Sorry. I did not mean to make it sound like the same thing. But the analogy is apt. Surviving acute and protracted benzo withdrawal very much came with the same agonizing unpredictability and disabling fear as navigating through a dark, electrical storm in a shaky aircraft. But we made it, you know? I know of people who jumped from tall buildings under that kind of pressure. I bent, for sure; but I did not break. It’s not pride, but I have great confidence now. Or at least it’s the peace of knowing the worse thing that will ever (probably) happen to me has happened to me. Unfortunately, my doctors handled the situation with such brutal incompetence I will never invest that much trust in a psychiatric provider ever again. And I will always struggle with some residual anger.
Yes, I feel for you about the brutal incompetence that adds insult to injury. I also found I could not get through to the medical establishment. They should have treated my condition holistically, but they simply would not wrap their minds around it. I had acute inflammation throughout my body, including in my cardio-vascular system, which was actually life-threatening, but it needed to be treated at the root cause, as a hormonal issue. The inflammation due to extreme metabolic stress was not detected, and I did not have the medical knowledge to describe my symptoms effectively. I eventually figured out on my own that the extreme physiological and mental stress from menopause was causing my inflammatory condition. Yes, we are survivors. I agree that weaker souls may have perished.
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