Top 5 Most Common Myths about Taking Antidepressants

Don’t be ashamed to get the help you need — however you need it.

As a person who has depression, is on medications, and is in therapy (I swear, I’m sane!), I’ve had many people comment on my use of antidepressants, or spout myths around me about medications for depression that simply aren’t true.

To put it simply: I’m tired of hearing it and feeling awkward having to correct them or inform them concerning their mistakes. (But hey, you live and you learn, I guess?)

10 Agonizing Truths Depressed People Never Talk About

Anyway, from both experience and research, I just wanted to debunk a few of the most common myths that I regularly hear about antidepressants and depression:

1. Antidepressants Make You Happy

Nope. As amazing as it would be to have a happiness pill, that is not a thing. Otherwise it would be in MUCH higher demand, right?

But no, that is not a reality. When a person has clinical depression, they have an overall low feeling that causes constant distress. All an antidepressant does is lessen those constant negative thoughts and feelings so a person can actually make it through a day feeling relatively normal (whatever that means).

2. They’re the Easy Way Out

First off, there isn’t really an “out” of clinical depression. If you have it, you have it, though over time it is possible to be weaned off of certain medications (discuss this with your doctor, if interested). But as stated above, antidepressants aren’t happy-pills. A person with depression will still deal with his or her depression, but on a much smaller scale, if prescribed properly.

3. All You REALLY Need Is Therapy

The first thing you should know is that not even therapists think this, so if you really believe you’re more aware than professionals and people actually suffering from depression, sorry, but you’re wrong.

While I personally think everyone can benefit from therapy, any therapist/psychologist/etc. will tell you that there are some people who can benefit only so much from therapy, and thus need the assistance of antidepressants. Depressed patients have this sort of impenetrable wall around them that will make it difficult or impossible for any therapy alone to truly help.

What It’s Like Inside The Psychological Purgatory of Depression

4. Antidepressants Give You Horrible Side Effects That Make You MORE Depressed

This is only the case for people who:

a) Don’t have clinical depression, but were very sad and were wrongly prescribed medication.

b) Need a different medication

Lots of people are prescribed antidepressants who shouldn’t be. Before taking antidepressants, a person should be aware if there is a cause for the mood change (such as the death of a loved one) or whether its an overall constant feeling. If an antidepressant doesn’t have any depression to treat, other reactions to it can occur.

This should not deter you from looking into the potential side-effects of your medication, and if bothersome or dangerous side-effects occur, you should speak with your primary care doctor to find another solution immediately.

5. They Numb You

Antidepressant treatments are pretty unique, and there’s definitely no one-size-fits-all medication. Sometimes the first medication taken isn’t the right one, either because of side effects, the medication is simply not working, or actually triggering other feelings that are abnormal.

If any of these things are a concern, a doctor is an appointment away, and your physician will happily help you find something better.

I was lucky enough, when first prescribed, to have the medication work great! My depression numbed me to every feeling but sadness and anger, so once my antidepressant worked into my system, my range of feelings actually expanded to a “normal” variety.

I still remember sitting in my room at the end of a day and thinking: woah…people can feel like THIS? I’m allowed to feel this okay?? It was a freeing feeling and I have no regrets.

It’s certainly not for everyone, and I don’t think that antidepressants are even the perfect solution. But if prescribed correctly, they can help so much. Basically, don’t knock it ‘til you try it (safely), and even then, don’t knock it until you’ve tried another. Make sense?

Published by Meg Duke

💪🏼 🍕 Fitness + Pizza —> It’s all about balance! 🧠 Licensed Psychotherapist 👋🏼 Get info on becoming my Client or a Coach!

Leave a Reply

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out /  Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out /  Change )

Connecting to %s

%d bloggers like this: