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7 votes
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Sha’Carri Richardson, a track sensation, tests positive for marijuana
9 votes -
An0m: Hundreds arrested in massive global crime sting using messaging app
19 votes -
US FBI secretly ran the An0m encrypted messaging platform, yields hundreds of arrests in global sting
7 votes -
California bill to decriminalize psychedelics is approved by Senate, now moves on to Assembly
26 votes -
Chinese dreams on Native American land: A tale of cannabis boom and bust
8 votes -
Medication for depression
Hello my lovelies, I struggle with a moderate amount of anxiety and obsession with self-image, which tend to amalgamate as some kind of depression or other over time. At least I think they do....
Hello my lovelies,
I struggle with a moderate amount of anxiety and obsession with self-image, which tend to amalgamate as some kind of depression or other over time. At least I think they do. I've never really been sure if what I experience is actually depression, or if I'm just a Mopey Idiot, or if I have a more acute cognitive issue that I'm not aware of.
I keep very precise semi-quantitative logs of my mood and behavior every day, and they suggest to me that some of my stress is related to being a little overloaded. I'm working on cutting back on some of that responsibility. But it's also extremely obvious to me that, for quite some time—I think since about early October 2019—I've lacked the physical energy that typically allows me to be consistently happy. There was no one, singular "proximate cause" two years ago, certainly it was none of my actual obligations (at that time I had very little work to speak of). However, I nevertheless very distinctly remember that my energy was suddenly just sapped, and has not come back to the level it was at before. The best theory I have is that it might've been a mini-existential crisis triggered immediately by some books I'd been reading, with a background of relatively more social isolation than usual. There have been specific circumstances since then in which I can be high-energy (and I mean be, not just act like I am), but they are fleeting and rare. The overall background energy of my life has been different.
In short, I do not really have a solid anchor per se, even as I have many little mini-anchors. I have been floating around for a while as a result.
At least that has been my working theory for a little while. The persistence of my condition has led me to question whether that theory is useful, or whether there is something fundamentally wrong with my brain. I am Young and Naive so I simply do not know how to tell. The pandemic has made it much more challenging to figure out the root cause of my problems, because I cannot tell if they are just because I can't do the fun activities I like doing in the social environments I like doing them in, or something presumably biochemical.
Things that each help a little:
- Getting more sleep
- Getting more exercise
- Being good about meditating, or when my therapist is useful (rarely)
- Being successful (I have a job for the summer and a likely career after I graduate. Knock on wood)
- Being hot as fuck (I'm not that attractive, but I feel pretty after I exercise, or when I dress nice, or when people compliment my body)
Things that each help a lot:
- Having extremely attentive and caring friends
- Not being around people who constantly drain me
- Consuming certain substances
Specifically, the most non-low-energy I've felt in a long time was when I ate some funky little mushrooms with my friend this year. Specifically, after I snapped back to reality (mom's spaghetti). I was just more alert and more able to function properly. My brain operated at its normal capacity; words flowed freely from my mouth in a gorgeous array of sentences; positive banter was at an all-time high; I was positive and optimistic; and so on. You know how you can sort of visualize the ideas popping around and the gears turning when you're sober but just really on top of your social life? Well that's what it was. Unfortunately my ability to be a normal person only lasted like 1 or 2 days from there, and then it was back to the same old.
This has made me ask the question: might it be prudent to look into some sort of legal medical prescription that would have a similar effect? That is, anti-depressants or like whatever. I'm also open to alternative treatments but I am mainly asking about prescription meds. I just don't know anything about the whole world of medication. I almost never take meds for anything ever, even physical injuries, and I'm afraid that if I start doing medication I'll never be able to stop. The concept of always being medicated is a little scary to me. Like even if it helps, I'm still worried. But I kind of feel like nothing I've done so far has been able to permanently work, so I kind of need to do something.
I appreciate any thoughts that you can give!!!
xoxoxo
beezselzak18 votes -
MDMA-assisted therapy for severe PTSD: A randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled phase 3 study
10 votes -
Drug cartel now assassinates its enemies with bomb-toting drones
17 votes -
New York just legalized marijuana. Here are the prime acquisition targets and the types of deals you can expect.
17 votes -
How mRNA technology could change the world
8 votes -
Microdosing's feel-good benefits might just be placebo effect
18 votes -
Breakthrough male contraceptive pill derived from Chinese medicine
17 votes -
Cost Plus Drug Company: Low cost versions of high cost generic drugs
4 votes -
What separates people that have positive and negative experiences with drugs? Which drugs tend to give people more positive or negative experiences?
(I don't personally have any interest in trying much of anything if anyone interprets this post as such. And yes, 'drugs' is a general/vague and loaded term and I might be asking too much in a...
(I don't personally have any interest in trying much of anything if anyone interprets this post as such. And yes, 'drugs' is a general/vague and loaded term and I might be asking too much in a single topic)
My opinion on drug legalization was generally summed up as pro-legalization, but really because just banning everything doesn't work and generally just understood drugs as bad.
However, I often hear people talking about drugs as giving them new experiences, enhancing sensations and generally being fun.
However, being Brazilian/Latin American, drugs here are often associated with illegal traffic, gangs, poverty, crime, among other bad things and, unlike in the US and Europe, this is generally something that is exterior to us, nor a position held overwhelmingly by social conservatives who rant about "the devil's lettuce", because it affects poor people (although, yes, that's also true in the US).
So back to the title question:
What separates people that have positive and negative experiences with drugs?
The 3 obvious differences are:
The drugs used. Drug gangs traffic stuff like cocaine and areas like [the] Cracolândia are populated by people dependent on crack, while people advocate for legalization of weed or psychedelics which are very different and "weed is no worse than alcohol" is confirmed to be truth and has been for a while. A question I have concerning this is what separates 'good' drugs from 'bad' drugs?
Preparation, since obviously you don't want to be high at work
(or asking for help on a Tildes thread, that happened.)A question I have in that area is what preparations do people take before taking weed or DMT and other drugs.Their motivations for taking drugs, since a lot of the bad examples come from people taking drugs to fill holes in their lives, while good examples are the vast majority of the time recreational (aka, for fun.)
Are there any other differences anyone wants to delineate?
20 votes -
Oregon legalizes psilocybin mushrooms (for therapeutic purposes) and decriminalizes all drugs
32 votes -
New Zealand voters approve euthanasia but reject recreational marijuana
17 votes -
An archaeology of marijuana
10 votes -
Eli Lilly says its monoclonal antibody cocktail is effective in treating Covid-19
7 votes -
Sweden has the highest proportion of drug-related deaths in the European Union, with eighty-one cases per one million citizens – nearly four times higher than the EU average
11 votes -
Telegrass and the next generation of digital black markets - Telegram-based services are facilitating much of the drug sales in Ukraine, Israel, and other countries
13 votes -
Low doses of LSD have been found to increase pain tolerance comparable to oxycodone or morphine
4 votes -
Four terminally ill Canadians get special exemption to use psychedelic therapy
5 votes -
New techniques are helping medical researchers develop new anti-cancer drugs and gain a better understanding of how existing ones work
5 votes -
Exponential adoption of solar power by opium-growers in Afghanistan
7 votes -
Mexican drug cartels are installing parasite antennas on existing cell towers, layering their criminal communications network on top of the official one and making life dangerous for technicians
11 votes -
I'm writing an autobiographical comic about trauma, psychosis, and clinical protocols. Looking for feedback
15 votes -
HIV drugs have transformed the lives of people in rich nations. In Papua New Guinea, the virus is mutating
8 votes -
Hypertension affects one in four adults and is usually treated with medication, even though lifestyle changes can reduce blood pressure
6 votes -
Remdesivir distribution causes confusion, leaves some US hospitals empty-handed
4 votes -
Alert level 420: New Zealand weed dealers on how they’re operating in lockdown
4 votes -
Coronavirus is dealing a gut punch to the illegal drug trade, paralyzing economies, closing borders, and severing supply chains in China
4 votes -
Hey Tilderinos, what's your favorite cannabis strain?
I've been progressively getting more excited about cannabis over the past year or so; we had a chat about drugs a while back, I figured we could try one specifically about cannabis. I've been...
I've been progressively getting more excited about cannabis over the past year or so; we had a chat about drugs a while back, I figured we could try one specifically about cannabis.
I've been really enjoying Durban Poison lately, I tend towards feeling compassionate and really loving and open to folks around me, though that depends somewhat on context. Jack Herer and derivatives have been nice as well, but they're more for tasks that need some focus like programming or writing.
I've been trying a couple indica/evening leaning strains lately, but I haven't found one that I've really loved (my ulterior motive for starting this thread).
We should probably start a ~talk.casual, but maybe all talk on tildes is somewhat causal, and that's cool too, Also, this is aspie special interest territory for me, so if y'all don't think about this as much, I can do strain recs if that'd be something that was nice for you. Though, I don't some (relatively) that much, so someone on the internet could probably do that better.
Also, yes, I know that COVID-19 falls under SARS; I already got the gentle warnings from my dad.
(edit: thanks whoever tagged nsfw.drugs! Also the cannabis tag makes more sense as well)
14 votes -
Nigeria has Chloroquine poisonings after Trump praised drug
9 votes -
Chloroquine, past and present
3 votes -
Eating animals will be the death of us
11 votes -
Is change on the way for Sweden's zero tolerance drug policy? Shifting the focus away from zero tolerance to the pursuit of zero drug-related deaths
5 votes -
Sun Yang banned eight years in swimming doping case
6 votes -
"Theire Soe Admirable Herbe": How the English Found Cannabis
5 votes -
On vice
As far as "vice" is concerned, do any of you draw the line somewhere? For example, has anyone here been to a strip club? Paid for sex? Engaged in recreational use of illegal drugs? Gambled? I was...
As far as "vice" is concerned, do any of you draw the line somewhere? For example, has anyone here been to a strip club? Paid for sex? Engaged in recreational use of illegal drugs? Gambled?
I was inspired by this post and was wondering where ya'll stand.
26 votes -
Drug gang violence in Sweden linked to 60% increase in bomb blasts – last year 257 bomb attacks were reported to police, up from 162 in 2018
4 votes -
Research identifies new route for tackling drug resistance in skin cancer cells
4 votes -
A spate of new class-action lawsuits threaten the CBD industry. Will they force Washington to act?
4 votes -
America’s first opioid epidemic: As the country struggles with a terrible opioid crisis, we remember a similar epidemic that raged through the US in the 1800s
6 votes -
Biopharma has abandoned antibiotic development. Here’s why we did, too.
9 votes -
Venturing a perspective on the drug pricing debate
3 votes -
US FDA approving drugs at breakneck speed
9 votes -
I was a drug rep. I know how pharma companies pushed opioids.
12 votes -
UPS employees allegedly ran massive drug shipment operation, evading authorities for a decade
12 votes -
Sweden bomb attacks reach unprecedented level as gangs feud – thirty blasts in the past two months and 100 so far this year
6 votes