Originally Posted by
rrich
I'm not sure if it is the same one, but I've seen the documentary. It was disturbing to say the least. Sort of related, a 14 YO girl next door took her life several years ago.
Long story short version. Her parents went through a exceptionally nasty divorce. The mom would doctor shop for opioid prescriptions. Dad had been arrested several times for driving under the influence. The girl was on anti-depressants. The dad not wanting the girl to be like mom, took her off of the anti-depressants. As she was coming down from the anti-depressants that she hung herself, at 14 years old. About a year after the daughters suicide, mom died of an overdose. Dad was and still is devastated.
And here is the lesson for everyone.
When someone is depressed, they can't do anything, not even harm themselves. When someone is on anti-depressants, they feel great and have no desire to harm themselves. When someone is coming down off of anti-depressants, there is period of time where they aren't fully depressed nor are they fully well. It is during this time that most suicides of depressed people occur.
The problem with anti-depressants is that they tend make the user feel great but also the user is in a fog. After a while on anti-depressants the person feels great but wants to shed the fog. They think that since they feel great they can get rid of the fog by stopping or cutting back on the drug. It is a vicious circle.
If we know someone that is taking anti-depressants, we need to give them all the attention and love that they need plus more love and attention that they don't realize that they need. We need to be alert for a sudden mood changes in the person as they may have stopped taking their anti-depressants.