Between the ages of 16 and 21, I was prescribed more
than fifteen different stimulants, antidepressants,
antipsychotics, and mood stabilizers. The cure was worse
than the disease.
By Gogo Lidz (courtesy of New York Magazine.)
Fall 2001
Ritalin
I was 16 when I was prescribed my first mood-altering
drug.
I'd been a dreamy, drifty child. But when adolescence
closed in, I became tall and clumsy and socially inept.
The flood of hormones seemed to unsettle my mind. I was
silly and giddy one minute, bursting with rage the next;
running around excitedly in the afternoon but impossible
to rouse out of bed in the morning. I lost friends
almost as fast as I could make them.
By 16, my concentration had ebbed so low and my grades
had plummeted so deep into the alphabet that my parents
decided to send me to a child psychiatrist. I was
concerned, too, and put up no resistance.
So, six Halloweens ago, my father, my mother, my kid
sister, and I went to the office of an upright fellow in
his late thirties who wore a cardigan sweater and a
narrow, straight-edge bow tie. All of us found the
psychiatrist charming - except my sister, Daisy, who
called him Dr. Titrate because he talked incessantly
about "titrating" the drugs he prescribed.
"What's titrate mean?" I asked during that first
session. "I'll explain the term as simply as possible," Dr.
Titrate said, grabbing a dictionary from the bookcase. "Titration is the process of determining the
concentration of a dissolved substance in terms of the
smallest amount of a reagent of known concentration
required to bring about a given effect in reaction with
a known volume of the test solution." Though it didn't
sound simple, we all nodded our heads in agreement.
I described my symptoms and family medical history
(depressed aunts, a schizophrenic uncle) to Dr. Titrate,
who wagged his head wisely and asked me a few questions
to screen for attention deficit disorder:"Do you have
trouble following through on things?"
"Are you often sidetracked?"
"Do you make careless mistakes?"
I answered yes to every one. Then again, so did my
father. And my mother. And my sister. Not only was I a
candidate for ADD, but so was everyone else in my home.
Satisfied that I was suffering from ADD, Dr. Titrate
gave me samples of Ritalin.
Winter 2001
Metadate, Dextrostat, Dexedrine Spansules, Adderall,
Adderall XR, Strattera
Discovering that I had a recognized syndrome brought my
parents tremendous relief. The news was comforting to me
too. All I had to do, I thought, was pop a few pills and
I'd be as focused and success-driven as everyone else in
my school. I'd be normal.
But the Ritalin made me feel spacey. Classes were easier
to sit through, but if a teacher asked me a question,
I'd answer with a disoriented "Whaaat?" When I explained
this to Dr. Titrate at our next session, he turned
pharmacist. Over the next few months, he plied me with a
small galaxy of ADD drugs: Metadate, Dextrostat,
Dexedrine Spansules, Adderall, Adderall XR, and
Strattera, alone and in various combinations. The
non-stimulant, Strattera, had no effect on me. The
stimulants turned me into a tweaked-out whiz kid. It was
as if I had been nearsighted and now had X-ray vision.
Adderall XR was my drug of choice. It turbocharged my
brain during the school day, but when I got home, I
crashed hard. Sometimes I'd lie in bed for hours and
sob. To supplement the Adderall XR, Dr. Titrate
prescribed the short-term amphetamine Dextrostat for
after-school studying. Taking so many stimulants made it
hard to sleep more than six hours a night. It also made
me rapidly lose weight. At first, I liked this side
effect. But when my classmates started calling me Anna
Rexic, the thrill faded. I always felt queasy, and food
tasted like sand.
Hopped up on stimulants, I gained confidence. After Dr.
Titrate wrote to my headmaster that I had ADD and needed
more time on tests, my performance at school improved
dramatically. A C student in tenth grade, I was pulling
A's by the eleventh. After Dr. Titrate wrote the same
note to the College Board, I got a near-perfect score on
my SAT. I turned from a basket case into an
overachieving young adult. But I was dimly aware that
the ADD medication was also doing something else,
something I didn't like. I felt impatient, irritable,
explosively angry. I'd scream at my father for buying me
the wrong toothpaste. I'd scream at my sister for
borrowing my hairbrush. I'd scream at my car for running
out of gas.
When I told Dr. Titrate about this, he nodded
empathetically and said, "Remember to take your
medicine." To be honest, I didn't always. My only friend
with ADD took Concerta, a kind of slow-release Ritalin.
Occasionally, we'd have "no-medicine days" when we'd
skip our daily doses and giggle and act random. The
problem with skipping the meds was that I'd want to
sleep all the next day.
Spring 2002–Summer 2003
Adderall XR, Dextrostat, marijuana, Tylenol PM, Effexor,
Zyprexa
During my junior year of high school, I hooked up with a
pudgy stoner, a senior. If I took stimulants and
finished all my homework, I'd smoke a joint with him in
the evening. Smoking weed took me out of my usual speedy
state. I'd get blissful and drowsy and amused by
gravity, and finally I could sleep. What perfect
titration, I thought.
This system worked very well until Pudgy Stoner
graduated and enrolled at a party school a thousand
miles away. My source of herbal titration was gone, and
the pressure to get into college was on. At first, I
called Pudgy every night. But gradually, he stopped
picking up the phone. One morning, before school, he
dumped me over e-mail. I was devastated. After lunch, I
asked to be excused from class and ran to the girls'
room, where I sobbed and slapped my wrists against the
tile floors.
The next day, I dropped off my sister at school and,
while searching in vain for a parking space, decided to
end my life. I drove to a pharmacy and bought a box of
Tylenol PM. Then I drove to another parking lot. As
Fiona Apple's "Sullen Girl" played over the car radio, I
swallowed twenty pills. I tore four pages out of my AP
European-history notebook and wrote a dramatic suicide
note. Then I waited.
As I settled into a stupor, I suddenly realized the
gravity of what I had done. I grabbed my cell phone and
dialed home. My father picked up. As hysterical as I
was, I still managed to tell him where I was and what I
had done. He found me and drove me to a hospital, where
I was given a charcoal lavage and admitted overnight to
the psych ward.
When I was released from the hospital 24 hours later, my
parents took me to see Dr. Titrate. I told him I hadn't
really wanted to commit suicide; I just wanted to get
back at my ex-boyfriend. My mother asked Dr. Titrate if
he thought I might be suffering from depression. "Well,
that may be a tiny component of her condition," Dr.
Titrate said. When my father asked about manic
depression, he said, "That's another tiny component.
She's also got a little cyclothymia and phase-of-life
issues. She's a unique case. I hope some day to write
about her in a medical journal." Dr. Titrate kept me on
the stimulants Adderall XR and Dextrostat and added the
antidepressant Effexor to my drug regimen.
But Effexor seemed to have no effect on me, and so the
day before I left for college in upstate New York, my
father and I met with Dr. Titrate again. He put me on a
heavy-duty antipsychotic called Zyprexa. Dr. Titrate
warned me of side effects. "Watch out for tardive
dyskinesia, acute dystonia, and neuroleptic malignant
syndrome," he said. I nodded dumbly. "Of course," he
added, "the possibility is remote."
Fall 2003
Adderall XR, Dextrostat, Zyprexa, alcohol, marijuana,
mushrooms, hash, cocaine
With my parents eleven toll booths away, and my mind on
Adderall and Dextrostat, I allowed my wildest impulses
to take over during my first semester at Bard. I drank,
drugged, and got the world's most ridiculous tattoo (oh
my!) inscribed on the small of my back. My substances of
choice were mellow drugs: pot, hash, mushrooms. I
snorted cocaine once, but it had little effect on me - I
already had quite a tolerance for stimulants.
Stoked by Dr. Titrate's little helpers, I hosted my own
college radio show and called it "The ADD Hour."
Naturally, "The ADD Hour" lasted just nine minutes, and
I played only the first eighteen seconds of every song.
I couldn't keep still in class or the library or even my
dorm room. I put off starting assignments until the last
possible moment. My classmates pulled all-nighters; I
pulled all-several-nighters. To finish an art-history
paper, I once stayed up 72 hours. Which wasn't that
difficult - the stimulants made sleep nearly impossible.
Bard had a don't-ask-don't-tell attitude toward drugs,
and a thriving black market for stimulants. The going
rate for Adderall was $5 a pill. After less than a month
at school, I got reprimanded by the dean for giving a
fellow freshman a couple of my Adderall XRs. "I've got a
paper due," he had told me, before selling them to a narc for $10 apiece and ratting me out to save his skin.
As the semester wore on, I became increasingly erratic.
I skipped classes and disappeared from campus for days
at a time. My friends still talk of the day they lost me
in a Wal-Mart: After paging me for twenty minutes, they
found me with no money and a brand-new .22 hunting
rifle. (It hadn't occurred to me where I would store the
gun or shoot it or what I would shoot at.) Another day,
my parents and Daisy drove up to Bard to meet me for
lunch, but I was 100 miles away at a friend's apartment
in Brooklyn, hungover from a night of hard drinking.
Daisy, then a high-school sophomore, was crushed that I
had blown off the visit. She didn't blame me as much as
Dr. Titrate, whom she called my "enabler." When her
concentration began to wane in school, she, too, had
seen him. She, too, had been diagnosed with ADD and
prescribed Adderall. But she stopped taking it after a
few months. "It changes my personality," she said. "It
makes me mean."
I stayed on Adderall, but I stopped taking recreational
drugs: Downers only brought me down.
Spring 2004
Adderall XR, Dextrostat, muscle relaxants, Ambien,
Abilify
Four weeks into my second semester, my parents received
a late-night phone call from my roommate. I had OD'd
again. I vaguely recall staggering around campus in a
speedy, woozy haze. I later learned a classmate had
found me unconscious and called for an ambulance. An EKG
revealed I had come close to cardiac arrest.
The next morning, my father signed me out of the
hospital and we met with the college dean. Still in a
haze, I rabbited on about all the hard drugs I had
taken. My father was horrified. So was the dean, who
kicked me out of school. By afternoon, my head had
cleared and I realized I had been regurgitating what I
had read in Naked Lunch. "I didn't know what I was
saying," I told my father. He believed me. We met again
with the dean, who didn't.
When I got home, I saw Dr. Titrate in an emergency
session. He kept me on Adderall XR and Dextrostat and
added Abilify to stabilize my mood. Two days later, the
toxicology report came back from the lab - on the night of
my overdose, nothing had been in my system except my
prescribed stimulants, an Ambien, and muscle relaxants.
Now I remembered: I had self-medicated for menstrual
cramps. The combination of drugs must have caused the
overdose. After Dr. Titrate called the dean to plead my
case, I was allowed to return to school. Conditionally.
I submitted to random urine screenings, and passed every
one. I got a new boyfriend, a straight-arrow lit major.
Soon after that, Dr. Titrate took me off Abilify, but
not Adderall XR. The following year, health regulators
in Canada would suspend Adderall XR following the deaths
of twenty people, including fourteen children, who had
taken it between 1999 and 2003.
Fall 2004
Adderall XR, Dextrostat, Lexapro, Advil
Feeling anxious at the start of my sophomore year, I
phoned Dr. Titrate from college to ask if he knew of a
potent antidepressant called Lexapro. My new boyfriend
was on the drug for depression. Dr. Titrate said he
recommended Lexapro for anxiety, and had a prescription
faxed to my off-campus pharmacy. His only warning: "Let
me know if it starts making you feel manic. " I was
unsure what Dr. Titrate meant, but I swallowed my daily Lexapro with my daily Adderall XR and my daily
Dextrostat.
Over the course of my sophomore year, I did not get any
less anxious. I spent day after gloomy day in bed,
feeling dizzy and nauseous and paranoid, getting
stomachaches, driving my friends crazy, and wanting to
kill myself. I became more and more unstable: sometimes
moored to my bed, sometimes restlessly ricocheting
around campus. I had a couple of scary panic
attacks - each followed by sudden eerie moments of
composure and lucidity. I became terrified of being
alone.
One night, after my boyfriend told me he needed more
"alone time," I went back to my room and screamed and
cried and beat my walls for three hours. I phoned Dr.
Titrate, who suggested I "dial down" my Adderall use and
increase my dosage of Lexapro.
That summer, on an art-class trip to Italy, I imploded.
Convinced that my classmates hated me, I tried to slice
my wrists with broken glass. When that proved
inefficient, I swallowed a handful of Advil with a glass
of wine. After a night in the Venice psych ward, I was
put on a plane back to the States.
When I finally got home, I threw a huge tantrum - body
thrashing, head whipping from side to side. My mom
grabbed my shoulders and hugged me, but I struggled
against it. "Why are you doing this to me?" I shrieked.
Daisy begged my parents to fire Dr. Titrate. "He can't
read people," she said. "He doesn't listen." But my
parents still trusted him, or at least wanted to trust
him. And so they took me to yet another emergency
session.
Dr. Titrate said he doubted I had "suicidal ideations"
and recommended that I be sent to a
substance-abuse-treatment facility. He told my parents,
"You can, of course, seek a second opinion." But there
didn't seem to be time for that. Dr. Titrate spoke with
great urgency: He wanted me in the facility within 48
hours. I crumpled in hysterics on his office floor.
June 2005
Lexapro, lots of Lexapro
Dr. Titrate recommended a consultant, and the consultant
recommended a treatment program in Utah. It cost $450 a
day and was not covered by my parents' insurance. The
next morning, I was shipped off to a remote campsite in
the High Uinta Mountains. This wilderness program was
designed specifically for drug addicts and alcoholics.
Dr. Titrate had assured my parents that although I
wasn't technically an addict, the treatment would be
beneficial.
But the field therapist - a recovering alcoholic in battle
fatigues - and her staff of instructors didn't seem to be
in on the secret. They treated me like the worst kind of
addict: one who was in denial. "Acknowledge your
addiction, or you're not getting out of here," one of
the instructors told me.
My attitude baffled the instructors, and I was routinely
disciplined with silence and the withholding of hot
food. When informed of my resistance, Dr. Titrate upped
my daily intake of Lexapro again, to three times the
normal dose.
I should note that I was over 18 and technically could
have left the program at any time. But leaving was not
really an option. Dr. Titrate had given my parents
strict instructions: If I phoned and said I planned to
come home, they were to say I wasn't welcome. I would be
stranded with no money in the mountains of Utah.
I had little to no contact with the outside world during
this time. My mother and father had weekly hour-long
phone conversations with the field therapist, who, in
turn, had weekly hour-long phone conversations with Dr.
Titrate. My parents could send e-mails to the center,
but anything deemed "nontherapeutic" was withheld from
me.
The letter that did get through was one they were
required to write: an "impact letter" that I was to read
aloud in group therapy. My parents later told me that it
was the hardest thing they ever wrote. They debated.
They agonized. They revised the text endlessly. They
wrote that they were desperate that I be accountable for
my life, that they had sent me to the treatment center
because they had no idea how to help and this seemed the
best option. They wrote, "Instead of taking
responsibility for your life, you are foisting that
responsibility on others. But the price is terrible.
From middle school on, we have seen you struggle to
forge friendships. But this is not the way to make
lasting relationships. In fact, it's just the opposite.
We are terrified."
I was terrified, too, but I didn't know how to stop. My
mental state still swung violently between extremes.
As the Utah program came to an end, Dr. Titrate's
consultant arranged to have me sent to a 90-day
"aftercare" program in Southern California. This
program, too, was designed for recovering addicts and
alcoholics. To get in, I was required to "admit" my
addiction in a phone call to the center's director.
After a tearful hour of trying to be honest, I lied and
said, "Okay, I'm an addict."
When I was released a week later, the Utah field
therapist said, "I don't think we can do much else for
you, but at least you've admitted your problem."
August 2005
Lexapro, Lamictal, Provigil, Wellbutrin, Cymbalta, more
Lamictal
In California, I had a brief honeymoon. Now, in addition
to a large dose of Lexapro, Dr. Titrate prescribed the
mood stabilizer Lamictal and, for focus, Provigil, a
non-stimulant used to keep narcoleptics awake. I went to
twelve-step meetings, body-image meetings,
risk-assessment, and love-addiction meetings. I did t'ai
chi, I meditated, and I wrote daily "letters to God."
But the honeymoon didn't last. The Provigil made me
faint and frenetic. I got dizzy and had frequent
stomachaches. I experienced sudden, overpowering moments
of terror. Whenever I refused to get out of bed all day
(often) or refused to attend group meetings (even more
often), I was grounded, which just gave me an excuse to
retreat even further into myself.
I did befriend a girl my age, a recovering heroin addict
who had been in similar programs half her life. Go
through the motions, she told me, and no one will pay
attention. Instead of letters to God, I jotted down
Ludacris lyrics and dated them. She was right: Nobody
noticed the difference.
I suffered panic attacks with greater and greater
frequency. One attack was so frightening that I finally
demanded to see a psychiatrist. He decided to start
weaning me off Lexapro, replace it with the milder
antidepressants Wellbutrin and Cymbalta, and increase my
dosage of Lamictal.
Around this time, the Utah program mailed me a box of
computer printouts - the e-mails my parents had sent that
were deemed "nontherapeutic" and withheld. One was an
article about cognitive behavioral therapy - a treatment
Dr. Titrate had always dismissed. After I read it, I set
up an appointment.
When I related my personal history and described my
symptoms to the cognitive behavioral therapist, she
said, "You don't sound like an addict. You sound like
you're bipolar II, a form of manic depression."
She asked for the names of the drugs I was taking.
"Provigil, Lexapro …"
"Lexapro! Do you have any idea what effects that drug
can have on bipolar people?"
At the end of the session, I called home and told my
parents. My father found a Website that cross-indexed
syndromes with drugs. Patients detail their reactions.
He typed in bipolar and Lexapro. A sampling: "When first
started on 10mg, about 2 hours later felt insane amount
of energy, was zooming, felt very speedy. Then shortly
after that same day I crashed and couldn't get out of
bed" … "I had euphoria/irritability like never before" …
"Manic and then wanting to kill myself all in 15 minutes
time."
The stimulants turned me into a tweaked-out whiz kid.
They also made me rapidly lose weight, which I liked
until my classmates started calling me Anna Rexic.
He flew to California the next morning. We met at my
halfway house and drove to the behavioral therapist's
office. "Your daughter has been misdiagnosed and mis-prescribed," she said. I felt ecstatic and oddly
vindicated. She said antidepressants may be used in
adolescent bipolar depression in the acute phase, but
only under cover of a mood stabilizer to calm potential
manic storms. She said Dr. Titrate should have
prescribed Lamictal first, then waited for the mood
stabilizer to, well, stabilize me. Then he could have
tacked on an antidepressant, but not Lexapro, one of the
more volatile and potentially mania-inducing of the lot.
According to this psychiatrist, the stimulants used to
treat my alleged ADD may have intensified my bipolar
disorder. Adderall, she explained, can cause dysphoria,
a symptom of depression defined as a "generalized
feeling of discontent." Dr. Titrate had never warned us
that stimulants could complicate depression or hasten
the onset of bipolar disorder in kids prone to it.
The behaviorist said the addiction therapy I'd been
subjected to was pretty much a wash, and possibly
counterproductive. Five months and $75,000 worth of
rehabilitation, all for nothing. "This is so typical of
the so-called treatment bipolar II patients receive,"
the therapist said. "The disorder is usually only
diagnosed after everything else is ruled out."
When my father and I got back to the halfway house, he
called Dr. Titrate. I listened in while he recounted the
recent turn of events. Dr. Titrate was mostly silent. At
the end of the conversation he said, "I admit I've made
some mistakes. I have a conscience. But, at this point,
what can I do?"
January 2007
Lamictal
I'm back in college now, in my senior year. Since going
off Lexapro, I have been free of manic feelings and
suicidal thoughts. I've got a new therapist, who
specializes in dialectical behavior therapy. She shows
me how certain thinking patterns cause symptoms by
projecting a fun-house picture of what's going on in my
life. She locks in on what I need to change and what I
don't, then works for those targeted changes. The
therapy is different from any I've ever had. I feel like
I'm taking a college course on myself.
Prescription drugs are still a hit-and-miss proposition
for me. Last January, a new psychiatrist prescribed
Geodon, a schizophrenia medication used to treat mania
associated with bipolar disorder. In rare cases, it can
actually provoke mania. I was one of those cases. I
jittered and shook and could barely sleep. The only
medication I'm on now is Lamictal, the mood stabilizer.
I haven't heard from Dr. Titrate since an envelope
bearing his name and return address arrived at my home.
Inside was a bill for $250, his consulting charge for my
father's last phone call. My dad and I had a good laugh
over that.