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Cassie

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Posts posted by Cassie

  1. 216 days today, wasn't sure where to post but just need to. I have a doctors appointment tomorrow (won't be able to get adderall because it's not a psychiatrist and those are the rules here). I've been incredibly fatigued lately to the point where I can barely go to work because I can't get out of bed despite 8+ hours of sleep. I haven't had motivation to workout and have just been depressed overall.

    I hope they find something else (minor and easily fixable!) wrong with me like mono or anemia or something. Because I am way too tempted to go back. The pull this drug has is crazy.

    Anyways just needed to post because I was imagining how it'd feel to avoid these forums if I go back on it.

    Congrats on 216 days! I was really fatigued and depressed around that point too, as I'm sure all us long timers were. It's normal. You just have to push through it. You say you can barely go to work, but you can go to work. It's not impossible. And not having any motivation for the first year or so is par for the course. After a year my energy levels started improving. Consider wellbutrin for a short term energy boost. Also, eating small meals throughout the day helped me.
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  2. Indecisive...I have a job interview tomorrow, but I am thinking of cancelling. My current job is perfect and the only benefit to the new job would be money, and more responsibility. Oh, and an additional 30 minutes to my commute. When I type it out, it makes me really want to cancel. Is this just my lack of motivation?

    Thoughts?

    You could always go on the interview and then take some time to decide. It sounds like you're happy where you are though. Plus a longer commute doesn't sound appealing. Why did you apply for the job in the first place? When I got off Adderall I really wanted a new job and I didn't care if it was less money, but it took me 18 months before I had the confidence to start looking for other jobs and go on interviews. If money is the main benefit of the new job but you wouldn't be as happy, that could be a problem.
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  3. I've been on a lot of job interviews in my life, and not once has an interviewer asked or cared what grades I got in college. They care about your skills, your ability to learn, and your attitude.
     

    I guess the exception would be students trying to get into medical school, but for the most part, these students are being sold a bill of goods, and they'll realize it as soon as they're in the real working world.

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  4. I remember feeling really weird at 18 months clean. I made a string of bad decisions (including quitting my job without having any prospects) and I was really frightened, had no confidence in my ability to learn new things, felt socially awkward, was anxious meeting people, and just generally felt lost and confused. After 3 years sober I feel like myself again. 3 years was a big turning point for me, much more so than 2 years. I have confidence again and most importantly, I feel like I'm in control of myself and my feelings. I feel strong. I didn't use for as long as you (5 years), so don't compare your timeline to mine, but everything does heal in time. There's no choice but to keep moving forward. In a few years you will thank yourself.

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  5. Out of your system in 30 days? Are they high? Amphetamine's half life only allows it to stay in your system for about a day.

    ^^ Cassie, do you really find Provigil addictive? I tried Adrafinil for the first time today and I must say, I'm underwhelmed (in a good way). There is zero euphoria or recreational value. It just flat out doesn't make me feel good, just not tired. I'd be interested in your reasoning for stating it's a risk. I'm assuming there are minor dopamine reuptake inhibition properties but I don't feel, as far as mood boost, much different than popping a few L-tyrosine capsules (which is borderline placebo).

    Never tried it, but according to manufacturer and NIH, 'this medicine can be habit-forming.' Same warning for amphetamines so why even go down that road. That's why many on this site use Wellbutrin in the beginning - no 'habit forming' (aka addiction) warnings.
  6. I feel back to normal after 3 years, but I used for 5 years which is quite a long time. It's easier to see your progress over years rather than months. Sounds scary to a newbie, but once you get to a year sober time just flies by, as opposed to the really slow first 6 months/year sober. You don't have permanent brain damage, it just takes a long time to repair. I personally think you need to give it as much time as you were on the drug. Think of brain repair like weight loss. If you gained 50 pounds in a year, you wouldn't expect to be able to lose it in a month, would you?

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  7. So i have been clean for nearly one full year.

    I HEAVILY abused for 2.5-3 years.

    How long into your recovery did you feel significantly better?

    Should i expect even more progress or benefits after the one year mark?

    Or am i "fully recovered" ? That isn't worded how i want it, but can't think of another way to phrase the question.

    Thanks!

    I wasn't even close to feeling fully recovered after 1 year. I felt better at 2 years, and way better at 3 years.
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  8. I became addicted to adderall later in life, so it wasn't a gateway drug for me. I drank more on it though (because I could drink a lot without getting tired).

    I believe there are a couple studies showing that ADHD kids on adderall are less likely to use other drugs later on, but you have to keep in mind that almost all drug studies are funded by the pharmaceutical industry, and that they are free to leave any studies casting their drugs in a negative light unpublished. There's so much publication bias in medicine (not to mention poorly designed studies) that you will never get the whole picture. I believe a kid on adderall long term would definitely be more susceptible to doing other drugs, including abusing adderall.

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  9. It's amazing what you've accomplished in only 4 years off Adderall. I agree with looking back on how ridiculous my thinking was on adderall. After a few years sober you realize life is long and nothing is permanent and on adderall (and newly sober) you just can't see the forest for the trees.

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  10. I only took adderall for a year but I lost 20-30 lbs while on it, and I am now 40 days clean from it yet I still haven't gained control of my eating. It seems like the first month of detox was so much easier and I ate so much less. Now I'm snacking all damn day and can feel the weight adding on. I just needed to vent this frustration because compared to others, I used for shorter duration yet it seems like my ability to just get to a healthier version of myself is taking far longer than expected and leaving me very frustrated with this never ending hunger/ still eating even when full.

    It's only been 40 days - that's not a long time to have quit something. I kept gaining weight for the first 3 months off Adderall, then my appetite and metabolism started to normalize and I lost the weight. Your body, mind and hormones will adjust over time.
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  11. My husband said the same thing to me in a roundabout way. That makes it so hard.

    I didn't mean to imply in my post that my husband wants me to take adderall again. Our relationship was terrible on adderall and that was one of my main reasons for quitting. Things are great now and I don't think he meant any harm with that comment. Ask your husband about the positive changes. I'm sure he can name off a bunch of them!
  12. And I read around this forum, which is amazing by the way... And two years clean a lot of people are seeming really positive with their changes. I feel worse than ever. Pregnancy and breastfeeding were the motivators to put it down without question, and after reading here I don't want to pick it back up. Getting pregnant stopped me from hitting bottom twice and saved me, but now my tubes are tied and I'm scared if I start back I won't have the internal fortitude to stop. But I also can't bear the thought of feeling like I'm just trying to get to the end of each day so I can sleep and not be awake for my life. I wake up and think things are just so bleak without adderall, so sad it's like that. Like being on it makes you look forward to every day. I want to be able to do that naturally. With kids you'd think that I'd be happy and content and I love them but I'm not content. I feel like I've damaged my pleasure receptors in my brain. Or maybe it is hormonal shifts, who knows.

    You can't compare yourself to other people. You doped your brain for 12 years. That's much longer than most of us. Plus your brain is different now with kids. It seems way premature to throw in the towel after just two years, which is barely any time sober compared to how long you used. Why don't you commit to another year and see a therapist, go to NA, get in shape, get some hobbies, take an antidepressant - these are just some ideas to help pass the time so your brain can heal from your long term addiction.
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  13. You get your motivation back but it takes a lot of time. Nothing is wrong with your frontal lobe, other than it's been chemically disrupted and it takes a long time to return to normal. Like you said, it's unsustainable. You're continually creating a greater chemical imbalance in your brain and the addiction gets worse over time. I admire you for telling your doctor. That shows commitment.

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  14. I had several half-assed quits that lasted a month here and there. The first time I tried to seriously quit, I relapsed after 2 months and took Adderall for another 9 months. During those 9 months, I was planning for the next quit. The time of year was important to me (slow at work and nice weather). The second time I tried to seriously quit was 3 years ago, and I haven't touched Adderall since. You can quit on your own if you really want to and you completely cut off your access to the drug. 

     

    IFIHADKNOWN, my doctor said the same thing, that "you should feel fine after 30 days." Haha, what a load of crap.

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  15. I agree with AlwaysAwesome. I was a straight A student too. I started taking Adderall at age 26, four years after college and already experienced in the workforce. I didn't need it, just wanted the boost. I worked fine without it before, but now I still struggle, 3 years off it. It's much better though. I'd say I'm 90-95% recovered. I feel normal almost every day. The problem is you will be anhedonic for a long time after you quit, and you'll feel slow and dull and socially awkward. You have to have a lot of patience as your brain recovers from all the doping.

    Have you never taken periodic breaks from it over the 12 years, like a week or month off here and there? Do you take weekends off?

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  16. I am almost 5 months Adderall free and I am considering changing to a less stressfull job.  I am thinking that my current high stress job may be slowing my recovery.  

     

    I am wondering if any forum members can share experiences with me about how stress impacted their withdrawal recovery?  It seems like my stress environment is causing me to remain fatigued.

     

    I appreciate any experiences people are willing to share.

     

    Thanks!

    I think you're fatigued because you're only 5 months clean, and you'd feel that way working in any job. 

     

    My job after quitting Adderall wasn't stressful on paper, but I made it stressful with my constant performance anxiety. When I changed jobs 18 months later, learning a new job and meeting new people caused huge spikes in stress. Before Adderall this stuff didn't stress me out at all. 

     

    Your sober brain simply has to relearn how to deal with stress. This takes time. I would stay at the job you know how to do until it no longer feels as stressful. Just my two cents :)

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  17. Thank you Cassie.  This means a lot to me.

     

    Even though I am going through a rough period right now, I know going back on that drug is not the answer and would never be even if hell froze over.  I feel bad for anyone that is addicted to it and can't get off it.  I am so lucky I don't have easy access to it, but even if I did I am in a better place now that I would turn it down.  My life means to much to me to roll the dice like that again.  I am blessed to be alive, healthy, have a good job, and not have any problems. 

     

    You're right though.  Sometimes life sucks and it's hard, but I know my return to that drug would only cause significant damage.  What I take for granted right now could be easily stripped away.  A return to that addiction would be a severe setback in my life and I can simply not ever afford to take that risk again.  If we just keep trucking along the path of recovery things will slowly get better.  Feels like a snail pace at times, but in my case my life has only improved when I have been clean.  I guess what I realized in this past relapse was that I am not protecting my sobriety as good as I should be.  I want to believe I can handle talking to certain people and it won't effect me, but it does.  Certain people trigger me and as hard as it is I need to stay away from them. 

     

    Does your husband support your recovery or does he just not get it?  It's hard to believe he would say something like that knowing how hard you've worked to stay away from it.  I really hope he didn't mean it and was just saying it in anger and frustration. Did you talk to him at all later on about what he said and how it made you feel?  I feel like it could be a good thing if you had a conversation about it and let him know that wasn't a cool thing to say then or ever. 

     

    It's weird you mentioned the cravings.  I went through so many stages in since being clean.  There were many times when I just forgot about it.  And then there were times when I'd get triggered again. I think the biggest help has always been exercise.  Cardio mainly.  For me the more active I am the better I feel and don't want it. And yes working from home is kind of crazy in a way. I am trying to come up with a solution.  I think I am halfway there.  :)  I will post about it once I know for sure.

     

    Anyhow, it sure makes it easier to stay clean when you have your buddies still in the trenches of recovery with you!  You've helped me today from your support and I really appreciate it. :)

     

    Take care!

    My husband is supportive. When he made that comment, he said he felt bad even mentioning it, but that's the way he feels sometimes (not overall). He doesn't want me back on it or anything. He was just being honest, and even though it was annoying, I can't really let what other people think affect me anyway. 

     

    Cardio definitely helps. I try to walk for an hour on my lunch break every day, so even if I don't do any other exercise, at least I'm getting a long walk every day. I also took a couple Wellbutrin and that snapped me out of it. I thought it was PAWS but it was lasting over a week. I have a bottle of 100mg SR Wellbutrin left over from ages ago. I recognized my symptoms of depression that were getting worse. When I've had depression in the past (before Adderall), I lose my appetite, I'm fatigued and my muscles ache painfully, especially my shoulders. I also can't focus or concentrate. I took a half a Wellbutrin on Friday and Saturday and that helped the physical symptoms tremendously. I no longer have muscle aches, I can eat, and my concentration snapped back. So, I'll keep that bottle around in case this ever strikes again. Maybe that's something that could help you too, if you have those kind of depressive symptoms that lead to cravings. I haven't had a craving in so long - this random depressive episode triggered them. And just two days of 50mg of Wellbutrin made it go away. It worked almost instantly. 

     

    Anyway, thanks for your support, and I hope you find a solution to the whole work from home thing!

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  18. Welcome Victoria.

     

    To answer your questions, I made a plan to quit and quit cold turkey in Dec. 2011. I planned my quit in Dec. because I could take three weeks off work around the holidays, and I knew work would be slow for another month after I got back (I worked at a college). So, I knew my slacking off wouldn't really be noticed as I eased back into work. I also chose to quit at this time because the weather was nice in Phoenix. I could get outside every day, walk and hike on the weekends. I loaded up my Netflix queue with tons of shows because all I could do for the first year was go to work, come home, watch TV, and sleep. 

     

    I prepared myself for being extremely tired, depressed, and unmotivated for my first year off Adderall. I prepared for the cravings, the iatrogenic ADD, the mental anguish and utter lack of confidence. I read up about PAWS (post acute withdrawal). I also prepared myself for the possibility of getting fired due to lack of productivity. It never happened, but I had a lot of anxiety about it, because any enthusiasm and/or motivation I had for work went out the window. It was especially tough because my job was very self-directed and not really deadline oriented. If you have a fast paced job with deadlines, that should help, and if you like your job that will definitely help. Most importantly, I had faith that the misery of getting sober was temporary. I wanted to stop being a drug addict and that was more important to me than anything else. That's why I am three years sober today.

     

    If you can step down instead of quit cold turkey, that should make it easier. I didn't have the willpower to do that. I was taking the same amount as you, about 20-30 mgs/day, for 5 years. I failed at the step-down method many, many times.

     

    I would suggest writing a list of all the reasons you want to quit and figuring out if you are ready for this fight for your freedom from speed. All the negatives need to outweigh the positives for you. Are you ready to deal with the depression and fatigue that can last for many months or years, knowing it gets better as time goes on? Are you ready to deal with working less, within your own limits, and not being superhuman CEO anymore? Are you sure you want to have a baby if you have chronic fatigue and can't take Adderall? If you are so reliant on Adderall to maintain your status at work, what will happen when you have work and the lack of energy/sleep/time that comes with taking care of a child, and you can't take Adderall because your partner forbids it? I think these are all questions you need to ask yourself. I'm 34 and thinking about having kids. I only now feel like I'm back to normal enough to deal with the fatigue, craziness and lack of sleep that comes with pregnancy and having a kid, knowing that I won't need Adderall to get through it. It took years of recovery to get myself to this point, physically and mentally. 

     

    So what should you do once you quit? You should completely cut off your access to the drug or you will risk relapsing. This means finding a different doctor or telling your current doctor to never prescribe you speed again (tell them you are addicted and can't take it). If I were you I'd find a new doctor and tell them about your problems with the drug - get a clean slate. You could take Wellbutrin to help with the transition. The supplement l-tyrosine helps some people, and a daily vitamin. You could go to NA meetings, SMART Recovery, or another support group in your area. These are free and you can go as often as you want. It's hard to find people recovering from Adderall, but it's easy to find people recovering from meth, and guess what? The withdrawal is exactly the same. Anyone quitting amphetamine/methamphetamine will understand the challenges you are facing after you quit. My friend used to be a meth addict and he was great to talk to about withdrawal symptoms/life after speed. This site is amazing as well and vital to my own recovery. 

     

    So, that's how I quit and my thoughts for you based on reading your story. Quitting is very doable - you just need to be realistic and prepared for recovery to be a process, not an event. It's worth getting your soul back and not being a slave to a pill. 

  19. I'm really glad you posted this, Liltex. I've been feeling very 'relapsey' myself lately. I've been really tired and unmotivated at work (my job is very self directed, which is challenging) and feeling guilty that I haven't been getting much done the past few weeks. I feel like I'm letting my boss down, even though this is probably just in my head. I can't seem to get it together to start working on projects. Then, the other day, my husband made a comment about how I used to 'get shit done' on Adderall and how I didn't need as much sleep as I do now (I think I sleep a normal amount - I don't take naps or anything). When someone you love validates the drug somewhat, that's a huge setback. 

     

    So, lately I've had strong cravings for Adderall, my first cravings in at least six months or so. I stick around here for the relapse stories. Nobody ever said, "I relapsed on Adderall, and I'm so happy I did!" When I get cravings for Adderall, it's a reminder to me that I'm still not over this addiction. I still get PAWS days from time to time. But, there's always another way to deal with shit. Meditation, diet, exercise, yoga, vitamins, just waiting it out. Drugs will only cripple your inner resources. Natural methods strengthen them. 

     

    I don't think I could work from home like you do. That would be really triggery for me, to be isolated every day. That must be extremely difficult. So, I don't have much advice, just commiseration that life sucks sometimes and we get stuck in negative patterns that we used to remedy with speed. I can't wait for the day when it's been so long since I've taken an Adderall, I forget what the hell it even feels like. 

    • Like 2
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