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New here and new to DR

916 views 12 replies 3 participants last post by  Moral Support 
#1 ·
I have resisted coming to this forum for a few months now because all the advice I get is that being here is navel gazing and it will only make things worse. I don't know if that is true or not, but I would like to share my story.

I am now 50 years old, and have not had any episodes of DR since I was a teen. When I was really young, like 5 to 8 years old I would get episodes that would last a few hours. It was like a switch would flip and everything familiar would look different, like my perspective was totally different. It didn't scare me when I was small and I instinctually knew it would pass, and it always did. I didn't have any overt trauma or anything like that as a child (at least that I was aware of), but I was a very hyper-sensitive child prone to some obsessive thinking.

Fast forward to my teen years, and I only had a few fleeing DR experiences when I was in a classroom at night school. It was the flourescent lighting and being in a classroom at night that set it off, at least that is what I felt and I was not scared of it and it passed quickly.

Now fast forward to 2021. I have been very afraid of COVID. My mother passed away in a nursing home (I was with her, alone in the room), and in April of 2021 I took a fall on the stairs and became very obsessed with not healing. I wouldn't go into the doctor's office and I think I started to lose touch with reality at that point. I was in constant irrational fear and had a couple of short DR episodes in May of 2021. I recognized that feeling from when I was a kid.

I was in pretty bad stress for a couple of months and then in June of 2021 I had a week where my sleep was bad (interupted) and my arms started to prickle and go numb (I didn't know anxiety could do this). I freaked out and went into the hospital and when I went into the ER I further freaked out that the people there were waiting to get COVID tests. I don't even know why my brain went there.......it was a total irrational panic freak out.

Anyway, after that day, I could not sleep anymore. Everytime I tried to sleep I got a head zap that would wake me up. It was torture. I was like this all of July 2021 and finally in August I reached out for pshyciatric help. By this time I felt like I was swimming in a soup of unreality. Every thought that entered my head scared me. Everything I looked at was foreign and scary. I couldn't watch TV or listen to music because everything scared me.

Where am I today? I currently take 20 mg Lexapro, 25 mg Seroquel and 0.5 mg Klonopin. I hate being on medication. I have never taken medication before in my life! I have never been depressed and although I was prone to anxiousness, I could always manage it.

I do feel that I have made progress with the anxiety (I am doing CBT with a therapist), and although the DR is still very much with me, I can watch TV, listen to music and go out for a walk without getting too bent out of shape. Things still seem unfamiliar and I feel detached from my emotions about things. This can be very upsetting and get me really depressed. I used to feel very engaged and connected to things.

That said, I do feel like things are slowly improving. I am starting to feel a little bit of enthusiasm for some things and activites. I just figure it will be a slow, gradual healing process.

If anyone here wants to correspond with me because you have had similar experiences. Please do!
 
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#5 ·
I am a Canadian sister.

Yes, I am working through a mindfulness app called Unwinding Anxiety. Before COVID I tended to have obsessive thought and be on the anxious side, but I had no idea that anixiety and perhaps trauma could lead to feeling like my reality is different. I do feel like I am slowly making some progress and am nowhere near where I was last fall. Yes, self love, patience and support.

I am learning that acceptance is also key. Acceptance and letting the feelings exist without judgement. All new concepts for me.
 
#7 ·
I have been working with the Unwinding Anxiety App to learn mindfullness practice. I think it is helping with the anxiety.

Extreme anxiety and perhaps trauma is what kicked this off for me (as you can see in my story above). After reading the symptoms of others, I don't think that I have a very bad case of DP. My face looks like my own, my hands look like my own, my body feels the same......Everything looks the same......The main symptom I have is that things look the same, but there is an intangible feeling that they are different and unfamiliar. It's like I have lost my emotional connection to the world around me. My eyes and ears also don't feel like they are connected the same anymore. Everything sounds and looks the same, it's more of a feeling of difference. I still have a lot of anxiety and I cry a lot, so I do have some emotion. I also laugh when my sister jokes around and I really feel the laughter. I do feel like there is a big hole in the middle of everything....my sense of contentment, my sense of flow are gone.

This only started last August, and I do feel I have had some improvement (things don't scare me as much anymore - last September, even looking at the TV scared me), so with the hard work I am putting in I still feel confident that I can heal.

One of my main problems is sleep. In fact it was the severe anxiety and insomnia that started me on this path of DP.
 
#8 ·
I was in pretty bad stress for a couple of months and then in June of 2021 I had a week where my sleep was bad (interupted) and my arms started to prickle and go numb (I didn't know anxiety could do this). I freaked out and went into the hospital and when I went into the ER I further freaked out that the people there were waiting to get COVID tests. I don't even know why my brain went there.......it was a total irrational panic freak out.

Anyway, after that day, I could not sleep anymore. Everytime I tried to sleep I got a head zap that would wake me up. It was torture. I was like this all of July 2021 and finally in August I reached out for pshyciatric help. By this time I felt like I was swimming in a soup of unreality. Every thought that entered my head scared me. Everything I looked at was foreign and scary. I couldn't watch TV or listen to music because everything scared me.

Where am I today? I currently take 20 mg Lexapro, 25 mg Seroquel and 0.5 mg Klonopin. I hate being on medication. I have never taken medication before in my life! I have never been depressed and although I was prone to anxiousness, I could always manage it.

I do feel that I have made progress with the anxiety (I am doing CBT with a therapist), and although the DR is still very much with me, I can watch TV, listen to music and go out for a walk without getting too bent out of shape. Things still seem unfamiliar and I feel detached from my emotions about things. This can be very upsetting and get me really depressed. I used to feel very engaged and connected to things.

That said, I do feel like things are slowly improving. I am starting to feel a little bit of enthusiasm for some things and activites. I just figure it will be a slow, gradual healing process.

If anyone here wants to correspond with me because you have had similar experiences. Please do!
Thank you so much for sharing - I left the most relevant parts of how I feel from your post. I never had symptoms as a child but have had a lot of stresses/triggers the past few months I feel may have led to my depersonalization episodes. I feel exactly as you do, especially with the obsessive thoughts and everything scaring me. It’s so nice to know I’m not alone. You also explained it in such an eloquent way; I can neeevvveeerrr explain how I’m feeling which makes it even more frustrating. But now I’m gonna reference your comment to my psychiatrist to hopefully help her with a diagnosis and some insight. I’m glad you’re making progress it gives me hope.
 
#9 ·
It feels good that I can help someone else. To give you hope, things have gotten better for me since last fall. It's a slow healing process, I think. I have read a lot on this condition, and they don't know much, but I do get the impression that many people do recover.

Try to stay engaged in things on the outside world to keep your mind from diving inwards. That is probably my best advice. Don't judge your feelings, just let your thoughts/feelings be as they are. This is very hard, but I think it is starting to work for me.
 
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