treatment-resistant depression Archives - Global Travel Noteshttps://dulichbaolocaz.com/tag/treatment-resistant-depression/Sharing real travel experiences worldwideSun, 05 Apr 2026 23:11:06 +0000en-UShourly1https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.3‘My Antidepressant Stopped Working’: Do’s and Don’tshttps://dulichbaolocaz.com/my-antidepressant-stopped-working-dos-and-donts/https://dulichbaolocaz.com/my-antidepressant-stopped-working-dos-and-donts/#respondSun, 05 Apr 2026 23:11:06 +0000https://dulichbaolocaz.com/?p=11848What should you do when a depression medication that once helped suddenly feels weaker, patchy, or useless? This in-depth guide explains the real reasons an antidepressant may seem to stop working, the smartest next steps, the biggest mistakes to avoid, and when symptoms require urgent help.

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It worked. Then it didn’t. Or maybe it sort of works, but now your brain feels like it quietly unsubscribed from the premium plan. If that sounds familiar, you are far from alone. Many people hit a point where an antidepressant that once seemed reliable suddenly feels weaker, patchier, or flat-out unhelpful. The good news is that this situation is common, treatable, and usually solvable with the right medical follow-up. The bad news is that panic-Googling, skipping doses, and making big medication decisions on a Tuesday night at 1:14 a.m. are not a treatment plan.

This article breaks down what to do, what not to do, and how to think clearly when you feel like your depression medication has stopped pulling its weight. We will also cover the difference between a true medication “poop-out,” a depressive relapse, side effects, withdrawal symptoms, and everyday life stress kicking your nervous system in the shins.

Important note: This article is for general information and should not replace medical advice. If you are having thoughts of suicide, feel unsafe, or believe you may act on those thoughts, call or text 988 in the U.S. right away or go to the nearest emergency room.

What does “my antidepressant stopped working” actually mean?

People often use that sentence to describe several different problems, and they are not all the same. Sometimes an antidepressant truly seems less effective over time, a phenomenon some clinicians call antidepressant tolerance or tachyphylaxis. Sometimes it is breakthrough depression, meaning symptoms returned even though the medication once helped. Sometimes the issue is not the antidepressant at all. It may be a new stressor, a missed-dose pattern, alcohol or substance use, a new medication interaction, poor sleep, another medical condition such as hypothyroidism, or even the possibility that the original diagnosis needs a second look.

That is why the first rule here is simple: do not jump from “I feel worse” to “this medication is useless” in one dramatic leap. Depression is a complicated condition, and treatment is rarely as tidy as a microwave timer. A medication can still be useful even when it needs adjustment. A medication can also look broken when the real problem is something sitting next to it, like insomnia, chronic stress, or a supplement you forgot to mention at your last appointment.

The Do’s

1. Do contact your prescriber before changing anything

This is the most important do on the whole list. If your antidepressant seems to have stopped working, tell the clinician who prescribes it. Do not reduce it, double it, stop it, restart an old one from your bathroom cabinet, or borrow your cousin’s “basically the same thing” because he “felt chill on it.” Antidepressants need a plan, not vibes.

Your clinician may recommend adjusting the dose, switching medications, adding another medication, checking for interactions, or combining medication with psychotherapy. For many people, the fix is not “give up.” It is “reassess and adjust.”

2. Do check the boring stuff first because boring stuff is powerful

Unsexy causes are often the real causes. Ask yourself these questions honestly:

  • Have I been taking it consistently, at the same time each day?
  • Have I been missing doses on weekends, during travel, or when I feel better?
  • Have I started any new prescriptions, over-the-counter drugs, or supplements?
  • Has my alcohol or recreational drug use increased?
  • Have I been sleeping badly for weeks?
  • Did a major life stressor hit recently?

These factors can make a medication seem less effective. They can also worsen depression on their own. In other words, the antidepressant may not be failing. It may be outnumbered.

3. Do ask whether this is relapse, side effects, discontinuation, or a different diagnosis

Not every crash means the same thing. If you missed doses and now feel dizzy, nauseated, anxious, weirdly zappy, or flu-ish, that may be discontinuation symptoms rather than a full depressive relapse. If your mood is lower but you are also unusually activated, impulsive, sleepless, or agitated, your clinician may want to reassess for bipolar spectrum symptoms or another diagnosis. If you are suddenly exhausted, foggy, and down, a medical issue such as thyroid disease, anemia, chronic pain, or another physical problem could be contributing.

The correct label matters because the correct label shapes the next safe move.

4. Do track symptoms like a detective, not a doom poet

Keep a short, practical log for one to two weeks. Write down mood, sleep, appetite, energy, anxiety, side effects, missed doses, menstrual cycle changes if relevant, alcohol or cannabis use, and major stressors. You do not need a leather-bound feelings journal with moon stickers. A phone note works.

This record helps your clinician spot patterns fast. Maybe your symptoms spike after poor sleep. Maybe they worsen after a dose change. Maybe they dip around workdays and lift on weekends. Real patterns beat vague dread every time.

5. Do stay open to combined treatment

Medication is important, but it is not the only tool in the box. For many people, combining antidepressants with psychotherapy works better than relying on medication alone. Cognitive behavioral therapy, in particular, can help with unhelpful thinking patterns, avoidance, hopelessness, and relapse prevention. If your antidepressant seems less effective, therapy is not some pity side dish. It may be part of the main course.

Sometimes the best question is not “Which pill next?” but “What combination gives me the best chance of staying well?”

6. Do protect sleep, routine, and daily structure

Depression loves chaos. It thrives when bedtime wanders, meals disappear, movement vanishes, and your day turns into one long scroll with snacks. A medication adjustment may help, but it works better when your basic routine stops actively sabotaging your brain.

Try the fundamentals: regular sleep and wake times, consistent meals, some physical activity, and limited alcohol or substance use. These are not magical cures. They are force multipliers. In mental health treatment, small habits are often the unsung interns doing all the hard work.

7. Do ask about next-step options if symptoms keep returning

If symptoms keep coming back, ask your clinician what the next evidence-based step should be. Depending on your history, that may include a dose change, a switch to a different antidepressant class, augmentation with another medication, psychotherapy, or evaluation for treatment-resistant depression. In more severe or persistent cases, clinicians may also discuss options such as esketamine, ketamine-based treatments, electroconvulsive therapy, or other brain stimulation therapies. That does not mean things are hopeless. It means mental health care has more than one lane.

8. Do get urgent help for red-flag symptoms

Seek immediate help if you have suicidal thoughts, feel unable to stay safe, become severely agitated, develop symptoms of mania, or have signs of serotonin syndrome such as confusion, fever, heavy sweating, tremor, muscle rigidity, or severe diarrhea after a medication change or interaction. This is not the time for “let me just see how tomorrow feels.” This is the time for urgent medical help.

The Don’ts

1. Don’t stop your antidepressant cold turkey

This is the classic mistake. Abruptly stopping an antidepressant can trigger discontinuation symptoms, including dizziness, nausea, insomnia, irritability, anxiety, sensory “electric shock” sensations, sweating, and mood worsening. That can make you feel as if the medication ruined everything, when the real problem is the abrupt stop.

If a medication needs to be discontinued, tapering should be guided by a clinician. Fast exits are for bad dates, not antidepressants.

2. Don’t assume a rough week equals medication failure

Life events matter. Grief, burnout, job loss, relationship conflict, hormonal changes, chronic illness, and sleep deprivation can all push symptoms higher, even if the medication is still helping somewhat. That does not mean you should ignore worsening depression. It means you should interpret it carefully.

A bad stretch deserves attention, not instant conclusions.

3. Don’t mix medications, supplements, or substances casually

Some antidepressants interact with other prescriptions, NSAIDs, alcohol, herbal products such as St. John’s wort, and other serotonergic substances. These interactions can reduce effectiveness, increase side effects, raise bleeding risk, or in rare cases contribute to serotonin syndrome. “It’s just an over-the-counter thing” is not a reliable safety check.

Tell your clinician and pharmacist everything you take. Yes, even the gummy. Especially the gummy.

4. Don’t chase online horror stories as your treatment plan

Forums can make you feel less alone, which is valuable. They can also convince you that every side effect means catastrophe and every symptom means your brain chemistry has filed for bankruptcy. Use online stories for solidarity, not diagnosis. Your treatment history, body, and symptoms are your own.

5. Don’t hide worsening symptoms because you are embarrassed

A lot of people feel ashamed when a medication stops helping. They think they “should be better by now” or worry their doctor will think they failed treatment. That is not how this works. Depression is a medical condition, not a moral exam. Clinicians expect medications to need adjustment. They would much rather hear the truth early than meet the polished version later after things spiral.

6. Don’t forget that untreated depression has risks too

People sometimes get so focused on medication side effects or warnings that they forget untreated depression also carries serious risks, including impaired work and school performance, relationship strain, substance misuse, and suicide risk. The goal is not to fear medication or worship it. The goal is to treat depression well and safely.

How doctors often approach the problem

If you tell a clinician, “My antidepressant stopped working,” a thoughtful evaluation usually goes something like this: review symptoms, confirm adherence, look for new stressors, check medication interactions, screen for alcohol or drug use, consider physical health contributors, revisit the diagnosis, and then decide whether to optimize the current treatment or change course.

That may include:

  • raising or lowering the dose
  • switching to another antidepressant
  • adding psychotherapy
  • augmenting with another medication
  • reviewing sleep, exercise, and daily routine
  • ordering labs or medical evaluation when needed
  • assessing for treatment-resistant depression if several trials have failed

In other words, there is a roadmap. You do not have to improvise your way through this alone.

A simple action plan if you feel your antidepressant isn’t working

  1. Do not stop the medication on your own.
  2. Write down your symptoms, sleep, side effects, missed doses, stressors, and substances used.
  3. Contact your prescriber and explain what changed and when.
  4. Bring a full list of medications, supplements, and over-the-counter products.
  5. Ask whether this looks like relapse, discontinuation, side effects, or another condition.
  6. Discuss next-step options, including therapy and medication adjustments.
  7. Get urgent help immediately for suicidal thoughts, feeling unsafe, serotonin syndrome symptoms, or severe agitation.

Conclusion

If your antidepressant seems to have stopped working, do not assume you are out of options, out of luck, or somehow doing recovery wrong. Depression treatment is often iterative. Medications can need adjustment. Life can change. Bodies can change. Diagnoses sometimes need refinement. None of that means you are broken beyond repair.

The smartest move is usually the least dramatic one: pause, document what changed, call your clinician, and work through the possibilities methodically. The do’s are simple but powerful: stay in contact with your prescriber, track symptoms, review interactions, protect sleep and routine, and stay open to combined treatment. The don’ts matter just as much: do not quit suddenly, do not self-medicate your way into a chemistry experiment, and do not keep red-flag symptoms to yourself.

When an antidepressant stops helping, it can feel personal. It is not. It is clinical. And clinical problems usually get better when they are approached with good information, steady follow-up, and zero pharmacy cowboy behavior.

Experiences people commonly describe when an antidepressant seems to stop working

The examples below are composite, educational scenarios based on common patterns people report. They are not individual medical stories and should not replace professional care.

One very common experience is the “slow fade.” A person starts an antidepressant, feels noticeably better for months, maybe even a year, and then begins to realize that ordinary tasks feel heavier again. It is not a dramatic collapse. It is more like color draining from the room one shade at a time. They are still going to work, still answering messages, still functioning on paper, but the effort feels harder and the joy feels thinner. Many people in this situation assume they are being lazy or ungrateful because they are not in full crisis. In reality, they may be having breakthrough depression and need a dose review, therapy support, or a broader treatment adjustment.

Another common experience is the “false alarm that was actually inconsistency.” Someone is sure the medication stopped working, but when they retrace the past month, they realize they missed several doses, took the pill at wildly different times, stopped it during travel, or restarted after a few skipped days because they felt “mostly okay.” Then came dizziness, nausea, irritability, poor sleep, and a sudden emotional crash. It felt like the depression returned overnight, but part of the misery came from discontinuation symptoms. This can be incredibly discouraging because the person thinks, “Great, now even the medicine is making me worse.” What they really need is a safe plan and less all-or-nothing dosing behavior.

There is also the “life happened” pattern. A medication may still be helping, but a new stressor enters the chat with the subtlety of a marching band: caregiving, a breakup, money trouble, burnout, pregnancy, chronic pain, grief, or relentless insomnia. The person starts thinking the antidepressant failed, when in fact their nervous system is carrying far more than it was before. In these cases, medication changes may help, but so can therapy, sleep support, stress reduction, and practical problem-solving. Sometimes the treatment did not stop working. Sometimes life simply got louder than the treatment.

Some people describe the opposite problem: the medication is helping their mood, but side effects have become impossible to ignore. They feel emotionally flatter, less interested in sex, more tired, or disconnected from themselves. Then they say, “I’d rather be sad than feel like a beige lampshade.” That statement is not dramatic. It is useful. It tells the clinician that effectiveness is only part of the equation. A medication that reduces symptoms but also reduces your sense of being fully human may need to be adjusted, switched, or balanced differently.

Finally, some people describe relief once they learn that medication changes are normal and not proof of failure. That shift in mindset matters. They stop seeing treatment as a pass-or-fail test and start seeing it as a process of calibration. That is often the turning point. Less shame, more data, better follow-up, safer choices, and a plan built with a professional instead of with fear. For many people, that is when progress starts again.

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A Psychiatrist’s 20-Year Journey with Ketaminehttps://dulichbaolocaz.com/a-psychiatrists-20-year-journey-with-ketamine/https://dulichbaolocaz.com/a-psychiatrists-20-year-journey-with-ketamine/#respondTue, 10 Feb 2026 09:57:08 +0000https://dulichbaolocaz.com/?p=4329Ketamine went from operating-room anesthetic to one of psychiatry’s most talked-about rapid-acting optionsand the ride has been messy, fascinating, and full of hard-earned lessons. In this in-depth, fun-to-read story, a psychiatrist recounts two decades of watching ketamine evolve: the early research that challenged “weeks to work,” the brain science behind glutamate and neuroplasticity, the rise of infusion clinics, and how FDA-regulated esketamine (Spravato) changed the rules of the game. You’ll get a clear, practical picture of what treatment can feel like, what risks matter most (and why “at-home DIY ketamine” is a bad idea), and how ketamine-assisted psychotherapy can turn symptom relief into real change. If you’re curious, skeptical, hopeful, or all three at oncethis journey will help you separate hype from help.

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The first time ketamine wandered into my psychiatric life, it didn’t knock. It didn’t send a calendar invite.
It just showed up like that cousin who used to be “a little wild,” disappeared for years, and returns at Thanksgiving
wearing a suit and handing out résumés.

In the early 2000s, ketamine’s reputation lived mostly in operating rooms and cautionary tales. In medicine, it was
a reliable anesthetic. In pop culture, it was shorthand for “don’t do that at a music festival.” In psychiatry, it was
the kind of name you heard in a hallway conversation and filed away under interesting but probably not my problem.

Then depressionespecially the stubborn, treatment-resistant kindkept being my problem. Not the “rough week, take a walk”
kind, but the “nothing touches this” kind. Patients who had done the therapy homework, tried multiple medications, slept
like garbage, woke up exhausted, and still looked at life like it was a room with all the exits bricked up.

Over the next two decades, ketamine moved from “intriguing research oddity” to “rapid-acting option we can’t ignore.”
It also dragged along some big questions about ethics, safety, access, hype, and how not to turn medical hope into a
checkout-cart subscription. This is my 20-year journey with ketamine: what surprised me, what sobered me, and what I wish
everyonepatients, families, clinicians, and the occasional overconfident internet influencerunderstood.

How Ketamine Entered the Conversation: When “Weeks” Was Too Slow

Psychiatry has long had a timing problem. Traditional antidepressants can be lifesaving, but for many people they take
weeks to workif they work. When someone is sinking fast, “come back in a month” can feel like telling a drowning person,
“Good news, swimming lessons start next season.”

Around the mid-2000s, the early clinical buzz got louder: low-dose ketamine could reduce depressive symptoms rapidly in
some patients, sometimes within hours. The idea sounded almost rude. We weren’t used to anything in depression care being
fastexcept, unfortunately, the parts we most feared.

My first reaction wasn’t “miracle.” It was “Waitketamine? That ketamine?” Medicine trains you to be both curious
and suspicious, like a raccoon with a stethoscope. I wanted to know: What’s the evidence? Who benefits? How long does it last?
What’s the costbiological, psychological, social?

Why a Psychiatrist Would Even Consider an Anesthetic

Because depression doesn’t politely stay inside diagnostic boundaries. Treatment-resistant depression often overlaps with anxiety,
trauma histories, chronic pain, insomnia, and the kind of exhaustion that makes even “small steps” feel like carrying groceries up Everest.
If a medication could offer rapid relief, it could create breathing roomenough space for therapy, lifestyle changes, and social support
to actually stick.

But rapid relief also invites rapid overconfidence. And overconfidence in psychiatry is how you end up with a waiting room full of people
who were promised a “reset button” and are now furious that the human brain doesn’t come with customer support.

The Science (Without the Yawn): Glutamate, Plasticity, and a Brain That Can Rebuild

For years, the public narrative about antidepressants centered on serotoninlike serotonin was a single magical knob you turn to “happy.”
Real brains are messier. Ketamine pushed the field to take glutamate seriously, the brain’s major excitatory neurotransmitter, and to think
in terms of circuits and connectivity.

Ketamine is known for blocking NMDA receptors, one of the main receptor types involved in glutamate signaling. But the antidepressant story
seems to be less “block one thing and feel great” and more “nudge the system, trigger a cascade, and temporarily open a window where the brain
can rewire.” Researchers have linked ketamine’s effects to synaptic plasticityessentially the brain’s ability to strengthen or form new
connections between neurons.

The “Critical Window” Idea

I started describing ketamine to trainees as “opening a window” rather than “installing a new personality.” Some patients reported that the
world looked the same, but felt more negotiable. The despair wasn’t gone, but it loosened its grip enough for the patient to do something
differentmake a call, take a shower, show up to therapy, or simply feel less trapped.

That framing matters. If ketamine increases plasticity, then what happens during that windowsupport, sleep, psychotherapy, routines, relationships
becomes even more important. Medication may open the door; it doesn’t redecorate the entire house.

From Research Curiosity to Real Patients: My First Ketamine Cases

The first patients I considered for ketamine weren’t casual “try anything” situations. They were the people who had been through multiple
evidence-based treatments, often including several medication trials and structured therapy. The decision wasn’t driven by novelty; it was driven
by necessity.

The early practical lessons were humbling:

  • Screening is not optional. Not everyone is a good candidate, especially if there are uncontrolled medical issues or certain psychiatric risks.
  • Set expectations like a professional pessimist. “Rapid” doesn’t mean “permanent,” and “better” doesn’t mean “cured.”
  • Support systems matter. Ketamine works best when the rest of the care plan is strong, not when it’s being used as a substitute for everything else.

What a Typical Session Looked Like (And Why It’s Not a Spa Day)

In a medically supervised setting, ketamine treatment typically involves monitoringvital signs, symptom check-ins, and a plan for what to do if
someone gets too dissociated, anxious, nauseated, or hypertensive. Patients may feel detached, as if they’re observing themselves from a slight distance.
Some describe dreamlike perceptions. Others feel emotionally neutral, like their brain briefly took a quiet vacation.

There’s a myth that “if it’s psychedelic, it must be profound.” Sometimes it is. Sometimes it’s just weird. I’ve had patients report transcendent
experiences and patients report, with genuine disappointment, “Doc, I mostly thought about nachos.”

The Boom Years: Clinics, Cash, and the Problem of “Too Easy to Sell”

As ketamine gained visibility, clinics multiplied. Some were thoughtful, medically rigorous, and integrated with psychotherapy and follow-up care.
Others treated ketamine like a commodity: pay, spray/infuse, and please leave a five-star review.

When something offers rapid relief, the market moves faster than the evidence. That’s not a moral failing; it’s a predictable human phenomenon.
People suffering want help now. Clinicians want better tools. Investors want a growth curve. And social media wants a before-and-after montage.

My Ethical Checklist (A.K.A. “How to Not Become a Ketamine Influencer”)

  • Medical oversight and monitoring: sedation, dissociation, and blood pressure effects are real considerations.
  • Clear diagnosis and treatment plan: ketamine is an option within a broader strategy, not a standalone identity.
  • Risk assessment: substance use history, psychosis risk, and medical conditions must be considered carefully.
  • Follow-up: if a clinic can’t tell you what happens after the session, that’s not a planit’s a transaction.

The deeper issue is that ketamine can “work” fast enough to tempt us into skipping the slow work: therapy, habit change, relationship repair,
and addressing the life conditions that feed depression. But depression is rarely just chemistry. It’s chemistry in a context.

Esketamine (SPRAVATO) Changes the Landscape: Standardization Meets Reality

When intranasal esketamine (commonly known by the brand name SPRAVATO) arrived, the field took a collective exhale. Here was a ketamine-derived option
with FDA approval for specific depressive conditions, a structured safety program, and a clearer framework for how it should be administered.

The most important shift wasn’t just pharmacologyit was guardrails. Esketamine’s rollout emphasized monitored administration in certified
settings, observation after dosing, and a consistent protocol. For clinicians like me, it helped pull the conversation away from the Wild West and back
toward standard medical practice.

Why the Rules Matter

Ketamine and esketamine can cause sedation and dissociation. They can also affect blood pressure and carry risk of misuse. That’s why supervised dosing
isn’t bureaucratic theater; it’s safety. Anyone promising that ketamine is a “simple take-home mood vitamin” is either misinformed, overselling, or auditioning
for a regulatory warning letter.

At the same time, standardization doesn’t solve everything. Access remains uneven. Insurance coverage varies. And there’s still the human reality that no one
wants to schedule their mental health around a clinic chair twice a week like it’s spin classexcept spin class at least plays upbeat music.

Ketamine-Assisted Psychotherapy: When Relief Becomes Opportunity

One of the most meaningful developments over the years has been pairing ketamine treatment with psychotherapy. Not as a trendy add-on, but as a practical
response to what ketamine seems to do: create a period where mood improves and cognition becomes more flexible.

In that window, therapy can be more effective. Patients may be better able to challenge rigid, depressive thinking. They can practice new skills without
their brain immediately swatting them down. They may feel motivated enough to show up consistentlyan underrated miracle in depression care.

What “Integration” Looks Like in Real Life

Integration doesn’t require mystical incense or a therapist who calls themselves a “neuro-shaman.” It requires practical structure:

  • Preparation: Clarify goals and coping strategies before treatment.
  • Support during the window: Therapy sessions timed to capitalize on improved mood and plasticity.
  • Skill-building: CBT techniques, behavioral activation, sleep routines, and stress regulation.
  • Meaning-making: Turning relief into change, not just relief into relief.

The best outcomes I’ve seen weren’t from ketamine alone. They were from ketamine plus a well-built care plan, plus a patient who felt safe enough to try again.

Safety, Side Effects, and the “Please Don’t DIY Your Brain” Talk

Let’s be blunt: ketamine is not a casual supplement. It’s a powerful medication with real physiological and psychological effects. In medical settings,
those effects are managed. In unsupervised settings, those effects can become dangerousespecially with inconsistent dosing, variable formulations, or lack of monitoring.

Over the years, I’ve seen the same safety themes repeat:

Short-Term Effects to Plan For

  • Dissociation: feeling detached from body or surroundings, typically time-limited but sometimes distressing.
  • Sedation: impairment that requires observation and safe transportation afterward.
  • Blood pressure changes: especially important for patients with cardiovascular risk.
  • Nausea or dizziness: manageable, but not rare.

Longer-Term Concerns (Especially With Frequent Use)

  • Misuse and dependence risk: ketamine is a controlled substance for a reason.
  • Cognitive effects: frequent high-dose use is associated with cognitive concerns in non-medical contexts.
  • Urinary symptoms: chronic heavy use has been linked to bladder problems; medical protocols aim to minimize risk.

The hardest part isn’t listing side effectsit’s communicating them without scaring people away from a treatment that might help. I tell patients:
“We can be hopeful and careful at the same time. That’s literally the job.”

What Ketamine Canand Can’tDo: The Difference Between Relief and Recovery

Ketamine can reduce depressive symptoms rapidly for some people. That matters. When you’ve watched patients crawl through years of failed treatments,
any real relief feels like someone opened a window in a locked room.

But ketamine isn’t a personality transplant. It doesn’t erase trauma. It doesn’t automatically fix relationships. It doesn’t pay your rent, solve discrimination,
or make grief stop grieving. And the effects may fade without a maintenance strategy.

I’ve learned to celebrate the “small” victories ketamine can enable:

  • Getting out of bed without a negotiation that lasts until noon.
  • Having enough energy to start therapy and actually participate.
  • Feeling a reduction in suicidal thinking that creates safety and options.
  • Reconnecting with routines that support long-term stability.

These outcomes are not flashy, but they are life-changing. Recovery is often built from boring bricks.

My 20-Year Takeaways: Hope, Humility, and a Little Bit of Humor

After two decades, I’m neither a ketamine evangelist nor a ketamine cynic. I’m something less dramatic: a clinician who has seen ketamine help,
has seen it disappoint, and has learned that the loudest story is rarely the most accurate one.

Three Things I Tell Almost Everyone

  1. Choose a serious setting. Treatment should include medical screening, monitoring, and follow-up. If it feels like a checkout line, reconsider.
  2. Use the window. If ketamine helps, invest in therapy, sleep, structure, and social support while your brain is more flexible.
  3. Keep expectations realistic. “Rapid” is not the same as “forever,” and “better” is not the same as “done.”

And yes, I also tell them: “If someone on the internet claims ketamine ‘cures depression in one session,’ they are either selling something or auditioning for a sequel.”

Conclusion: Ketamine as a Tool, Not a Religion

Ketamine’s emergence in psychiatry has been one of the most significant shifts I’ve witnessed in my career. It challenged old assumptions about how quickly
depression can improve and pushed the field toward new biological targets and new clinical models. It also forced us to confront the risks of hype, the need for
safety standards, and the uncomfortable truth that access to novel treatments often reflects privilege more than need.

In the best cases, ketamine doesn’t “save” a person on its own. It gives them a foothold. And with that foothold, they can climbslowly, steadilytoward
a life that feels livable again.

If you’re considering ketamine therapy or esketamine nasal spray, treat it like the serious medical intervention it is: talk with a qualified clinician,
ask hard questions, and build a plan that includes more than the medication itself.


Bonus: 500 More Words From the Ketamine Trenches

If you’ve read this far, you deserve an extra storynot a miracle story, but the kind that actually happens in clinics when the lights are fluorescent and the
paperwork is aggressively unromantic.

Years ago, I worked with a patient I’ll call “D.” (Details changed, identity protected, dignity preservedmy favorite trio.) D. had the classic treatment-resistant
pattern: multiple medication trials, earnest therapy attempts, and the kind of fatigue that made every suggestion sound like an insult. When we discussed ketamine,
D. said, “So… I’ll trip and then I’m happy?” This is an excellent question, because it reveals how the public understands mental health: as a dramatic plot twist.

We talked instead about probability. About the goal being relief, not fireworks. About monitoring. About planning for the hours after treatment, when the mind might
feel quieter but the world is still the world. D. agreed, mostly because we framed it as a test of whether the brain could still respond to anything at all. That
question“Is my brain still reachable?”is often the hidden heartbreak of depression.

The first session didn’t produce angels singing. It produced something much less cinematic: D. slept better that night. The next morning, D. texted (through the
appropriate clinical channels, because I’m not trying to become a cautionary tale): “I don’t feel good. But I feel… not doomed.” That phrase stuck with me.
Not doomed. Psychiatry rarely gets “cured.” It gets “not doomed,” and then it gets to work.

Another patient, “M.,” had a different experience. M. felt relief after treatment but also felt unnerved by the dissociation. “I didn’t like not being in charge of
my mind,” M. said. We adjusted the plan, focused on grounding strategies, and spent time normalizing the experience: dissociation can be a side effect, not a
spiritual message. M. eventually did wellnot because ketamine was perfect, but because the plan flexed around the patient instead of forcing the patient to flex
around the plan.

Then there are the practical moments no glossy brochure mentions: the blood pressure cuff that feels like it’s squeezing secrets out of your arm, the patient who
insists on bringing a lucky hoodie (approved), the playlist debates (“No, we are not doing breakup ballads”), and the post-treatment snack discussions that are
strangely vital. One of my guiding principles is: if a person has been battling depression for years, let them have the apple juice.

The biggest lesson from these years is that ketamine is not a single eventit’s a chapter in a longer story. When it works, it can make the next chapter possible:
therapy becomes more doable, routines feel less impossible, hope stops feeling like a scam. When it doesn’t work, it still teaches us something: we need other tools,
other targets, other approaches. Either way, ketamine has forced psychiatry to become more creative, more urgent, andwhen we’re at our bestmore compassionate.

The post A Psychiatrist’s 20-Year Journey with Ketamine appeared first on Global Travel Notes.

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