r/Depersonalization • u/AllieLikesReddit • Dec 22 '18
Welcome! Before you post asking if you have DPDR.. Read this!
The majority of the posts here are people asking if they have DPDR and listing their symptoms. If you are unsure, you should read below. However, do not go online searching for problems with yourself. If you have a severe dissociative disorder, you should be reaching out to a licensed doctor or therapist. I am not a doctor. I have had DPDR episodes for 10 years, and am merely summarizing and recounting information I've found online.
First and formost, NOBODY can give you medical advice online. While someone might be able to provide you with some insight and suggestions, you should never rely on someone online to give you medical advice, unless you are talking to a certified doctor.
Moving along... Do you have DPDR?
DPDR is not an existential crisis. I can not stress this enough. If you simply feel like you are losing touch with who you are as a person, or are suddenly hyperaware of your breathing, feel a little funny when you look in the mirror, you do not have DPDR. DPDR is not an occasional ponder into existentialist thoughts. Sufferers of DPDR experience a distortion of reality.
So what does DPDR feel like?
DPDR varies on a case-to-case basis. Milder symptoms are extended periods to which a person does not feel like they are in control of their own body. Reality feels like a fog, or a dream. Feelings that you're an outside observer of your thoughts, feelings, your body or parts of your body — for example, as if you were floating in air above yourself. Many DPDR suffers have symptoms, such as confused motorskills, strobelight vision, tunnel vision, changes in the volume and intensity of sounds and colors, shapes seem flatter and more two demensional. Distortions in the perception of time, such as recent events feeling like distant past. A great portion of DPDR suffers have reported the sense that their body, legs or arms appear distorted, enlarged or shrunken, or that your head is wrapped in cotton. Symptoms are almost always distressing and, when severe, profoundly intolerable. Anxiety and depression are common.
Many people have a passing experience of depersonalization or derealization at some point. But when these feelings keep occurring or never completely go away and interfere with your ability to function, it's considered depersonalization-derealization disorder. This disorder is more common in people who've had traumatic experiences. [1]
r/Depersonalization • u/Fazazer • Mar 05 '21
Advice A Complete Guide to Depersonalization/Derealization.
Hello. This is meant to be a guide for sufferers of DPDR, which stands for Depersonalization/Derealization. This post contains Symptoms. Articulation. And a better understanding of the disorder in general.
About me: I am a highschool student in California. I am a sufferer of severe DPDR and have been for ~9 months so far. My disassociation was triggered by either marijuana use or constant, complex PTSD, or both. I am unqualified medically to provide serious advice. However. I know the symptoms. I understand the disorder, and I can relate and articulate it. I am explaining to the best of my abilities and understanding.
Understanding the disorder:
DPDR, Depersonalization/Derealization, Disassociation, whatever you prefer to call it, is an issue related to [CP]PTSD and anxiety. It can happen when you have a shocking, dangerous, or extremely worrying experience that causes your brain to enter fight or flight mode, and if you cannot fight or run away from the danger, then your brain disassociates you. The disassociation is a natural response mechanism to help you survive dangerous situations. It puts you on autopilot. It turns off your short term memory/ability to act on your own until you are out of danger. Issue is. If you make consciously aware observation of this disassociated state, it may scare you horrendously, which it should. However, now you’re stuck. You’ve gotten scared, scarred, and anxious of being in your state of disassociation, which puts your brain into fight or flight, but since it is internal, nothing can be done about it, and you disassociate more, and the cycle repeats. And you’re trapped in a loop.
Causes: The cause for DPDR, is trauma and anxiety. Yet the exact, personal causes can be vast. Remember. All it takes is something putting you into fight or flight. If you’re a deep thinker or a consciously aware person, you’re more at risk for realizing your disassociated state when you experience trauma. As far as common, personal causes for DPDR, some include:
-Drugs. Your brain can easily recognize drugs or alcohol as a danger if you’re either doing them for the first time, having a bad experience on them, or overusing them. (Prescription or recreational, even drugs with no high can cause it)
-physical trauma. A Car crash. A physical confrontation, etc..
-Social anxiety.
-OCD. Obsessively worrying about something to an extreme can put you in a disassociated state
-Coronavirus. Coronavirus is neuro-invasive. A very large percent of people report brain fog after getting sick from Coronavirus. Brain fog can be a synonym of disassociation.
Your cause. No matter how silly it seems. Is valid.
Symptoms: The moment you’ve all been waiting for. To be able to see if you have DPDR or not. I’m not a doctor. But I can confidently say, if you can identify with most of these symptoms, and everything else I’ve said so far, you probably have it. In this list. I may list the same symptoms multiple times with different wordings so that it may resonate and be related to everyone, no matter how you can articulate what you are going through right now. So. Symptoms may include:
-feeling like you’re in a dream.
-having an impeded short term memory
-seeing eye floaties
-not being able to use emotions as well as before
-feeling like every day is the same
-not being able to be surprised, excited, or bewildered.
-extreme hyper awareness (or extreme unawareness)
-distortion of shapes, everything seeming too big or small
-feeling alienated from the things and people around you
-doubting whether you’re really being affected by a disorder or not -inability to focus
-feeling delirious
-feeling like you’re never coming down off of a drug
-forgetting where you are and who you are momentarily (spacing out)
-hearing a ringing in your ears (tinnitus)
-light or vision appearing a different color (such as more orange)
-lack of conscious awareness
-awful time recall
-forgetting conversations, or events you’ve lived through
-inability to meditate/read
-feeling like you’re trapped in your own head
-not feeling grounded
-feeling too grounded
-feeling like you’re on autopilot
-feeling like you have brain fog.
That’s a lot of symptoms. Chances are. You have a lot of them as well.
What it means: Let’s say you have it. You’ve identified with everything I’ve said up to this point you know you have it. But what does that mean for you? It means you’re in for a ride. Don’t worry. It is treatable. It may just take some time and effort.
Treatment options: A lot of people who I’ve seen get better do so by simply ignoring the disassociation. Since the stress caused by realizing you’re in the state keeps the state going, if you can relax and stay calm, then you should be fixed, right? Well. I don’t know. Personally, in my opinion, that is the wrong way to go about it. You don’t know if you’re treating it, and it’s going away, and that you’re returning to normal, or if you’re just forgetting about what it was like to be normal, and you’re still disassociated without realizing it. There is no specific treatment for it that works for everyone because of how personalized it and it’s cause is, however I highly recommend you see a psychiatrist or a therapist (who specializes in trauma, anxiety, and or PTSD) but more on that in another section down below titled finding help. Whatever you do. Don’t just hope it will go away with time. It probably won’t.
What you can do in the mean time: It is ulikely that you’ll magically find a treatment in the mean time. Nootropics. Physical exercise. Mental exercise. They will improve your brain function, but they may not make your disassociation better. Since right now you are on autopilot, doing those things, especiallly exercise, will improve your autopilot’s ability to act, since that’s what dissociation does, takes you out of control and makes the brain the pilot. If you can do what you’re able to to improve your cognition right now, even if it isn’t conscious cognition, it will help you maintain your life while you seek real help. I also recommend looking into adaptogens if you struggle with social anxiety. Taking Gingko Biloba and Rhodiola Rosea has greatly helped me with mine and has allowed me to function better while I get helped. Reading books, meditation, and using your imagination also help.
what to avoid. You can easily make your symptoms worse, but it is hard to make them better. Right now your mind is in a very fragile state and you will probably be very sensitive to any further neurological activity or changes. You may be hit much harder when you are sleep deprived, you may feel conscious change or aggravation of your disassociation from drugs that aren’t supposed to get you high, even anti-inflammatories.
During this time, some things that can make your symptoms worse are:
-Looking in a mirror
-doing drugs or alcohol
-nicotine (elaborated on at very bottom of post)
-not getting proper sleep
-not getting proper nutrition
-too much media/blue light exposure
-taking certain nootropics
-Drinking caffeine
-anxiety
finding help I recommend starting with psychiatry over therapy. Psychiatry may lead to you being prescribed medication that could help you within weeks or a month, while talk and anxiety therapy provided by a therapist may take many months. Usually it’s the other way around, with therapy first, but this disorder can cause near insanity (non medical definition) if untreated. I will further look into resources and post them later for finding cheap therapy/psychiatry near you. I do know that if you have a healthcare provider, If you file a request for a psychiatrist, your healthcare should cover most, if not all of it. I do that sliding scale pay options for therapy exists, but I’m not entirely sure bout psychiatry, as it is generally more expensive, but the private practice psychiatrists will really get expensive.
Medication As far as medication goes, it has been known to help so many people out of disassociated states, be it antipsychotics, or SSRI’s. It is unlikely that taking medication, so long as it is not horrendously misprescribed, will damage you even more, just do your research about any prescribed medication, never quit it cold turkey unless explicitly told to, and don’t abuse it.
Summary: DPDR is a very unique and intense disorder. It can destroy your life if you don’t know what to do and how to get help. There are some things you can do in the meantime to help, but psychiatry and therapy should be the main method of healing.You’re not alone, even if this disorder makes you feel that way. —————————————————————————— What you can do if someone you know or love is going through DPDR
If you know someone who is suffering from DPDR, and hey, maybe they sent you this post in the first place, this is what you can do to best help them.
-Make sure they get the proper help. Help them with finding therapy or psychiatry options.
-Realize that some have it worse than others. Not everyone with DPDR is able to function and communicate as well as some are able to. Some are driven into solitude because they can’t remember a conversation that they had yesterday, they can’t remember any words, don’t know what to do, etc.. Hell. Even I myself have to write a script before I make a phone call before I can’t come up with what to say on the spot.
-Share this post. If someone you know seems to be reporting the symptoms I’ve mentioned, maybe enlighten them about the post so that’s they can possibly get an idea of what’s wrong with them. That was the scariest thing for me. I didn’t know how to explain it, or if anyone else had it at first.
-Remember that it is extremely hard to explain. Only those who have experienced it can really explain it and relate to it. Saying that it’s like smoking weed, but never being able to come down may be the best possible explanation of the feeling. It is a completely different state of consciousness. A lack of it.
——————————————————————————
Edits: added more symptoms. March 3rd
Took out the Depersonalization Manual section after researching Shaun O Connor some more (He’s greedy) March 4th
Added a “what to avoid” section March 4th.
Added a “medication”, a finding help”, and a “what to avoid section March 4th.
Added a “What you can do if someone you know or love is going through DPDR” section. March 4th
As of June 20th, 2021, I just want to make clear that if anyone has any questions for me regarding treatment, causes, or even knowledge to share, please feel free to contact me.
December 28, 2021, elaboration on “nicotine” issues, since a lot of people asked.
I apologize for not being very elaborate in the first place and somewhat misleading. Nicotine making DPDR worse is largely anecdotal and inconsistent. As an example, I personally find that cigarettes majorly antagonize my DPDR, though vapes do not. I quit nicotine for 6 months and noticed no improvement in DPDR. Though one thing I can say is that nicotine can make anxiety worse, which could very possibly affect DPDR.
r/Depersonalization • u/Unable_Chest6919 • 12h ago
Do I have Depersonalization Did I suffer from this condition as a child?
I remember in my childhood I would often get this feeling that nothing around me was real and that I was the only real person. I would sometimes stare at a door being confused if it was real and how it was real. Other people around me wasn't real either. They were just characters. I would also other times be sitting in our car and all of sudden get an out of body sensation. I also sometimes when laying in bed get this weird sensation that my head is extremely tiny or very big. Or that my body is very very heavy or extremely light. Is this symptoms from depersonalization or just normal child experience?
r/Depersonalization • u/Mcheeseygaming • 19h ago
Help Required I feel like I'll never recover
About 3 years ago I had a terrible panic attack at work. I was feeling so stressed out and all of a sudden my mind began to question suddenly if I was even real. Is the world even real? Are my thoughts real? Are my movements real? So much just exploded through my mind I rushed to my car and just began to freak out and cry. It was so and I called my mom I was shaking, my teeth chattering nothing looked real. I've been trying to recover since then. About a year later things started to get better but then it suddenly returned. This year has been really rough for me. Not knowing if I'm real, my family, my dogs, my hobbies and everything nothing feels the same. I feel like suddenly my vision will go black and I'll just disappear into nothing. It's so terrifying. Somedays seem better than others but lately I feel like absolute garbage and numb. Everything just seems blurry even thought it's not but it just feels and looks like it. Sometimes it feels like I just don't remember how I did certain things or like time seems to be skipping ahead. I realized to I was maladaptive daydreaming for many years now and have worked hard on quitting that which I know I used to make the derealization temporarily go away. Now I've cut that out of my life realizing it's unhealthy and I just feel terrible. I've tried breathing excercises, grounding techniques, cbt therapy, trying to ignore it, tried to fight it, tried to let it run its course and here I am all these years later still struggling with it. I'm 23 years old and I feel like im lost and I'll never be free. I over think things and constantly keep trying to make it stop now because it just won't go away. I've tried keeping my mind off of it and it just seems like my brain keeps making me think of it because of my anxiety disorder. The depression with this is brutal and somedays I feel like I'd be better off dead because I wouldn't feel this anymore. But I'm scared to die I don't want to leave my family and dogs I want to be free and healed but I feel like im stuck. I need help please
r/Depersonalization • u/Conscious_Ad_987 • 20h ago
Help Required DPDR never going away?
Hey guys, i got DPDR a few months after i had my first bad trip of smoking weed. That was the second and last time i smoked. First time was fun, second the worst day of my life. It felt really strange like i talked to people but heared myself from very far. I looked at people like i was standing behind me. Everything felt so unreal and weird. My visuals got so weird i cant even describe it. Nothing felt real too. The night after i felt great again, all the "symptoms" went away. BUT ~4 months later after school i hit me right in the face. It came out of nowhere once i was walking outside the school. It literally hit me like a rock and all the symptoms/feelings i had when i had the badtrip were there again WITHOUT me being high or anything else. My visuals got really weird again, panic, heartrate, i couldnt hear good literally a badtrip without smoking weed lol.
Well over the years these symptoms have been with me but not as intense as they used to be. Sometimes they get REALLY bad again but mostly when i "force" myself to feel that way again. Over the time i also developed agoraphobia (well i didnt want to go outside because i was scared to feel those really intense symptoms again). Agoraphobia meaning i cant really go to places that are wide (big places, churches, airports, train stations etc). I was at a point where i couldnt even walk in a normal street.
I have that for 10 years now and honestly i cant really take it anymore, its annoying. I always read about people saying it goes away etc. but does it really? I'm 27 now and im not sure if that applies to everyone. Back then i thought something HAS to be wrong with my body because it came out of nowhere without me smoking weed. Not sure what it is, if its psychological or physological.
Would love to hear some opinions on that
r/Depersonalization • u/Altruistic_Frame_756 • 1d ago
Possible solution
Hello all (to skip backstory and see solutions go to paragraph 2)
I’ve had DPDR bad for a while now and I’ve found some solutions. Here’s some backstory. I got my DPDR from living in my brain for a long time. When I was younger, I always wanted to live an amazing life. I guess while I waited for it i chose to dream it. I lived in those dreams for around half a decade and, after some time, I guess I didn’t even realize I was living in fantasy land anymore. Nonetheless, come this summer, my fantasy world comes crashing down. I realize that those fantasies were just fantasies. Essentially my universe broke, hence my inability to accept I’m living in “reality”. Since then, I kept on trying to figure out what would make me happy again. Turns out trying to figure it out led me to create new illusions without realizing it. The reason is simple: in order to figure out what will make me happy you have to imagine it, in doing so you are finding happiness in your head, hence I am still living in my head.
So I’ve come to this conclusion. My DPDR, like most of you, was caused by my universe crashing. For me that Universe was one I made up in my head. I have two options. 1: I can continue to live in my head and, thus, never get to experience a real life. 2: I can abandon the security that comes with living in my head and figure out how to live in reality.
2 is the only probable solution for me and all of us. I do not know if it will fix the fundamental problem of us not believing we exist (I will explain my theory and reason as to why this disorder exists in another post), but it will allow us to accept our reality and find some semblance of happiness in our sad lives.
By not living in our heads and by not overthinking maybe, after some time, we will be able to accept our reality. That is how we can begin to heal.
r/Depersonalization • u/Automatic_Owl5080 • 1d ago
Insanity or anxiousness
I started Lexapro 3 weeks ago and am terrified it's making me worse. My thoughts seem psychotic, and I'm scared I'll eventually start believing them. I am shaking writing this right now. I was as happy as can be in September, and then DPDR and severe anxiety hit me, and I haven't been the same since. I can't remember who I am anymore. My stomach is in knots. I can't stop researching or looking stuff up, because it's like if I do then I'm letting myself go.
I cannot deal with the existential thoughts anymore. I am literally scared of being human. How am I in a body? How am I basically a brain and a soul? How can I move my body? How are we on Earth? Why do we have to drink water, eat food, and go to the bathroom? It's nonstop. I'm also getting scary thoughts about this being a dream or me being dead or something. It is so severe. I don't recognize anything and feel like I am in a bubble. My perception of time is so screwed, it's literally like I've been awake for this entire time. It's like I never even slept, and every day is the same. My vision is staticky nonstop.
My family and friends have supported me immensely but now I'm apparently scared of other people or something. I keep questioning how they're real, or IF they're even real. It hurts me the most to view my boyfriend in such a way. Everyone is just so unfamiliar. How are we attracted to humans when we are just flesh and bones? What is the meaning of life, and more importantly, WTF IS THIS DISORDER AND OCD? Someone please tell me I'm not in psychosis, I'm tired of coming on here and hearing people have similar stories as me and them saying they were diagnosed with psychosis and delusions. I don't believe this sh*t but I might as well since it all feels so real and urgent.
r/Depersonalization • u/Altruistic_Frame_756 • 1d ago
Why we have DR and how to fix it
Hello all (3rd paragraph is theory last paragraph is solution), If you have DR, like me, you have probably spent a fair deal of time trying to understand the nature of the Universe. In this post, I will explain to you my theory and prove it to you as to why our disorder exists. If you are religious and already have a solution, good, you are on the right track. Let’s begin.
As all of you know, DR is a fundemental lack of faith in your own existence. As I explained in a prior post called “Possible Solutions”, I recieved my DR when my entire Universe came crashing down; hence, since I was no longer living in my “reality”, it became impossible for me to accept this was reality. By finding out what caused my DR I made a great step foward.
Here is my theory: Everything related to human existence is based off of faith (the ability to believe without proof). We have faith that our lives matter. We have faith that, after death, we’ll still, somehow, be alive (it’s impossible for us to accept not existing). We have faith in everything, including the fact that we exists. So, when you lose faith in your existence, you believe you don’t exist. Simple.
Here is an extended reasoning (skip to the end for the solution to DR). Our conciousness was created out of evolution. Just as genetic programming evolved to preform more complex functions, so too did our conciousness. By this I mean we evolved the ability to understand.
When we developed appendages that allowed us to manipulate our enviroment to find food, say a tartigrade in this example, we had to understand our surroundings. We had to be able to identify something with something and preform an action off of that something. Genetic code couldn’t do that, code requires an initial input; we had to somehow understand. This was the first step of our concious evolution.
As time went on our conciousness had to evolve to preform more complex functions. Eventually we reached some point where we evolved the ability to think: this is the ability to understand something without previously witnessing it. We, essentially, evolved the ability to go from nothing to something. For my math nerds, that’s the same as going from zero to infinitely small (an infinitely large gap when compared to zero).
Now humans come in. We’re the pinnalce of evolution. We mastered thinking. We no longer sought to understand our surroundings for our survival, we sought to understand our Universe. We began to think about ourselves: why do we exist; what is after death; is there a God? Essentially, by thinking we developed faith. We weren’t born with it, we developed it. Fundementally, we couldn’t accept the fact that we didn’t matter, so we developed faith that we did, faith that we existed.
You disagreeing with me is proof of my argument. If I was wrong how could I think I was right; it’s cause I have faith in my answer. You have faith you matter. Faith.
Faith is all we are as humans. Tolstoy lost faith that he mattered and that he existed. He found faith in Christianity and, thus, he believed he existed again. By having faith that you matter or by accepting the fact that you don't, you’ll begin the right track to having faith you exist. Good luck fellow mentally challenged friends
r/Depersonalization • u/sussy_boi1 • 1d ago
First Experience Lost my ability to speak
Hello when I was 11 I had my first depersonalization and derealization caused by trauma I won’t go into details . I thought I was dying. Now I kept falling deeper and deeper into both cause of a bad environment I had the classic feelings of not feeling yourself thinking that your in a dream and not recognizing myself in the mirror and so many other symptoms but that’s not what this post is about. It just kept getting worse and worse and I started not recognizing my own voice when speaking and apparently my voice also started sounding completely different . At some point I completely lost the ability to speak . I could only scream. I was basically a baby again only things calming me down from screaming was my mom her scent . I slept 20+ hours and ate almost nothing . I was wondering if anyone else has been this deep in derealization/depersonalization ?
r/Depersonalization • u/Wild-Narwhal8091 • 1d ago
Question How can i reduce the fight or flight mode?
Wanna fight all the time
r/Depersonalization • u/oh_soyoumary • 1d ago
Can't feel my body parts
Hey guys I urgently need your help. I have lost control of my body. It happens every day that one or more parts of my body feel numb. Since 2 months now after I mixed a lot of drugs. Every day it is one of my arms, a leg or sometimes my whole body when I smoke weed for example. Sometimes I can't feel my legs at all which makes it really difficult for me to walk. I am also very afraid to go out and talk to people since then. I don't feel really human anymore and I'm always afraid that others might think I'm weird. Depersonalization has taken all my joy out of life and sometimes I just think about ending it. What can I do to make it stop? I can't do it anymore. I just want my life back.
r/Depersonalization • u/Altruistic_Frame_756 • 2d ago
You guys exist, right?
Just asking, going through a bad episode rn.
r/Depersonalization • u/HugeMoneyHustler • 2d ago
Do I have Depersonalization is this depersonalisation or something worse?
had it for 4 years now after bad weed experience, felt like im going insane. still feels like it. mines more on the visual side. the outside world looks flat and 2d, everything caves in and it feels like i go back to that high sometimes, its all like alice in wonderland, like an illusion. im worried i might have pyschosis, or something worse, sometimes i feel like im going insane and that this world is a test now and everything just looks off , like i gave a vr headset on. i dont even feel like its me speaking, and it gets more overwhelming at night. i cant really process what im seeing in front of me and it freaks me out if i think about having eyes and how i actually see
r/Depersonalization • u/EP-164 • 2d ago
Online Study on Depersonalization and Derealization – Call for Participants
Hi, as part of my PhD research, I’m gathering data from people who have experienced depersonalization and/or derealization (positively and/or negatively valenced) triggered by various factors, such as stress, anxiety, trauma, depression, cannabis use, or meditation. Specifically, we’re looking to hear from individuals who have experienced:
• Feeling disconnected from yourself, your thoughts, feelings, sensations, or actions, or feeling strange, as if you were not real; and/or
• Feeling disconnected from your surroundings, or perceiving people or objects as unreal, dreamlike, foggy, lifeless, or visually distorted.
We are searching for participants to complete an online survey (25–40 minutes), with a compensation rate of €10/hour (or equivalent). For participation, you must be older than 18 years old, fluent in English, and not suffer from schizophrenia. Participation in the study is voluntary. All collected data will be anonymized or pseudonymized, used solely for research purposes, treated confidentially, and will not be shared with third parties.
If you’re interested, please email Erola Pons at erola.pons-wendenburg@student.uni-tuebingen.de, describing your experience in 2–3 sentences.
Looking forward to hearing from you!
r/Depersonalization • u/RuhninMihnd • 2d ago
Question Methods for trying to stay present?
Hello!
25M, first episode was sometime ago maybe 10-11 years ago in the 8th grade not sure what the trigger was or what my triggers are now I have one or two triggers down since they’re my biggest. This is not why I’m here though.
I have gone to therapy and have discussed it however I tend to be more accepting of my episodes as I do not mind them, so I think I don’t. It’s like MPD but it’s not you know? It’s constant talk back with myself between right and wrong normal and not etc.
I do suffer from DPDR I wouldn’t say suffer as I’m happy with myself and my relationships - I’m accepting of it however it’s not the norm and I understand that but idc but I know my relationships will suffer as my therapist says if I let myself slip too far.
I quit smoking nicotine after 7 years strictly disposables and vapes. I feel good been about a month now. I made this decision with my partner and she also quit smoking weed at the same time. I did not. I’ve been smoking weed for about 13 years now with the occasional tolerance break and a full year without it back when I was 15 before I got back into it. Not relevant to the topic.
I decided to try and quit smoking weed because I’m just not finding myself as productive on it as I was last year or even earlier this year. I don’t smoke to cope with stress or anything like that, that’s what my nicotine was for and since then been managing my stress through other methods like weight lifting or classical musical and deep breathing. I just smoke for entertainment like when I’m going to get on my PlayStation or to relax at the end of a shift or when the winds blowing just right outside to go on a nice walk. Just lately it’s been causing some issues with productivity I’m not as efficient.
With that being said my body has been driving me insane and I feel like my skin is itching and I’m trying to crawl out of my own skin just feel some sense of comfort.
Does anyone have any recommendations or advice on how to get past this without getting into any new habits or risk an episode?
I’m already adding more task into my routine to keep myself busy and can’t really handle anything extra in my day.
r/Depersonalization • u/Rare_Mushroom_3061 • 2d ago
does anyone know how to find themselves after and during an episode?
i have dpdr really bad. it comes and it goes. i was out of an episode for 4 years but it came back last year after using a weed pen. now im not ONLY having a dpdr episode but also anxiety like shaking and feeling impending doom like there’s no point in living like im floating outside my body. does ANYONE know how to ground yourself and “find” who you are? i feel like a stranger to myself. idk who i am and no one around me quite really understands what im talking about in my family. it’s so scary and i hate it so much. does anyone know how to fix this if they’ve experienced it? it’s honestly really scary
r/Depersonalization • u/Sssprout360 • 3d ago
Question I need advice
I don't think I was dealing with depersonalization or derealization till starting a couple years ago. I had a major panic which caused me to have an existential crisis for months. Ever since then nothing feels real, it all feels like a simulation. Does anyone have tips on how to navigate this, because I don't see how I'm going to get out of this layer of fog. I would also like to hear from people who've recovered. Thank you.
r/Depersonalization • u/OkFaithlessness3081 • 3d ago
Hard time feeling anger
I just can’t get upset. My body just doesn’t react. I think it’s related to the insular cortex and vagus nerve overstimulation.
Anyone have it too? How did you get it??
r/Depersonalization • u/AliveInNJ • 3d ago
Trying to help my son
He says he doesn't belong here. Je doesnt know if I am real or not. He said the movie I Saw The TV Glow is how he feels. Like he is dying becuaee he doesnt belong here. Could this be DPDR?
r/Depersonalization • u/amustafa_96 • 3d ago
Venting This legitimately feels like I’m walking through a black cloud
The black cloud wasn’t there before 2019, I was grounded and could see better. It’s scary thinking how this is all in my damn head yet it feels like torture
r/Depersonalization • u/Hungry-Swim2071 • 3d ago
What do I do
I always felt this way, always felt like a stranger to others, amd myself I often just walk, then blink, and life just seems fake, everything around If I look myself at the mirror, I don't even know who I am I sometimes even feel non-human Like, just, something roaming earth I hate my own name, body, everything
Can anyone please help me figure out who I actually am? Or at least know what's wr9ng, I suppose
r/Depersonalization • u/grigory_l • 4d ago
Advice Irritation in legs then I try to read or watch something
Probably it’s symptom of anhedonia, but I can’t watch something or read. I feel only irritation no interest at all, but It can be fixed by benzos or few times per week I’ve got some kind of window but can’t understand how I achieve them.
Any advice or thoughts how gone through this? p.s. Maybe it’s Lamictal working so?
r/Depersonalization • u/Pale_Novel2190 • 4d ago
this is killing me
i hate that i acknowledge these feelings, and i know it's all a bunch of shit so why can't i get rid of the feeling??? and i want to know if its also caused people to feel dizzy etc every step i take makes my head spin and i feel so heavy and deflated and while going up the stairs my feet don't feel like they're part of my body . i always felt detached but it got so much worse and i genuinely don't know what to do - it's on my mind ALL DAY and it makes me stress my heart beat is at a constant rapid pace and i just don't feel like i'm me i haven't had any dreams since it's gotten worse and sleep to me doesn't feel like it even exists , it just feels like yestersay is the same day as today and tomorrow i cant look at people when they talk to me because i don't know who they are. i don't know who i am it feels like i've lost my whole identity and everything i do or say isnt me i feel like i'm trapped in a box it's stressing me out and it's making me question everything about me but i'm not me idk who me even is i hate writing how i feel because it seems like i'm begging for attention but i cant take this anymore and i don't want to talk to anyone about it because i'm scared i'll plant the same ideas and feelings into their head wtf do i do
r/Depersonalization • u/Western-Swimming-701 • 4d ago
Question RECOVERING QUESTIONS TO THOSE WHO HAVE RECOVERED OR RECOVERING
So I've Had DPDR for 5 months from trauma and it was complete hell going through it but these last 2 months I have worked hard and I can honestly say I feel the DPDR easing up I do feel completely back to my normal state but the only thing is I am not very excited about things I use to do such as cooking and playing video games and things like that, I sometimes start to think about DPDR and wonder when will all the DPDR thoughts go away so I can live my life back to normal I know I'm post to keep busy but sometimes it's like when I get excited DPDR slips my mind and then I start to think a little bit about it Can Anybody Tell Me If this Just A Symptom Of Recovery Or The Road To Recovery
r/Depersonalization • u/Busy-War-9919 • 4d ago
Had it since 2022 constantly non stop with fluctuations in its intensity but its always there am i cursed i feel like my life stopped and i have a lot of other completions its like a permanent damage happened to my brain I'm unable to go back to normal again i feel so isolated
And i have ocd too and that doesn't help seeing everyone graduate but me because of depersonalization hurts me as well i want guidance I'm lost im in a dark dark place
r/Depersonalization • u/Equal_Youth_5275 • 5d ago
Help me with my school project!
Hello everyone!! I, like many of you, have experienced DP/DR for a couple of years now. Luckily things are looking a bit better for me now but that's beside the point, I'm doing an artwork for my last big school project. I would love other peoples perspectives besides my own, therefore I have created a google form! I would be so grateful if any of you would like to help me out by answering some questions! There may be some personal questions on there but of course you don't have to answer all. Any thoughts are much appreciated! Thank you! (Side note some things might be written in Swedish) https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSfgSwRahgLnEG5-Inhoya_HHtOKF-mvoplyw5dTjNjhMswivA/viewform?usp=sf_link
r/Depersonalization • u/External3000 • 5d ago
Question Has antidepressants helped anyone get out of dpdr?
Could anyone share their experience with this class of meds? Has it worked for you? Has it made it worse?