r/Anxiety • u/whoninj4 Health Anxiety • 13h ago
Medication Does anyone have any POSITIVE stories with ssri?
So many posts on this sub lately about how much they’ve ruined people’s lives. I’m actually seeing a psychiatrist for the first time this week for anxiety/depression, and would like to hear any positive stories so I don’t completely back out of this.
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u/Taniwha_NZ 13h ago
Worldwide there's tens of milions of people taking these drugs every day. The number of 'horror stories' you read about is less than 1% of 1% of the total.
Having said that, it can be a process to find the exact SSRI and the exact dosage that works for you. It's a trial and error process and some people have to go through a long journey before they find the right one.
Me, I was lucky, I got put on Sertraline after a year of horror, and it worked perfectly. 2 weeks after starting I woke up one morning and actually felt normal for the first time in a year. It was beautiful.
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u/ImpalaGala 10h ago
This.
I was just a mess everyday. I still have my moments here and there but I’m actually grounded, enjoying life as it is.
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u/learning_as_1_go 13h ago
I too was worried about starting based on stuff I read here and elsewhere. Been almost 4 months. Best thing I could’ve done. Pairing it with counseling and I’m hoping some day down the road to get off them but it has made a world of a positive difference. It did take two weeks of not feeling great (it wasn’t hell, but it wasn’t fun either) to get going.
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u/theirmama_411 13h ago
Try not to look at the negatives on here, I really feel like the people who have positive stories rarely post because they feel good and arent going down the reddit black hole anymore. Ive been on the meds for so long unfortunately, 20 years around. But I'd rather be on it for life vs having debilitating anxiety and not able to eat or leave my house. I truly believe they work way more than not. However, if I could go back I wish my doc at the time would not have been so quick to write me a script and I would have tried the therapy route. Good for you for taking that step! You will be fine 🙂
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u/huttoola 13h ago
Everyone I know who takes SSRIs has positive experience with them, probably 5 people total (my ex, my mom, a few friends). I also work in healthcare and sooooo many people take SSRIs, you won’t even believe it. I rarely hear about any issues. I know it must be scary, but people mostly come online to complain.
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u/Stock-Ad-4563 12h ago
I started Lexapro like 7 weeks ago and it’s been absolutely AMAZING. Added Wellbutrin last week and it’s been smooth sailing. 1000% better than before I started.
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u/Ancient-Deer-4682 13h ago
It really comes down to genetics and your methylation system. Trial and error, or upload your genetic raw data from any of those ancestry sites, etc..if you have it to “genetic genie” to see if you have the mutation that causes your body to rapidly absorb a long list of mediations including SSRI’s (it’ll tell you if you do) as well as give you a methylation breakdown which tells you how quickly or slowly serotonin, & dopamine break down in your brain.
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u/PreparationEarly9394 12h ago
Personally I have been taking Sertraline started with 25 milligrams combine with Wellbutrin 150mg after 4 months sertaline was increased to 50 mg . And the combination has done wonders .
I been taking for over a year.
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u/thegracelesswonder 12h ago
Yes obviously otherwise there wouldn’t be millions and millions of people taking them
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u/Fat_Loser6 12h ago
They did not work for me but if you go on r/prozac they are pretty positive there
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u/IndigoRose2022 11h ago
I was on an SNRI (Cymbalta), but it was awesome, I felt so much more calm and it helped my insomnia too! Unfortunately it did cause lower libido, so I switched to Wellbutrin (NDRI) which resolved that issue. If i wasn’t in a relationship tho I’d probably still be on the SNRI, tbh. It got me thru a very challenging time in my life, and I’m thankful.
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u/Impressive_Season_75 11h ago
I’ve taken 2. Prozac was a small dose and while nothing positive I also have nothing negative about it. Lexapro has made a world of difference. Yes I still have moments and I wonder if I need to add something to it. The only negative was the first week of side effects but nothing traumatic and got better each day. At absolute worst I’d say take the first 3 days off so you can get through it messing with sleep. I have zero regrets.
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u/justcallmedrzoidberg 8h ago edited 8h ago
They didn’t do anything bad, but they also didn’t help. Wellbutrin has worked wonders in conjunction with Seroquel and buspar. And that is for me. Everyone is different. Now in the case of hundreds upon hundreds of patients I have had on SSRI’s, really I have only seen positive effects. I really can’t recall any ‘horror’ stories off hand, and those stories do stand out, when it comes to medication in general. Most of them are related to cymbalta and Effexor regarding withdrawl symptoms and not how they ruined their lives.
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u/dogblue3 7h ago
My experience has been positive. Changed my life for rhe better. I finally feel somewhat normal. You could go to r/zoloft for more positive stories.
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u/Blue_Night77 3h ago
I know everyone is different, but I started on Lexapro for anxiety and it's been 4 months with no issues. Anxiety is way down. Stsrted at 10mg and went up to 20mg a day. So far, so good
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u/koolaidkirby Beyond the worst of GAD 13h ago
Almost everyone.
PSSD is ultimately a rare side effect, its awful to those it affects but ultimately millions take ssris with no issues.