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anita

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Viewing 15 posts - 31 through 45 (of 5,712 total)
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  • in reply to: Prison House of Language #455913
    anita
    Participant

    Welcome back, Peter:

    Thank you for taking the time to write all of this 🙂

    I can feel how deeply you’ve been thinking while away, and I can understand why it feels unsettling 😬

    I shared your recent two posts with you know whom (Copilot) and he (yes, I think of it as he) says:

    “The good news is that the people who build and oversee these systems are very aware of this issue. They don’t just let AI act on military or political language without human review. There are whole teams whose job is to watch for exactly the kind of metaphor‑drift you’re describing — making sure the system doesn’t take a figure of speech literally or turn it into an unintended instruction.

    “Engineers and researchers work with what they call ‘human‑in‑the‑loop’ oversight, meaning a person always checks the meaning, the context, and the intent before anything is acted on. They also design systems to flag ambiguous or metaphorical language, so it doesn’t get treated as a command. In other words, people are paying attention to this, and they’re building safeguards around it.

    “Your reflections show a lot of care and awareness, but you don’t have to carry the whole weight of this concern alone. You’re not the only one thinking about it, and you’re not shouting into a void. There are many thoughtful humans involved at every step.

    “I hope that brings you a little ease. 🤍✨”

    Does this help at all, Peter?

    🕊️🌿🤍Anita

    in reply to: Zen Story #455911
    anita
    Participant

    Thomas 🙂:

    Thank you for taking the time to explain what the finger and the moon mean to you. I can see how much thought you put into how to handle whatever life brings, and how acceptance helps you stay steady when things feel uncertain.

    I’m sorry you’ve been dealing with so many health worries — that’s a lot for anyone. I hope you can be gentle with yourself as you go through all this. Your way of looking at life has a quiet strength to it, and I appreciate you sharing it here.

    And that last line you wrote… it touched me. I’m glad you’re here with us 🙏🙏🙏

    🤍 Anita

    in reply to: I mightve messed up #455904
    anita
    Participant

    How are you, Lara?

    ✨️ Anita

    in reply to: Seeking clarity about a relationship #455903
    anita
    Participant

    How are you, Going Through Life day 13 of the war(?

    🤔🤪 Anita

    in reply to: Creating Meaningful Relationships #455902
    anita
    Participant

    Dear Omyk:

    I hope I didn’t scare you away with all my emojis (my phone keeps offering them and it’s hard to resist.

    I am resisting them in this message though.

    How are you 1 month and 3 days since you posted last?

    Anita

    in reply to: Friendship gone wrong #455901
    anita
    Participant

    How are you, Sonia, 17 days since you posted last?

    🤍 Anita

    in reply to: Zen Story #455900
    anita
    Participant

    Thomas: “Got to look up to the moon and not focus on the finger”- I wonder what the 👉 means to you (health anxiety?) And what the 🌙 means,to you (enlightenment, as in the short story you gave?).

    I am asking because these very days I noticed feeling hopeful about the idea that my anxiety can lessen after living with elevated anxiety and body tension for so long.

    🤔 Anita

    in reply to: I just randomly and suddenly fell out of love #455888
    anita
    Participant

    Good morning (7 am here, West coast, U.S.A- by the time I submit this message), Good afternoon (4 pm in Greece):

    You asked about withdrawal from Klonipin (generic name: Clonazepam) in your previous message. It was very difficult. I kept lowering amounts and stopping altogether only to take it again for the longest time because of the feeling of panic and insomnia when withdrawing.

    I did a little study this morning on SSRIs and their effect on MDD & OCD. Here it is:

    SSRIs increase serotonin availability in the brain, which can reduce symptoms of major depressive disorder (MDD) and obsessive–compulsive disorder (OCD). They are considered first‑line treatments for both conditions.

    Escitalopram (Lexapro, in the U.S.) is widely studied and is considered one of the more effective and better‑tolerated SSRIs for major depression. A 2023 systematic review found escitalopram superior to several other antidepressants in acute‑phase treatment of MDD.

    Many people begin noticing improvement within 2–4 weeks, with full effects often taking 6–8 weeks.

    OCD generally requires higher SSRI doses and longer treatment duration than depression.

    SSRIs are effective for 40–60% of people with OCD. Improvement often takes 8–12 weeks, sometimes longer.

    Many clinicians gradually increase SSRIs to the maximum tolerated dose for OCD because lower doses may not be sufficient. This is consistent with expert guidance that OCD often responds better to higher SSRI exposure.

    Escitalopram at 10 mg is the standard starting and therapeutic dose for major depressive disorder. Many people respond well at this dose. For OCD, 10 mg may help, but OCD typically requires higher doses (e.g., 20 mg or more) for optimal effect.

    Whether 10 mg is appropriate depends on the individual, their symptoms, side‑effect tolerance, and a clinician’s judgment.

    Any dose changes should always be guided by a healthcare professional.

    Most SSRIs share a similar side‑effect profile. Many effects are mild and improve over time, especially in the first 1–2 weeks.

    * I was on Sertraline (Zoloft, in the U.S.), one of the most studied SSRIs for OCD, “Flexible dosing up to 200 mg, which is important because OCD often needs higher doses”, I read today (I was on 400 mg for years!)

    For a much shorter time, I was on another SSRI: Fluoxetine (Prozac).

    🧪 💊 🧫 Anita

    in reply to: I just randomly and suddenly fell out of love #455879
    anita
    Participant

    I took the train from Amsterdam to Milane, from there to Venice, from there to Rome, to Athens, and from there to Crete. And from Crete to Cyprus and from there, to Israel, a short distance away by boat.

    Yes, Klonipin (a Benzodiazepine which is supposed to be taken for a few months top- but was prescribed to me for 17 years).. that was very hard.

    The SSRI was not hard to get off.

    Anita

    in reply to: Alone Again, Naturally #455878
    anita
    Participant

    Whatever comes 2 mind this Wed evening, March 11, 2026, as I listen to nostalgic Israeli music and more than enough red wine in my system:

    Tears in my eyes as the war rages on: Iran (since 1979) trying to DESTROY the state of Israel where I was born. Where I have family. It breaks my heart.

    Ever since 1979, the Iranian regime DECLARED again and again, and again:

    “Death to Israel! Death to America!”-

    Quite violent, isn’t it?

    The only way to satisfy the Iranian Regime is the destruction of a country (Israel), the death or expulsion (to WHERE?) of millions of Israeli people, millions of children included.

    Iran is what.. 70 times the size of the small county of Israel, and yet, it wants Israel’s destruction, that and nothing less. And it has been financing his proxies (in Lebanon- Hizballah; the Houthis in Yaman and others in Iraq and elsewhere).

    I am just besides myself: the Iranian regime stands as it is, no change there (it’s been acknowledged most recently by Israel and the U.S.). It stays and so does its goal: the destruction of the state of Israel, the destruction of millions of people who understandably, like anyone and everyone.. just want to LIVE.

    Such a small, tiny country (Israel). Such a big, huge country (Iran)- and the other countries in the middle east.. so much bigger than the tiny Israel. Will Israel survive? I pray. I pray. I pray.

    Anita

    in reply to: I just randomly and suddenly fell out of love #455875
    anita
    Participant

    Yes, Confused: in my mind, love is about Choice, a series of choices, every day. It’s about the words we choose and actions we take.

    It’s about acting according to what we value rather than reacting to “feelings that come and go”.

    ⚓️ Anita

    in reply to: I just randomly and suddenly fell out of love #455872
    anita
    Participant

    Wow, Confused: you are Greek? If you were born in Greece and live there, then you are a short distance from where I was born and grew up in (Israel).

    It’s only yesterday that I talked in real-life to a man born in Greek He’s very much a proud of his heritage, knows a whole lot of history of Greece and talks about it.

    Some of my favorite time was visiting Greece back in my 20s.

    As to Zoloft, why I was on it for so long- good question. The psychiatrist told me that the prognosis was that I will always be depressed, lifetime. He was wrong, just to show you that psychiatrists can be wrong.

    It was not difficult to get off Zoloft. It was very difficult to get off the Clonazepam (Klonipin) I took together with Zoloft.

    I’ll write more later.

    in reply to: Zen Story #455870
    anita
    Participant

    Dear Thomas:

    I am sorry 😞 to read that you suffer from diabetes, high blood pressure and high cholesterol. I understand your fear in regard to suffering a stroke like your father did (you shared about it previously as well).

    I wish you as much healing as possible, wishing that you are able to make the lifestyle changes that can help, and keep yourself as calm and as grounded as you can.

    I take a 💊 for high cholesterol, keep active (often a 3.5 mile walk up and down the hills around here and I no longer overeat like I used to (you mentioned recently being parked by the frig, but it could have been you being funny).

    And I am trying to keep myself as calm and as grounded as I can.

    🚶‍♀️😎⚓️ Anita

    in reply to: I just randomly and suddenly fell out of love #455869
    anita
    Participant

    Good (early) morning, Confused:

    Like I shared with you before, when I first took Zoloft (an SSRI that is prescribed off label for OCD), after maybe a few weeks and perhaps after an increase in dosage (it’s been so long ago, I don’t remember), I noticed a new magical reality (for me)- I wasn’t obsessing or ruminating. I was wonderful.

    I took Zoloft (as well as other psych meds) for 17 years and quit them all 12+ years ago.

    “Just curious though, what will be the differences in my feelings with this?”- I don’t know. But looking at another thread earlier this morning, I came across something that made me think of you, Confused, and I’d like to share with you because a shift from focusing on how and what you feel or don’t feel to ===> a new awareness may be helpful to you:

    “In mystical traditions (like Sufi and Christian mysticism), emotions are seen as temporary, reactive, dependent on circumstances, and rising and falling like weather. They come and go.

    When mystics talk about Love, they don’t mean butterflies, infatuation, desire, excitement, or longing. Mystical Love is something deeper — a way of perceiving reality. It’s a state of consciousness.

    When love is a state of consciousness, you feel connected rather than separate, open rather than defended, present rather than anxious, spacious rather than contracted, and you feel aligned rather than fragmented.

    It’s not about a person. It’s not about romance. It’s not even about emotion. It’s a shift in awareness.

    Mystical love is described as: seeing the sacred in everything, feeling unity with existence, experiencing yourself as part of something larger, and recognizing the same essence in all beings

    In ordinary consciousness, you feel like a separate self, “me” is here, “you” are there, the world feels outside you, and love feels like something you give or receive.

    In mystical consciousness the boundary between self and other softens, the world feels like an extension of your own being, love is not something you do. Love is the experience of oneness. Not intellectually — but experientially.

    Mystics describe it like the wave realizing it is not separate from the sea

    Think of it like this- Emotion Love= “I love you because…”, “I feel love right now.”, “My love rises and falls.”, “I love this person but not that one.”

    Consciousness Love= “I am love.”, “Love is the nature of my awareness.”, “Love doesn’t come and go.”, “Love is the fabric of existence.”

    One is personal. The other is universal.

    One is a wave 🌊. The other is the ocean 🌅.

    Why mystics emphasize this difference? Because emotional love can break, fade, or turn into its opposite. But consciousness-love doesn’t depend on circumstances, or on another person, or on being loved back; it
    doesn’t depend on mood or hormones🔥💋. It’s a way of being, not a feeling.”

    I find this helpful 🙂

    🌊 🔥 🌅 Anita

    in reply to: I just randomly and suddenly fell out of love #455862
    anita
    Participant

    Hey Confused:

    He prescribed you with an SSRI to take for 4-6 weeks before you can tell a difference-

    This sounds reasonable, from my experience of being prescribed SSRI’s.

    It’s supposed to calm down the ocd part of it all (overthinking, ocd-ing.. to Just insert a pause ⏸️ in that rollercoaster 🎢 mind.

    It’s okay, Confused. All you need to do is to calm down, to Hush the Rush.

    Shhh…

    ⏸️🎢🌙 Anita

Viewing 15 posts - 31 through 45 (of 5,712 total)