You are not alone. We all understand because we've all been through it. Maybe our side effects were different, but we've all been at the exact point you are at. You will make it. This is not like mending a broken leg - you are rewiring your brain, so it gets worse before it gets better - but you will make it to your son's wedding and you will be better than you are today - everyone's time frame is different, but know that what you are feeling now is part of the recovery - and it sucks greatly. This disease is the curse of the stong - you are probably the type of person that takes the world on their shoulders, puts your kids before you, and everyone else for that matter, and try to make everthing right. You are not weak! This is not your fault! Only a strong person can handle what you and all of us have gone through. You are not a terrible person, the person you were before this is still there, and you will make it back. But it's hard as hell to have to go through this because your brain is fighting you - let it happen, don't push the recovery because - it has to happen at its pace. I can almost guarantee you that no one thinks you're a bad person, or a terrible mom - that's the disease talking. Let them help you, it's okay to take a break from being the strong one. I was there, where you are, and I made it back - even through I never believed I would despite everyone on here telling me I would.
When I was going through this, I found this timeline - and while everyone is different and some of my recovery didn't match - this was my bible of hope. I hope it helps you:
Week 1: This week can go either way. Some find almost immediate improvement while other see the side effects (see weeks 2-3) after the first day.
Weeks 2,3: These are almost always the most difficult. Anxiety and depression can get worse than before the medication. Side effects kick in, these can include sleeplessness, nightmares, diarrhea, nausea, hot flashes, excessive sweating (especially at night), dry mouth, muscle twitches, overall muscle weakness and pain, zero appetite, and very negative mental outlook. My advice is, take these one day at a time and try not to get discouraged, not every day will be bad and better times are ahead!
Weeks 4,5: Some improvement. The side effects lessen to some point, and there are moments when you start to feel normal. Typically evenings are the best and mornings the worst. Many start playing around with dosage at this point because they are told that the Prozac should be working, my advice: hold the course!
Weeks 6,7: More improvement. Maybe 50% to 70% better than before starting. There are often blips where you feel just terrible for a few days, but not usually over a week. Some side effects lessen, but also you may get new side effects. Hang in there, you are getting ready to turn a corner!
Weeks 8-10: Even more improvement. There still are blips, but they are less severe and shorter, maybe 1-2 days. Not normal yet, but getting better day by day. The side effects are usually 75% or so gone. Light at the end of the tunnel!
Weeks 10-12: Maybe this is wishful thinking for me (I'm not here yet), but this is where most see the best results. Some quotes from this time period: "best in months", "Amazing", "Feel good", "brilliant". Again, this is for the people for whom the prozac did work, not everyone, and for those who stuck to their original dosage. For some, this happens at 7 weeks, for some, 3-4 months. But, from what I have read, 10-12 weeks is the payoff time.