I can see how Cymbalta may be viewed as the best thing, or helpful, or even the right thing to do: it's like being under water with your foot trapped- the best thing, the most helpful thing, and the right thing to do is hold your breath. But you can't stay there forever.
New Want To Be Off Cymbalta!
#32
Posted 09 July 2014 - 03:55 PM
With the reference to age here, I tend to think that I might be the oldest one on this site!? I am 72 and that may explain why I still, after more than 6 months off, am having sleep problems and definitely feelings of sadness - or melancholy, as TM suggested.
The last time I saw my PCP he thought that I should go back on the crap (a lower dose) and I said NO - Not after what I have been through and what I know now. Yikes!! I am currently looking for a new doc. He said he had a couple of other meds in mind but wouldn't tell me what because he knew I would go home and look them up - IMAGINE THAT!!!
ARRRGG!!!
#33
Posted 09 July 2014 - 04:07 PM
Your doc really is an asshat... I'd forgotten he'd said that to you ... hope you find a new/better doc soon...although maybe just wait until after you get back from your son's wedding... you've got nuff to do as it is...
#36
Posted 09 July 2014 - 07:43 PM
also, ice packs on my head helped mucho with the dizziness...and always has helped with the migraines ... put the ice on your temples, the carotid arteries your neck, also on the back of your neck...ice causes the arteries to constrict...(migraines cause them to expand)
I also found that ginger helped me when dizzy (best for nausea) ...ginger tea, or ginger ale...
You've made it through another day of withdrawal! Yay!
#37
Posted 09 July 2014 - 09:51 PM
FN
You nailed it the first time, ". . . it's time to lie down." I always have a problem with this one, and it seems I can't get it through my head because I've looked it up at least a dozen times over the years.
You lie down on the sofa, but you lay a book down. Lay requires a direct object- something that is having something done to it- the book. "Lay it on me Baby!"
Therefore Lay Down Sally should be Lie Down Sally (sorry Eric), and Lay Lady Lay should be Lie Lady Lie (sorry Bob).
My favourite source for grammar tips is Mignon Fogarty, otherwise known as Grammar Girl. Here is the source for the info on Lay and Lie:
http://www.quickandd...rsus-lie?page=1
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#38
Posted 09 July 2014 - 10:49 PM
#42
Posted 10 July 2014 - 08:37 AM
Clara, I'm a Clapton lover as well... we must be of about the same "generation" ;-)
Crystal.... yeah, I've been waking up at 4 a.m., sucks... I'm thinking that I should just get a cow and a couple of chickens so I can do the milking and gather the eggs since I'm living on "farmer time" ....
#44
Posted 10 July 2014 - 02:32 PM
I awoke so many times at 3 or 4 AM during the first year of discontinuation. At first I would get angry, and that would virtually guarantee I'd be awake most of the night. Then after some weeks I'd go on the computer or look at the teevee- both have bright screens and that would keep me awake for a few hours too. Then I tried reading; I'd find something innocuous but that bored me, and boredom (while sleepy-sounding), evokes frustration and that turns on the adrenaline tap and there you go- the sun's coming up!
Trying to go back to sleep seems like a reasonable endeavour, but it's doomed to fail- kind of like running up a hill to reduce your heart rate.
I began working with Mindfulness and Acceptance around that time, and after many months I learned to accept the nights I would wake up at 3 AM. I am awake- it is what it is. I'm awake. I might listen to a Ted Talk with the computer screen off; I might read some, or do a guided mindfulness meditation session- nothing to spool up adrenaline.
If you're awake, just acknowledge that reality and calmly go about doing something you enjoy. You'll either find sleep in the hours that follow or perhaps you won't. Now you have to choose whether you'll nap during the day (which could begin a pattern of waking at 3 AM and sleeping during the day) or you could push through the tiredness of the day and hope for a longer sleep the next night.
Sleep aids helped some, but I had to start them early - around 8:30 or else I'd be hung over and lazy and dumb for most of the next day. A sleep aid can help restore the pattern, but regular use just got me down.
My sleep patterns didn't really get back to normal for a long time (about a year and a half); there's information out there regarding the negative impact of antidepressants on the sleep cycle.
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#46
Posted 13 July 2014 - 07:43 PM
Somebody else here recently mention aloe ... juice? Can't remember now ... I'll search the archives and see if I can find the post for you ....
#47
Posted 13 July 2014 - 07:51 PM
Also, here's a blog article about various natural remedies for nausea ...
Another thing that helped me, which now seems totally weird, is that I put an ice pack (one of those gel pea things that you can chill in the freezer or heat in the microwave) on my stomach, sort of between the stomach and the solar plexus ...
In any event, the nausea doesn't usually last long ... it, like all the other symptoms, sorta' gets bored with us and moves on ... to be replaced by yet another symptom that's all eager and excited to bug us ... just wait 'em all out ... and before you know it, you'll be through the hardest parts of the process :-)
#51
Posted 14 July 2014 - 07:46 AM
The nausea! It's awful! I'm on....I don't even know....week 11 (?) of tapering. I am nauseated every day. Morning to night.
Yesterday was particularly bad. After living on crackers for a few days I needed a meal, but wasn't able to enjoy it because I was so nauseated. Yuck and yuck. I described it like living with a constant hangover - the dull headache, if you move too quickly you're going to throw up, and your body just wants to sleep but you can't.
I forget about the ginger. It's on the list for today.
#52
Posted 14 July 2014 - 08:04 AM
Hang in there, as I said above, this won't last too much longer!
#53
Posted 14 July 2014 - 08:25 AM
Hello! I am new here. Been on cymbalta 30 mgs about 10 months was started for some situational anxiety and migraine headaches. Well the situational anxiety went away as the situation went away.. Migraines no. Still on a multitude of drugs in addition to Cymbalta. Anyways want to be off this drug and I do not want to count beads.. Etc. for a week I opened the caps eyeballed it and took less and less. Today I took none. Well see. Been having nightmares that are terrible- vivid 3D gory killing spree type. Is this normal? Other wise some tingling which I know is normal. Fatigue, some irritability and brain fog at work too.
I am a nurse so I gotta be on my toes didn't have a clue this stuff was so potent! Any natural suggestions?
#55
Posted 14 July 2014 - 01:22 PM
Girl go get that ginger root supplement! On my bottle it says you can take it up to 3 times a day. I got mine at Walmart. I force myself to eat a banana in the morn and wash that puppy down with lots of water! If I feel bad later I take another one. I hope you can get out of the house and get some it's worth the couple of bucks to try.
Let me know if it helps you!
Good luck!
Mich
#56 Guest_Notsureaboutit_*
Posted 14 July 2014 - 04:32 PM
My first couple days were like heaven I had no pain, felt great, and no real side affects, to speak of, I was taking it at night and it kept me up so I switched to the morning.
Readin all of these forums for a week now has made me want to get off NOW, just cause I am scared that if I stay on longer it will take longer to get off....
I started taking 10 percent out of the capsules, have done that for 2 days, and now I have headaches, and I don't know if what I am experiencing is what all are calling brain zaps....when I close my eyes it's like I feel some pulses going from one side to the other???
And I have been clenching my teeth for two days now, and itching horrible itching, So is this it? Is this withdrawal?
Maybe a I should have just done one little bead at a time vs 10 percent, but I didn't want to take 4 months to get off of it when I have only been on it for almost 2 months
Am I going thru withdrawal now?
Thanks
#58
Posted 14 July 2014 - 05:53 PM
It's far wiser to be very very cautious and slow in how you get off this stuff... go back up to the 30 mg, as FH suggests, and stay there until you're back to being stable ...
Then, start bead counting your way down ... at first, try removing just the 2-3 beads a day ... if you still have strong withdrawal, try waiting a day or two (or three) between bead reductions... you can even slow down to taking out just 1 bead a day or every couple of days...
I totally understand that you want off this crap asap ... but asap isn't going to help you in the long run ... you need to start slow, and figure out how much dose reduction you brain and body can handle...
everyone is different... what's important is that you get off it, and do it with as little "pain and suffering" as possible ...
Please keep posting here to let us know how you're doing ... several other forum members were also taking the poison for fibro, so you'll get lots of good suggestions from them ... (I wasn't on it for fibro, so I'm not much help there...)
Hang in there, you can do this!
#59
Posted 14 July 2014 - 10:01 PM
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#60
Posted 17 July 2014 - 09:45 AM
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