24. Feb, 2015
Everyone Recovers
I'm still attempting to 'dance in the rain' but I left my umbrella at home over the last two days and started splashing about in the puddles again. Negotiating the bad days is never easy.
Some more words of wisdom from another withdrawal sufferer writing about advice they received from a counsellor......
Point one: Withdrawal effectively reduces you to an exposed raw nerve. You are completely exposed to every stress and that
stress is basically experienced without a filter, without a buffer. You have to limit the stressors you are exposed to however you can.
Point two: Withdrawal ends. Period. She has seen and counseled thousands of people in withdrawal from
benzos and other psychiatric medications and she said she has never seen someone not recover, even with the most horrific of cases and the most protracted of cases. She says we will all return to being inside of our own skin, inside of our own minds, and in
control of our thoughts, feelings, and emotions.
Point three: Hope. You have to hold onto hope and the reality that the body has an intrinsic capability to heal from this kind of traumatic injury. It might take a long time, it might get
worse before it gets better, it might drag you to the edges of hell and dangle you above the fire, but your body is strong and resilient. Hope, it is a requirement to survive this experience.
It's a relief to know that everyone
recovers. From everything I've read and am told, by those who have experienced this and healed, there is no doubt. As long as we hang on, take nothing to upset our systems and accept all that's happening, eventually we'll be ourselves again. I've had to do
this over the last couple of days when Satan intervened again and dangled me over that fire. I made all the mistakes of believing I'd never get better after so long and lost hope while I curled up on my bed with intense, unbearable, chemical anxiety surges.
I'm so bad at taking my own advice. It passed and not because I tried to fight it by pacing the house and bemoaning my suffering. I'm back today in a calm place and determined to watch myself very carefully so my CNS doesn't throw a fit and start complaining
again. Once we feel, even just a little better, it really is hard to remember the bad times and all too easy to overstep the mark taking recovery for granted. This must never happen. We need to treat every window, every lessening of symptoms with respect until
it's all passed and we can be sure there will be no more downturns.
For the time being rest, gentle exercise, careful nutritious diet, no excitement and a calm, stressless day of quiet routine are on my prescription pad. I want
to maintain the recovery I believe is underway making sure that the sun has dried up all those puddles.
The most important thing to keep in mind is that as unpleasant and unsettling
as it can be for many, withdrawal does not last indefinitely. Thousands before you have survived this and are now enjoying fully functional lives once more. This too, shall pass.
Baylissa Frederick - recovery-road.org
Latest comments
Well said. I am very negative sadly always been. Have health anxiety bad.Food wise what you show is mostly a no no for me. You are right re less carbs no sugar processed., k... gp has given me thiamin
Bad still from z and mirtaz damage. 2 wee reductions benz.even WORSE Horrific pain eatiing ANYTHIN each drug..another 13 months to go. I cant face it mentally or physically..already had gastritis etc.
Your story I read often.ty. A healthy diet is vital. But each reduction of z or benz causes unbearable pain eating anything. Healthy or not. +mirtaz poison. damage. Already had gastritis years.Why.?
Sorry to hear this Brian. You can join my Protracted Group with others in a similar time frame….
https://www.facebook.com/groups/protracted/?ref=share_group_link