96. Meds for Your Symptoms? Dizziness, SSRIs, Benzos, Withdrawal & the Truth w/ Dr. Anders Sorensen
DEC 24, 202568 MIN
96. Meds for Your Symptoms? Dizziness, SSRIs, Benzos, Withdrawal & the Truth w/ Dr. Anders Sorensen
DEC 24, 202568 MIN
Description
Join me as I interview Dr. Anders Sorensen, PhD, a clinical psychologist, researcher, and expert in psychiatric drug withdrawal. This comprehensive discussion addresses chronic dizziness, the fallacies of psychiatric medications, and the process of tapering off such drugs. Dr. Sorensen shares insights from his book 'Crossing Zero', offering hope and practical advice for those dealing with prolonged withdrawal symptoms. We delve into the importance of understanding medication effects, the proper way to taper, and the role of the nervous system in healing. This episode is essential for anyone considering or currently on psychiatric medication for conditions such as chronic dizziness, PPPD, MdDS, vestibular migraine, tinnitus, hyperacusis, or other multisensory symptoms. Resources: Crossing Zero: The Art and Science of Coming Off — and Staying off — Psychiatric Drugs by Anders Sørensen: https://www.amazon.com/Crossing-Zero-... Crossing Zero Substack: https://crossingzero.substack.com/ Learn more about Dr. Yonit and The Steady Coach on our website: https://thesteadycoach.com For more free education and information from The Steady Coach, please visit our YouTube channel and website: YouTube: https://youtube.com/@thesteadycoach Free Healing Chronic Dizziness Course: https://thesteadycoach.com/free-course Instagram: @therealsteadycoach Our website: https://thesteadycoach.com DISCLAIMER: Please note that Yonit Arthur, The Steady Coach and any of our guests are not acting as an audiologist nor offering audiology or medical services or advice on any public videos or on any other content. This channel provides wellness education and personal opinion only, and are not meant to be a substitute for medical or mental health instruction or intervention. Use any tools discussed at your own risk.