Last night sleep came. Since stopping Cymbalta 13 days ago, most nights have provided only a few hours of true dozing. Once or twice in the past fortnight I took zolpidem to knock myself out. But that does not lead to refreshing slumber, just a kind of drugged unconsciousness. Even with the sleeping pill, no more than five hours were spent sleeping; the rest of the night passed with me either laying in bed trying to relax, or else reading and eating blueberries (there must be a bumper crop this year, the prices are so low). But yesterday I retired early, then slept almost ten hours without awakening. What’s more, after arising I sat in our hot tub like I often do, but afterward got out and dozed for another hour.
After all that, my point is that I feel better. Yesterday my mood stayed pretty solid, with only a slight dip toward depression in the afternoon, something I experienced my whole life up until starting SSRI antidepressants. This morning, after finally getting up for good, I have been productive and energetic. Could it be I am finally getting past the Cymbalta withdrawal syndrome? The past two weeks have been brutal. If I did not have a strong commitment to survive and be here for my wife, suicide would have been the likely result of how badly I felt. Life seemed so very pointless, and not at all worth the torment roiling in my heart and soul. Countless times each day I dreamt and prayed (to the extent that I pray, since the God of my belief is not the kind that keeps an ear to the mutterings of mammalian nervous systems) that I just drop dead on the spot. Now I feel ready to engage my corner of the earth once more. Not that I am thrilled to be alive, singing like Julie Andrews on a grass-blanketed mountainside. No, I am still the not-too-optimistic failed surgeon. I sit before a small computer screen connected by a wire to my even smaller laptop, typing with nine fingers and one elbow (actually a finger in a thick dressing). The hillside I gaze upon is covered by an expanse of dead weeds baking in the August afternoon sun. But today I am pleased enough with this little drama of mine to stay in the production until it finishes its natural run. Once more, I survived all-out assaults launched by the mood-demons who dwell in darkest recesses of my mind. Thank you, big Pharma, for marketing a drug that required me to weather such torment in order to release myself from its grasp.
That altering my brain chemistry by withdrawing a drug had such an effect on my worldview brings to mind, once more, my curiosity about what it means to exist as a human consciousness. I wrote earlier about the origins of decisions and intention. This ordeal has made me wonder, too, about the locus of attitudes and feelings about life. When something as fundamental as whether I think my story is worth living can be affected by removing a synthetic chemical from my bloodstream, then who am I? Is there ‘nothing’ more to ‘me’ than proteins, and cell membranes, and DNA, and myriad organic molecules? That kind of musing resurrects my whole philosophy about the relationship between living things and (what I for convenience call) ‘God’.
Aside from feeling that the Cymbalta wash-out may be behind me, I also cheered up after looking a bit at my web statistics. OK, OK, I know doing that is pointless. Numbers are not my objective, and obsessing about how many computers connect with my site will drive me (even more) nuts. Still, I noticed that my post ‘Is Depression Sane?‘ has been viewed two-and-a-half times as often as any other. This strikes me as great news, because I enjoyed writing that essay, and it touched on a number of philosophical points. I like to include in my blog my homespun views about the mind, mental distress, and how one can lead a satisfying life. Knowing that one of the essays that most does that also attracted the most interest encourages me to continue.
I resolved to keep my posts short. What I’ve written so far is the introduction to my real topic: the relationship between the chemicals that traverse my brain and the ‘person’ that the organ produces. In particular, how does an organism acquire the gifts of pleasure and pain, instead of just having a drive to move toward or away from certain stimuli and experiences? Rather than launching into that now, and even further exceeding my supposed daily word quota, I will put the topic out there as something to either look forward to or avoid, depending on your attitude.
(I modified this post on 2009 August 13, c. 23:00 PDT.)
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Milo at http://likopoliom.blogspot.com
I am really happy for you too Will.
please take care
Milo
Posted at August 14, 2009 on 2:46am.