Thanks bohm, I really appreciate what you just said.
For me, everything is about my relationship with the person. Life is about relationships. I am by NO MEANS a suck-up, brown-noser, etc. I have always had more ‘adult’ interests and typically adult/authority figures have always seen a very bright future for me. I am very serious about my academic success. Even in the midst of full-on addiction, I would still put school first (e.g. Not go on a coke-binge because I know that’s going to mess up everything with school, if it’s exam week, even if I really wanted to). I’ve always been kind of a nihilist/existentialist, and I chose to value school first and foremost for this stage of my life, and that’s helped me. (See this is one of those tangents you’ll notice in my posts, lol, I have so many things I want to say every time, I end up saying them all, sometimes not in the correct order).
I WAS talking about relationships. My psychiatrist is a good psychiatrist, but definitely was not going to give me any benzodiazepine’s the whole time I saw him, until we developed a relationship, until he saw I had turned a corner, saw that spark in me that was just beginning to ignite, and until the other non-benzodiazepine medications we tried had failed to have any affect. I build relationships with everyone I feel I need to. (Note: this is not solely based on my ambitions or anything like that. I build relationships with everyone I encounter and have any sort of contact with over an extended period of time. This HAPPENS to include professors, deans, authority figures, etc.) Having good relationships with my professors, with the deans, with my teachers in high school, with my doctors and therapists, all that has only enhanced my ability to perform and succeed. At times, yes it has given me a sense of entitlement because I am often able to slip by the rules, in any environment ; ) because of those relationships, but the most important part of a relationship for me is holding up my end of the bargain. I can charm someone all I want to, and I have a pretty good personality when I’m not freaked out, especially when talking to ‘adults’, but I have to show results, which I always have, besides the one or two times I didn’t, which crushed me. I have very very close personal relationships with my friends. My friends are my family. I have drug friends that I would get fucked up with, but I also have ‘real friends’ that I love and would die for. One of which is missing from my life right now because of what happened earlier this year (the suicide attempt hurt her so badly, she hasn’t gotten over it enough to sustain any real conversation/contact with me).
You’re right about Klonopin being favored by psychiatrists because of it’s longer half-life. A longer half-life means less of a rush, and the faster the drug takes affect, the more addiction prone the drug is (e.g. Smoking crack vs. Snorting cocaine). I don’t get a high either, unless I took them with other drugs. Benzodiazepines have always just made me feel ‘normal’, although the fact that my mother breast-fed me while taking them, might have something to do with that, lol.
O yeah, I wanted to say this: I saw your post about your worries about going back to work. Man.. Typing about this is bringing tears to my eyes because I know exactly what it is you feel. I was a top student, got into a top 15 college, performed extremely well, very socially popular, in a good fraternity, selling drugs, living the high life (I thought). Meanwhile, because of my poor work habits I had to rely on things like adderall to keep me up for days at a time to study for exam week, or finish papers, etc. All of a sudden second semester, I’m preparing research for a paper, and I can’t read anymore. I just can’t do it. I retire for the night, thinking I was just tired. Got up, still couldn’t do it. Had to ask for my first ever extension on an assignment, the beginning of the ‘end’. I could barely read the rest of the term and I had to withdraw at the end of the term, having 2 incompletes in my best two classes. I went to eye doctors for a year before I had any concrete diagnosis, and by then what started as a simple muscular deficiency (convergence insufficiency) turned worse, and I still have yet to regain my former eye strength/reading ability. ANYWAYS, after leaving my school, I could not even write the one page entrance essay for going into a school local to where my family lived. I couldn’t do anything because I was so paralyzed. I had a mental-block. I was so damaged at my rapid decline and embarrassment, that I just couldn’t put any thing together. I got through that term with drugs (that one page essay, high as all get-out, was the beginning, lol).
The next term I was in rehab, missed that one. This past term in the spring I started to overcome it, but I had so many problems with the medications, it left me even more traumatized, until suddenly the past 2 months I’ve come out of it firing on all cylinders. I have special lenses with micro-prisms that help me read, although my eyes still get lazy and look messed up (a big cause of anxiety for a person that already had social anxiety issues!), but I’ve adjusted to that. Right now I finished all the work that I missed and the end of last term because I had been admitted after the attempt on my life. I simply could not do it at all during the whole summer, until I got back into school, taking 2 classes, and slowly got into the rhythm of things. The past 6 weeks I worked my ass off all day and all night, finishing the massive amount of work I needed to do, while keeping up with my classes now. This kept the door open for me, this kept the glimmer of hope alive for me to able to go back to the school I originally went to and get the degree I wanted originally. To accomplish the things I set out to do 4 years ago, I had to complete this work, it was do or die, thank god I was able to.
That was important, however, I believe the next 2 months in which I’m going to have plenty of free-time and need to work on my physical health and time management abilities are going to be even more important for my long-term success. If I can keep this up and move back to full-time course load next term and do well, I’m going to try and get back into my original college.
OK, sorry for like the biography, but like I said before, I’m a ‘personal’ person, and I think it’s important in evaluating anyone’s circumstances, or offering help to anyone’s circumstances, to lay out your situation. Hope I didn’t bore anybody!