
Celerity
shape without form, shade without colour
- Jan 24, 2021
- 2,732
My anxiety has improved as I have gotten older, but I still experience acute episodes every now and then, particularly in regard to work and school, and I have found Valium really helpful in the past. I understand that doctors have started to frown upon issuing benzo prescriptions for good reasons, but I can't help but feel like their behavior constitutes a massive overcorrection.
Though the preponderance of the evidence against benzos is for long-term users who started decades ago, even getting a short-term prescription is exceedingly difficult. I have not tried it myself, but I have heard enough from other people who did this that doctors will interrogate you on why you want them with the underlying tenor being that you are a weak-willed, immoral person for even requesting such a thing.
To me, it just seems like one more way doctors often completely disregard QoL in favor of risk aversion. You know what also represents a health risk to me as a patient? Losing my job and not being able to buy food or medical care. This, of course, never enters into the equation for people who enjoy some of the best job security in the nation.
I know for a fact that my anxiety has contributed to me leaving past jobs early and to a firing I endured last year. Were they bad situations regardless of my tendency for anxiousness? Hell yeah! Shake and stir unethical companies with amoral, narcissistic bosses for a violently bitter mental health cocktail! But being right on the edge of wanting to flee the building or bite somebody's head off certainly didn't help matters.
Because my provider is strongly averse to benzos, he prescribed me propranolol, a beta blocker, for acute anxiety. He instructed me to request that my employer let me sit down if I felt like passing out after taking one of them because the drug causes blood pressure to plummet. I then realized that my medical provider would rather risk me passing out and cracking my head open on the fucking floor than risk me getting addicted to evil, scary, boogeyman benzos.
This was a few months ago and certain aspects of my job improved to the point where I don't feel I need Valium. I have not risked taking the propranolol even once. That said, if something really disastrous came up and I needed to be able to keep my shit together so that I can continue to feed myself, it would be nice to know that I could get a short-term (1-2 week ) prescription for Valium. As it is, prayers from my religious aunt and blacking out with a deliciously percussive head smack to the floor will have to do.
Though the preponderance of the evidence against benzos is for long-term users who started decades ago, even getting a short-term prescription is exceedingly difficult. I have not tried it myself, but I have heard enough from other people who did this that doctors will interrogate you on why you want them with the underlying tenor being that you are a weak-willed, immoral person for even requesting such a thing.
To me, it just seems like one more way doctors often completely disregard QoL in favor of risk aversion. You know what also represents a health risk to me as a patient? Losing my job and not being able to buy food or medical care. This, of course, never enters into the equation for people who enjoy some of the best job security in the nation.
I know for a fact that my anxiety has contributed to me leaving past jobs early and to a firing I endured last year. Were they bad situations regardless of my tendency for anxiousness? Hell yeah! Shake and stir unethical companies with amoral, narcissistic bosses for a violently bitter mental health cocktail! But being right on the edge of wanting to flee the building or bite somebody's head off certainly didn't help matters.
Because my provider is strongly averse to benzos, he prescribed me propranolol, a beta blocker, for acute anxiety. He instructed me to request that my employer let me sit down if I felt like passing out after taking one of them because the drug causes blood pressure to plummet. I then realized that my medical provider would rather risk me passing out and cracking my head open on the fucking floor than risk me getting addicted to evil, scary, boogeyman benzos.
This was a few months ago and certain aspects of my job improved to the point where I don't feel I need Valium. I have not risked taking the propranolol even once. That said, if something really disastrous came up and I needed to be able to keep my shit together so that I can continue to feed myself, it would be nice to know that I could get a short-term (1-2 week ) prescription for Valium. As it is, prayers from my religious aunt and blacking out with a deliciously percussive head smack to the floor will have to do.