Psycho-Babble Medication Thread 91010

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Re: Long-term Effects of Adrafinil » IsoM

Posted by mr.scott on January 24, 2002, at 18:08:02

In reply to Long-term Effects of Adrafinil » Mr. Scott, posted by IsoM on January 24, 2002, at 1:31:50

No other side effects I can think of...What did you have in mind?

 

Re: Long-term Effects of Adrafinil » mr.scott

Posted by IsoM on January 24, 2002, at 18:25:57

In reply to Re: Long-term Effects of Adrafinil » IsoM, posted by mr.scott on January 24, 2002, at 18:08:02

One son who just started it said he has a constant headache & upset stomach. He gets a sick stomach at the drop of a hat so I don't know whether it's from adrafinil or not. He's very anti-medication anyway. Thinks we should just tough it out but I hate to see feel the way he does.

He was absolutely the happiest baby & child I'd ever seen, always laughing & so cheerful, but it's like a black cloud over him now. No motivation, no drive, bleak, barren outlook & these 2 'side-effects' are making him resistant to continue. I'm not going to shove it down his throat but wanted him to give it a fair trial. I wanted to know if others felt like that & if they did how long it lasted.


> No other side effects I can think of...What did you have in mind?

 

Re: Long-term Effects of Adrafinil » IsoM

Posted by Mr. Scott on January 25, 2002, at 20:41:57

In reply to Re: Long-term Effects of Adrafinil » mr.scott, posted by IsoM on January 24, 2002, at 18:25:57

Actually now that you mention it I did get a headache at first, but only in combination with Zoloft or Prozac.. Thats why I stopped a while back. No problem with Effexor?

I hope the best for your son.

Scott

 

Re: Long-term Effects of Adrafinil -Thanks Scott (nm) » Mr. Scott

Posted by IsoM on January 25, 2002, at 21:19:43

In reply to Re: Long-term Effects of Adrafinil » IsoM, posted by Mr. Scott on January 25, 2002, at 20:41:57

 

Re: I've been scared into quitting!

Posted by 2sense on April 7, 2002, at 17:53:13

In reply to Re: I've been scared into quitting! » mr.scott, posted by JohnX2 on January 21, 2002, at 15:28:08

I started on Klonopin/Clonazepam .5 - 1.0 mg 1 1/2 years ago because I was unable to sleep. I take Wellbutrin (150 SR -- 2X a day -- I have Hashimoto's which causes hypothyroidism so I also take Synthroid -- for the depression that comes when the antibodies from the Hashimoto's kick up and it cuts my smoking to nearly nothing. I also have AD/HD and take Ritalin (a life saver). My doctor who I had seen for 6 years moved and a new one took over and during a 4 month period I went from 0.5 - 1.0 of the Klonipin to 4.0 (just at bedtime). This doctor became very ill and someone else (another pyschiatrist) took over and decided because my one brother may be bipolar and I have a thyroid disorder then I must be bipolar also. I wanted to go off (slowly) the Klonipin BUT a) the doctor had no appointments because they are short on doctors so our discussions where over the phone and short; b) he simply believes this and there is no changing his mind because I talk fast (I grew up in NJ and am currently in W. PA). When I worked in CO and CA I learned to slow my processing and talking so that others who were 'mellow' could keep up -- when I taught at MIT I didn't have to adjust anything for anyone they all kept up fine. I have no other symptoms and have been evaluated by other psychiatrists having worked for the government and it was part of intake -- so my family got the flu and I didn't refill the script (meaning I called a day or two late and the doctor didn't call it in a day or two after that) -- I had a grand mal seizure on Good Friday. Someone said they could take it or leave it (a posting from 07/04/01 or there abouts) -- be very careful with regard to w/drawl of anti-convulsants that are benzos -- my doctor (not one of them) ever told me that this could happen. Ultimately given how much I research having had some less than pleasant experiences (not everyone is an "A" student and/or doctor) I have a bunch of medical books, etc. Interestingly he PDR doesn't state the danger of sudden withdrawl (and it should) what it does, is tell the reader to see anticonvulsants (a section with other groups of meds, antianemic meds for instance) and it is there they are very, very clear about the danger in sudden withdrawal. I am seeing an excellent therapist and if I leave the practice then I leave her too -- hence my delima. Any ideas? Sorry so long it is my first posting. (To dot the i's and cross the t's I am having an EEG tomorrow AM and a brain MRI with contrast on Tuesday -- this was order not by the pyschiatrist but by my internist who thinks I should get out while I am still able to ... well I am sure you get the picture. Thanks for any and all who made it through this "brain dump". :-)

 

Re: I've been scared into quitting! » 2sense

Posted by JohnX2 on April 7, 2002, at 20:51:05

In reply to Re: I've been scared into quitting!, posted by 2sense on April 7, 2002, at 17:53:13

> I started on Klonopin/Clonazepam .5 - 1.0 mg 1 1/2 years ago because I was unable to sleep. I take Wellbutrin (150 SR -- 2X a day -- I have Hashimoto's which causes hypothyroidism so I also take Synthroid -- for the depression that comes when the antibodies from the Hashimoto's kick up and it cuts my smoking to nearly nothing. I also have AD/HD and take Ritalin (a life saver). My doctor who I had seen for 6 years moved and a new one took over and during a 4 month period I went from 0.5 - 1.0 of the Klonipin to 4.0 (just at bedtime). This doctor became very ill and someone else (another pyschiatrist) took over and decided because my one brother may be bipolar and I have a thyroid disorder then I must be bipolar also. I wanted to go off (slowly) the Klonipin BUT a) the doctor had no appointments because they are short on doctors so our discussions where over the phone and short; b) he simply believes this and there is no changing his mind because I talk fast (I grew up in NJ and am currently in W. PA). When I worked in CO and CA I learned to slow my processing and talking so that others who were 'mellow' could keep up -- when I taught at MIT I didn't have to adjust anything for anyone they all kept up fine. I have no other symptoms and have been evaluated by other psychiatrists having worked for the government and it was part of intake -- so my family got the flu and I didn't refill the script (meaning I called a day or two late and the doctor didn't call it in a day or two after that) -- I had a grand mal seizure on Good Friday. Someone said they could take it or leave it (a posting from 07/04/01 or there abouts) -- be very careful with regard to w/drawl of anti-convulsants that are benzos -- my doctor (not one of them) ever told me that this could happen. Ultimately given how much I research having had some less than pleasant experiences (not everyone is an "A" student and/or doctor) I have a bunch of medical books, etc. Interestingly he PDR doesn't state the danger of sudden withdrawl (and it should) what it does, is tell the reader to see anticonvulsants (a section with other groups of meds, antianemic meds for instance) and it is there they are very, very clear about the danger in sudden withdrawal. I am seeing an excellent therapist and if I leave the practice then I leave her too -- hence my delima. Any ideas? Sorry so long it is my first posting. (To dot the i's and cross the t's I am having an EEG tomorrow AM and a brain MRI with contrast on Tuesday -- this was order not by the pyschiatrist but by my internist who thinks I should get out while I am still able to ... well I am sure you get the picture. Thanks for any and all who made it through this "brain dump". :-)

Take this with a grain of salt... Its my understanding that people with seizure disorders develop tolerance to Klonopin's antiseizure activity much quicker than people with anxiety disorder develop tolerance to the anti-anxiety effects. The medicine was looked into to treat seizures, but dropped due to the tolerance issue.
Some people feel that bipolar disorder is a form of a seizure disorder..

I found that the medicine Topamax, which is a non-habit forming antiseizure medicine that also works on the same Gaba receptors as Klonopin, was a very effective medicine to substitute for Klonopin (for my symptoms).

Best wishes with your testing.

Regards,
John

 

Re: I've been scared into quitting! » JohnX2

Posted by 2sense on April 8, 2002, at 11:40:06

In reply to Re: I've been scared into quitting! » 2sense, posted by JohnX2 on April 7, 2002, at 20:51:05

John --

Thanks for answering so quickly. I am not certain I fully understood whether you think that I have a seizure disorder and therefore had the grand mal due to the tolerance issue or not. Can you clarify for me?

EVERYTHING and EVERY medical professional except this psychiatrist who wrote the script, and also believes that bipolar is a type of seizure or whatever, believes unequivocally that the rapid withdrawal from 4 mg. of Klonopin to 0 mg. PLUS my becoming lax with making sure my Wellbutrin doses (2 150 SR's a day) are a minimum of 6 hours apart (if not this lowers seizure tolerance), plus my 3 kids and husband had the flu and I wasn't sleeping well (and the night before the grand mal I didn't sleep a single wink) -- collectively along with an electrical re-entry anode heart problem needing to be fixed and I had a hysterectomy (TAH) and had been hemorrhaging since last May and my electrolytes were whacked out, plus I am anemic, plus my blood sugar was low. Still another's interpretation and input is always of interest to me. The EEG went fine but will not know the results until end of the week; MRI (w/ contrast) is tomorrow at 11 AM and will not know those results either until?? Even though I own 'The Pill Book' and the Nurses PDR manual and the slip from the pharmacist states not to withdraw suddenly because grand mal seizures can result -- I think it was negligent of the psychiatrist not to state so very clearly to me. I think he is juggling too many balls and it is my own humble opinion that mistakes can be made when one does not recognize and rectify situations that indicate they are overbooked, so to speak; it is still just my opinion!

As to the other medication you mentioned, Topiramate -- do you take this for seizures, bipolar, anxiety? I did a search on this medication (and the Depakote he is pushing also) and along with some pretty scary side effects (ex. grand mal seizures) -- the internet search comes up with attorneys who are taking cases of people who use the drug and have developed other health problems, some fatal. All drugs have side effects and at least to me, it is both a very pharmaceutical and litigious world we know live in.

My biggest issue is I do not believe I am bipolar, and since I have atypical anorexia (in times of mega stress I don't eat very well -- but dealing with this in therapy and it has been effective) I am a searcher, a reader, a learner -- I don't believe every problem one has can be given a label and a pill to fix. Now there are other "problems" <-- I don't like using that term -- issues; I had AD/HD and Ritalin not only stabilized my weight but made a great difference for me in many ways. It was not until I was in my early 30's that I even knew about it; it is very genetic (we are an entire family of it -- my immediate and both sides -- his and mine --> it isn't all bad; like anything there is good and bad). Thanks for reading, I type very fast and being a stay at home mom for 6 1/2 years has proved to be the most difficult and stressful time of my life. Just my ... 2sense :-)

PS I found this web page on the Topiramate – (http://www.nursespdr.com/members/database/ndrhtml/topiramate.html). I am including it ONLY for the 'FYI category' – obviously side effects are VERY individual, and the Nurse’s PDR, I suspect, lists everyone under the sun that anyone, anywhere has EVER experienced even a single time.


 

Re: I've been scared into quitting! » 2sense

Posted by JohnX2 on April 8, 2002, at 17:04:44

In reply to Re: I've been scared into quitting! » JohnX2, posted by 2sense on April 8, 2002, at 11:40:06

> John --
>
> Thanks for answering so quickly. I am not certain I fully understood whether you think that I have a seizure disorder and therefore had the grand mal due to the tolerance issue or not. Can you clarify for me?
>
> EVERYTHING and EVERY medical professional except this psychiatrist who wrote the script, and also believes that bipolar is a type of seizure or whatever, believes unequivocally that the rapid withdrawal from 4 mg. of Klonopin to 0 mg. PLUS my becoming lax with making sure my Wellbutrin doses (2 150 SR's a day) are a minimum of 6 hours apart (if not this lowers seizure tolerance), plus my 3 kids and husband had the flu and I wasn't sleeping well (and the night before the grand mal I didn't sleep a single wink) -- collectively along with an electrical re-entry anode heart problem needing to be fixed and I had a hysterectomy (TAH) and had been hemorrhaging since last May and my electrolytes were whacked out, plus I am anemic, plus my blood sugar was low. Still another's interpretation and input is always of interest to me. The EEG went fine but will not know the results until end of the week; MRI (w/ contrast) is tomorrow at 11 AM and will not know those results either until?? Even though I own 'The Pill Book' and the Nurses PDR manual and the slip from the pharmacist states not to withdraw suddenly because grand mal seizures can result -- I think it was negligent of the psychiatrist not to state so very clearly to me. I think he is juggling too many balls and it is my own humble opinion that mistakes can be made when one does not recognize and rectify situations that indicate they are overbooked, so to speak; it is still just my opinion!
>

I think it is *very bad* for anyone to abuptly stop taking a strong dose of a benzodizepine.

> As to the other medication you mentioned, Topiramate -- do you take this for seizures, bipolar, anxiety? I did a search on this medication (and the Depakote he is pushing also) and along with some pretty scary side effects (ex. grand mal seizures) -- the internet search comes up with attorneys who are taking cases of people who use the drug and have developed other health problems, some fatal. All drugs have side effects and at least to me, it is both a very pharmaceutical and litigious world we know live in.
>

This is what I would do in term of looking at side effects. Find the PDR that did the actual clinical studies and look at the incidence of side effects compared to those who took a placebo. If the placebo caused 20% of the patients to have headaches, and the medicine caused 20% of the patients to have headaches, then the medicine probably doesn't cause headaches. Regardless of what medicatin you are looking at , whatever it is treating, it is going to be reported as a side effect, correct? What if I have epilepsy and Depakote doesn't work for me and I have a seizure, do I report that depakote has a seizure side effect? Every antidepressant will list depression as a side effect too. This is where looking for *statistical significance* is important. The placebo will also have seizure as a side effect. So usually in the actual physicians PDR they list side effects that were much more common than those listed on the placebo pill. These are the ones to look out for. If the medicine did not cause a side effect more often than the placebo pill, then probably the medicine was not the culprit. And yes, topamax has a reputation for causing cognitive decline.


> My biggest issue is I do not believe I am bipolar, and since I have atypical anorexia (in times of mega stress I don't eat very well -- but dealing with this in therapy and it has been effective) I am a searcher, a reader, a learner -- I don't believe every problem one has can be given a label and a pill to fix. Now there are other "problems" <-- I don't like using that term -- issues; I had AD/HD and Ritalin not only stabilized my weight but made a great difference for me in many ways. It was not until I was in my early 30's that I even knew about it; it is very genetic (we are an entire family of it -- my immediate and both sides -- his and mine --> it isn't all bad; like anything there is good and bad). Thanks for reading, I type very fast and being a stay at home mom for 6 1/2 years has proved to be the most difficult and stressful time of my life. Just my ... 2sense :-)
>

FYI, Topamax may not be good for anorexia. It kills the apetite pretty bad.


Take care,
John

> PS I found this web page on the Topiramate – (http://www.nursespdr.com/members/database/ndrhtml/topiramate.html). I am including it ONLY for the 'FYI category' – obviously side effects are VERY individual, and the Nurse’s PDR, I suspect, lists everyone under the sun that anyone, anywhere has EVER experienced even a single time.

 

Re: topamax example from rxlist.com

Posted by JohnX2 on April 8, 2002, at 17:24:41

In reply to Re: I've been scared into quitting! » 2sense, posted by JohnX2 on April 8, 2002, at 17:04:44


http://www.rxlist.com/cgi/generic2/topiram_ad.htm

Look under "side effects drug interactions"

John


> > John --
> >
> > Thanks for answering so quickly. I am not certain I fully understood whether you think that I have a seizure disorder and therefore had the grand mal due to the tolerance issue or not. Can you clarify for me?
> >
> > EVERYTHING and EVERY medical professional except this psychiatrist who wrote the script, and also believes that bipolar is a type of seizure or whatever, believes unequivocally that the rapid withdrawal from 4 mg. of Klonopin to 0 mg. PLUS my becoming lax with making sure my Wellbutrin doses (2 150 SR's a day) are a minimum of 6 hours apart (if not this lowers seizure tolerance), plus my 3 kids and husband had the flu and I wasn't sleeping well (and the night before the grand mal I didn't sleep a single wink) -- collectively along with an electrical re-entry anode heart problem needing to be fixed and I had a hysterectomy (TAH) and had been hemorrhaging since last May and my electrolytes were whacked out, plus I am anemic, plus my blood sugar was low. Still another's interpretation and input is always of interest to me. The EEG went fine but will not know the results until end of the week; MRI (w/ contrast) is tomorrow at 11 AM and will not know those results either until?? Even though I own 'The Pill Book' and the Nurses PDR manual and the slip from the pharmacist states not to withdraw suddenly because grand mal seizures can result -- I think it was negligent of the psychiatrist not to state so very clearly to me. I think he is juggling too many balls and it is my own humble opinion that mistakes can be made when one does not recognize and rectify situations that indicate they are overbooked, so to speak; it is still just my opinion!
> >
>
> I think it is *very bad* for anyone to abuptly stop taking a strong dose of a benzodizepine.
>
> > As to the other medication you mentioned, Topiramate -- do you take this for seizures, bipolar, anxiety? I did a search on this medication (and the Depakote he is pushing also) and along with some pretty scary side effects (ex. grand mal seizures) -- the internet search comes up with attorneys who are taking cases of people who use the drug and have developed other health problems, some fatal. All drugs have side effects and at least to me, it is both a very pharmaceutical and litigious world we know live in.
> >
>
> This is what I would do in term of looking at side effects. Find the PDR that did the actual clinical studies and look at the incidence of side effects compared to those who took a placebo. If the placebo caused 20% of the patients to have headaches, and the medicine caused 20% of the patients to have headaches, then the medicine probably doesn't cause headaches. Regardless of what medicatin you are looking at , whatever it is treating, it is going to be reported as a side effect, correct? What if I have epilepsy and Depakote doesn't work for me and I have a seizure, do I report that depakote has a seizure side effect? Every antidepressant will list depression as a side effect too. This is where looking for *statistical significance* is important. The placebo will also have seizure as a side effect. So usually in the actual physicians PDR they list side effects that were much more common than those listed on the placebo pill. These are the ones to look out for. If the medicine did not cause a side effect more often than the placebo pill, then probably the medicine was not the culprit. And yes, topamax has a reputation for causing cognitive decline.
>
>
> > My biggest issue is I do not believe I am bipolar, and since I have atypical anorexia (in times of mega stress I don't eat very well -- but dealing with this in therapy and it has been effective) I am a searcher, a reader, a learner -- I don't believe every problem one has can be given a label and a pill to fix. Now there are other "problems" <-- I don't like using that term -- issues; I had AD/HD and Ritalin not only stabilized my weight but made a great difference for me in many ways. It was not until I was in my early 30's that I even knew about it; it is very genetic (we are an entire family of it -- my immediate and both sides -- his and mine --> it isn't all bad; like anything there is good and bad). Thanks for reading, I type very fast and being a stay at home mom for 6 1/2 years has proved to be the most difficult and stressful time of my life. Just my ... 2sense :-)
> >
>
> FYI, Topamax may not be good for anorexia. It kills the apetite pretty bad.
>
>
> Take care,
> John
>
> > PS I found this web page on the Topiramate – (http://www.nursespdr.com/members/database/ndrhtml/topiramate.html). I am including it ONLY for the 'FYI category' – obviously side effects are VERY individual, and the Nurse’s PDR, I suspect, lists everyone under the sun that anyone, anywhere has EVER experienced even a single time.

 

Re: I've been scared into quitting! » JohnX2

Posted by 2sense on April 8, 2002, at 17:48:49

In reply to Re: I've been scared into quitting! » 2sense, posted by JohnX2 on April 8, 2002, at 17:04:44

John

I didn't think it possible, and my apologies to other posters I have not yet read (I have been reading for two (2) years but just started posting recently) -- but I have finally found someone who researches thoroughly, exhaustively, and without question intellectually "facts" put in evidence.

I am relieved to hear that you are saying this about the other drug, though I do not know that I will need it. I need to get through these tests, the electrophysiology tests, the ablation, and I think find another doctor. I am glad you and others are around to interact with.

Just my 2sense

 

Re: I've been scared into quitting! » 2sense

Posted by JohnX2 on April 8, 2002, at 18:12:40

In reply to Re: I've been scared into quitting! » JohnX2, posted by 2sense on April 8, 2002, at 11:40:06

> As to the other medication you mentioned, Topiramate -- do you take this for seizures, bipolar, anxiety? >

I take topamax to help with bipolar II, and mainly to treat a facial neuralgia (tension headaches, weird pains around my face/head).


> My biggest issue is I do not believe I am bipolar, and since I have atypical anorexia (in times of mega stress I don't eat very well -- but dealing with this in therapy and it has been effective) I am a searcher, a reader, a learner -- I don't believe every problem one has can be given a label and a pill to fix. Now there are other "problems" <-- I don't like using that term -- issues; I had AD/HD and Ritalin not only stabilized my weight but made a great difference for me in many ways. It was not until I was in my early 30's that I even knew about it; it is very genetic (we are an entire family of it -- my immediate and both sides -- his and mine --> it isn't all bad; like anything there is good and bad). Thanks for reading, I type very fast and being a stay at home mom for 6 1/2 years has proved to be the most difficult and stressful time of my life. Just my ... 2sense :-)
>

Personally, I don't like labels (bipolar, whatever). There are certain classes of medicines that do certain things. Membrane stabilizers such as Lamictal and Depakote are good for many things (seizures, bipolar, migraine). I may not have text book symptoms of bipolar, but since I have other problems that can use membrane stabilizers, I feel that there is a likelihood that they will help my mood issue too.

John

 

What JohnX said! (nm)

Posted by Zo on April 8, 2002, at 21:37:58

In reply to Re: I've been scared into quitting! » 2sense, posted by JohnX2 on April 8, 2002, at 18:12:40

 

Re: I've been scared into quitting! » 2sense

Posted by JohnX2 on April 10, 2002, at 19:55:27

In reply to Re: I've been scared into quitting!, posted by 2sense on April 7, 2002, at 17:53:13

> I started on Klonopin/Clonazepam .5 - 1.0 mg 1 1/2 years ago because I was unable to sleep. I take Wellbutrin (150 SR -- 2X a day -- I have Hashimoto's which causes hypothyroidism so I also take Synthroid -- for the depression that comes when the antibodies from the Hashimoto's kick up and it cuts my smoking to nearly nothing. I also have AD/HD and take Ritalin (a life saver). My doctor who I had seen for 6 years moved and a new one took over and during a 4 month period I went from 0.5 - 1.0 of the Klonipin to 4.0 (just at bedtime). This doctor became very ill and someone else (another pyschiatrist) took over and decided because my one brother may be bipolar and I have a thyroid disorder then I must be bipolar also. I wanted to go off (slowly) the Klonipin BUT a) the doctor had no appointments because they are short on doctors so our discussions where over the phone and short; b) he simply believes this and there is no changing his mind because I talk fast (I grew up in NJ and am currently in W. PA). When I worked in CO and CA I learned to slow my processing and talking so that others who were 'mellow' could keep up -- when I taught at MIT I didn't have to adjust anything for anyone they all kept up fine. I have no other symptoms and have been evaluated by other psychiatrists having worked for the government and it was part of intake -- so my family got the flu and I didn't refill the script (meaning I called a day or two late and the doctor didn't call it in a day or two after that) -- I had a grand mal seizure on Good Friday. Someone said they could take it or leave it (a posting from 07/04/01 or there abouts) -- be very careful with regard to w/drawl of anti-convulsants that are benzos -- my doctor (not one of them) ever told me that this could happen. Ultimately given how much I research having had some less than pleasant experiences (not everyone is an "A" student and/or doctor) I have a bunch of medical books, etc. Interestingly he PDR doesn't state the danger of sudden withdrawl (and it should) what it does, is tell the reader to see anticonvulsants (a section with other groups of meds, antianemic meds for instance) and it is there they are very, very clear about the danger in sudden withdrawal. I am seeing an excellent therapist and if I leave the practice then I leave her too -- hence my delima. Any ideas? Sorry so long it is my first posting. (To dot the i's and cross the t's I am having an EEG tomorrow AM and a brain MRI with contrast on Tuesday -- this was order not by the pyschiatrist but by my internist who thinks I should get out while I am still able to ... well I am sure you get the picture. Thanks for any and all who made it through this "brain dump". :-)


Hi 2sense,

May I ask what you taught at MIT?

John

 

Re: I've been scared into quitting! » JohnX2

Posted by 2sense on April 10, 2002, at 20:08:08

In reply to Re: I've been scared into quitting! » 2sense, posted by JohnX2 on April 10, 2002, at 19:55:27

I was teaching computer science/engineering, but by and large any and all of the scientists who used our machines, how to use the new CRAY supercomputers (I used to test the s/w and h/w and find security holes before taking to the road to teach at all the sites around the country, and sometimes taught other stuff -- seems like a lifetime ago) at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory National Energy Supercomputing Center -- that's a mouthful.

I found out today that my EEG and my MRI were very bad news. It looks like I have both a seizure disorder and MS.

Sue

 

Re: I've been scared into quitting! » 2sense

Posted by JohnX2 on April 10, 2002, at 20:39:56

In reply to Re: I've been scared into quitting! » JohnX2, posted by 2sense on April 10, 2002, at 20:08:08

> I was teaching computer science/engineering, but by and large any and all of the scientists who used our machines, how to use the new CRAY supercomputers (I used to test the s/w and h/w and find security holes before taking to the road to teach at all the sites around the country, and sometimes taught other stuff -- seems like a lifetime ago) at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory National Energy Supercomputing Center -- that's a mouthful.
>
> I found out today that my EEG and my MRI were very bad news. It looks like I have both a seizure disorder and MS.
>
> Sue

Sue,

I'm very sorry to hear your bad news.

Thanks for your kind words to me.

Best Regards,
John

 

Re: I've been scared into quitting! » 2sense

Posted by JohnX2 on April 11, 2002, at 0:37:05

In reply to Re: I've been scared into quitting! » JohnX2, posted by 2sense on April 8, 2002, at 17:48:49

> John
>
> I didn't think it possible, and my apologies to other posters I have not yet read (I have been reading for two (2) years but just started posting recently) -- but I have finally found someone who researches thoroughly, exhaustively, and without question intellectually "facts" put in evidence.
>

I'm sure if you look around you will find many other posters who achieve the above criteria.
But thanks for the kind words.

Regards,
John

 

Too tough to quit » 2sense

Posted by Ron Hill on April 11, 2002, at 0:42:06

In reply to Re: I've been scared into quitting! » JohnX2, posted by 2sense on April 10, 2002, at 20:08:08

> I found out today that my EEG and my MRI were very bad news. It looks like I have both a seizure disorder and MS.
-----------------------


Sue,

You have already been through the wringer, and now this. I am truly sorry that it is necessary for you to deal with these health issues. However, as you know, it is not time to give up. Problems are merely solutions waiting to be found!

1. Identify the problem.
2. Brainstorm (without constraints) a list of possible solutions to the problem.
3. Select from the list a feasible solution with the highest likelihood of success.
4. Implement the selected potential solution.
5. Evaluate the effectiveness of the implemented action.
6. Iterate until convergence (convergence occurs when the implemented action meets or exceeds the criteria for success).

Best wishes.

-- Ron

 

Re: I've been scared into quitting! » JohnX2

Posted by 2sense on April 11, 2002, at 7:02:53

In reply to Re: I've been scared into quitting! » 2sense, posted by JohnX2 on April 11, 2002, at 0:37:05

> > John
> >
> > I didn't think it possible, and my apologies to other posters I have not yet read (I have been reading for two (2) years but just started posting recently) -- but I have finally found someone who researches thoroughly, exhaustively, and without question intellectually "facts" put in evidence.
> >
>
> I'm sure if you look around you will find many other posters who achieve the above criteria.
> But thanks for the kind words.
>
> Regards,
> John


John --

I have already found this to be true (i.e., other posters who researched thoroughly, exhaustively, and question intellectually "facts" put in evidence [my husband is a Matlock watcher :-)]. In fact it is really cool (comforting and empowering to know that you all are there, to meet and interact with and bounce ideas off such a really smart group of people. In the past I just search and read on stuff that I or someone else had asked me -- I am seeing the board differently participating "interactively" so to speak.

Sue

PS I will risk it. When I worked at LLNL I finished my first assignment the first day I was there. My boss was talking to someone else, and when I let her know -- she gave me this cold stare and said, "That was supposed to keep you busy for the next month." The other co-worker said, "What are you trying to do make us look bad?" As I worked there and got to know people I found some were fast, slow, whatever at grasping concepts, etc. A good friend and future boss told me, "Sue it isn't that they are slow, it is that you are fast." I do not take complements easily given my up bringing, so even considering this, as a possibility was difficult. It helped me see and work with people from a different perspective. As I had taught computer engineering for 5 years prior, it was my job to see if someone was lagging and why and if I could help them grasp concepts or see if external (i.e., personal life reasons) events were impacting their work. Once at the lab, this was not my job, though it was still valuable to know if I was able to do so without intruding on someone's privacy and/or boundaries. That truly is my 2sense.

 

Re: Too tough to quit » Ron Hill

Posted by 2sense on April 11, 2002, at 7:05:43

In reply to Too tough to quit » 2sense, posted by Ron Hill on April 11, 2002, at 0:42:06

Ron --

Thank you very much for the kind and supportive words. Are you a scientist by chance? Your approach, like my own, seems 'eerily' familiar :-).

Sue (aka 2sense)

 

Re: Too tough to quit » 2sense

Posted by Ron Hill on April 11, 2002, at 11:58:20

In reply to Re: Too tough to quit » Ron Hill, posted by 2sense on April 11, 2002, at 7:05:43

>Are you a scientist by chance? Your approach, like my own, seems 'eerily' familiar :-).
-----------

Sue,

JohnX2 is an EE (semiconductor chip design) and I am a ChE (but worked as an environmental engineer). Your resume is impressive!

-- Ron

 

Re: Too tough to quit » Ron Hill

Posted by 2sense on April 11, 2002, at 18:32:42

In reply to Re: Too tough to quit » 2sense, posted by Ron Hill on April 11, 2002, at 11:58:20

Ron --

I am sure both yours and John's resume is quite impressive. When I did the supercomputing thing it was really cool -- if you want to take it off the board (if you have any interest) let me know and I'll email you want I used to do and how I had what I figure is my 15 minutes of (geek) fame. My biggest problem is that I was a strawberry blonde and most scientists I worked with thought(initially) I was a 'bimbo' -- it just motivated me more -- and after awhile not only did they not feel that way, they didn't approach other women in the field with that "going in position".

Sue

 

Redirect: Too tough to quit

Posted by Dr. Bob on April 12, 2002, at 12:03:40

In reply to Re: Too tough to quit » Ron Hill, posted by 2sense on April 11, 2002, at 18:32:42

> I am sure both yours and John's resume is quite impressive. When I did the supercomputing thing it was really cool -- if you want to take it off the board (if you have any interest) let me know...

How about if discussion of non-medication topics is at least redirected to Psycho-Social-Babble?

http://www.dr-bob.org/babble/social/20020411/msgs/21948.html

Thanks,

Bob

 

Re: Redirect: Too tough to quit » Dr. Bob

Posted by 2sense on April 12, 2002, at 13:19:50

In reply to Redirect: Too tough to quit, posted by Dr. Bob on April 12, 2002, at 12:03:40

Sorry -- my last post may also have violated this though I do ask about meds -- more than one of them -- I gave a lot of background. Will be more careful.

Sue

 

Re: Too tough to quit » Ron Hill

Posted by 2sense on April 21, 2002, at 12:39:40

In reply to Too tough to quit » 2sense, posted by Ron Hill on April 11, 2002, at 0:42:06

This process is fool proof if you do not have
obstacles like: not being able to drive, and
insurance companies, playing phone tag ...

It still is the way to go -- thanks.

Sue

 

Re: Too tough to quit » Ron Hill

Posted by 2sense on October 22, 2002, at 9:45:30

In reply to Too tough to quit » 2sense, posted by Ron Hill on April 11, 2002, at 0:42:06

> > I found out today that my EEG and my MRI were very bad news. It looks like I have both a seizure disorder and MS.
> -----------------------
>
>
> Sue,
>
> You have already been through the wringer, and now this. I am truly sorry that it is necessary for you to deal with these health issues. However, as you know, it is not time to give up. Problems are merely solutions waiting to be found!
>
> 1. Identify the problem.
> 2. Brainstorm (without constraints) a list of possible solutions to the problem.
> 3. Select from the list a feasible solution with the highest likelihood of success.
> 4. Implement the selected potential solution.
> 5. Evaluate the effectiveness of the implemented action.
> 6. Iterate until convergence (convergence occurs when the implemented action meets or exceeds the criteria for success).
>
> Best wishes.
>
> -- Ron
>
>

RON ...

It is 6 months later and this approach will be timeless in 6 million months ....

SUE


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