" Some people find that as they get clean from substances, they feel less depressed, anxious or angry. This is one of the really positive signs of recovery. However, if you have a true co-curring disorder, it won't go away with abstinence....... The tricky part is that while people are using substances or withdrawing from substances, it may look like they have a co-curring disorder (such as depression), but it dissapears as they get clean. This means they did not have a co-curring disorder. They had a substance induced mental disorder. - what looked like a co-curring disorder was actually caused by the substance itself.
It generally takes 4-6 weeks of abstinence to see whether you really have a co-curring disorder. If the signs persist, you have one; if they go away, you don't....... If you have a co-curring disorder, you may need therapy or medication over a period of time. If you don't, good for you - you can just work on maintaining abstinence. However, you don;t have to complete the 4-6 week of clean time before you seek help. It's better to treat it immediately, and if it goes away as you get clean, you can decide later whether to continue the treatment"
This probably explains why some people feel really great after some time of abstinence and life is really better for them, and other people are still feeling bad thinking that abstaining would have fixed everything. The people that have co-curring disorders may feel even worse at times because things aren't really changing for them.
I am hopeful that my depression lifts the more time I get under my belt, either way, I have an appt. scheduled with a therapist in 2 weeks, I'll see what she says.
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