Anti-depressants do not make you high
Mine do! My behavior is a lot more random and high energy if I take 300mg of bupropion instead of the prescribed 150.
Taking ~160mg of citalopram (an SSRI) in a day feels a lot like an MDMA high, but with more negative side effects. I feel compelled to talk to people, I ask more personal questions and share more personal stories, dogs and children like me a lot more for no apparent reason (I probably seem more relaxed), and I feel more creative. When I start writing a journal entry, I put the title last because I don't know where my thoughts will go. I started an entry on saturday about drinking with friends and it ended up focused on how I acquired a stuffed animal. High is the only word that accurately describes this effect. It's nice because I can get more of my ideas down on paper, leaving fewer things on my mind. It doesn't feel like I need to think about stuff if I've already written it down and worked it out.
Keeping a journal really helps, but I have nothing personal to write in the journal unless I'm high on citalopram.
or take the problems away
Mine do. I'm on bupropion because it keeps my body and mind alert. I don't randomly fall asleep or randomly feel tired anymore. My brain likes to power itself down if it's not being used, so I can go from very excited to sleeping within 5 minutes if all stimulation stops. On bupropion, I can stay awake even when someone who is not an attractive woman is trying to talk to me.
I step into a room full of strangers and I feel the way a person feels when they're running away from a tiger - extreme anxiety. Taking 20mg of citalopram (half a pill), immediately stops that. If I take too much citalopram, it calms me down to the point where I'm somewhat withdrawn from the situation and I blankly stare at nothing. Apparently a lot of people get the same effect, because people bitch about SSRI medications making them zombie-like. That just means they took too much at that time, probably because their retarded doctor told them to take it at the same time every day even though people obviously don't have anxiety attacks at the exact same time every day.
they merely prevent the body from using up all the chemicals needed for communication between brain cells, chemicals, that when lacking, lead to a communication breakdown causing depression.
Actually it's the other way around. Drugs that boost neurotransmitter activity tend to blow through all of your reserves. Studies have confirmed this many times over. Taking SSRIs causes the brain to blow through serotonin at a much higher rate. Same with cocaine and dopamine, crystal meth and dopamine, MDMA and serotonin, barbiturates and GABA, etc. When you're on medication (or illegal drugs), you need to eat more food and take more vitamins; mainly vitamins B and C.