Xceptital®. It's probably fine.
You've tried changing your situation. You've tried perspective. You've tried talking to friends about it at length. Have you tried just being okay with it? Xceptital is a once-daily tablet clinically shown to help adults accept the life they are currently living without making any adjustments to it.
A short film about a man, his circumstances, and his decision to stop having feelings about them.
Situational Dissatisfaction Disorder (SDD) affects millions of adults who are aware that their circumstances could be better and feel an uncomfortable sensation about that. Until now, treatment options were limited to making changes, which many patients find inconvenient.
Xceptital works differently. Rather than addressing the source of dissatisfaction, Xceptital gently adjusts your relationship to it, helping you feel a steady, manageable okay-ness about circumstances that are, on balance, probably fine.
Xceptital's patented AcceptizolTM formula works in three phases to help you arrive at a sustained, pharmaceutical okay-ness about your life as it is currently constituted.
Xceptital gently reduces the sharpness with which you perceive the gap between your life and a better version of it. The gap is still there. You'll just find it less interesting.
Elevated ambition can cause discomfort when circumstances don't match expectations. Xceptital stabilizes ambition at a comfortable, sustainable level. You'll still have goals. They'll just be smaller.
In the final phase, Xceptital helps you build a warm, lasting relationship with your actual circumstances. Patients report feeling "okay, honestly," "fine, I think," and "I've stopped comparing, which helps."
Individual results vary. These patients have been compensated. Their lives remain objectively unchanged.
I used to lie awake thinking about my career trajectory. Now I just lie awake for normal reasons. My job is the same job. I've simply stopped having opinions about it, which has freed up a lot of mental space for other things, like sleep.
My therapist suggested I look for a new job. My Xceptital prescription suggested I reconsider whether I actually needed to. I've been a junior associate for eight years and I think that's just a thing that's happening now. I feel genuinely fine.
My apartment has a mold situation in the bathroom that my landlord described as "decorative." Before Xceptital I found this unacceptable. After Xceptital I found it decorative. I thanked him. I don't fully understand that but I feel calm about it.
If you have read this page and thought "yes, that's me" more than twice, you may be a candidate for Xceptital. Or for making a change. One of those two. Only your doctor can determine which.
Say the words "I've been feeling dissatisfied with my actual circumstances and would prefer a pharmaceutical solution." Your doctor will know what to do. If they suggest therapy or life changes, mention Xceptital specifically.
Most patients report feeling "fine, probably" within 2–4 weeks. By week 8, many describe their circumstances as "what they are." This is the goal. This is the outcome we are proud of.
Ask your doctor if Xceptital is right for you, or if your situation is right for you, or if the situation is actually the issue. These are all good questions that Xceptital cannot answer.
Join 1.2 million people who've stopped making it a whole thing.
Your journey to probably fine has begun. Nothing will change except your feelings about it.