As everyone has mentioned, substances are not the answer, however that said if you absolutely have to take something, the specific substances you have mentioned are a bad idea. Microdosing psychedelics has not been proven to have any effect beyond placebo, and the others are habit forming and sedating and will not do anything to help you.
Personally I have had a lot of success using the more benign and well known nootropics to lift myself out of apathy. A couple of years ago now I used a regimen of Piracetam, Oxiracetam and Noopept to overcome a period of stagnation and depression that had lasted around 8 years, during this period of increased motivation and optimism I was able to make lasting changes to my life for the better. Ever since then no nootropic has had quite as pronounced an effect, but I would still recommend them if you absolutely have to take something because they are not recreational or habit forming but will give you a small increase in energy which is what you need when you are feeling low. You absolutely MUST combine them with a concerted effect to live positively however, no substance is going to change your outlook on it's own without effort from you as well.
You don't want to be taking anything sedating because although it might feel good in the moment it's just going to feed your desire to retreat into yourself. You want something that is stimulating, but not too stimulating to be habit forming or have a perceptible crash. Even caffeine can be useful, if you have to develop a coffee addiction to get yourself to start living better, do it, you can kick the addiction afterwards, caffeine addiction is nothing in the grand scheme of things.
Therefore my revised regimen for you would be:
Piracetam 800mg 3x per day
Oxiracetam 600mg 3x per day
Noopept 10mg 3x per day
Coffee, 1-2x per day, 5 days per week
Lift weights, 3x per week
Run/do cardio, 3x per week
Eat healthy, 6 days per week
Do this for a month and tell me if you don't feel better. Really the first 4 are optional, but they worked for me, the latter 3 are not optional.
^ good post. Definately agree with the latter 3 not being optional - healthy diet and exercise are critical. If you take any action to remedy your situation, change diet and exercise first as this may actually be enough.
I've been trying nootropics in an attempt to finish healing from benzodiazapines. I've been taking
aniracetam 325mg 3x a day
Noopept 10mg 3x a day
tianeptine 12.6 mg 3x a day *
ALCAR 300mg 3x a day
Choline/Inositol 500mg 2x a day
L-Tyrosine 1x a day (forgetting dose)
L-theanime 100mg 3x a day
Multivitamin 1 dose divided - 1 am 1 pm
Vitamin B complex 1x a day
CoEnzyme Q10 100mg
Curcumin 500mg 2x a day
Piperine 4mg 2x a day
Ashwaganha 500mg 1x a day
Magnesium 200mg 1x a day
Coffee 24oz am
Eat healthy and exercise 6 days a week
I plan on doing some of this indefinately, and with other stuff cycling on a monthly basis. I want to add it's very important to take the nootropics with a choline source or one may get headaches. It also very important to identify which supplements are fat soluble and take those with fat (I use peanut butter or olive oil) otherwise they do not get absorbed by the body.
So far the results are positive. I have more energy and the anxiety is extremely low to nonexistent most days. The underlying depression that I have had my entire life has also diminished dramatically to where I have had anxiety free and depression free days which I have never experienced, even as a child. I do have an appointment with a psychiatrist that I used to see regularly years ago Tuesday to get his assessment on the regime, and to see if the US has anything similar to tianeptine (SSRE) in case that gets banned.
*Tianeptine is an SSRE (selective serotonin reuptake enhancer). In Europe it's available with a prescription (Stablon) dosed 12.6 mg 3 times a day. It's unscheduled in the US. It has a fairly low side effect profile. Apparently in large enough doses it can be both recreational and addictive, however those doses are 200mg and above. Since sticking with the standard European prescription quantities I have not found it to alter my state noticeably, and have not had the compulsion to redose frequently or take a larger dose than is therapeutic.
I also tried Adranafil at 30mg as I have often wondered if I do have ADHD or if my poor concentration is from drugs/alcohol. I tried it a few times, 30mg each time, and it really didn't do much. Not certain if I should increase the dose once to see if it helps or leave it be. I though if it were legitmately beneficial then I could get a script for modinafil which won't destroy my liver (Adranafil metabolizes to modinafil but is toxic to the liver). Haven't gotten around to increasing as I'm a little nervous too. Plus I only intended on using either (modinafil or Adranafil) in emergencies and nothing has come up.
Aniracetam supposedly helps repair neurological tissue after the have been damaged. There are numerous studies of patients with traumatic brain injury using it to expedite healing with positive results. Severe cold turkey benzo withdrawal results in excitotoxicity, which also happens to people who have traumatic brain injuries so I figured it may help me :/