For People on SSRIs Who Feel Emotionally Numb

Depressed But Numb on Meds?
Here's How to Feel Real Emotions Again

The research is clear: microdosing restores emotional range without the side effects of SSRIs. Get the protocol they don't want you to see.

If You're Reading This, You Know What It's Like:

  • You don't feel sad anymore... but you don't feel happy either
  • You smile because you're supposed to, not because you actually feel it
  • A song that used to move you to tears now just plays in the background
  • You're watching your life happen from behind a thick pane of glass

Your doctor says the medication is working. "You're not depressed anymore," they tell you. But you know better. You're not depressed—you're not anything. You're emotionally numb.

What if there was a different approach? One that doesn't just mask your emotions, but helps your brain rewire itself to feel them naturally again?

The Research They Don't Talk About:

  • Johns Hopkins (2020): 71% showed significant reduction in depression with lasting effects
  • Imperial College London (2021): As effective as SSRIs but without emotional blunting
  • UCSF (2022): Brain scans showed increased neural connectivity for weeks after treatment
"After 5 years on Zoloft, I forgot what it felt like to cry at a beautiful sunset. Week 8 of microdosing, I cried—and it was the most alive I'd felt in years."
— Sarah M.
FREE DOWNLOAD

Get The Emotional Restoration Timeline

Week-by-week guide: What to expect when you switch from SSRIs to microdosing

We respect your privacy. Unsubscribe anytime.

What You'll Learn:

  • Why SSRIs make you emotionally numb (the mechanism)
  • How microdosing restores emotional range (neuroplasticity)
  • Week-by-week timeline: When laughter returns, when creativity flows
  • Safety guidance for transitioning off SSRIs
  • The complete 12-week microdosing protocol

Backed by Leading Research Institutions

71%
Significant reduction in depression (Johns Hopkins)
12+
Months of lasting effects (Imperial College)
3+
Weeks of increased brain connectivity (UCSF)