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PAWS-Post Acute Withdrawl Syndrome

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Old 07-24-2011, 03:13 PM
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Wink PAWS-Post Acute Withdrawl Syndrome

Great bit of information I found.
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There are two stages of withdrawal. The first stage is the acute stage, which usually lasts at most a few weeks. During this stage, you may experience physical withdrawal symptoms. But every drug is different, and every person is different.

The second stage of withdrawal is called the Post Acute Withdrawal Syndrome (PAWS). During this stage you'll have fewer physical symptoms, but more emotional and psychological withdrawal symptoms.

Post-acute withdrawal occurs because your brain chemistry is gradually returning to normal. As your brain improves the levels of your brain chemicals fluctuate as they approach the new equilibrium causing post-acute withdrawal symptoms.

The most common post-acute withdrawal symptoms are:

Mood swings
Anxiety
Irritability
Tiredness
Variable energy
Low enthusiasm
Variable concentration
Disturbed sleep

Post-acute withdrawal feels like a rollercoaster of symptoms. In the beginning, your symptoms will change minute to minute and hour to hour. Later as you recover further they will disappear for a few weeks or months only to return again. As you continue to recover the good stretches will get longer and longer. But the bad periods of post-acute withdrawal can be just as intense and last just as long.

Each post-acute withdrawal episode usually last for a few days. Once you've been in recovery for a while, you will find that each post-acute withdrawal episode usually lasts for a few days. There is no obvious trigger for most episodes. You will wake up one day feeling irritable and have low energy. If you hang on for just a few days, it will lift just as quickly as it started. After a while you'll develop confidence that you can get through post-acute withdrawal, because you'll know that each episode is time limited.

Post-acute withdrawal usually lasts for 2 years. This is one of the most important things you need to remember. If you're up for the challenge you can get though this. But if you think that post-acute withdrawal will only last for a few months, then you'll get caught off guard, and when you're disappointed you're more likely to relapse.

How to Survive Post-Acute Withdrawal

Be patient. Two years can feel like a long time if you're in a rush to get through it. You can't hurry recovery. But you can get through it one day at a time.

If you try to rush your recovery, or resent post-acute withdrawal, or try to bulldoze your way through, you'll become exhausted. And when you're exhausted you'll think of using to escape.

Post-acute withdrawal symptoms are a sign that your brain is recovering. They are the result of your brain chemistry gradually going back to normal. Therefore don't resent them. But remember, even after one year, you are still only half way there.

Go with the flow. Withdrawal symptoms are uncomfortable. But the more you resent them the worse they'll seem. You'll have lots of good days over the next two years. Enjoy them. You'll also have lots of bad days. On those days, don't try to do too much. Take care of yourself, focus on your recovery, and you'll get through this.

Practice self-care. Give yourself lots of little breaks over the next two years. Tell yourself "what I am doing is enough." Be good to yourself. That is what most addicts can't do, and that's what you must learn in recovery. Recovery is the opposite of addiction.

Sometimes you'll have little energy or enthusiasm for anything. Understand this and don't over book your life. Give yourself permission to focus on your recovery.

Post-acute withdrawal can be a trigger for relapse. You'll go for weeks without any withdrawal symptoms, and then one day you'll wake up and your withdrawal will hit you like a ton of bricks. You'll have slept badly. You'll be in a bad mood. Your energy will be low. And if you're not prepared for it, if you think that post-acute withdrawal only lasts for a few months, or if you think that you'll be different and it won't be as bad for you, then you'll get caught off guard. But if you know what to expect you can do this.

Being able to relax will help you through post-acute withdrawal. When you're tense you tend to dwell on your symptoms and make them worse. When you're relaxed it's easier to not get caught up in them. You aren't as triggered by your symptoms which means you're less likely to relapse.

Remember, every relapse, no matter how small undoes the gains your brain has made during recovery. Without abstinence everything will fall apart. With abstinence everything is possible.


Post-Acute Withdrawal Symptoms - Relapse Prevention Strategies
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Old 07-24-2011, 04:00 PM
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This is my favorite PAWs link - no offence Tuff, but it's a little more positive

PAWS « Digital Dharma

D
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Old 07-24-2011, 04:28 PM
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great link Dee , thanks. As someone who has always had a fascination/interest in Buddhism as well, I just added that site to my favorites. I had not come across that one before in my web-surfing~!
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Old 07-24-2011, 06:41 PM
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Does the use of certain medications, such as the occasional Ambien to sleep, or antidepressants, interfere with PAWS recovery? These informational sites do not speak to these issues. Any anecdotal stories or insight?
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Old 07-24-2011, 07:00 PM
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Apart from OTC painkillers I'm not on any medications,4theKidz, so I have no experience to share.

These sites we link to aren't meant to take the place of professional advice or guidance.

D
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Old 07-25-2011, 04:16 AM
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I am on meds for bipolar 2 and started at about 2 weeks clean. I feel they have helped me significantly but ad my dr warned, nothing he could prescribe could compare to the amount of pills I was putting into my body. I remember that when things get rough.

Today I am grateful for these meds and this website. Yesterday for the first time in 7 years I felt 'normal' .... I can't even describe it. Like someone put the electrical fire out in my brain. Btw- I only used the past 20 months.

I still have PAWS but do feel my meds help and my psych is well versed in addiction recovery.

This is only my experience.

Thank Carl.

Thank the Universe.
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