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#1 | |||
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Member
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I take 100MG of zoloft everyday as well as 1800mg of gabapentin a day. I started to walk and eat right about a week ago, and everything was fine until the past 2 nights. Restless legs have been extremely awful, and I am so depressed - I haven't felt this way in a long time. Only thing that has changed is that I started to run low on my gabapentin meds, so I spread them out and now I'm finally out.
I keep asking myself what is this life worth? No I'm not suicidal either. Does eating right and exercising really change the way you think? |
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#2 | |||
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In Remembrance
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Dieting sometimes causes depression as can gabapentin meds.
![]() You may need a different AD....Zoloft runs its course, after awhile and stops working.
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~Love, Sally . "The best way out is always through". Robert Frost ~If The World Didn't Suck, We Would All Fall Off~ |
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#3 | |||
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Member
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Sometimes we just feel sad. If you are being bothered at night with RLS, you may be just plain ole tired.
You need to inquire about REQUIP for the RLS. I am on it and don't know what I would have done without it. Also, the Zoloft may need to be increased or another drug prescribed. I was on Paxil for years then to Wellbutrin and now on Celexa. Wellbutrin can perk you up and that's okay unless you are inclined to anxiety! So you see some of these drugs are hit and miss as to what works best for you. You are what you eat! Diet does help as does exercise. Exercise helps raise endorphins. Not to mention that you need to keep your body strong and as fit as you can. A good diet fights the effects of stress also.
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. If you obsess about things that may happen and they don't come true...then you've wasted your time. If it does come true....then you've lived it twice. . |
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#4 | ||
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Senior Member
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In this "instant" everything day and age, we may expect too much too soon from things like wellness programs...and then get discouraged and/or depressed when we don't feel immediate benefit.
Changes in diet, even if they are health promoting ones, and increased activity, while usually beneficial in the long term, are still stresses that the body and mind must adapt to. During that adaptation phase, some common symptoms of the body & mind's coping mechanisms are a temporary increase inflammation, increased need for sleep, changes in digestion, agitation, and mood swings. The good news is that it usually only lasts for a couple of weeks...and you are already through the first one. Hang in there. A change in ADs is well worth looking into; as your metabolism might be changing and you might respond better to something else. With love, Erika |
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#5 | |||
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Member
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I learned long ago (1995) that changes in diet and exercise are best taken slowly. And do it with no expectations of results . . . just do it. Make it a habit. I also learned around that same time that it takes 6 weeks to break an old habit and 8 weeks to make a new one . . . hence that time frame where people abandon trying! It feels like you are hanging by a thread during that netherworld of habit training!
I was rather overweight and out of shape when I decided to climb a mountain in 1994. I had been going to the gym pretty regularly, but was not really working it . . . hadn't broken sweat much. But once I knew I was going to stress my body carrying a heavy backpack up and down on rocks and ice, I realized I needed to work to strengthen some muscles in my hips, legs and back, as well as heart and lungs. My exercise had now become training for an event instead of trying to slim down, or even just generically "get healthier." I found it invaluable to have a goal requiring hard work in order to succeed. I did not summit Mt. Rainier in '95, but I came really close, climbing to 12,500'. Weather turned us around, but even if it had been perfect conditions, I was a slower climber than I thought I would be, and knew I would need more time and an earlier start to do it if I ever attempted to climb it again. The winter of 2001 I went back to the gym to get back into shape to try again . . . but quit when I began having deep hip pain. I later found out that pain was from a colon that was rapidly becoming inflamed . . . and would begin my spiral downward into surgeries and disability. It is very likely my TM came from the inflammation I dealt with during that time and the horrible invasive surgeries that ensued. Ah, poo . . . no pun intended. I have been "there" once -- to the land of fitness and movement. I know it can be done. Easy to recount my tale, but these days I am discouraged beyond belief. I totally understand how discouraged my MS and TM friends are, because I am there. I love that I did what I did when I could . . . but I sure do miss that body. Sometimes it is harder to be less able when you came from a place of very able. ![]() I used to say "pain is just weakness leaving your body" when the pains I experienced then were those good aches brought on by hard work. Not so much anymore, especially when there is no relief and no escape. The physical pain wears on you . . . but I am finding the emotional pain of depression from this physical pain is getting to be unbearable.
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We live in a rainbow of chaos. ~Paul Cezanne . |
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#6 | |||
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In Remembrance
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__________________
~Love, Sally . "The best way out is always through". Robert Frost ~If The World Didn't Suck, We Would All Fall Off~ |
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"Thanks for this!" says: | Erika (11-19-2013) |
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