U
Unregistered
Guest
Hello fellow aviators,
I am currently ready to solo and am concerned about my medical being approved. Around 7 years ago I got an ADD diagnosis and was on Vyvanse for a few months but stopped taking it realizing I was part of the overdiagnosis trend that's going on (messing up peoples lives later on imo) and was able to function fine and ended up getting into one of the top schools in the country. I was also taking Lexapro for GAD (pilots are allowed to take Lexapro) for a few years but very recently stopped talking it under doctor supervision and am able to function fine off of it. What would I need to do in order to pass my medical as far as getting documentation from my past doctors , ect.? I am more concerned about the ADD because I know the FAA allows pilots to stay on Lexapro even though I stopped taking it , but advice on both matters would be greatly appreciated.
Please don't say go gliding because that's just not my dream ... I live for flying and find it to be something that I excel in and allows me to literally feel no stress. As you can imagine I'm pretty upset about all of this, also if my medical was approved would I have to go through the same loopholes all over again when I renew it? Professional advice would be greatly appreciated, thank you very much!
I am currently ready to solo and am concerned about my medical being approved. Around 7 years ago I got an ADD diagnosis and was on Vyvanse for a few months but stopped taking it realizing I was part of the overdiagnosis trend that's going on (messing up peoples lives later on imo) and was able to function fine and ended up getting into one of the top schools in the country. I was also taking Lexapro for GAD (pilots are allowed to take Lexapro) for a few years but very recently stopped talking it under doctor supervision and am able to function fine off of it. What would I need to do in order to pass my medical as far as getting documentation from my past doctors , ect.? I am more concerned about the ADD because I know the FAA allows pilots to stay on Lexapro even though I stopped taking it , but advice on both matters would be greatly appreciated.
Please don't say go gliding because that's just not my dream ... I live for flying and find it to be something that I excel in and allows me to literally feel no stress. As you can imagine I'm pretty upset about all of this, also if my medical was approved would I have to go through the same loopholes all over again when I renew it? Professional advice would be greatly appreciated, thank you very much!