95% feel much better.
>
> I think that any treatment, whether FDA-approved, illegal, herbal, or something out of your front lawn, will work great for some, not great for others. I think it is always best to stick with things that are well-researched and documented to work, but how can anyone fault someone who has "been there, done that" and moves on to experimental or fringe treatment? I just hope that if that is the case, that as much care as possible will be taken to insure that help is available if something goes wrong. And if you are doing both traditional and nontraditional drugs, please tell your health care person so they can be prepared if there is an adverse reaction or a drug-drug interaction.

 

Re: LSD therapy & stuff

Posted by Elizabeth on March 13, 1999, at 9:51:48

In reply to Re: LSD therapy & stuff, posted by Toby on March 12, 1999, at 12:51:33

> Hello, just a comment on something that appears to have been talked to death...
>
> I know some people who have done the LSD reasearch in England from the 1960's and it was indeed beneficial according to these researchers but most of it got suppressed after Timothy Leary did his stuff. I also know former patients who received LSD therapy in the US in the late 1960's and some had a really eye-opening experience that set them on the path to enlightenment and future good functioning and some had a really horrifying experience. I also have been reading about the Ibogaine treatments currently being done and it appears that, there too, are some outstanding experiences that result in complete sobriety and new insights for some and absolutely terrifying experiences for others. I even have to admit that my pet treatment, EMDR, has made some people feel worse even though 95% feel much better.
>
> I think that any treatment, whether FDA-approved, illegal, herbal, or something out of your front lawn, will work great for some, not great for others. I think it is always best to stick with things that are well-researched and documented to work, but how can anyone fault someone who has "been there, done that" and moves on to experimental or fringe treatment? I just hope that if that is the case, that as much care as possible will be taken to insure that help is available if something goes wrong. And if you are doing both traditional and nontraditional drugs, please tell your health care person so they can be prepared if there is an adverse reaction or a drug-drug interaction.

Well said, Toby.

I certainly can imagine that hallucinogens might faciliate psychoanalysis. On the other hand, it occurs to me that people under the influence can be pretty suggestible, which could be dangerous: not that therapists aren't trustworthy, but just that it's surprisingly easy to "convince" people (hypnosis is problematic in the same way). I'm sure that some people might "freak out" (for some people, even "unaltered" analysis is too anxiety-provoking).

Does anyone know what if the IPA (or any of the other *PAs) has a particular stand on this?

BTW, the indole hallucinogens (LSD, psilocybin, etc.) don't have much in the way of drug interactions, although they tend to be less effective if you are taking antidepressants at the same time. Would stay away from mescaline if already taking stimulants (including MAOIs). I'd imagine that MAPS has more information on this.

-elizabeth

 

Re: LSD therapy & stuff

Posted by Gringo on March 15, 1999, at 2:14:56

In reply to Re: LSD therapy & stuff, posted by Elizabeth on March 13, 1999, at 9:51:48

> > Hello, just a comment on something that appears to have been talked to death...
> >
> > I know some people who have done the LSD reasearch in England from the 1960's and it was indeed beneficial according to these researchers but most of it got suppressed after Timothy Leary did his stuff. I also know former patients who received LSD therapy in the US in the late 1960's and some had a really eye-opening experience that set them on the path to enlightenment and future good functioning and some had a really horrifying experience. I also have been reading about the Ibogaine treatments currently being done and it appears that, there too, are some outstanding experiences that result in complete sobriety and new insights for some and absolutely terrifying experiences for others. I even have to admit that my pet treatment, EMDR, has made some people feel worse even though 95% feel much better.
> >
> > I think that any treatment, whether FDA-approved, illegal, herbal, or something out of your front lawn, will work great for some, not great for others. I think it is always best to stick with things that are well-researched and documented to work, but how can anyone fault someone who has "been there, done that" and moves on to experimental or fringe treatment? I just hope that if that is the case, that as much care as possible will be taken to insure that help is available if something goes wrong. And if you are doing both traditional and nontraditional drugs, please tell your health care person so they can be prepared if there is an adverse reaction or a drug-drug interaction.
>
> Well said, Toby.
>
> I certainly can imagine that hallucinogens might faciliate psychoanalysis. On the other hand, it occurs to me that people under the influence can be pretty suggestible, which could be dangerous: not that therapists aren't trustworthy, but just that it's surprisingly easy to "convince" people (hypnosis is problematic in the same way). I'm sure that some people might "freak out" (for some people, even "unaltered" analysis is too anxiety-provoking).
>
> Does anyone know what if the IPA (or any of the other *PAs) has a particular stand on this?
>
> BTW, the indole hallucinogens (LSD, psilocybin, etc.) don't have much in the way of drug interactions, although they tend to be less effective if you are taking antidepressants at the same time. Would stay away from mescaline if already taking stimulants (including MAOIs). I'd imagine that MAPS has more information on this.
>
> -elizabeth

Greetings,

let me just add a little bit. Concerning the fact that for someone psychedelics may be helpful and for someone they may be hell, it's up to a psychotherapist to exclude such people, they should be educated enough now to diagnose people with possible risks. And concerning 'convincing' people, this also could be a myth, yet again, not researched in a propriate and *unbiased* way. But maybe that is the question of something called ethics. I don't think that a therapist 'convincing' people would 'survive' for a long time. And I think that when under psychedelics, it's not as easy to convince someone to 'kill someone else'. Even in deep hypnosis a patient did not hurt themselves when told to. But again, too much bias makes research on these interesting topics too complicated. Anyway, I think that most of today's patients are actually *convinced* about something that may show up as wrong later on. I'd like to ask just one more question - anybody heard of holotropic breathwork here?
This was not meant to recommend people with depression to try psychedelic substances. If there was not so many political 'walls', too many myths and bias in public, a serious research on psychedelic *therapy* could be done. Recommended reading (I don't sell books, nor live in the usa, thus not helping to sell them): "LSD psychotherapy" by Stanislav Grof, "The Adventure of Self-Discovery", "Beyond the Brain", "The Holotropic Mind" or "The Realms of Human Unconscious" all by the same author. If interested there are loads of information on this on Internet.

And please, remember, prejudice and myths are of no help. Thank you.

Regards,

Gringo

 

Re: LSD therapy & stuff

Posted by Steve on March 15, 1999, at 8:46:06

In reply to Re: LSD therapy & stuff, posted by Toby on March 12, 1999, at 12:51:33

> Hello, just a comment on something that appears to have been talked to death...
>
> I know some people who have done the LSD reasearch in England from the 1960's and it was indeed beneficial according to these researchers but most of it got suppressed after Timothy Leary did his stuff. I also know former patients who received LSD therapy in the US in the late 1960's and some had a really eye-opening experience that set them on the path to enlightenment and future good functioning and some had a really horrifying experience. I also have been reading about the Ibogaine treatments currently being done and it appears that, there too, are some outstanding experiences that result in complete sobriety and new insights for some and absolutely terrifying experiences for others. I even have to admit that my pet treatment, EMDR, has made some people feel worse even though 95% feel much better.
>
> I think that any treatment, whether FDA-approved, illegal, herbal, or something out of your front lawn, will work great for some, not great for others. I think it is always best to stick with things that are well-researched and documented to work, but how can anyone fault someone who has "been there, done that" and moves on to experimental or fringe treatment? I just hope that if that is the case, that as much care as possible will be taken to insure that help is available if something goes wrong. And if you are doing both traditional and nontraditional drugs, please tell your health care person so they can be prepared if there is an adverse reaction or a drug-drug interaction.

What is EMDR?

Thanks
--Steve

 

Re: LSD therapy & stuff

Posted by V on March 17, 1999, at 7:28:11

In reply to Re: LSD therapy & stuff, posted by Gringo on March 15, 1999, at 2:14:56

> I'd like to ask just one more question - anybody heard of holotropic breathwork here?

Yes, I have. I'm also very interested in learning more about it. I even wrote Dr.Grof a letter, asking him to give me suggestions of appropriate reading, but he hasn't replied yet and I don't ecpect him to do so any longer. I guess he's a busy man.

Have any tips on good books on the subject?

/V

 

Re: LSD therapy & stuff

Posted by Peter on March 17, 1999, at 20:02:21

In reply to Re: LSD therapy & stuff, posted by V on March 17, 1999, at 7:28:11

Yeah,

I've done holotropic breath work with Stan Grof. It was very interesting. They put you in a room with huge speakers. They turn the music up real loud and you breath extremely quickly and fast for a long time. Many people reported seeing visions. I didn't see much, but I did experience a lot of emotions.

Peter

 

EMDR--for Terry & Steve

Posted by phyl on March 17, 1999, at 23:01:13

In reply to Re: LSD therapy & stuff, posted by Peter on March 17, 1999, at 20:02:21

> For Terry & Steve--EMDR stands for: Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing. For more info: www.emdr.org --phyl

 

Re: HB Books

Posted by Gringo on March 18, 1999, at 9:37:20

In reply to Re: LSD therapy & stuff, posted by V on March 17, 1999, at 7:28:11

> > I'd like to ask just one more question - anybody heard of holotropic breathwork here?
>
> Yes, I have. I'm also very interested in learning more about it. I even wrote Dr.Grof a letter, asking him to give me suggestions of appropriate reading, but he hasn't replied yet and I don't ecpect him to do so any longer. I guess he's a busy man.
>
> Have any tips on good books on the subject?
>
> /V

I already mentioned it in previous messages, in some of them, well, there are four titles giving lots of info on HB, its research and many stories of people who undergone HB, these are all by Stan Grof - "Realms of the Human Unconscious" "Beyond the Brain..." "The Adventure of Self-Discovery" "The Holotropic Mind...". They are all brilliant, the last mentioned has the most of the stories of people from all of them. It's interesting reading, Mr.Grof describes human psyche as much deeper and in a more complex way, giving a new view on it comapred with Freudian view. Check the page http://www.breathwork.com .Then there are other titles like "The Breathwork Experience" by Kylea Taylor, there are some excerpts at http://www.hanfordmead.com/bwechap.htm I think in all of these you could find more than you need.

Regards,

Gringo

 

Re: EMDR--for Terry & Steve

Posted by Terry on March 18, 1999, at 19:09:59

In reply to EMDR--for Terry & Steve, posted by phyl on March 17, 1999, at 23:01:13

Phyl and others -- thanks. I looked up the website for EMDR. But is this really legit? Seems like hocus-pocus to me. Terry


> > For Terry & Steve--EMDR stands for: Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing. For more info: www.emdr.org --phyl

 

Re: EMDR--for Terry & Steve

Posted by phyl on March 19, 1999, at 0:14:00

In reply to Re: EMDR--for Terry & Steve, posted by Terry on March 18, 1999, at 19:09:59

> Phyl and others -- thanks. I looked up the website for EMDR. But is this really legit? Seems like hocus-pocus to me. Terry
>
>
> > > For Terry & Steve--EMDR stands for: Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing. For more info: www.emdr.org --phyl

>>Terry--I can once again only speak for myself but my experience with EMDR was INTENSE and mostly positive. Terry-if you would like to give me a web based email address I would be happy to email you more about it. --phyl

 

Re: EMDR--for Terry & Steve

Posted by Terry on March 19, 1999, at 18:39:58

In reply to Re: EMDR--for Terry & Steve, posted by phyl on March 19, 1999, at 0:14:00

Phyl -- thanks for offering to send info on EMDR. My e-mail address is TWaldron@mindspring.com. Terry

> > Phyl and others -- thanks. I looked up the website for EMDR. But is this really legit? Seems like hocus-pocus to me. Terry
> >
> >
> > > > For Terry & Steve--EMDR stands for: Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing. For more info: www.emdr.org --phyl
>
> >>Terry--I can once again only speak for myself but my experience with EMDR was INTENSE and mostly positive. Terry-if you would like to give me a web based email address I would be happy to email you more about it. --phyl

 

Re: Skeptic about antidepressants and therapy...

Posted by alan on March 19, 1999, at 23:18:00

In reply to Skeptic about antidepressants and therapy..., posted by David on March 4, 1999, at 12:13:31

> Hello everybody,
>
> I have been mildly depressed for a long long time,
> without actually knowing it. But it seems to me
> that it has been forever.
>
> But last year I had two bouts of severe depression in
> late spring and then again in winter. I could not make
> myself go and seek professional advice, hesitating all
> the time, "lingering on the edge," looking for excuses
> all the time (look there, it's not so bad, pull yourself
> together, there're lots and lots of other people that
> suffer much more... and stuff like that).
>
> Finally I managed somehow to walk into a psychologist's
> room, it was about the time, when my suffering lasted
> for about 2 months and I could no longer pretend that
> everything's fine with me (you know, all your friends
> asking "how are you?" and you saying with a warm
> smile "fine, thank you" but deep inside longing to
> scream to the world "miserable!!!").
>
> The psycholigist sent me to a psychiatrist to have some
> medication prescribed since I was to leave my home
> country to study in the Netherlands temporarily.
> I received a diagnosis of major depressive disorder,
> anxiety, depersonalization, derealization, and a few
> other things that I could not understand.
>
> The psychiatrist gave me Zoloft 50mg, twice a day and
> Lexaurin 1.5mg (Bromazepamum), a total dose of 3mg a
> day. At the same time he said that my depression
> has its roots in the structure of my personality, my
> character. And he added that a psychotherapy for me
> would be difficult and complicated.
>
> I had been skeptical about medicines for depression as
> well as any kind of conventional psychotherapy before,
> although never actually tried them (I had always
> really doubted that they could be of any help to me...
> maybe I had some kind of prejudice...? I don't know.)
> and now the psychiatrist, although being honest,
> even enhanced these worries in me!
>
> I have been on Zoloft and Lexaurin for 2 months now,
> I can see a slight improvement (I have enough energy
> to pretend again that everything's all right...) but
> very often I slip into despair as to whether there
> really is any kind of help for me? Any positive vision
> of the future, I mean bright future? I don't know...
>
> I have a very intense feeling that these antidepressant
> drugs just suppress the underlying causes of the
> state of my mental health without really "removing"
> them. Maybe the most severe symptoms disappear so I
> can get through a day somehow...
>
> But I am sure I do not want to switch to any other
> kind of pills and then to some other pills and on
> and on... and although in psychotherapy it might
> be nice to have an opportunity to talk to somebody
> (especially when my social life is and has for a long
> time been virtually non-existent), I don't believe
> I can make any progress.
>
> What do you think?
>
> Thank you that you have endured to read up to this
> point.
>
> Good luck to everyone,
>
> David

Don't worry about the underlying causes of your depression. They go back to the Big Bang, or whatever. Get rid of the depression, and all the causes you need be concerned with will have been dealt with. Some drug combo will almost certainly work eventually, and you will probably not believe that until it does, for depression turns off the 'hope-centers' of the brain. If nothing else works time will. My very best wishes.


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