Categories
Drug Addiction

Using crystals in recovery from addiction

At Villa Kali Ma, we offer a wide variety of methods for healing from addiction. Our program is integrative in nature, acknowledging the fact that many alternative healing therapies work well together.

The core of our program is built from powerhouse evidence-based therapies that are clinically validated, such as Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, Dialectical Behavior Therapy, and EMDR.

Woven around this clinical core are many braids of adjunct therapies taken from ancient healing systems that are powerfully effective in their own right, such as Ayurveda, yoga, and acupuncture. These sciences have been used effectively for thousands of years.

One method we embrace is the therapeutic use of crystals. The effect of crystals is sometimes scoffed at by people who haven’t tried it. Skepticism is good, we encourage it! Always. But empiricism is also good – as in, try it and see what happens.

Through experience and observation, we here at Villa Kali Ma find crystals to be a useful tool. We also don’t find it outlandish to imagine that the same properties that make crystals useful in emitting frequency for use in an ultrasound machine, for example, might make them helpful in balancing the body’s electromagnetic field, too.

That said, we do not recommend trying to get sober using crystals alone. Addiction is a serious medical condition requiring an urgent and intensive treatment response. Getting sober requires medically supervised detox and some months of follow-up treatment in a highly structured setting.

Holistic therapies are powerful healing modalities in their own right, but they are slower and gentler approaches and do not belong as the sole tool in an emergency protocol.

Whatever has brought you to this article today, we invite you to read on, for our exploration of how crystals can be used therapeutically in the journey to recovery from addiction.

What are crystals?

Stone crystals are a type of rock, formed from minerals and combinations of minerals, occurring naturally in the wild. They are also manufactured.

What makes crystals different from other stones is that they have a lattice structure, a repeated crystalline pattern that is consistent throughout the whole stone. These patterns are often beautiful, and under a microscope, strikingly perfect, geometrical, and regular.

Gemstones are usually crystals, such as rubies, emeralds, diamonds, and sapphires. Some crystals are made from a single mineral, as diamonds are created from carbon, but many are made from combinations of minerals. Emeralds, for example, are mostly made of the mineral beryl but include also trace amounts of chromium, vanadium, and iron.

Crystals have many physical properties that contribute to their unique profile and utility in technology as well as therapeutic purposes, such as degree of lightfastness, hardness, piezoelectric effect, and electrical conductivity.

How do crystals work?

Crystals work on the body and its electromagnetic field, through their electro-magnetic conductivity.

Different crystals placed on or near the body will have different effects, either drawing small amounts of current from the human bio-field or flowing small amounts of current into it.

In the context of crystals used in healing, the unique electromagnetic profile of a specific crystal is referred to as its vibration, which determines its therapeutic use.

What are examples of healing crystals?

There are many different therapeutic effects possible through the use of crystals in healing.

The most commonly used healing crystals include clear quartz, rose quartz, selenite, turquoise, agate, amethyst, citrine, obsidian, black tourmaline, and aquamarine, just to name a few. The list of popular healing stones is long.

These crystals are used for specific effects that benefit the physical body, and/or emotional states. For example, turquoise is believed to be de-acidifying, reducing infections, digestion problems, and inflammation. Selenite is commonly used for lessening emotional pain, such as depression and anxiety.

What are the healing effects of crystals for addiction?

We include crystal therapy in our programs at Villa Kali Ma, because like massage and acupuncture, crystal healing is useful for creating safety, ease, comfort, and peace in the body. It is much easier to respond to treatment when the body is feeling safe and relatively pain-free. Crystals balance the human bio-field, creating relief from the emotional distress and physiological discomfort of withdrawal and early sobriety.

Gently stimulating energetic nodes in the body has clarifying, calming, and regulating effects for the patient, as organs that are heavily involved in negative emotions and thoughts, like the heart, lungs, and adrenals, can be corrected to a more neutral, healthful electromagnetic signature.

Healing crystals for alcohol addiction

Alcohol is a common substance of choice for women, with tragic impacts on their minds, bodies, emotions, and relationships. When a woman is recovering from addiction to alcohol, two crystals are considered to be particularly helpful, celestite and amethyst.

Named for its heavenly blue color, celestite has a relaxant, and soothing effects on the body, stimulating the parasympathetic nervous system. The parasympathetic branch of the nervous system is responsible for healing, rest, digestion, and recovering. Whenever you want to encourage the body’s self-healing mechanism, activating the parasympathetic nervous system is key.

Amethyst, a beautiful violet quartz, has been used to help with alcohol’s negative effects for thousands of years. The name comes from the Greek word amethystos, meaning “not intoxicated”. The stone was believed by the ancient Greeks to protect against inebriation.


Healing crystals for cocaine addiction

Women recovering from addiction to cocaine typically have problems with their nervous systems for a time, until they rebalance and rebuild through positive actions over a consistent period.

Since during active addiction, these women used cocaine to overstimulate their sympathetic nervous system, creating artificial energy, excitement, and euphoria, post-acute cocaine withdrawal can be a brutal climb out of a valley of low mood, low energy, and ego deflation.

Crystals that work to raise energy and un-dampen the nervous system, without overstimulating, are helpful.

Rose quartz is a pink stone with gentle stimulating effects, linked to feelings of love and connection. Citrine, a stone associated with enthusiasm and enjoyment, is used for ameliorating low mood.


Healing crystals for heroin and opioid addiction

Heroin, fentanyl, and prescription opioids are powerfully addictive because they temporarily obliterate pain, and at the same time, generate euphoria.

Withdrawal from opioids is a tough experience because it means finding healthy ways to tolerate some pain and dysphoria, during the window of time it takes your body to regenerate its natural state.

Two crystals that can be helpful during post-acute opioid withdrawal and early recovery are aquamarine and howlite.

Aquamarine is a very beautiful blue-green gemstone that helps the lungs and breath. The breath is involved with our ability to self-soothe, trigger the parasympathetic nervous system, and modulate pain both emotional and physical.  The lungs are strongly affected by opioids.

Howlite has anti-inflammatory effects, which can ease physical pain and relieve places of chronic tension that are generating headaches. It is also sedative, bringing calm and relaxation.

How do women use crystals for sobriety?

A life in sobriety has ups and downs, and crystals can help us through without using, in a few different ways.

Crystals for Boosting Mood and Energy

Crystals like jasper and blue apatite can be used to stimulate your energy to bring courage and cheer when you’re feeling discouraged or otherwise low.


Crystals For Calm and Relaxation

Crystals like rhodonite and blue lace agate soothe states of agitation and encourage strong emotions to pass out of the body, for example when triggered.


Crystals for Spirituality

Crystals can be incorporated into a centering spiritual practice like meditation or prayer, used for grounding and self-soothing.

How are crystals for sobriety used?

There are many ways to use crystals to support your sobriety. Here are some ways to begin your journey of exploration.

Placing Crystals on Meridians and Chakras

If you have an understanding of the Chinese system of meridians or the Indian system of chakras, you can use these body maps to experiment with placing crystals on key energy nodes and highways of the body.


Placing Crystals on Parts of the Body that Need Help

You can also place crystals directly on parts of the body that are in pain, such as on your lower back, or key emotional centers in the body, like the heart, solar plexus, or forehead. Holding crystals in your palms is also effective and calming.


Charging Crystals and Setting Intentions

Some people charge crystals by placing them in the sun, or through creating a vibrational field of intentions and focused thought. Essentially, you are programming your crystal to help you in accordance to the way you wish it to.


Using Crystals to Crystallize Water

It is also possible to charge your drinking water and your bathwater with crystals. Some crystals are toxic if consumed internally, though, so research before you try this method.

What are FAQs of crystals for addiction?

Do crystals work for addiction?

Crystals can be part of your mental, emotional, and physical healing process once drugs and alcohol are detoxed out of your system. No therapy, mainstream or alternative, works while you’re still actively using drugs and alcohol, as substances create an overload of toxicity for the body and also interfere with any healing mechanism a modality has.

The only known cure for addiction is to stop using drugs and alcohol completely and to commit to a full transformation of lifestyle, radically changing behavior, thoughts, and feelings.

Crystals can support the hard work a person does to achieve sobriety and recovery, and can be used very effectively to help relieve psychological and physical pain, making treatment easier and more powerfully transformative.


What can using crystals for addiction do, and what can’t it do?

Crystals can balance, regulate, and harmonize your body’s electromagnetic field. Physical illness and unhappy states of mind and mood have certain electromagnetic vibrational signatures, and these can be changed through the application of a crystal that carries the correct vibrational “medicine”.

Through the correction of imbalances, a state of health and harmony can be created. When you are ready to be relieved of an imbalance, crystals can take the imbalance out of your field, and help entrain your field to a more balanced, crystalline, symmetrical state.

Broadly speaking, what crystals don’t do is eliminate a powerful recurring root cause, if you aren’t yet conscious and ready to change it. For example, if you are very anxious because, at a deep unconscious level, you believe that you are not safe, you will also need to repair the core belief consciously before lasting improvements will be noticeable. As with other modalities, including mainstream ones, unconscious trauma can get in the way of the healing powers of crystals.


Where can I start with using crystals for healing?

Intuition is a good guide when it comes to choosing and working with crystals. Just as you might be guided to choose a color to paint your house, or are drawn to certain flowers and scents, the vibrational signature of a crystal may be felt before it is understood mentally.

Start with finding your first healing stone. It is probably best to go to a store rather than purchasing online, because of the physical properties which can be better felt in person. By holding a crystal in your hand you may be able to feel within seconds whether the vibrational signature of electromagnetic effects is a good medicine for your particular needs at this time, or not.

You can also research online or in guidebooks, to get a more comprehensive overview.

Villa Kali Ma uses crystals for addiction treatment

Villa Kali Ma’s core program is built on evidence-based practices which are shown in clinical studies to have the best outcomes for women recovering from addiction, mental health disorders, and trauma.

Into this core, we integrate many ancient healing practices from around the globe. Crystals are used in some of our alternative therapeutic options, such as in our Reiki with Plant Oils and Crystals sessions, and are occasionally incorporated into our earthing, shamanic healing, art therapy, and meditation groups.

If you’re struggling with addiction, we encourage you to reach out and get help right away. If you like the sound of getting world-class treatment and also having the option of learning more about crystals and other holistic methods, consider one of our many programs for women!

Categories
Drug Addiction

Prozac Side Effects in Females: Why Does Prozac Affect Women Differently?

Women are affected differently than men are by addiction, mental illness, and trauma. That’s part of why we here at Villa Kali Ma believe so deeply in our mission: to provide healing and treatment services by and for women.

Women’s bodies respond differently to substances like alcohol and medications, too. One common medication, Prozac, frequently prescribed for conditions like depression, obsessive-compulsive disorder, anxiety, and eating disorders, has stronger side effects for women than for men.

In this post, we’ll explore the topic of Prozac, Prozac abuse, side effects, and more.

Why does Prozac affect women differently?

Women’s bodies are composed of different ratios of water, fat, and hormones than men’s bodies. Women are also subject to a greater degree of fluctuation, due to the menstrual cycle, as well as pregnancy and menopause. All of these factors can influence a woman’s ability to metabolize Prozac.

What is Prozac?

Prozac is the brand name for fluoxetine, an SSRI-class drug (selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor).

Prozac was one of the original “happy pills”, pioneered by early proponents of expanding the use of psychiatric medication. SSRIs are believed to help with depression. Since its introduction to the market, the list of conditions Prozac is prescribed to treat has expanded to include other mental health disorders as well.

Prozac, like other SSRIs, is believed to increase serotonin levels in the brain. Serotonin is theorized to have a primary role in the operations of mood, thus contributing to happiness and unhappiness.

Since the skyrocketing popularity of anti-depressants in the 1990s and early 2000s, more and more people in the United States have been prescribed drugs like Prozac, to treat more and more mental health conditions.  Further research is needed to validate the theory of serotonin deficiency being the origin of depression, as well as into the longer-term safety and efficacy of SSRIs.

More recently, a percentage of the population misusing SSRIs has gained attention within the addictions and mental health field. This trend suggests that the psychoactive effects of antidepressants, widely believed to be nonaddictive and safe at appropriate doses, may after all represent potential for abuse.

What are the side effects of Prozac for women?

Prozac has numerous side effects, generally considered acceptable by the psychiatric and medical community, traded against a lessening of painful mental health symptoms.

Whether or not the side effects feel acceptable in comparison to the symptom-suppressing effects of the medication is a personal decision for each woman to make. The journey of finding the right medication and level of medication to take is generally ongoing, as most mental health patients will end up being guided into switching psychiatric drugs, adding additional drugs, and/or upping and lowering doses many times over the years.

It is noteworthy that some side effects are stronger for women than men. These side effects include:

  • gastrointestinal impacts like diarrhea, weight changes, nausea, constipation, loss of appetite and digestion problems
  • headaches, fatigue, dizziness, dry mouth
  • anxiety, restlessness, and insomnia
  • sexual dysfunction

What are the effects of Prozac on pregnancy?

More research is needed into the impacts of SSRIs like Prozac on mother and baby during pregnancy. Prozac is believed by some doctors to be safe to take throughout pregnancy at low doses, while others believe there is an increased risk of complications.

Given that all doctors agree that whatever substance ingested by a pregnant mother is also ingested by the fetus, it is wise to research and discuss options with your trusted health person before deciding what’s best in your case.

What are the effects of Prozac on female hormones?

Prozac interacts with female hormones and may disrupt your menstrual cycle. Side effects of Prozac that relate to hormones include an increase in premenstrual mood syndrome symptoms (headaches, irritability, moodiness, and cramping), cycle irregularity, and changes to the amount of blood (having a heavier or lighter period).

What are the serious side effects of Prozac in women?

Some side effects of Prozac are more serious and are important to be aware of. The risk of these side effects is greater at higher doses, and for the same reason, it is also more likely to occur when abusing the substance to get a psychoactive effect. So if you are on a high dose or you are using more Prozac than prescribed, look out for these.

Serious side effects include:

  • Abnormal bleeding
  • Seizures
  • Heart Palpitations, increased heart rate
  • Tremors and shakes
  • Nervousness and agitation
  • Suicidal thoughts
  • Mood swings
  • Allergic reactions
  • Serotonin syndrome (serotonin toxicity, potentially fatal)

Can Prozac cause seizures?

In concentrated doses, yes, Prozac can cause seizures. People with a history of epilepsy may want to avoid Prozac. Seizures are reported to be rare when taking Prozac as directed by a doctor, but the risk increases when put on a high dose and/or when intentionally taking more than prescribed, for recreational or self-medicating motives.

What are the signs of Prozac abuse?

The distinctions between chemical dependence on a high dose of Prozac, Prozac abuse, and Prozac addiction are somewhat fine and semantic. In general, signs of addiction to Prozac taking root include:

  • Taking pills more frequently, or more of them, than prescribed
  • Finishing prescriptions early
  • Obsessive thinking about the medication, including preoccupation with obtaining it or undue fear of running out of it
  • Taking pills at unscheduled times, spontaneously or in response to an emotional trigger
  • Moodiness, irritability, mania, or social withdrawal
  • Flu-like symptoms
  • Other addiction signals, including financial or legal trouble, life consequences, and so on

Women’s treatment for Prozac abuse

Stopping the use of Prozac, like any psychoactive substance, should be done carefully with trained health personnel supporting and supervising the process. Prozac withdrawal is a medical event that needs to be monitored for your own safety.

If you have been over-using your prescribed Prozac or abusing Prozac without a prescription, it is highly advised to seek substance abuse treatment. The stages of detoxification from Prozac, getting through the mental and emotional challenges of post-acute withdrawal (which can include a severe uptick in mental health symptoms like suicidal feelings and anxiety), as well as adjustment to sobriety as a permanent positive lifestyle, are best supported by a team of professionals.

Villa Kali Ma can assist women with prescription addiction

As more research about SSRIs like Prozac emerges, it’s apparent that addiction to these medications is growing in some portion of the population.

From the beginning of the use of SSRIs, chemical dependence, evidenced by withdrawal syndromes, has been documented though not widely discussed in the public forum.

Most vulnerable to developing SSRI dependence or addiction are those with pre-existing mental health disorders, (aka the people being prescribed these medications), and those with an active addiction or addiction history.

Our opinion at Villa Kali Ma is, if you would like to free yourself from reliance on a particular substance, including a prescription drug you no longer want to take for whatever your personal reasons are, that is a valid goal and we support you. Many prescription drugs are patently addictive. Whether you count SSRIs on the list of addictive prescriptions is a matter of debate and definitions of addiction, but if you want to get off your SSRI, we’ll help you.

To us, any substance that harms you physically while it suppresses your emotional symptoms creates dependence and is hard to get off because when you do, you go into withdrawals, and may not be a trustworthy medication in the long run.

Whatever your opinion is, we are here to help people get through chemical withdrawals from any substance, legal or illegal, and to reorient themselves towards positive, healthy, holistic, happy lives without chemistry.

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