• MagicShel@programming.dev
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        3 months ago

        I couldn’t even have them. Sex felt kinda good, but nothing that was ever going to arrive anywhere. It felt good like someone rubbing your arm feels good. I couldn’t even get myself there and that is seriously messed up for me.

        • LustyArgonianMana@lemmy.world
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          3 months ago

          Yeah I’d spend hours trying to cum with a vibrator, and my clit would go numb before I came sometimes. If I did cum, it was the weakest most unsatisfying orgasm

          • MagicShel@programming.dev
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            3 months ago

            I think Wellbutrin was like that for me.

            They recently tried to put me on Duloxetine for migraine prevention. I couldn’t cum but I could sure get blue balls. Without getting into details I have an extremely high libido. Like per day, not per week or month.

            I couldn’t stay on that med long enough to say if it worked. I hate migraines but that was impossible. Fortunately after that, they put me on Ajovy and that fixes the migraines with almost no side effects.

    • Chozo@fedia.io
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      3 months ago

      This was my experience, as well. Every experience felt dull or muted. If anyone remembers adjusting the rabbit-ear antenna on an old TV, it felt like you were just an inch away from perfect reception; you can still tell what’s going on, but there’s a thick haze that just flattens everything out.

  • Today@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    Like you’re one of a kajillion people who have ever lived, like an ant, and if someone came along and stepped on you, you’d be dead, just like most of the kajillion people who have ever lived, only to be replaced by another.

    ETA- also sweaty, yawny, and either very interested or very not interested in sex and/or food.

  • cheee@lemmings.world
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    3 months ago

    First week it made me feel like there was a very light electric current running through my body. Not unpleasant, just a bit odd. Tingly. And yawning uncontrollably for a few hours after taking them for a few weeks.

    Again, not unpleasant. But I absolutely embraced them, I did not fight the effects. I was very, very glad to try medications.

    Now, after like 4 or 5 years, I can clearly tell the difference between before and after - the difference is, instead of downward spiralling into a hideous pit that I couldn’t climb out of, that spiralling downwards still starts, but it stops.

    Instead of falling into the pit, I can just choose not to keep going down.

    Things are still upsetting and I still take things worse than other people but I dont become out-of-control spiralling downwards forever until I can’t function. I have gained the ability to shrug and go “that sucks but, whatever”.

  • Acronychal@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    For me it felt like an uncomfortably mild head high. Some slight anxiety spikes, mild SI, quicker to anger.

  • ChonkyOwlbear@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    Everything felt lighter. Depression for me felt like someone had increased the effects of gravity just for me. It took immense effort to get out of bed or to make myself move to accomplish anything. The meds turned gravity back to normal.

  • Phenomephrene@thebrainbin.org
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    3 months ago

    Taking SSRIs, I feel like I’m living with an anvil strapped to my back.

    Before I started on them, I felt like I was wrapped around the singularity at the center of a massive black hole. Utterly, utterly crushed; reduced down to the size of something that may as well be nothing. So far past the event horizon that I couldn’t even see it anymore.

    At least an anvil can be useful for smithing something practical, hearty, and if one has the skill, something artful.

  • mommykink@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    Like the first ten minutes after waking up from a really hard, hot, nap, all day, every day.

    • Mayor Poopington@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      Common antidepressant. Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors work be limiting how much serotonin your neurons gather back up after use. More serotonin around leads to more happy. Or so the theory goes. Antidepressants are very much vibes based and the best way to see what works is trial and error.

  • cheee@lemmings.world
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    3 months ago

    First week it made me feel like there was a very light electric current running through my body. Not unpleasant, just a bit odd. Tingly. And yawning uncontrollably for a few hours after taking them for a few weeks.

    Again, not unpleasant. But I absolutely embraced them, I did not fight the effects. I was very, very glad to try medications.

    Now, after like 4 or 5 years, I can clearly tell the difference between before and after - the difference is, instead of downward spiralling into a hideous pit that I couldn’t climb out of, that spiralling downwards still starts, but it stops.

    Instead of falling into the pit, I can just choose not to keep going down.

    Things are still upsetting and I still take things worse than other people but I dont become out-of-control spiralling downwards forever until I can’t function. I have gained the ability to shrug and go “that sucks but, whatever”.

  • Delta_V@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    They have no effect until you stop taking them. Then you hallucinate for a few weeks, like a low to medium dose of LSD.

  • SavvyWolf@pawb.social
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    3 months ago

    So, I want to preface this with “it affects everyone differently”. If you are at all curious about it and live in a place with functioning healthcare, you may as well give them a try. Worst comes to worst, you try them for a month and they don’t work. Personally, I kinda wish I had tried them sooner.

    Anyway, for me I think that they allow me to feel more of a “range” of emotions. I still have good and bad days, but that’s better than bad and terrible days. It’s actually interesting to me, because it feels like I’ve unlocked a range of emotions and need to learn how to manage them like a normal person.

    I also sometimes get this weird euphoric feeling that everything is going to work out and that the world isn’t as bad as it seems. I also seem to be better at motivating myself, although still not good at it yet. Since taking them, I’ve been able to push boundries and do things I wasn’t confident doing before. But I still don’t exercise enough and eat too much takeout. :P

    However, I do feel that there’s a tiredness in the back of my head that inhibits my ability to do intellectual tasks? Someone else described it as feeling like carrying an anvil around, and I can kinda see that. Although I did pick up a really bad habit of bedrotting during my depression, which I have yet to shake off. Maybe if I exercise more regularly I will feel better?

    For libedo… I do feel that it has gone down a lot. Especially in the first few weeks of taking them. However, I also was really worried and obsessing over that part of them before taking them, so maybe I placebo’d myself into thinking I had issues? The biggest sex organ is the brain and all that. A lot of my anxiety and depression was related to sex stuff as well, so that may tie into it.

    Anyway, that’s my experiences. Let me know if anyone has any more questions. I like talking about myself. :P