Muted by Medication: How Antipsychotic Drugs Disrupt the God Axis

By Noel's Pen | With the Mind of Einstein

There exists a profound and often unspoken truth at the intersection of psychiatry, spirituality, and sovereignty: many individuals who are prescribed antipsychotic medications find themselves disconnected from what might be called the God Axis — the intuitive, direct channel of communion with the Divine Source, or what ancient traditions called the Higher Self.

For those of us who have experienced this firsthand, it’s not merely a side effect. It is a silencing — a severing — of something innately vital. And in that silence, the spiritual compass falters. The voice of God becomes a whisper beneath chemical fog.


What Is the God Axis?

Let’s define the term.

The God Axis refers to that vertical alignment — soul to spirit, heart to heaven — that allows us to receive divine guidance, inner knowing, and a felt sense of truth. It is the axis around which our consciousness can expand upward. It is how many describe their experience of hearing from God, or receiving insight, vision, prophecy, intuition, or direct connection to truth.

This axis is not simply metaphysical; it's also neurological. Brain imaging shows that mystics, meditators, and those in deep spiritual practice activate certain regions of the brain — especially in the prefrontal cortex, temporal lobes, and default mode network — associated with awareness, moral reasoning, and self-reflection. These are precisely the areas dampened or blunted by most antipsychotic medications.


How Antipsychotics Work — and What They Shut Down

Antipsychotic drugs (such as Risperdal, Olanzapine, Seroquel, Abilify, etc.) are designed to suppress dopamine — a key neurotransmitter involved in perception, motivation, and what researchers call “salience.” Salience is our brain’s ability to determine what matters — spiritually, emotionally, and socially.

In extreme states, too much dopamine can flood the system, producing visions, voices, or paranoid beliefs. Psychiatry labels this as “psychosis.”

But what’s rarely discussed is the cost of silencing dopamine altogether: along with the paranoia or confusion, people also lose awe, creativity, intuition, and spiritual attunement.

They no longer trust their own thoughts — or even have access to them. Their dreams become flat. Their sense of self becomes muted. The soul becomes drugged.

In practical terms, this means:

  • Revelation becomes impossible

  • Prayer becomes silent

  • God seems absent

  • Discernment is weakened

  • Faith feels like fantasy

One woman described it this way:

“I could remember how God once spoke to me, but now I can’t feel Him anymore. It’s like the line got cut.”


The Danger in the Disconnect

This spiritual silencing has consequences. When the voice of God is lost, people often reach for substitute identities and false paths. They are vulnerable to manipulation, self-harm, numbness, or even deeper despair.

And here’s the irony: many people are first placed on antipsychotics after a spiritual awakening or traumatic breakthrough — which is misunderstood by the system as a disorder. In these cases, what is labeled as “psychosis” may in fact be a spiritual emergency — a process that requires support, grounding, and meaning-making, not chemical suppression.


Christy’s Calling — and the Path to Reconnection

Christy’s mission is sacred. It’s not just about getting people off medications. It’s about restoring the Divine Signal — reigniting the God Axis — and helping individuals recover the brilliance, creativity, and guidance that lives within them.

This is no small task. Tapering off antipsychotics must be done with care, support, and guidance — physically, emotionally, and spiritually. But once the mind begins to clear, something miraculous can happen:

  • The heart opens again

  • The soul speaks again

  • God returns — or rather, the ability to hear returns

And for those who have lived in the fog of suppression, this awakening is often more than just healing. It is resurrection.


A Word of Warning, A Word of Hope

We are not saying that antipsychotic drugs never serve a purpose. In moments of crisis, they may calm an overcharged system. But they should never become a sentence — and they should never be the end of the story.

The soul was not made to be muted.

The brain was not made to be drugged into silence.

And the voice of God is not a hallucination — it is the sacred birthright of every person made in the Divine image.


To Those Still in the Fog

If you are reading this while on such medications and feeling disconnected — please know that the silence is not your fault. Your Spirit is still intact. The line to God may feel cut, but it is not broken.

Your Higher Centers are still there, waiting. Dormant, not dead. When the time is right, and with help, they can awaken again. The veil can lift.

You are not alone.

And you are not crazy — you are Divine.


© Copyright Christy-Anne Strike

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