cracklingroses
Member
- Sep 10, 2023
- 59
I am curious about other's experiences with ECT.
To give context about my experience, I was 16 years old when I was forced to have ten rounds of ECT. The only reason I didn't have more was because my mom stopped letting me have them as I couldn't walk or talk on my own. I could only sleep. Which could have been the combination of all the antipsychotics and mood stabilizers they were experimenting on me too, but the ECT was what really did me in. Complete cognitive impairment. TMI, but I often woke up in the recovery room after ECT covered in my own excrement.
I now struggle with brain damage but who is going to help me with that when all of the medical complex supports the psychiatric complex? No one will take me seriously because they all support these horrible "treatments".
I wasn't even the youngest person getting ECT. I was with a young girl who barely turned 13. She would cry everytime we went for it and it broke my heart. I would've cried too but I was so sedated I didn't even realize what was happening before it was too late. And of course they aren't going to warn you of the risks (not that I had any choice anyways) they told my parents and I this was perfectly safe.
Perfectly safe. Just as they said with antipsychotics that left me bedridden with my eyes rolling back into my head and uncontrollable muscle movements. Literally stating the "pros" outweigh the cons.
One day I swear to god we will see ECT, antipsychotics, mood stabilizers, and even SSRI's as bad as lobotomies. Especially ECT. How the public continues to remain so ignorant about the damage is beyond me. Maybe more people need to be injured, unfortunately. The Antipsychiatry movement is growing fast though. Hopefully we can eventually make change.
I tried to file a law suit but it took me over two years just to come out of my medical stupor from all of the medical abuse I endured since I was 12. I finally took myself off all meds at 18. Still took over two years just to come to a place of being able to advocate for myself. Not perfectly, but a lot further than I was. By then, the statute of limitations ran out, and I couldn't sue for medical negligence. Although the court probably would have sided with the psychiatrists anyways.
Plus having a diagnosis of "Schizoaffective Disorder" makes it so much harder to be taken seriously as they can write me off as "needing the treatment". Though I don't think anything could justify how far they went, when I was just an adolescent with my brain still developing...
To give context about my experience, I was 16 years old when I was forced to have ten rounds of ECT. The only reason I didn't have more was because my mom stopped letting me have them as I couldn't walk or talk on my own. I could only sleep. Which could have been the combination of all the antipsychotics and mood stabilizers they were experimenting on me too, but the ECT was what really did me in. Complete cognitive impairment. TMI, but I often woke up in the recovery room after ECT covered in my own excrement.
I now struggle with brain damage but who is going to help me with that when all of the medical complex supports the psychiatric complex? No one will take me seriously because they all support these horrible "treatments".
I wasn't even the youngest person getting ECT. I was with a young girl who barely turned 13. She would cry everytime we went for it and it broke my heart. I would've cried too but I was so sedated I didn't even realize what was happening before it was too late. And of course they aren't going to warn you of the risks (not that I had any choice anyways) they told my parents and I this was perfectly safe.
Perfectly safe. Just as they said with antipsychotics that left me bedridden with my eyes rolling back into my head and uncontrollable muscle movements. Literally stating the "pros" outweigh the cons.
One day I swear to god we will see ECT, antipsychotics, mood stabilizers, and even SSRI's as bad as lobotomies. Especially ECT. How the public continues to remain so ignorant about the damage is beyond me. Maybe more people need to be injured, unfortunately. The Antipsychiatry movement is growing fast though. Hopefully we can eventually make change.
I tried to file a law suit but it took me over two years just to come out of my medical stupor from all of the medical abuse I endured since I was 12. I finally took myself off all meds at 18. Still took over two years just to come to a place of being able to advocate for myself. Not perfectly, but a lot further than I was. By then, the statute of limitations ran out, and I couldn't sue for medical negligence. Although the court probably would have sided with the psychiatrists anyways.
Plus having a diagnosis of "Schizoaffective Disorder" makes it so much harder to be taken seriously as they can write me off as "needing the treatment". Though I don't think anything could justify how far they went, when I was just an adolescent with my brain still developing...