I wish you well on your med change Carl. Remember that going off a long term med can be hard on a body short term, and it can take awhile before you really know what your base line will be without it.
The Chantix (Varenicline) people take to quit smoking is a mild anti-depressive. It apparently did little for depression, but turned out to help people quit smoking (making them millions in the process).
The 25Mg Tradzodone the doc gave me to be able to sleep through the night is also an anti-depressive, but the usual clinical dose for depression is 350Mg and up. (If I took that dose, I'd probably sleep 22hrs a day - LOL) Sleeping through the night is a blessing.
The doc had me on a very low dose Losartan-Potassium to lower blood pressure, but after changing my diet for life (Mediterranean) and getting rid of most sugar and carbs, and walking 2-2.5 miles daily now for a year, dropping 25lbs, I didn't need any BP medicine anymore.
However, 8 days in to quitting tobacco (for the last time) (with no Chantix which made me sick last time, and no patch and no gum), my anxiety level is through the roof, and my damn blood pressure is back up. I was very disappointed until I realized the BP spike is just the tobacco quitting anxiety spike, which should only be a few weeks to a month, hopefully.
This tobacco demon is a real son of a bitch, and quitting one of the hardest things I've ever done in my whole life. Before, I quit because it was the right thing to do, but now I'm doing it to save my life (and 70yo damaged lungs). Interestingly, I am not eating more to make up for quitting, my appetite was already low, and has gotten lower since quitting.
Pray for us sinners.
Tobacco is a hard demon to fight.
One day at a time.
Fight the good fight.
If you need someone to talk with message me.