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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: July 23rd, 2023

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  • I’ve not been on that one in quite some time, but I’ll try to remember what I can and pull from experience with other meds. Psych meds like that one can take a few weeks to get used to / reach full efficacy. I can’t remember what the specific timeframe for that med is, but in general it takes at least 6-8 weeks at a specific dose to give a med a fair trial. The initial symptoms when starting a med often resolve in that time, but if they don’t you may need to try a new med. If the symptoms are bearable for until you’ve made it that far, it can be nice to know that you can check it off as helping or not with some certainty. For me, this med just made me a bit out of it and I believe made my anxiety a bit worse. Trialling meds with alexithymia can be a real pain in the ass…doubly so when you have the wrong diagnosis and or doctors who don’t believe in yours.

    Since this med is typically prescribed for ADHD, I’m going to assume that is what you are taking it for, if not the following probably won’t be relevant: I’ve read that meds that act on norepinephrine (like this one) tend to work better for people with hyperactive or combined ADHD, while inattentive ADHD tends to (but definately doesn’t always) respond better to meds that work on dopamine. If this med doesn’t end up helping this is some info you can talk to your doctor about and if stimulants are not an option other meds like DNRIs (like bupropion/wellbutrin) may be a path to consider with them. Additionally, clonidine and guanfacine are two blood pressure meds that have been shown to have some benefit, especially with reguard to anxiety around starting tasks. I’m not a doctor so don’t take any of this as medical advice. It is just some info you can bring up with your doctor if this med doesn’t pan out for you.

    As another note, this is something I’ve found useful a a reference for people who are skeptical on ADHD related topics:

    The World Federation of ADHD International Consensus Statement: 208 Evidence-based Conclusions about the Disorder

    https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8328933/

    Finding the right treatment/meds can seem daunting and hopeless at times, but it is worth it. Meds are also not magic fixes and often are better in combination with therapy or other steps to improve your situation. If you are looking for a therapist, I generally recommend looking for one who practices trauma informed therapy AND works with neurodivergent clients. Finding a good therapist for you, which is not the same as a good therapist in general, can be a lot of work and take a few tries, but it is worth it. If therapy isn’t something that is an option, there are free resources online. I’ve found a lecture series by the American Psychological Association on trauma on YouTube that was pretty good and there are quite a few therapists who put content on that site as well. Healthy Gamer is a channel that I’ve found good content on that may be worth looking into.

    Sorry for rambling on for so long.


  • I’m not op, but these are some things that I appriciate about Vivaldi:

    • Mouse gestures that work anywhere in the window with different options based on what I start the gesture on (eg. Right clicking on a link and dragging down opens the link in a new foreground tab {dragging down then up opens it in the background} but doing so on empty space opens a new tab)
    • A scrollable side bar for tabs instead of the horizontal one that is standard (not in addition to or requiring hacky workarounds)
    • The ability to minimize tabs or send them to the bottom of the cycle order (this needs to be able to be done with mouse gestures)
    • The ability to easily highlight parts of a link so that I can copy part of the text (Vivaldi highlights with a click and drag and drags the link on a click, hold and drag; Firefox doesn’t appear to do either)
    • Not having to worry about third party extensions security issues or having this core functionality stop working because the extension maintainer has to update it for the new browser version.
    • The fact that it just works with minimal configuration

    Unfortunately I am looking for alternatives to Vivaldi since Google has decided to kill quality web browsing on Chromium browsers. Much of the web is virtually unusable to me without a tool like ublock quieting things down to work past my sensory processing issues. At times it is hard to think that the majority of web devs have anything but distain for disabled people.

    I do use Fennic on Android (with ublock and darkreader) because Mozilla decided to block access to about:config in the mobile version and I have yet to find another way to always force pages to load the desktop version. (Mobile versions of sites disable most of the built in accessibility options like the ability to zoom)

    The settings I set in fennic if anyone is curious:

    • browser.viewport.defaultZoom (set a sane default zoom)
    • browser.viewport desktopWidth (say that the screen is large enough to not trigger CSS mobille layouts)
    • general.useragent.override (work around browser sniffing; I’ve yet to find an extension that actually works for this)