Friday, August 10th, 2012 06:05 pm
So, after a major blow-up last week, I went to the doctors to discuss how my PMT was getting just a teeny little bit out of hand. I discovered three things:

1. I don't have PMT. What I have is severe enough to be classed as PMDD - aka industrial grade PMT that sends you genuinely clinically insane for a short time each month.

2. This has been getting steadily worse over the past year, and while I should have realised something was wrong far sooner, it's still lucky I caught it when I did.

3. It is treatable. They have a very good success rate treating PMDD with SSRI anti-depressants.

So I'm now on prozac.

Which was a shock, but also a relief. It's terrifying when you start to believe that you really are some kind of psychotic monster, unfit for human company. And a massive relief to find that no, you're actually quite a nice person with a pretty well balanced mind, it's just that your brain has spent too much time recently soaking in some really nasty chemicals.

Because the way PMT - and especially PMDD - affects your brain is terrifying. It's not just a case of going through emotional mood swings. It influences your brain chemistry. It does profoundly weird things to your rational mind.

Everybody has some kind of internal measure of whether something's a good idea or not. Some people's are rigid, some are changeable, some are hazy, some are so different to our own we'd call them just plain wrong, but everybody has some kind of baseline to judge ideas against.

But with severe PMT, you completely lose that baseline. You may as well be floating in space, with no reference points. There's no way of telling if what's dropped into your mind is a sensible intuition backed by good logic, or an insane scheme with a few ridiculous justifications tacked on.

And this is where the emotional triggers get really dangerous, as your brain picks on those and uses them instead. You feel furious, so somebody must have upset you. And here's your brain suggesting who, and justifying why you're right to feel so upset with them. And that must be right, because if not you wouldn't feel so angry, right? And you DO feel angry, so those justifications must be true!

So you phone up a friend full of righteous ire, and explain to them that a close examination of the precise wording of a throwaway Facebook comment proves there's obviously a grand conspiracy against you... and rather than backing you up and offering to ride out to lay waste to your enemies, they say "Anna, are you craving rare steak right now?" and you say "Well, now that you come to mention it... Oh. Ohhhhh. It's PMT again, isn't it?" and spend the next couple of days trying to keep yourself in check and ideally only make decisions based on known quantities, or thoroughly sense checked by someone else.

And then it's gone - magically, almost instantly, like someone flicked a switch - and your mind is operating normally again. Move along, nothing to see here.

I'd thought recently that I was coping better, as I was getting better and better at spotting the PMT myself without having to phone a friend. Turns out it's more a case that it's easier to spot that something's wrong when you have to stop yourself jumping under a train.

(Not in a suicidal kind of way. I'm not sure why that's so important, but it is. More impulse control. The idea 'I could just step forward just before the train gets in' pops into your head, and there's absolutely no warning bells attached. A couple of times I've ended up having to stand with my back pressed to the back wall of the platform until the train was safely pulled in and the doors were open, just in case my brain made any stupid split second decisions.)

So, yeah... seriously, at that point, HOW could I not see there was something majorly wrong???

I guess part of it that PMT affects your perception. While you're in the hurricane, there's no way to make sense of what's happening, you just ride it out. And afterwards, what you were feeling and thinking feels so removed from the everyday, normal, actual 'you' that it's all rather unreal, a bad dream that you can now put away for another month.

But mostly... well, it's PMT, isn't it? Everybody knows that PMT makes women go a little bit crazy. We know all the jokes. Loads of women get it every month, and they get through it just fine. If you put a post online saying 'I have terrible PMT today' you'll get a whole bunch of friends sympathising, saying 'Me too!' It's the same for everyone. What can you do? It's just PMT. Deal with it.

...and then the dust settles, and you have a proper conversation with other female friends, and it turns out that while you were talking about having to ~literally~ physically restrain yourself from pushing people downstairs for walking too slowly, they meant they'd had horrible cramps and snapped at someone who made them a cup of tea.

And it did sneak up on me slowly. After all the problems I had last summer with constant bleeding, blood tests, ultrasounds and general unpleasant prodding and poking, I thought everything had been fixed when I switched to the hormone coil. But while that did sort out all the physical symptoms, my doctor thinks the PMT has been building up ever since.

And honestly? Having been through all that crap last year I think part of me desperately wanted it to be all sorted so I didn't have to go through it again, so was turning a blind eye to the hormone storms.

Turns out that's a really bad idea.

So here I am. And as always, the silver lining of acknowledging you have something wrong with you is learning there actually is a cure.

Not to mention realising you have some wonderful, supportive, understanding, patient people in your life. (This post isn't intended to be either an apology or a thank you, as those things are very important and therefore best done in private... but you all know who you are.)

So the past week has been kind of interesting - I've been going through all kinds of entertaining mental states while the Prozac kicks in. And of course, the nature of the medication means I'm going to have to be completely alcohol-free for the foreseeable future. But that future is hopefully now going to be a much easier and happier time.

I'm writing this here, now, for two reasons. First, so that in six months time when I'm feeling completely fine and normal and wondering why I'm even on these silly pills anyway, I can look back here and remind myself.

Second (and for this reason I'm not friends locking it, even though I'd like to) it's here in case it sounds strangely familiar to anyone else out there.

Those kind of extreme PMT symptoms? They're not 'normal', they're not just what everybody else is dealing with, they are serious, and most importantly of all, they ARE treatable.

I don't have to worry about when or how it's next going to strike, or how I'm going to cope. I won't have to live as a hostage to my hormone any more. I feel like I've just got my life back. I've got me back.

That's definitely worth taking a few pills for.
Friday, August 10th, 2012 06:33 pm (UTC)
No they're not, well done! Going on the mini pill was amazing for me because I was finally functional more of the time than not, and it's also allowed me to get a proper handle on my real mental issues because they're not obscured by the blinding crazy of severe pmt.
Monday, August 13th, 2012 11:33 am (UTC)
It really is scary how far from normal you can stray without even realising it...
Friday, August 10th, 2012 07:26 pm (UTC)
I'm glad you have diagnosis and stuff... I found it a shock when I came off the pill and discovered all that stuff I had put down as "teenage angst" (like the fact that I thought stopping eating food was a perfectly rational reaction to the fact that exams are hard and boys are mean... whereas drinking wine and chucking rocks at boys would have been FAR more sensible!) was actually PMT, and the pill I was on for 10 years was just a rather good way of controlling it. Hormones are weeeeird and troublesome things.
Monday, August 13th, 2012 11:33 am (UTC)
Mine was the other way around, but yes, they are very nasty little things when they get out of control...
Friday, August 10th, 2012 10:57 pm (UTC)
Hope the prozac kicks in in time for next months hormone-fest and it feels much less extreme and you are okay.


BTW are you still on same mobile number?
Monday, August 13th, 2012 11:29 am (UTC)
Yes, I am - shall be in Leeds this upcoming weekend too if you're around and want to catch up?
Monday, August 13th, 2012 05:57 pm (UTC)
I hear you, oh boy do I hear you. I was diagnosed a few of years ago and put on the pill. I took the decision to stop taking it and stick to having the symptoms a while ago though. They're reduced from what they were before I started taking it but not sure how long I can keep that up for. May try something else at some point but no way I'm going back on SSRIs after spending years on the things for depression. I really hope they work for you though!

Take care of yourself.
xxx
Tuesday, August 14th, 2012 11:52 am (UTC)
Take care of you too and keep an eye on it because it creeps up on you so easily, especially because it's only that one week that all hell breaks loose so you can't judge it the rest of the time. I'm back at my doctors next week so should be able to find out more about long term treatment and management, so shall keep you updated. And we must do cocktails again soon - I am planning on being a pain in the butt to every bartender out there and making them find me interesting and tasty non-alcoholic concoctions!
Monday, August 13th, 2012 10:01 pm (UTC)
Added you. Hope you feel loads better very soon, sounds like things are moving in the right direction xx.
Tuesday, August 14th, 2012 11:53 am (UTC)
Hello :-) And thank you, and hopefully!
Tuesday, August 14th, 2012 09:58 pm (UTC)
It is good that this has been identified and is now being addressed, I hope the medication does it's job. I bet this is a big sense of relief lifted from your mind.
Wednesday, August 15th, 2012 05:16 pm (UTC)
Thank you, and definitely - it's the difference between thinking you're a monster, and knowing that you're ill...
Wednesday, August 15th, 2012 10:38 am (UTC)
*sympathies*, and sorry for the delayed reply. I didn't feel up to it until I'd done a chunk of processing around my own hormone-related mental health stuff (see my post this morning). I hope the meds help.
Wednesday, August 15th, 2012 05:18 pm (UTC)
Thank you and don't worry - and I'll leave a proper reply on your post so it doesn't all get too crossing-the-streams!
Saturday, January 5th, 2013 05:52 pm (UTC)
I'm so glad you posted this unlocked - I just passed it along here, to someone who has a few questions about getting PMDD treatment on the NHS.