Panic Attack Medication - A Vital Tip You Must Use

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If you've been taking panic attack medication for any length of time, you know how difficult it can be to stop.
Within days you'll be experiencing the dreaded withdrawal symptoms, and in many cases, your anxiety will temporarily return in massive amounts, making you far more likely to need to restart your medication.
As you can probably tell, I'm talking from experience.
After many years of suffering with severe panic and anxiety, I finally accepted my doctor's suggestion that I try an anti-anxiety medication.
The specific type of drug I was given was an SSRI, more commonly referred to as an anti-depressant.
These are the most common drugs used to treat anxiety.
My initial reaction to the panic attack medication was so bad that I had to try 3 different varieties of SSRI before I found one that didn't make me feel awful.
And when I found one I could tolerate, I took it for about 9 months.
The crazy thing is, the medication didn't do me any good at all.
So, when I got to 9 months without any positive signs from taking the drug, I decided it was time to stop taking it.
But the moment I did, I got dozens of unbearable withdrawal symptoms.
Dizziness, tiredness, depersonalization, trembling, numbness.
I could write a list as long as my arm.
I even tried the doctor's suggestion of going from a whole pill a day to half a pill a day, but even that caused me big problems.
In the end, I used an idea I found online, and I'd like to share it with you in case you're having the same problems coming off your anti-anxiety drugs.
What I did was crush up each pill before I took it, and diluted it in a glass of orange juice.
I would drink the orange juice each day, with the pill diluted in it, but each day I would drink less and less of the juice.
This means I could reduce my dose by as little as 2 or 3% a day, instead of jumping down half a pill.
Over a period of about two months I got to the point of drinking just about a tenth of the glass of orange juice, with no withdrawal symptoms at all.
And when I finally stopped taking the pills altogether, I was also fine.
So if your panic attack medication is proving tough to stop, try the method I used and you'll be amazed how effective it can be.
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