Love can save your loved one
Day 27 of Med Harm Awareness.
Today’s truth is simple: love.
These drugs can strip the felt sense of love. The person on the drug may feel unloved, unwanted, unappreciated, or unadored.
Their partner, sibling, parent, or child may feel the drugged person has stopped loving, caring, or respecting them.
Neither side understands what’s happening.
Spellbinding, in plain language:
It’s like your loved one is physically there, but emotionally absent—the eyes look different. You get exhausted defending yourself from nonsense that doesn’t make sense. The spellbound person may insist the drug is “great,” even as their personality shifts into someone you don’t recognize. To the outside world they look “fine”—working, exercising, carrying on—so it’s easy to assume you “just grew apart.”
What it felt like—to those who later woke up:
- “Like being underwater.”
- “Watching my life instead of living it.”
- “I lost time.”
- “I lost memories.”
How do you wake someone up?
You can’t force it. You drop seeds and you pray. Seeing the pain of other families sometimes breaks through. Most eventually find their own way out; for many it takes years. Sometimes it’s faster.
What pulls people back:
- Tired of being numb.
- Tired of health challenges—weight gain, noise sensitivity, body-wide numbness, and more.
- Wanting to feel bonded again—something more than floating through space.
Waking up is real—and it’s beautiful.
Colors return. Birds in the sky are suddenly noticeable. Curiosity about other people reappears. Questions replace defensiveness. Feelings come back. It’s like waking from an awake coma.
Join us at Stop AntidepressantDamage – to add your voice, share your experience and help us STOP this silent abuse.
Trust your love, focus on your self while they are sleeping. Drugged ones wake up- We Miss YOU!- Families everywhere
