@@Projectpassion123 I’m glad they came around! It took a long time for my family to realize that, too. They still don’t entirely get it, idk how much people can get without going through it themselves.
Hi I am a mum with a daughter who recently(a year or two) back had her first psychosis experience and it was very frightening and helpless for me watching her suffers. I eventually contacted a psychiatrist who have seen my daughter before and ask for medication to help her. He did and it temporarily reduce her hallucination and delusion but till today she us still suffering from psychosis and I am asking if anyone out there can highlight to me the correct medication for her as she is still hearing voices. Thank you.
@@AnnaPaul-n3u I can’t say what does or doesn’t work in her situation, but there are definitely ones that have been more effective for me than others so don’t lose hope! It can take a few tries before finding the right one.
Psychosis is incredibly scary and frightening, but I love how you framed it as not being the end. We can live a fulfilling life even with this complex mental illness. Love the video with your Mom! Thank you for sharing your life experiences. As I've stated in the past it definitely makes me feel less alone in my diagnosis. We can thrive!
@@NavigatingthePeriphery yes we can!! I know it’s hard, but I’ve had times in psychosis where I was doing well. My sister would take me to a recovery center to make art, and little day trips like that helped so much. I hope people can find happiness in some way in psychosis, even though it’s often scary. Any amount of positivity goes a long way.
I found this Interesting. You are a success story. To come back from psychosis is remarkable and inspiring. I myself have gone far too far in psychosis and come back several times. I have seen a lot of sad situations in my many hospitalizations. Before covid I'd go to my pdoc and there were always people hanging out. One man, whom I've seen around for 20+ years and who is psychotic told me he tried as hard as he could. He also told me to let go. Letting go is foreign to me. I've worked very hard at not losing control. He usually doesn't make much sense. My voices reminded me for years not to get comfortable because I was insane. I still don't know what insanity really is. Maybe not living in this world? Not being yourself? Not having conscious thoughts? I used to feel like screaming. Madness has gotten easier. Funny thing about Alan Watts is I don't think he was a great man but a terribly fucked up person. He was just well read ...
@@HalenNelah thank you! I am enormously blessed to have such great people in my life. I was just talking with my mom & sister earlier today & it made me so happy.
Hey I been watching videos and wanted to ask if your normal reality after stopping antipsycotics has come back. My reality is different, and I'm waiting to go back to normal.
@@GerardoVargas-k3h it did, although it took a long time. I wasn’t sure it ever would. It was a few months before the symptoms passed after going on meds. Then honestly it was maybe 2 years before I felt normal. Reality doesn’t feel the same but I’d say it’s back to normal.
That’s so good that you had amazing support. My parents were so mad at me until they realized I had no control over it.
@@Projectpassion123 I’m glad they came around! It took a long time for my family to realize that, too. They still don’t entirely get it, idk how much people can get without going through it themselves.
Hi I am a mum with a daughter who recently(a year or two) back had her first psychosis experience and it was very frightening and helpless for me watching her suffers. I eventually contacted a psychiatrist who have seen my daughter before and ask for medication to help her. He did and it temporarily reduce her hallucination and delusion but till today she us still suffering from psychosis and I am asking if anyone out there can highlight to me the correct medication for her as she is still hearing voices. Thank you.
@@AnnaPaul-n3u I can’t say what does or doesn’t work in her situation, but there are definitely ones that have been more effective for me than others so don’t lose hope! It can take a few tries before finding the right one.
Psychosis is incredibly scary and frightening, but I love how you framed it as not being the end. We can live a fulfilling life even with this complex mental illness. Love the video with your Mom! Thank you for sharing your life experiences. As I've stated in the past it definitely makes me feel less alone in my diagnosis. We can thrive!
@@NavigatingthePeriphery yes we can!! I know it’s hard, but I’ve had times in psychosis where I was doing well. My sister would take me to a recovery center to make art, and little day trips like that helped so much. I hope people can find happiness in some way in psychosis, even though it’s often scary. Any amount of positivity goes a long way.
I found this Interesting. You are a success story. To come back from psychosis is remarkable and inspiring. I myself have gone far too far in psychosis and come back several times. I have seen a lot of sad situations in my many hospitalizations. Before covid I'd go to my pdoc and there were always people hanging out. One man, whom I've seen around for 20+ years and who is psychotic told me he tried as hard as he could. He also told me to let go. Letting go is foreign to me. I've worked very hard at not losing control. He usually doesn't make much sense. My voices reminded me for years not to get comfortable because I was insane. I still don't know what insanity really is. Maybe not living in this world? Not being yourself? Not having conscious thoughts? I used to feel like screaming. Madness has gotten easier. Funny thing about Alan Watts is I don't think he was a great man but a terribly fucked up person. He was just well read ...
@@WWS322 You’re a success story too, & I’m glad you never gave up. You have a lot to offer the world.
I’m so glad you have had people around who love you!
@@HalenNelah thank you! I am enormously blessed to have such great people in my life. I was just talking with my mom & sister earlier today & it made me so happy.
Very interesting 😁
@@jeffmonje5452 thanks!
Hey I been watching videos and wanted to ask if your normal reality after stopping antipsycotics has come back. My reality is different, and I'm waiting to go back to normal.
@@GerardoVargas-k3h it did, although it took a long time. I wasn’t sure it ever would. It was a few months before the symptoms passed after going on meds. Then honestly it was maybe 2 years before I felt normal. Reality doesn’t feel the same but I’d say it’s back to normal.