Maybe if I put my legs on the wall, it would help. Maybe curling into a fetal position would do the trick. But nothing works. I’m sweating, I’m shivering — I feel like I accidentally took a drug I didn’t know I took. Like I astral-projected, but I still have to command my body. My legs drag when I walk. My eyes close on their own, too tired to stay open. My skin feels wrong — I want to tear it off. I feel restricted. I want to sleep, but I can’t: too many vivid dreams. I need help. I just took a pill prescribed by my doctor. Why does my body react like this?
My legs kick and twitch
on their own. My jaw drops, and I can’t always close my mouth in time — saliva
slips out. Do I look like a freak in public? My eyes want to close again. It’s
hard to move.
It’s been three weeks
since I started Aripitas 10
(Aripiprazole). I had been on Nexito
10 (Escitalopram) for a while before that, and it helped steadily, slowly,
but Aripitas changed everything overnight.
The Beginning: How I Got Here
It didn’t start in the
psychiatrist’s office. Funny enough, it started at my gynecologist’s office.
After addressing the physical issue that had brought me there, she said softly,
“I think it would help if you also saw a psychologist — someone who can support
you for the parts I cannot fix. Is that okay?”
She had helped me
physically — truly — but she recognized something deeper: a psychological layer
that needed attention. And I trusted her. I agreed.
That was how I found myself
in a psychologist’s office — my psychologist, and in a way, my first safe
witness. I opened up, and after years of holding everything inside, I let the
floodgates release.
“Hello, lovely to meet
you. I hope we have a productive session — I am your new psychiatrist,” he
said. Suddenly, everything had a name: auditory hallucinations, maladaptive
daydreaming, insomnia, anxiety. My life was mapped out in diagnoses I hadn’t
spoken aloud before.
Mirtazapine came first.
Absolutely Not! Weight gain. So it was switched to Nexito. Then, later,
Aripitas joined the mix. I swallowed, hoping for relief, trusting the guidance
I’d been given, and suddenly my body became a battleground.
The Aftermath: Movement, Panic & Restlessness
https://www.webmd.com/schizophrenia/side-effects-aripiprazole
Why I Feel Torn
On one hand,
Aripiprazole silenced the hallucinations. On the other hand, it unleashed
restlessness I couldn’t describe. My spirit felt untouched, but my body was
rebelling. My mind wanted sleep, but my legs, my jaw, my hands, my very skin,
refused.
There were moments I
thought I had lost my mind. My fire flickered and my bones ached from being
alive. And the worst part? I didn’t know if this was normal. I didn’t know if I
was overreacting. All I knew was: my body wasn’t mine for those first weeks.
Living through It
* Inner restlessness so
strong I can’t sit still.
* Twitching limbs while
my brain begs for calm.
* Waves of panic that
arrive uninvited.
* Dreams that feel too
real, too vivid, and too endless.
* Shame imagining how I
look when I pace, twitch, or drool.
* Guilt for questioning
a medicine that’s supposed to help me.
Awareness Matters
I’m not a doctor. I’m
sharing my lived experience.
1. You are not alone.
Others have similar experiences.
2. Doctors don’t always
explain the subtle, terrifying side effects in everyday language.
3. Awareness and conversation
can save your peace of mind.
What Helps Me
* Tracking symptoms:
twitching, restlessness, severity each day.
* Talking to my
psychiatrist when things peak.
* Asking about
adjustments, dosage, or supportive medication ([AAFP] https://www.aafp.org/pubs/afp/issues/2010/0301/p617.html
* Gentle self-care:
rest, short walks, breathing exercises, light movement to release inner
tension.
Final Thought
Taking antipsychotics
doesn’t feel like a clean fix. It’s messy. Its trade-offs. Silence about these
experiences doesn’t help anyone. So here I am, writing this for anyone who
might be walking in my footsteps. You are not broken. You are healing —
complicated, raw, imperfect, human healing.
Speak up. Ask
questions. Seek support. You deserve both relief and understanding.


You are a fighter..Well done piece.
ReplyDeleteThank you so much ❤
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