I have had experience and have tried to manage depression since my pre-teens; I was a born-in JW with a very dedicated family. I was diagnosed with "Sub-acute depression" when I visited a Psychiatrist from London who settled in Africa. I was working overseas on a Branch for the WTBTS when things just got bad for me so I went to see some doctors. Within two months of the London Psychiatrist diagnosing me with depression and starting treatment I left the branch construction and went home. I've made a few mistakes in my life, however, to leave the branch construction was one of the best decisions I've ever made.
These are the known anti-depressants that I have taken in the past. I don't remember what I was given from the Psychiatrist from London practicing in Africa, however, it took me hours to wake up from it, literally zombie like. However, I had never slept so well.
Lexapro
Paxil
Cymbalta
Effexor
Wellibuton
Zoloft
Celebrex
Paxil made me very lethargic and slowed my thinking down considerably.
Effexor worked the best, however, the side affect for me was a very strong craving for alcohol. I mean bad. So I ended up the happiest drunk in the world.
Celebrex can help with arthritis.
Wellibuton had the least effect on sexual relations. Many of the others affected sexual relations performance which at the time was a real bummer.
I think I was last on Cymbalta when I had decided to stop; I had "brain zaps" for weeks, just Google "Cymbalta and Brain Zaps". It was like your brain was quivering from withdrawl.
As far as anti-anxiety medications, I've got mixed feelings about them. Xanex and Clonazepam are great for anxiety. Librium is also good. However, being benzos, it is addictive. Even after the stressful situations had passed I was still taking those little blue and pink pills and feeling anxiety. I found that my feelings of anxiety were acutally withdrawl symptoms from not taking the xanex. I found that xanex worked quickly and disappated quickly. So I was also prescribed klonopine or clonazepam which worked slower and lasted longer. So if you took both together with a gin and tonic, you were good to sit through a 5 day District Convention and be happy.
Getting off of the Benzos wasn't too bad, but I went through a withdrawl of about three days basically three days of no sleep.
I will conclude with non-depressing news; I stopped taking anti-depressants after two years of being out of JW's, and am doing well. They can help you get over a hump, and taking them is a decision for you personally, however, they are not the total answer. They put a bandaid on the siutaion. Oh as "friends"erroneously used to tell me, "only in the New System will we not suffer from depression."