trumpet153
Greenlighter
- Joined
- Nov 17, 2015
- Messages
- 10
So here it goes, a person I know quiet well, bob, has had experience with a fairly wide range of drugs over several years. In his earlier years when his drug use was fairly sporadic he on a pretty large number of occasions took the common household spice nutmeg as a drug. Like many of the other people he has now seen taken this drug he did not find the effects to be extremely unpleasant as it seems a few suggest but rather extremely similar to marijuana. Effects began at around T+3:00 and would continue until T+15:00 +- 4:00, and include sedation, appetite increase, red glazed eyes, and increase in humor.
Now bob had not taken nutmeg for several years as of 3 weeks ago when he, after somehow ending up on the subject with his roommate and told him one can indeed get high eating the relatively common spice. The roommate, who has a moderate marijuana tolerance at the time takes a moderate sized dose of ground nutmeg the two owned and reports only mild effects. Bob however is intrigued, and a few days later purchases a jar of whole nutmegs from the local market as he recalled he preferred to take them this way.
Bob took 6 of the whole nutmegs, a dose he remembers to be on the high average side from former use. He receives mild effects, including no reddening of the eyes.
Now Bob is concerned he may be receiving a drug test in the near future and immediately following this incident stopped smoking marijuana for the first time in probably 3 years. Over which Bob was a moderately heavy daily smoker, with a significant tolerance to pot, compared to his roommate Bob would not get red eyes when he smoked while the roommate would.
Bob today took 6 nutmegs out of the same exact bottle he did 3 weeks ago but had received extremely mild effects, and the effects produced were extremely powerful. Subjectively described as being almost too much from the very experienced drug user at times, and including powerfully increased appetite, strong sedation and dream like sensations, as well as eyes which are redder then Bob has seen since, well before he started smoking every day years ago.
Bob is aware that the leading theory of nutmegs effects are believed to be serotonergic and possibly also dopamatic, but Bob is also familiar with the effects of a wide variety of serotonergic and dopamatic drugs, and can certainly say the subjective effects of nutmeg are nothing like any of them, and frankly, precisely the same as CB1/2 agonists he has tried.
Bob presumably had no tolerance to nutmeg for either of the exparements as they were spaced three weeks apart and after a multiple year absence of nutmeg use. the nutmegs were of the same size in the same quantity out of the same bottle, the only difference was a 20 day absence of marijuana use. To Bob this presents strong evidence of CB agonism in nutmeg.
Now bob had not taken nutmeg for several years as of 3 weeks ago when he, after somehow ending up on the subject with his roommate and told him one can indeed get high eating the relatively common spice. The roommate, who has a moderate marijuana tolerance at the time takes a moderate sized dose of ground nutmeg the two owned and reports only mild effects. Bob however is intrigued, and a few days later purchases a jar of whole nutmegs from the local market as he recalled he preferred to take them this way.
Bob took 6 of the whole nutmegs, a dose he remembers to be on the high average side from former use. He receives mild effects, including no reddening of the eyes.
Now Bob is concerned he may be receiving a drug test in the near future and immediately following this incident stopped smoking marijuana for the first time in probably 3 years. Over which Bob was a moderately heavy daily smoker, with a significant tolerance to pot, compared to his roommate Bob would not get red eyes when he smoked while the roommate would.
Bob today took 6 nutmegs out of the same exact bottle he did 3 weeks ago but had received extremely mild effects, and the effects produced were extremely powerful. Subjectively described as being almost too much from the very experienced drug user at times, and including powerfully increased appetite, strong sedation and dream like sensations, as well as eyes which are redder then Bob has seen since, well before he started smoking every day years ago.
Bob is aware that the leading theory of nutmegs effects are believed to be serotonergic and possibly also dopamatic, but Bob is also familiar with the effects of a wide variety of serotonergic and dopamatic drugs, and can certainly say the subjective effects of nutmeg are nothing like any of them, and frankly, precisely the same as CB1/2 agonists he has tried.
Bob presumably had no tolerance to nutmeg for either of the exparements as they were spaced three weeks apart and after a multiple year absence of nutmeg use. the nutmegs were of the same size in the same quantity out of the same bottle, the only difference was a 20 day absence of marijuana use. To Bob this presents strong evidence of CB agonism in nutmeg.
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