Shown: posts 1 to 10 of 10. This is the beginning of the thread.
Posted by Jeroen on May 29, 2008, at 11:34:51
can i volunteer freely to go into the isolation room ??
i need some quit and i d like everybody to leave me alone tomorrow, i also want to get on clozapinehow will this psychiatrist react?
Posted by Phillipa on May 29, 2008, at 11:58:24
In reply to can i volunteer to go into the isolation room ??, posted by Jeroen on May 29, 2008, at 11:34:51
Jeroen will probably let you a wise decision. Pdoc will probably be fine about it. Are voices talking to you? Just asking? Love Phillipa
Posted by Jeroen on May 29, 2008, at 11:59:46
In reply to Re: can i volunteer to go into the isolation room ?? » Jeroen, posted by Phillipa on May 29, 2008, at 11:58:24
no voices, just old fashion paranoia and tired of lifeness
Posted by Jeroen on May 29, 2008, at 12:09:59
In reply to Re: can i volunteer to go into the isolation room ?? » Jeroen, posted by Phillipa on May 29, 2008, at 11:58:24
im sick of everything, im on abilify
side effects are terrible, but its treating psychosis someone who effects like anxiety and insomnia, derealizations too feelings of weakness too
Posted by B2chica on May 29, 2008, at 12:53:33
In reply to Re: can i volunteer to go into the isolation room ??, posted by Jeroen on May 29, 2008, at 12:09:59
i'm glad their switching you and in a safe place, they can do it quickly there.
let them help you dear one.
can you take something with you that you can hang on to. like a picture, to keep things ...well. i don't know.i'm not sure i'm much help. i'm not much better myself. but i want You to be better Jeroen. i want them to take good care of you. i want them to be nice to you.
best wishes for you.
let us know how things are working.
b2.
Posted by Jeroen on May 29, 2008, at 12:55:24
In reply to Re: can i volunteer to go into the isolation room » Jeroen, posted by B2chica on May 29, 2008, at 12:53:33
yea i want to make a change in my life and i know they can do it with right meds
but with bad meds it can kill someone .. .. ..
Quoting myself ANNO 2008
Posted by B2chica on May 29, 2008, at 13:04:06
In reply to Re: can i volunteer to go into the isolation room, posted by Jeroen on May 29, 2008, at 12:55:24
now see. this is the Jeroen i remember. you are putting your anger to good use here...proactive for you. still angry but activly helping you.
yes change life for you.
i think i just saw a light jeroen. i've been bad last couple days, ever since i had my baby when my depression hits it hits very quick and very hard, well this geodon (i know is evil for you what it did for you...i still remember video of eyes)
but it's not working well. i cried so much last night. pdoc said to up to 80.anyway not about me about you and change life for you. i think your statement, has given me a glimmer of hope.
thank you
b2c.
Posted by yxibow on May 30, 2008, at 1:49:25
In reply to Re: can i volunteer to go into the isolation room » Jeroen, posted by B2chica on May 29, 2008, at 13:04:06
If one doesn't feel safe and has more than an ideation that they may harm themselves in a way more than just the average ideation that people experience with depression, a hospital is a short term solution for that. That's when one calls 911 or 999 or 112 or whatever your local emergency number is. You live in a place where socialized medicine is taken care of better in some ways, if I'm not mistaken. In the states, a hospital visit should be limited because it can become expensive.
But following up with your doctor is important too -- and being in the community is important also, when one feels they are "safe" again -- remembering that there is no thing as being purely safe, but I'm talking about other things which we need not say for triggers sake. As is said, familiar faces and familiar places are most important. And the inside of a hospital is not typically familiar, but is there for a crisis.
Personally I'm claustrophobic, I'm not sure why one would want to voluntarily be in an isolation room -- that is typically reserved for violent and catatonic patients to isolate and calm down. Its typically a non-voluntary solution, as is non-voluntary holds in hospitals in the first place.
At any rate -- you know only how you feel and must decide if you are reacting to anxiety or whether you really need a hospital stay.
-- best regards
Posted by Jeroen on May 30, 2008, at 5:57:06
In reply to Re: can i volunteer to go into the isolation room, posted by yxibow on May 30, 2008, at 1:49:25
hi, im at the hospital right now and i ask the doctor to prescribe clozapine i also take abilify
Posted by yxibow on June 3, 2008, at 4:56:24
In reply to Re: can i volunteer to go into the isolation room, posted by Jeroen on May 30, 2008, at 5:57:06
> hi, im at the hospital right now and i ask the doctor to prescribe clozapine i also take abilify
Mixing of atypicals is generally not a thing usually done... its very difficult to know what sort of a side effect outcome could occur. Usually you would taper to clozapine.
This would probably violate your confidentiality, but here in a hospital I don't know how you would post to the internet, let alone have a phone call. Anyhow, that's sort of ad-hominem, so don't bother answering that, I probably shouldn't ask.
I hope you do well on the Clozaril.
-- tidings
This is the end of the thread.
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