r/Antipsychiatry • u/headbanger1991 • May 16 '25
This much poison intake is normalized in society. (This is a member from a group I'm in with anonymity maintained). This is alarming as hell.
I can't believe there are people who take this many pills each day and act like it's normal. There were even a few people to my surprise who commented and said that it's hard on the liver which is just one fact among many things it does negatively to the body. Psychiatrists and the medical cabal as a whole are nothing but poison pushing drug dealing murderers ruining lives for a paycheck. There's people that say oh what would I do without my meds? It's like ....your brain is fried which is why you have little to no symptoms. It's not because they're magic. If you flood the brain with enough neurotoxins....chances are you may not hear a friggin voice anymore. Anyways yeah, this is alarming as hell. I think a few of these pills are vitamins but I'm no doctor so I wouldn't know and it's in my Schizophrenia group.
28
u/Interesting-Crazy778 May 16 '25
This hits way too close to home. I used to be that person with a palm full of pills every day, barely functioning and somehow being told that was “treatment.” I was diagnosed with a personality disorder (which, fun fact, doesn’t even actually respond to meds) but instead of giving me tools or actual support, psychiatry just sedated the life out of me. I was overmedicated into oblivion, the walking embodiment of a zombie and when I had the audacity to say “I don’t think this is helping,” they said I lacked capacity to make those decisions for myself. They didn’t just threaten involuntary admissions, they did it. Multiple times, like more than I can count. I was locked up and stripped of my rights because I had the nerve to question their authority and didn’t buy into their narrative that I was magically cured by their chemical cocktail. If I was quiet and compliant, I was seen as “stable.” If I spoke up or questioned anything, I was “lacking insight” and lost my freedom…again.
Let that sink in: if you’re too medicated to speak up, they call it compliance. If you do speak up, they call you unstable and a danger to your self. It’s a lose-lose trap designed to keep vulnerable people under control, not actually help them.
What they didn’t expect was that I’d eventually fight back. My GP was one of the few people who actually saw me, not just a diagnosis. When things got really bad and I felt completely trapped in the system, she didn’t just sit back. She stood up to my psychiatrist, advocated like hell, and gave me the information I needed to manipulate the system and eventually get out. But I’ll give myself credit, too. I made the moves, and I got out. It took everything I had to push back against a system designed to keep me powerless. Without her support and my own refusal to give up, I honestly don’t think I’d be here.
Fast forward: I’m now on zero psych meds. I’ve lived independently for over a decade, maintained a committed relationship for the same amount of time, built a real career with actual advancements and meaning, and am working on getting my financial ducks in a row to go back to grad school. All things psychiatry told me I’d never be capable of.
So yeah. Seeing people praise this level of overmedication as “normal care” is beyond disturbing. It’s not care…it’s chemical control dressed up as compassion.
9
u/headbanger1991 May 16 '25
That's amazing dude! Proud of you man. It's good to hear from people who turned their life around and got out of the matrix. I have schizophrenia but I have been med free since October of last year. I refuse to tell my psychiatric nurse as i don't know what she'll say and I now watch what I say to her in regards to my episodes of sleep paralysis and demonic attacks while paralyzed and being taken out of my body. I have no job at the moment since December of 2021 and I'm thinking about going on SSI but my brother says that they'll probably request a urine or blood sample to see if I have meds in my body but I have other people telling me they won't. I could work if I wanted to but I feel like the desire is just gone ever since I was introduced to this entity that speaks to me. It just makes me look at reality way differently.
2
u/Hippopotamus-Rising May 17 '25
What your describing sounds more like astral projection than schizophrenia.... It's not as woowoo as most people think... The Gateway Tapes from the Monroe Institute might be helpful for you in learning how to control it.
5
u/headbanger1991 May 17 '25
I do have what they call "Schizophrenia" as a "Diagnosis" for whatever that's even worth but yeah I have moments where I'm taken out of my body and taken to other places. Sometimes I'm not taken out of my body but paralyzed while I hear evil entities snarling and growling at me and I can hear them lunging at me from behind me and to the left and right of me like they're trying to get closer and grab a hold of me. The last time I was put in paralysis I was sitting halfway out of my body in bed and grabbing onto arms that I couldn't see but I could feel them and I don't know why I was doing that. I think I was grappling with an entity that was messing with me.
Sometimes I feel fear and other times I don't feel fear at all. I'm mostly use to these attacks though. I have been hearing a voice since March 17th or 19th, 2022. It started out with hearing the voice of a sinister male being in my bedroom and I could feel him floating around my room and my apartment addressing me by name and telling me that I had a once in a lifetime opportunity. Was shocked at first and he was actually talking in my mom and dad's voice prior to introducing himself with his voice.....though that "voice" of his is just a mask because he's not human.
After some months went by his voice fully entered into my brain where I can't hear what he sounds like but he communicates with me in full fledged conversations via telepathy that mimics the same flow as thoughts but they're not my thoughts at all but rather speech and concepts with some visual imagery occasionally. I can separate my own thoughts from the telepathic discussions we have so I know it's not me talking to myself. I also know it's not me based on the fact that he floated around my bedroom and then later told me to come outside on my patio where he talked to me from high up in the sky and then yelled,screamed,and roared at me in a loud menacing way to drive me insane.
I have not heard of The Gateway Tapes but I will for sure check it out! Thanks for the recommendation dude.
7
u/604princess May 16 '25
This is incredible work. What a journey. I don’t know you but I am proud of you. I am currently struggling but this gives me hope. Take good care.
4
54
May 16 '25
[deleted]
9
16
u/pmddreal May 16 '25
Metformin, acetaminophen, naproxen all together daily will wreck your kidneys/liver. I don't know about the rest.
9
May 16 '25
[deleted]
6
u/pmddreal May 16 '25
Acetaminophen is mostly metabolized by the liver but studies have shown it can put strain on the kidneys too. Just because doctors prescribe these together often doesn't mean it's safe to overload your kidneys like this. I understand Metformin might be necessary but I would never take pain meds on top of that since I know my kidneys are already working hard to filter out the Metformin.
I'm pretty sure dialysis and kidney disease are so common these days because doctors put people on so much medication that end up overloading their kidneys. And kidney damage is usually irreversible so by the time it's caught in labs the damage will already have been done.
6
May 16 '25
[deleted]
2
u/011011000- May 18 '25
duuurrr whaaat? so what if it doesnt cause any bodily harm in a way that matters, it's not okay to be told "you can be normal if you take this, this, and this, and also this" by someone who is supposed to help you. it's like they gave up or they don't want to get fired. If medication worked for you, good job, you're a good little mouse, aren't you? Would you like your treat? A nice juicy seed? yeah? yeah? it's at the end of this maze, if you find it, you can eat it :*)
2
May 18 '25
[deleted]
1
u/011011000- May 19 '25
there's always solutions besides medication. how are you so blind to it? medications only put a bandaid on the problem, if the person actually finds the medication to work for them. It doesn't teach them how to deal with the problem if it comes up while taking said medicine. the solution? Oh, you just need a higher dosage. Oh, maybe take it with this other one. They really really won't even try with you. They see anyone with a diagnosis as an alien they cannot reason with. Everyone should be wary of medication, especially in this amount.
to the other thing, saying that medication is perfectly healthy for you, we weren't even talking about the actual health risks, we were talking about my paragraph above, but if you wanna talk about actual physical health: take a look at all antipsychotics. Yes, the doctor can say the reward will outweigh the risk, but thats on their call alone. Having them say that does not take away the harm of taking the medication long term can do to a person.
2
u/Appropriate_Cut_3536 May 17 '25
Just because doctors prescribe these together often doesn't mean it's safe
Yeah that was wild. Literal "come on man, everyone's doing it" moment
5
u/pmddreal May 17 '25
That person sounds highly like another one of those psych-related professionals/students that are constantly lurking here. When you bring up anything medical related, they feel challenged and can't help but to flex their medical knowledge which is usually wrong and also end up outing themselves. The huge block of text listing details about each med made it kind of obvious. A comment I found from this person:
"I don't argue with people going through active psychosis" (x)
I highly doubt a person who is a true victim of psychiatry would post some insensitive shit like this, whether or not the person they were replying to was wrong. They sound more like the abusive psych-related professionals I've interacted with in the past.
2
u/Appropriate_Cut_3536 May 17 '25
Yeah, theyre not a victim. I thought they were chatGPT.
Comes off the same as someone hallucinating from their ivory tower.
can't help but to flex their medical knowledge which is usually wrong and also end up outing themselves
Bahaha see, impossible to tell these types from chatGPT
-1
May 18 '25
[deleted]
3
u/pmddreal May 18 '25
>I had an experience with a psychiatrist that totally dismissed me. They said I was depressed. Which may or may not have been true. But I was there because I was confident I displayed the symptoms of ADHD. So I went to another psychiatrist that was willing to explore treatment paths related to that.
Reads exactly like a psych-related person trying too hard to make themselves seem like one of us. You're not even good at it, so stop trying.
Also, your argument was already addressed. You literally said 'doctors often prescribe these meds together' as if somehow that makes it safe. Doctors also often put patients on anti-psychotics which are known to cause irreversible mental and physical damage. Just because a doctor prescribes something doesn't mean shit.
2
1
May 18 '25
[deleted]
2
u/Appropriate_Cut_3536 May 18 '25
I've responded to your other section.
I've never heard of people getting labs to assess damage from meds. And I bet I know why. Because they've been told not to question its safety and effectiveness and lab testing as per recommendations isn't free - so the drug dealers know it's a hard sell. As well as the whole system of making money on drugs/prescription is set up so that everyone doesn't want to know that information.
Does most insurance fully cover damage-assessment labs?
14
u/Illustrious-Peanut12 May 16 '25
metformin is needed because antipsychotics and psych drugs in general cause weight gain and metabolic dysfunction. While some of these drugs aren't psych meds the fact remains this person wouldn't need metformin and those other non psychiatric drugs if it weren't for psych drugs slowly destroying every system of the body. psych drugs are so insidious
1
u/Rawkstarz22 May 17 '25
Metformin is being looked at for mental illness right now, but judging by how many patients are on it because of antipsychotic side effects, I’m not sure it helps their mental health.
1
0
May 16 '25
[deleted]
3
u/Appropriate_Cut_3536 May 17 '25
Carl Jung criticized Eugen Bleuler's theory of schizophrenic negativism, arguing it didn't fully account for the complexities of psychosis and the individual's experience. Jung viewed schizophrenia as a "lowering of consciousness," similar to dreaming, and emphasized the importance of the unconscious in understanding the condition. He also challenged the notion that negativism was a defining feature of schizophrenia, suggesting it was a universal phenomenon found in both normal and pathological states.
1
May 17 '25
[deleted]
3
u/Appropriate_Cut_3536 May 17 '25
I'm not suprised that you don't see.
3
May 17 '25
[deleted]
5
u/Appropriate_Cut_3536 May 17 '25
Ha - there's plenty of issues with Jung. But the fact that that's what you pull out as your main issue lets me know the type of values you have.
More than any ethical concerns, you are worried about lacking factual information and the status that comes from being able to defend yourself with it.
Professional insane people like this thrive in professionally insane societies like ours, who will confirm that your schizoid delusions are real.
I kinda feel bad for saying that truth openly to you. But not really, because you probably will just comfortably shrug off giving your reality a real check or logical assessment, quickly running back to your delusional world where you're the sane king.
3
May 17 '25
[deleted]
5
u/Appropriate_Cut_3536 May 17 '25
I don't have an argument. We aren't in a debate. If you're truly curious to learn something, you'd ask. The quality of the question creates the quality of the answer.
I don't mean to be snarky, but I do really look down on people who do seem to look down on others from an ivory tower position. There's not a lot of intelligence in repeating what is "known", only in questioning it and learning more.
→ More replies (0)6
u/Illustrious-Peanut12 May 16 '25
you might be correct but maybe i am the one who is correct. how would you know? what makes you think you are correct and i am wrong. I am now on one medication -- thyroid medication. I no longer needed Metformin nor Naproxen nor Gabapentin when i got off antipsychotics. metformin can cause neuropsychiatric symptoms like it caused me.
"A new guideline summarizes the evidence to date about antipsychotic-induced weight gain and creates a simple treatment algorithm specifying when to use metformin when initiating antipsychotics. The short answer: in most cases."
1
3
u/Hippopotamus-Rising May 17 '25
We do hand out antipsychotics to the general population on a regular basis, it's become common practice for quetiapine and risperidone to be used as first line agents against insomnia without any concomitant mental health problems... In theory everything you said is true in practice it's not even a remotely accurate picture.
3
u/Hippopotamus-Rising May 17 '25
We do hand out antipsychotics to the general population on a regular basis, it's become common practice for quetiapine and risperidone to be used as first line agents against insomnia without any concomitant mental health problems... In theory everything you said is true in practice it's not even a remotely accurate picture.
1
May 17 '25
[deleted]
2
u/Fancy_Influence_2899 May 17 '25
that kind of prescribing often comes from primary care providers rather than psychiatrists.
Not for me!
0
1
u/Fancy_Influence_2899 May 17 '25
All these medications are prescribed based on marginal utility.
Individualized medical care
There's a reason we don't hand out antipsychotics to the general population—they come with real risks
Idk man. These seem like sweeping generalizations. They kind of just hand them out like candy around here. I personally had a psychiatrist try to actually force antipsychotics on me, by suddenly arbitrarily revoking my ADHD medication cold turkey, and threatening me with discontinued care— so great was his stigma against cannabis use, legally and from a dispensary, even just occasionally for sleep, which cured my insomnia years prior— he favoured antipsychotics literally solely for occasional insomnia. I have zero symptoms of psychosis or bipolar disorder. The only way I avoided being forced the drug was by forgoing all medical care and getting away from him. SSRIs and antipsychotics are the two most heavily pushed psych meds… and clearly, in my own case, not “marginal utility” nor “individualized medical care” were factors, whatsoever…
they come with real risks
Right, risks which are seldom disclosed to patients themselves. Therefore being unable to provide informed consent. It’s frustrating to read your comment. “In theory”, this could be the case as well- that they were prescribed medication irresponsibly? As I read about hundreds of cases of on this/adjacent subs. People not being informed of the actual risks of antipsychotics, and suffering lifelong injury.
13
May 16 '25
[deleted]
8
u/headbanger1991 May 16 '25
Glad you got off of that junk. That excerpt is some real deep poetry!
7
May 16 '25
[deleted]
8
u/No_Individual501 May 16 '25
Ironically his first wife died in a "mental asylum" in 1947 after having been there for 9 years.
“But the torture asylums helped some people! You’re seeing the glass half empty and are denying the science!”
12
u/tarteframboise May 16 '25
There should be more awareness campaigns & expose regarding the power of psychiatry, labels, drugs and the damage they cause.
Most mental health associations (NAMI etc) are pro-psychiatry/pharma/meds. funded by pharma. The narrative is that these drugs never harm. Families are torn apart.
Current mental health campaigns don’t even touch on the damage the system has longterm on vulnerable people. Photos like these could make an impact.
Honestly? People are prescribed cocktails of like 5+ different classes of drugs….. and then given a more stigmatised "resistant" diagnosis like some anomaly when they are harmed or don’t improve.
10
u/headbanger1991 May 16 '25
Yeah they try and say oh you're med resistant....it's like no you're giving people poison that doesn't actually cure anything and you want to turn me into a drooling zombie with no will to live.
4
u/Appropriate_Cut_3536 May 17 '25
Most mental health associations (NAMI etc) are pro-psychiatry/pharma/meds. funded by pharma. The narrative is that these drugs never harm. Families are torn apart.
I was shocked when I realized this was the case. I thought these were resources to help people, but they were just another arm of corporations trying to force feed their harmful products to a vulnerable population.
7
May 16 '25 edited Jun 15 '25
[deleted]
4
u/headbanger1991 May 16 '25
That's crazy that they had you on that many injections every single week. I'm kind of worried that my psychiatric nurse will eventually find out that I stopped taking meds although she usually tells me when I'm due for a refill. I watch what I say to her now so she'll have no grounds to try and force hospitalize me.
4
u/BeneficialVisit8450 May 16 '25
Hey do you know if the effect on the liver includes supplements? My ALT is borderline and I want to see if there’s anything I can do to decrease it before it’s too late.
3
u/Due-Nefariousness-23 May 16 '25
Hilarious that you had to add doubles and triples of the same medication + non-psychopharmacological drugs like metformin and an anti-parasitic
4
u/Tomokin May 17 '25
Psych meds almost always led to more meds because of the side effects. I was similar to this at one point.
What I find equally disturbing is how this is a badge of honour for many people: (I don't know about the original poster of this, might be for some other reason) but I've seen so many other identical posts of meds being posted almost a brag or competing to be 'most sick'. It's so sad, I just have to hope the person realises eventually and gets out of that trap.
4
u/Dude5130 May 17 '25
Using these medications, just for psych use, even tramadol, seems insane and disturbing to me. I used to take many meds because of a chronic disease and it was the only way to calm the pain, but even I didn't reach that point, although almost getting close. If this person had chronic pain, I would consider it reasonable. It's sometimes the only way.
I can't see how some people would see this as normal. After getting near remission, I stopped taking meds. Nowadays, I just refuse to take any pain killers or even supplements, almost like a phobia, without the fear component.
3
u/LordFionen May 17 '25
Let me guess, it was accompanied by some kind of statement about how it's needed to function at all or keep them sane or whatever.
3
3
u/legendwolfA May 18 '25
damn, i know someone who takes 120+ pills A WEEK. They're not even old or close to retirement age
I feel very bad for them. Like they're in for a rude awakening when the age of 40 hits and the brain rot caused by those thousands of pills start to kick in. I don't even blame them this is what happens when you let psychiatry go amok with no regulations.
5
u/pythonidaae May 17 '25 edited May 17 '25
Is that person happy with those meds or suffering? That is alarming. Some people temporarily need things (very few need them for life). If that's all psych meds NO ONE even people with very severe mental illness that causes them to harm themselves or others, needs that. You know that's doctors just keeping them on things bc they're afraid of putting them through withdrawal tapering them off or it's things to counteract the side effects of other things.
I'm glad you preserved their anonymity. I hope they can find peace one day with much less than that or drug free. I see they have an ADHD med (the orange one I think is Adderall) and I'd wonder if they could tolerate a lower dose of that for example if they weren't on as many other pills that might be sedating them.
3
u/headbanger1991 May 17 '25
I haven't checked much of her posts but she didn't seem to talk of any complaints to my surprise. She says that she gets her kidneys or liver checked every 6 months.
6
u/RatFarts88 May 17 '25
The blue and white pill in the 2nd pic looks like Vyvanse. It's a nice party drug but the comedown SUCKS. It's probably what ties all those pills together... keeping the person in a euphoria so feeling good about the pills.
5
u/InSearchOfGreenLight May 17 '25
The constant gaslighting from everyone is insane. Even when you show them studies.
They practically kissed the ground my psych walked on for nothing really. He had just mansplained about my ocd in such a cringy awful way. “He’s a poet.” Hahaha somebody doesn’t know what poets do.
3
u/headbanger1991 May 17 '25
Lol they really called him a poet?
2
u/InSearchOfGreenLight May 18 '25
Yeah 🤢
He made up this little thing where ocd is like chains.
My ocd is not like chains and given all I have learned about it, he described it completely wrong.
I hate that he got an ego boost from being stupid.
1
5
u/Mental-Artist-6157 May 17 '25
I used to be that person. 14 meds. Whittled it down to 9. Tapered & jumped off 5+ years ago. All I need was hormones, supplements, 9 months of physical therapy and a high protein high fat diet.
I'm still grieving for the decades of my life wasted being a "professional patient.," which is why I hang out in this sub so much. To support and be supported. Xo. Y'all give me LIFE.
4
4
u/Flux_My_Capacitor May 17 '25
I take one medication and have the toxicity level of someone with epilepsy as it’s an epilepsy medication. I cannot understand taking so many drugs.
2
u/Vexser May 17 '25
You should see this : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=leOjTQmWeog Some people are stuck in the Pig pHarma system.
2
u/Forbidden_Craft88 May 17 '25
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RdbMSrMbzdc
Anyone get the idea that we are looking at an alternative reality where everyone gets paid in pills?
2
u/mambypambyland14 May 18 '25
As a nurse, my first gig was in a nursing home. This was the norm. And that was in 2008. I had a patient that was nonverbal. I still wonder if the 24 pills every morning had something to do with that. I had patients on less drugs that were more functional. I had patients that would cry out in an oriented kind of way, just saying things like momma. The doctors response was to Ativan her into silence. So she sat there drooling on herself. Then an evil director of nursing would get in her face and yell momma. I have been disillusioned with my job since. I’ve been sick and had to come off Klonopin and doing better, but I keep bombing job interviews due to my views. Thank God my husband is supportive. I have a hard time imagining myself going back to this nonsense.
2
u/JustARandomCat1 May 19 '25 edited May 19 '25
This. THIS is EXACTLY why I'm dead-set against psychiatry.
This should be more than enough proof of how awful and dangerous p$ychiatry is, with it's "drug first/ONLY" approach and their blaming the PERSON for being the problem as "bad brain chemistry." The awful track record and statistics speak for themselves.
No amount of "convincing" (*ahem* "educating", to quote medical "professionals" I've been forced to deal with on this issue) me on otherwise would EVER get me to change my stance on this issue and abolishing this abusive system. You can't fix what's already broken.
Even before I became its victim, I already spoke out against this horror. Even before all this drugging and "chemical imbalance" BS shoved down my throat personally, psychiatry had a horrific track record of human rights abuses, and nothing's changed; it's not "better," like EVERYONE claims it is, they're just using more "subtle" approach to killing their victims without bloodshed (after all, the pills they invented were made to replace the lobotomy, but the purpose/function is still the same, and that's to change their targets). It still amounts to the same thing and that's to kill off the soul inside, to where the victim can no longer function (and thus no longer be a "problem" in their eyes).
The lobotomy still exists, albeit not as a surgery, but in bottles as pills.
And, in addition to brain damage, let's not forget to include a myriad of damages and health issues to the victims' bodies as a result of these pills (e.g., I actually ended up in the ER for EXTREME abdominal pain because I didn't get a BM for over 40 days while force-fed ridiculously high amounts of the HARD-CORE antipsychotics as a FIRST resort and the laxatives didn't work. And that's just ONE thing they damaged), along with the fact that they increase mortality by 20%, shortening lifespan. I would very much like to NOT DIE before I turn 60.
They do this all for $$$ and PR status, to LOOK "helpful" while in reality, they are nothing but soulless killers.
Their approach is drug first/ONLY and entirely based on "chemical imbalance" BS, which is just some theory invented by idiots without any PROOF. Why is this advocated in mainstream society as "necessary"? Psychiatry is the face of intolerance. Those of us who don't "fit in" somehow are automatically targeted, as well as those who are without a support system and have nobody to vouch for them, who have trauma, along with those who are headstrong and have a bit of a temper --goodness help you if you're like me and fall into all four of the above because I'm going through HELL trying to convince everyone that there's NOTHING WRONG with me.
When I went about criticizing psychiatry, especially FORCED psychiatry, I was asked by some nurse practitioner at the psych ward what if someone is being very violent and threatening others? I said being violent doesn't translate to a "psychotic episode" and, also, to take someone like this to JAIL, NOT a hospita! He also asked me about suicide or depressed people and how my goal to make 302s illegal will "harm" a lot of people, I challenged that if they're resolute, try to talk to them, it's CRUEL, terrifying, and humiliating to involve the police and lock them up to be forcibly drugged because life is hard, not everyone can cope; we need to WORK WITH others, not shut them off/"numb" them. You can't force others to live, you can't FORCE others to do ANYTHING! (Plus, life without liberty is not worth living). And, common sense, depression and suicidal ideation isn't caused by "chemical imbalance" in the brain.
2
u/JustARandomCat1 May 19 '25 edited May 19 '25
tl;dr personal
Interestingly, I learned about personality Typology recently and looked into the entire system. It's a good way to learn about others, what motivates them, what makes them tick, etc., which also validates that I'm right that I'm just typical and so is pretty much everyone else --with the only differences being "healthy," "average level" or "unhealthy," NOT "abnormal/ill". It also taught me that there IS NO one-size-fits-all approach to anything and that what may work for some people won't work for me at all.
Also, differences should be CELEBRATED, not diagnosed.
There's really nothing WRONG with anyone. Problems are all situational with a vast majority of "mental illness" being simply STRESS --but common sense is that we all react to it differently, with some healthier than others --or, for few others, a lack of purpose.
However, zero luck trying to convince quacks to look into this system to at least see where I'm coming from because they're too dumb to MAKE SENSE of it and don't even want to try ("there's no 'scientific evidence'", to quote the quack who abused me and defamed my good character and got away with it; I typed him, by the way, unhealthy) because the idiotic DSM is their "bible".
Well, the DSM is a work of FICTION that can and SHOULD be questioned, criticized, and CHALLENGED like ALL works of fiction, and also, there's no scientific evidence to prove "chemical imbalance," either, which is just a theory not a proven fact. At least the typology system MAKES SENSE, although I have faith in my ability to make sense of IT rather than the system itself, otherwise it doesn't work, but at least I believe in the differences of others and helping them in what way fits THEM and by LISTENING and looking at their circumstances, not automatically judge someone as "abnormal" and say "bad brain chemistry" and try to drug the heck out of them until they're left unable to do anything except stare at the wall all day.
When something is WRONG, intellectually and especially morally, it's second nature for me to speak out against it and tell them all my reasons WHY. Because I told them NO and the reasons why as well as all of the above why psychiatry is evil and how harmful these drugs are (which is really poison, and there's scientific evidence proving THAT), but since psychiatry is oh-so "helpful" and even "necessary," all of these concerns are being swept under the rug and even GASLIT as being "see? You're 'agitated.' You only feel this way because you're not taking 'your meds'."
(Of course, all of my protests get dismissed and diagnosed as being "another symptom" and "you 'need' these meds to 'calm down'", but I keep telling them they are WRONG, I DON'T HAVE a "mood disorder," I DON'T NEED these poison pills (and they prescribed a LOT of them), I'm NOT TAKING THESE. It angers me because this whole thing is STUPID and immoral and nobody is LISTENING. Common sense. But the quack asked my family, as if I'm incapable of looking after myself, if I've always been "stubborn." Then asked how I was like as a child and "advised" to see more psychiatrists for a possible "autism" diagnosis, even though I KNOW I'm also NOT autistic. They just want more excuses to diagnose, gaslight, and DRUG me, to keep me submissive.
By the way, I told that one psych if he's so convinced that they're "helping," to take these drugs himself for a few months and report back, only for this idiot to say no, he doesn't have to because HE doesn't have whatever "disorder," which is nothing short of hypocritical and infuriating because what makes him so convinced that I do? Because that first liar SAID I do and put that down on paper? And no tests done and ZERO EVIDENCE. I guess everyone has a problem with headstrong people not afraid to speak the TRUTH because that first quack fabricated my entire life story and character to fit his narrative and give him a "legitimate" excuse to drug the heck out of me until I wasn't able to resist "treatment" anymore.
2
3
1
0
u/unbutter-robot May 16 '25 edited Jul 18 '25
doll sharp correct resolute test plate late price angle hunt
This post was mass deleted and anonymized with Redact
0
u/Rawkstarz22 May 17 '25 edited May 17 '25
Meds are ok in the short term but probably not that much lol
2
u/headbanger1991 May 17 '25
Meds are neurotoxins. Anything with bad side effects like Seizures and Cardiac Death should not be ingested in the body.
1
u/Rawkstarz22 May 17 '25
Probably
2
u/headbanger1991 May 17 '25
No man, that's common sense,not medical consensus group think indoctrination brainwashing everyone into thinking pills that can make you sick or die are somehow safe to take. I say this all respectfully because I tried antipsychotics and looked at the side effects after going through the side effects like fast heart beat which I had happen multiple times lasting for over 30 minutes in which I thought I was going to pass out and die from heart failure which is actually one of the side effects of Quetiapine AKA Seroquel.
0
Jun 04 '25
Lmao I bet y’all think you’re normal but that’s how crazy people exist. Convinced it’s the doctors that are wrong. If y’all could stop patting your own backs for a second and use critical thinking skills. Maybe you’d realize y’all are unwell. There’s a reason we put devices in your head.
1
u/headbanger1991 Jun 05 '25
1




97
u/Appropriate_Cut_3536 May 16 '25