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steve-atx-7600today at 12:59 PM4 repliesview on HN

I’d be afraid of a treatment like this where you’re sort of different after one treatment. From experience taking ssris, I took one one that worked so well that I had to stop taking it because it removed stress to the extent that I wouldn’t get to class on time or get my homework done before deadlines. Eventually I found a medicine that worked for me. But, if there’s a “before” vs “after” one shot treatment, you have to hope the new you is the one you want assuming you could be stuck there permanently.


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throwaway12poltoday at 1:05 PM

When you have heavy generalized anxiety, you are usually willing to commit to that if it means there is a significant probability of coming out with an improved condition. I had such terrible panic attacks before my treatment with a bunch of different medication that I seriously considered and searched for electroconvulsive therapy and even help from shady religious institutions.

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gs17today at 7:40 PM

My experience was similar, with social anxiety suddenly removed it made me a bit of a dick for a while.

phitotoday at 4:06 PM

I think curing GAD will mean changing your personality. There's always going to be a before/after you, that's the whole point. The important part is being able to reliably know what the "after you" will be so you can be sure that you want that change to happen.

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LazyManstoday at 1:01 PM

A good point, but if stress was your motivator, it might be better to work to reframe that and gain motivation through something else that isn't stress.