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indecisivelyn
06-20-2006, 10:48 PM
I recently stopped my paxil after slowly weaning for about a month. After two weeks of hell I decided to return to taking paxil. I just think it's best I remain on the medication. However, it's been about 10 years that I've been taking prozac then paxil. My doc said I may have to take it indefinitely, but has anyone hear ever heard of someone taking antidepressants all of their lives.

Does it bother anyone the way term OCD is overused and often used incorrectly. I know I hear so many people say, just because theyr'e a little rigid or too neat, that they have OCD. Often I hear people say they are obsessing or they think they know what ocd is but they don't. Even the show monk which I've only seen once was a turn off. They never really show him battling an intrusive disturbing thought. They almost make it look like it's a funny disorder and I guess I'm being a downer here, but it's not.


I've never had one set compulsion. With me, I always just redid whatever I was doing to get rid of the "bad thought". If for example I was looking at something when the ocd feeling was strong I would look at the object again to rid the thought, give it a good number etc etc ,but as I say the compulsion changes all of the time. Does anybody else suffer this way? I never had to strictly just wash or just check.

I also noticed that over the last year or so I keep twitching my neck. On some level it feels good physically but on some level it's almost a release emotionally. Before the neck twitching I had little tics but nothing that noticeable like raising my eyebrows or wiggling my ears, yes I can do that. I asked my Doc today, could I have borderline tourettes syndrome and he said they usually coexist. I kind of knew this but to actually hear it, especially in the state I'm in, just returning to paxil, I felt devestated. Is this true what the doc told me? Quiet often when I read about Tourettes I hear that OCD coexists with it but I've never heard it the other way around. I guess it's the same thing but not really. Why is it if you read an article on tourettes it ma mention that some who suffer with it also have OCD but when reading about OCD and all of it's symptoms, it's rarely mentioned that an OCD sufferer may have tourettes.?

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GatsbyLuvr1920
06-21-2006, 12:25 AM
First off, some OCD-ers have Tourette's, but the majority don't. However, it's virtually impossible to have Tourette's and not have OCD, or at least some obsessive-compulsive traits. The two are very closely linked as you mentioned, as they both have origins in the part of the brain called the basal ganglia, responsible for motor coordination/movement, and filtering of sensory information. Anyway, bless you for bringing up Monk and for being one of the few people on here who is as fed up with the colloquial use of the term "obsessive-compulsive" as I am! I watched Monk one time, when I practically knew I had OCD, but hadn't yet been officially diagnosed with it, and I smiled a few times, but that was only because it was about OCD, and I wanted to have something to connect to. It turns me off, too. It just reinforces stereotypes about how OCD is all about hand washing, germphobia, and wanting to have everything neat. What kills me is that everyone thinks OCD is about hand-washing or checking, leaving pure obsessionals like me, who have few, if any, overt compulsions, to be left undiagnosed (as I was) and not suspect OCD... :mad: I, too, hate hearing people say, "Oh, I'm so OCD! I always, like, need to brush my teeth before I, like, comb my hair!" :rolleyes: They don't understand it at all... Even movies are the same thing. What REALLY aggravates me is that As Good As It Gets is touted as "the OCD movie," and it was just about stereotypical hand-washing, yet it won an Academy Award for Best Picture and Best Actor (Jack Nicholson). The character of Melvin doesn't even have OCD- he most likely has OCPD because everything has to be his way or the highway. Real OCD-ers would never be outwardly mean to people, unless they were disrupted during a compulsion. We're too busy worrying about hurting someone's feelings. The Aviator, however, was a breathtaking, poignant, realistic view of OCD. I still can't get over that Leo***** DiCaprio didn't win the Oscar for it. Yes, I'm biased in a way because I love Leo, and think he's incredibly hott, ;) but his performance makes me cry. If you haven't seen it, you absolutely must. I don't understand how he mimicked little, seemingly insignificant nuances that reveal so much about the disorder, things that I didn't even realize I do. There's one particular scene when he's pretty much incapacitated by the OCD, where he slumps into a fetal position and begins blinking back tears... and obsessions. I almost always wince in the same way when an obsession strikes. Other things, too: the rocking back-and-forth while covering his mouth during a panic attack, the frozen, deer-in-the-headlights expression when an obsession hits, the wringing of the hands to stop the anxiety- brilliant. It may sound like I'm trying to be funny, but if you want a humorous look at OCD that also shows the fear it causes, watch the cartoon Ed, Edd n Eddy, one of my all-time favorite shows. The character of Double D is someone I can relate to very much since he's a verbose, obsessive-compulsive science nerd. There's one scene in a back-to-school episode where all the kids on the cul-de-sac are scrambling to get school supplies, and they run in Double D's house, ravage his perfectly executed closet of supplies, and leave him with nothing but a highlighter. We then see Double D slumped on the floor, trying to compose himself, before beginning to spew worries, "How am I going to write notes with just a highlighter? My grade point average will plummet..." etc, etc. It's very real. Half the time when I watch an episode where there's a good focus on Double D's OCD, it's like looking in a mirror. In the same episode, when Double D finds out that he's not in the same homeroom as Ed and Eddy, he begins to panic and searches for a form to fill out to switch homerooms with other students. The funny thing is that I did the same thing this past semester so I could get my same chemistry professor. The themes of safety and sameness prevail. It makes me upset, too, that few people believe me when I say I have OCD, and I believe it's for two reasons: I'm a pure obsessional, so they don't see the hand-washing or checking, and more importantly, they think that I'm kidding due to the cavalier way people use the term today. It's very sad, and it undermines our condition, a condition that can be pure hell to deal with... :nono:
-GatsbyLuvr1920-

indecisivelyn
06-21-2006, 08:36 AM
Dear gatsbyluv
Beautifully written and very true. Thanks for replying to my thread. I'm glad that I have finally found someone who has similar feeling regarding the portrayal of ocd. I did see part of the aviator and yes I agree with you definitely think it's a good portrayal of the disorder. I also would love to check out Ed and Eddy. I'd love to write more but Ihave to run to work
I hope I hear from you again. Thank you Thank you Thank you!!!! I actually feel a little bit better today after reading your post.
Have a good day!!!!!

GatsbyLuvr1920
06-21-2006, 10:56 AM
Hey, indecisivelyn! Ed, Edd n Eddy is on Cartoon Network, and is on at 8:30 pm on weekdays. Oh, and feel free to just call me "Gatsby." I only use my full user name as a formality...;) I also have Asperger's, which I was just diagnosed with a few months back, and it also contributes to a lot of my problems. Write back soon! :angel:
-GatsbyLuvr1920-





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