Guest guest Posted May 19, 2012 Report Share Posted May 19, 2012 Dear Everyone, As writes, taking responsibility is important to recovery. She also says we should love and take care of ourselves. I agree. I was thinking, however, that for some of us those three activities haven't traditionally gone together. Maybe we grew up seeing " responsibility " as " blame, " rhyming with " shame " --no relation to self-love and self-care. When we realize we need to get off our " meds " in order to recover, we're left with the idea that we weren't " mentally ill " in the first place, and therefore...what? We blame ourselves for our problems? We feel ashamed of trusting our doctors? I suggest that anyone who's come to this forum deserves congratulations for taking an important step toward recovery on her/his own. I also suggest that there's a difference between taking responsibility for one's recovery and wallowing in self-blame (or blaming others). We did what we could before, and now we're taking control of our lives again. I'm a compulsive researcher. When I was given an antidepressant and sleeping pill over 2 1/2 years ago, I went straight to the internet. There's a lot of info put out by the drug companies online! And I trusted the doctors, who either lied to me or were ignorant. So I didn't immediately conclude the drugs were making me worse. Most of all, my low self-esteem and emotional distress distorted my decision-making abilities. I've had to forgive myself for that. Thinking for myself meant leaving my psychiatrist (who refused my repeated requests to tell me how to get off the drugs) and stepping outside the paradigm of " mental illness " and my so-called diagnoses (which fit only when I was on the drugs!) That was scary, but less scary than the prospect of becoming permanently disabled, as I saw other patients had become. I found it very helpful to read anti-psychiatric stuff online. There's plenty of that. If right now you're doubtful about what " psychiatric survivors " write, I suggest the following: " The Epidemic of Mental Illness, " by Marcia Angell, MD, in The New York Review of Books, 2011. This can easily be googled online and printed out. A distinguished doctor's take on psychiatry and its reliance on prescription drugs to boost the prestige and earning powers of psychiatrists. " Mad in America, " by Whitaker. This can be bought from Amazon in hard copy or Kindle edition. Whitaker is a superb investigative reporter who might just change the way you see so-called " mental illness. " " Anatomy of an Epidemic, " by Whitaker. (Amazon, hard copy or Kindle). Whitaker dissects the bad science and outright lies and greed of the pharmaceutical industry and the psychiatrists who prescribe drugs. " Doctors of Deception, " by Andre. A masterpiece of scientific writing by a survivor of shock therapy. Andre is clearly a wonderful woman, brave, funny, compassionate, and very sane. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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