Thank you for giving me the opportunity to come back to your channel to spread awareness and give hope to others. Thank you again for all the work you and your team do 🙏
@basketballfan576318 сағат бұрын
I'm not in the mood today to say where I'm from but I'm from what I would call a backwater country with no real resources to deal with this at all but obviously they were able to hand it out in bucket loads to me over the years but there are zero resources ok there are not zero resources but there are very few to deal with this. Through this channel I have actually found a source but I have not had the guts to reach out and connect with that medical practitioner yet
@dr656016 сағат бұрын
Great to see that you're feeling better, onwards to 100%!
@Youthmind0713 сағат бұрын
Please Reach out to elon musk he has mentioned about pssd
@sc.12823 сағат бұрын
@@Youthmind07 Do you have a source to this? I’ve never seen him speak upon PSSD.
@Maryan9019 сағат бұрын
There are many many so severe adverse reactions stories like jess on communities.. Many people are very sick with severe cognitive issues to the point of dementia and many symptoms! What jess experienced is not so rare! Am so glad Jess got better! She truly deserves it!
@angrydonkeyman520 сағат бұрын
I'm so happy she has improved. Her original story was very upsetting and heart breaking.
@stevekaylor560618 сағат бұрын
'Psychiatry is sincerity, fraud, force and financialization!' - Thomas Szasz
@nwunnoticewhatyounotice613622 сағат бұрын
Sending love to this beautiful young woman for continued healing from these horrible effects.
@cathysapanski627620 сағат бұрын
I watch as much of your content as I can. It is amazing how much I learn from your guests. My daughter is currently going through a lot of what Jess is going through I remember seeing Jess in the part 1. Iam so thankful for her insight into what is going on in her mind. She brilliantly explains everything what a smart girl! Extremely helpful for Iam caring for my daughter and my daughter doesn’t always have words for what is going on. Thank you❤
@christopherp.886821 сағат бұрын
Thanks again Jess. It's good to see you again talking about your experience and keeping us updated
@Ice9sculpture8 сағат бұрын
Thank you for sharing your story. I really felt it when you said you would of rather gone to prison. Unfortunately ive done both and youre not wrong. The stigma of needing mental heath care is intense. We need more people like yourself who have the courage to share and to really dig for new ways to heal. I hope you continue to heal and rebuild your life. Thanks again.
@gracegrace189616 сағат бұрын
My son suffered after they forced 400mg Abilify Maintenna. He could not eat , sleep or talk. He still cannot articulate what happened because they still have him drugged on other drugs. After a psych stay, they randomly injected him with 400mg Abilify Maintenance. For 2 weeks he could not sleep, eat, talk or stop moving. He suffered severe akathasia- although I did not know what that was at the time. He paced constantly or rocked back from one foot to the other. He was obviously suffering horribly and they blamed the label they gave him. His all started from smoking spice. But after 2 weeks, he was arrested for doing something completely out of character- no one was hurt - but he was arrested. It’s a horrific story. Yes, he spent time in jail, but that was a much better place than a psych ward as she mentioned. Prisoners have rights. People in psych wards have zero rights and there is zero accountability on these so called “professionals “ who harm and abuse people in the psych wards. They have severely traumatized him. Jail did not traumatize him whatsoever. He is good at keeping to himself and out of trouble. The hospitals overdosed him on multiple Haldol/ativan injections- then were letting him die in isolation. Until my husband and I saw him dying- and I described that before under another video. I had to demand medical intervention and he landed in CV-ICU with respiratory failure, kidney injury, rhabdomyolysis and more. They had to work on him for over an hour to stop vital organ shutdown and death. If I had not seen him dying, he would be dead Then he was beaten multiple times by staff! He’s over 6 feet tall and strong and was drugged to the max and scared. And I have been banned from seeing him at times. He lost an eye in a psych ward once. And more. The worst of it started with that 400mg injection of Abilify Maintenna. Now he seems stuck in the system! I do all I can to keep him out of abusive hospitals. He is now so drugged up that he is in bed most all the time since 2022. He has tried to just jump off their drugs before and he was forced off CT by a p-doc once. Both times landed him in the torture ward with more labels and more drugs. Dr Josef- how can I help my son??? They have manipulated him with their drugs. I could even prove that. They wanted him gone because I saw what they did when they tried to kill him. Tried many times to put him away in state hospital where he would die. He is heavily drugged now. No life. This is also so EVIL! Destroying a young man’s life.
@tanersahin129820 сағат бұрын
Do a video on Wellbutrin
@RussellD1122 сағат бұрын
Cymbalta Literally killed most my Dopamine receptors, now i live in dysphoria and stimulants dont work for me. Drug induced BRAIN DAMAGE ~ I have same symptoms after cymbalta... For me the only drug that helps are opioids for some reason..
@katiehorneshaw99515 сағат бұрын
Because they work on your opioid receptors. You can burn out your dopamine receptors and still get high off opioids- I know from my former life!
@Filthycoffin19 сағат бұрын
I am sorry that you had to deal with that as well. I lost my entire freaking family and the courts just said I was borderline. They don’t even know what all I went through. My family does not believe in medication injury I feel like I live in another universe.
@michelleespino981421 сағат бұрын
After suffering severe side effects from antidepressants for years and still being depressed, they offered me antipsychotics for treatment resistant depression. Hell no! After seeing this, I am happy about the decision that I made. I hope you have a speedy recovery ❤️🩹
@Hollyucinogen21 сағат бұрын
Same, except I took the anti-psychotics that were prescribed to me (Seroquel, aka quetiapine). I've never felt worse in my entire life. I felt better when I was just depressed than when I took that garbage. (Also, it didn't fix my depression whatsoever.)
@konstantinossohos234918 сағат бұрын
I am happy you never made that decision. I was give an antipsychotic without any consideration and I stopped. I am still in immense pain. I am thankful you don't have to feel this.
@konstantinossohos234918 сағат бұрын
@@Hollyucinogenhave you recovered? It has been 8 weeks and I only took it once and I feel so much worse. Please I need help.
@Hollyucinogen18 сағат бұрын
@@konstantinossohos2349 I dunno, maybe I'm weird because my body does seem to clear things out unusually fast, but it typically does get better eventually. There are some things that you can do; like drinking green tea, I've heard, helps clear things out of your body. There's light at the end of the tunnel, I promise.
@Hollyucinogen15 сағат бұрын
@@konstantinossohos2349 I have indeed. I think for me part of the reason why I recovered so quickly is because I also just happen to have an autoimmune disorder, so my immune system is always "on"; my body naturally cleanses itself of bacteria/viruses/toxins more quickly than a regular persons'. I can't promise you that this will help, but maybe try eating some foods that boost your immune system; and green tea is usually good for ridding the body of toxins too. Intermittent fasting also boosts the immune system, so you could also try that.
@Praetoriaan20 сағат бұрын
Question. Does lacking dopamine cause extensive sleepiness?
@benjaminro34122 сағат бұрын
Almost 40k subscribers! Kinda scary when you think about it.
@jasonsenator614421 сағат бұрын
I got some bad mushrooms and blacked out. my parents called the cops and had me arrested for it so I was threatened to prison while in benzo injury which was the reason I tried it.
@СергейОльсен20 сағат бұрын
Почему вы не подадите в суд на врачей которые не правильно вас лечили такими опасными препаратами? Психиатрию нужно запретить пока не будут тщательно расследованы подобные случаи и причины.
@stevekaylor560618 сағат бұрын
Entirely new guidelines must be set in Mental Health - e.g. agapeic love is mental health, so why not coach this?!
@amiinia6 сағат бұрын
Полностью согласна, что психиатрию нужно запретить, хотя бы малую психиатрию. Столько жертв пострадало от так называемой фармакотерапии, но психиатры продолжают травить население. Я уверена, множество суицидов и последующих обострений психических заболеваний может быть связано с побочными эффектами препаратов, но эти врачи, конечно же, не признают этого, так как для них все симптомы могут быть объяснены только болезнью, а не эффектом лекарств, которые не пойми как работают.
@konstantinossohos23495 сағат бұрын
38:00 what is the discord? Can I join it?
@stevekaylor560617 сағат бұрын
Dr. Josef or James Davies should Head a Mental Health Accountability Board. Erie County, in NY has an Accountability Board!
@luzlopez77622 сағат бұрын
How does this happen?
@stevekaylor560618 сағат бұрын
A trend toward the MAID Act in Canada!
@kevk74113 сағат бұрын
It’s really hard to tell the difference between helping and hurting. I thought klonopin was helping my symptoms. I only realized what it had done when I pulled it away. The same thing happened when I tried to treat pain. It felt like it was helping me. I was working more and more and rejoining life. Eventually, I started to worsen and had to come off. When I came off, I was always worse than when I went back on trying to save my life. It was so deceptive to have a period where it helped. Helping is hurting. That’s the problem. Feeling good comes as a reaction to a neurotoxic molecule. That’s how “medications” work. They should remind more people of that. This time, the klonopin cessation did something and nothing really works the same. Most of those tricks were working less and less.
@jasonsenator614421 сағат бұрын
my mom's been on this for a long time. I think she has adverse reactions but doesn't notice it.
@Maryan9019 сағат бұрын
I experienced both healing and permanent PSSD. Stopping my medication abruptly gave me concussion-like symptoms, followed by protracted withdrawal syndrome, which actually started to help me heal. However, when I mistakenly took an herb that affects neurotransmitters, I turned my protracted withdrawal into permanent PSSD. In my opinion, there’s a big difference between the two. PSSD is long-lasting and doesn’t show signs of recovery, unlike protracted withdrawal.
@karenthorpe438718 сағат бұрын
Excusee, what was the herb that you took please? My son takes chamomile. I hope it's helping him
@Maryan9017 сағат бұрын
@@karenthorpe4387 It was a strong natural herb that works like an SSRI, as I read lately... It's Panax ginseng. It has a lot of reports of adverse reactions, as I see after. Seems unlikely chamomile caused such a severe setback, but of course, no one is sure of anything anymore!
@Maryan9017 сағат бұрын
@@karenthorpe4387 It was a strong natural herb that works like an SSRI, as I read lately... It's Panax ginseng. It has a lot of reports of adverse reactions, as I see after. Seems unlikely chamomile caused such a severe setback, but of course, no one is sure of anything anymore!
@CuriousNotion11 сағат бұрын
@@karenthorpe4387they all do to some extent. St John's wort is known to have SSRI effects. Chamomile is amazing ❤
@karenthorpe438718 сағат бұрын
How about clozapine. Could you talk about that please?
@edgetransit332020 сағат бұрын
She didn't recover though. She's just on another med that is masking the symptoms of the Abilify adverse reaction. I'm happy she's feeling better but I was hoping this was a true recovery story. Hopefully she can get off her new med one day too and heal from it all. I'm 18 months off Klon in a bad wave. Let's all heal!
@Dethgato506017 сағат бұрын
The problem with pssd though is there is NO cure. There are however a lot of snake oil salesman targeting people in their desperate state. I get what you're saying. Sometimes having some kind of life on something is better than absolutely a joyless life sober.
@mitchellmccole832214 сағат бұрын
You can’t define somebody else’s recovery. She has obviously improved since the last interview, and thats what everybody in the community is looking for. If small global improvements while taking a drug to offer some relief while the body is still reeling from acute injury is not healing, then you will quickly find that you yourself will never be healed. We need to allow ourselves any relief we can get, and having people telling us our improvements aren’t “A true recovery” then we’ll all end up in the grave.
@edgetransit332014 сағат бұрын
@@mitchellmccole8322 You're reading way wrongly into my comment. I don't have the energy to go back and forth. Read my comment again instead of being offended.
@LowV-o7x11 сағат бұрын
It’s something I’m thinking about lately. I changed my diet to avoid histamine and I’m taking a DAO supplement with every meal to help break down histamine in the gut. It seems to help more than anything I’ve tried so far. I’m surprised to find out that the foods forbidden in MAOI treatment are almost the same foods forbidden in histamine intolerance. Could that have helped as well in case she has histamine intolerance? I’m just trying to guess… what if these medications (SSRI etc) affect blood brain barrier and when you already have histamine build up in the system, it starts to affect your brain like a toxic substance? She mentioned antibiotics briefly in her first interview. Antibiotics can trigger histamine intolerance syndrome because they cause dysbiosis in the gut. I think it’s something worth looking into.
@dmanzawsome3 сағат бұрын
this story is why i dont think im ever going to a doctor for a bad trip. Id rather have the hatman attack me than loose myself.
@FunkelbunСағат бұрын
I’ve been in abilify for 4years i think. As injection. Is my life over now? I feel rather okey, ive started on escitalopram also, a week ago, i feel tired but i believe i will get better. This scares me alot but i feel okey. I exercise, eat and drink
@Youthmind0721 сағат бұрын
Doctor please Reach out to someone on a higher place/rank some famous person
@idesigncutethings21964 сағат бұрын
Yes. I agree. We need MAJOR MEDIA attention, and more than one story with someone famous, or well-known that hits big media news. It needs to be some consistent front page type big media to "stick" and make a difference.
@cuekinaja14 сағат бұрын
Don't all psychiatric drugs make you feel better at first? I think Parnate will have similar issues as Abilify: side effects, worn-off efficacy over time, and a difficult taper due to its withdrawal effects.
@mr.giggles499512 сағат бұрын
No, actually most of them will likely make you feel worse for at least a few weeks, many times much longer and sometimes permanently.
@basketballfan576318 сағат бұрын
If I could go back to the first day I ever took this pill it was at the insistence of a dentist to calm me down and because he said he could not get my mouth open wide enough with severe TMJ and you know the hospital don't agree with that pill for TMJ at all. They suggest a gum shield or night retainer
@Rene-uz3eb10 сағат бұрын
Not feeling sleepy: may be depletion of ALA alpha linoleic acid (omega 3). Some drugs affecting the brain can use up more ala.
@hammersaw31352 сағат бұрын
I did these on my own with herbs, MAOI inhibitor drugs are super powerful, but herbal ones tend to be more mild, and gentle. But still should avoid aged cheese
@PJPer-zs8uj18 сағат бұрын
Why???
@toefoneman22 сағат бұрын
Yeah exactly!
@brycefox57579 сағат бұрын
I wish I had some
@AdelSaeedPersian21 сағат бұрын
It is good she is back on her drugs and working with her doctors.