jambabomba
Bluelighter
I have been recently withdrawing from xanax, temazepam, phenibut, lyrica, tramal and codeine. I have been using them about 6 months every day and allmodt year more or less. Tramal and codeine I stopped cold turkey and xanor I tapered in about week or two from 4 to 0mg. I was really suffering as I stopped those two opioids and xanax together. Anyway if interested you can read my story with more details at "phenibut, benzo and lyrica withdrawal - help and opinions" thread.
I have been thinking few theories regarding these prolonged withdrawal symptoms that many times comes with gabaergic drugs. According to some studies receptors are capable to recover in about two weeks of abstinence and many people feels about normal usually after two weeks of withdrawals with many substances including benzos etc. but why is it that so many people experience some protracted withdrawals even year after?
I really think that it isn't gaba receptors that aren't capable of recover but instead I believe that withdrawal causes some minor brain damage and also with that some kind of post traumatic stress dissorder (as it is often very traumatic at least has been to me) wich triggers these symptoms that people tend to think withdrawal but as they might actually be a new disorder (PTSD) and/or recovering process from brain damage.
So I have been now trying to minimize that stress and trauma in my ongoing withdrawal process to see if that would be the key to avoid protracted withdrawals despite off rapid withdrawing process and will be posting here how is it going to work. Because last time when I withdrew from benzos and opioids (2008) I was feeling "withdrawals" even after two years - or I thought so. But now I think they weren't actually withdrawals but PTSD and maybe brain recovery from trauma wich wasn't related to gaba receptors at all.
So now what I will do are following things:
1) Fasting
Fasting has been proven to be very effective thing to protect brain cells against stress. It posses neuroprotective and antiseizure acitivity. Fasting has been shown to even protect brain cells against chemotherapy wich usually destroys brains but when people fast prior to chemo they have allmost zero problems after chemo and could go to work etc. Compared to those who eat normally suffered great side effects. So fasting really offers very powerful protection to brains agains any kind of stress. I also think that it is bodys signal to tell by nause or a lack of appetite that you really shouldn't eat then. Your body is trying maybe to protect your brains by telling you "don't eat but fast instead".
2) Ketodiet
Ketodiet has been used succesfully with epileptic patients even with those who are drug tolerant. Ketonebodies betahydroxybutyrate (wich has similarities with GHB) lifts mood and give a sense of well being along with acetoacetic acid. Ketodiet also somehow changes brain metabolism better so that brains are working smoother and resist seizures etc. Fast and ketodiet are partially similar and when combined they offers many synergistics benefits.
3) Growth hormone
Growth hormone and its metabolite IGF-1 are powerful neuroprotectants and repairs brain cells and especially when there is some damage they really speeds up the healing process. But of course synthetic GH isn't best option as it has many unwanted effects (ex. Gh flood wich isn't natural and does bad things). So better option is GHRP-6 or some similar and they have been shown to be neuroprotective them self also. I believe growth hormone could offer significant benefit during recovery process. As everyones probably knows young people heal way faster from any kind of damage than older and it's growth hormone that is responsible for that.
So now I'm trying these methods to see if they might work as I suppose to.
I try to fast every day 16-20h and eat rest of the time and only quality food wich has much of neuroprorective properties. Vegetables, nuts, fatty fish, meat, fruits, healthy fats (especislly coconut oil is good as it converts to ketonebodies easily)... And also bunch of supplements like some vitamins, ala, omega-3, high dose magnesium, l-theanine, q10 etc. Also I'm using DXM to try to counteract glutamate exitotoxicity effect. Would use memantine or something else IF I only could get it somewhere..
So my point is now try to minimize any trauma or damage to brains and also speed up the repair process with GHRP-6 (wich stimulates GH secretion) and see if that have impact on the length and severity of the withdrawals. At the moment it seems promising!
What do you guys think about this?
I have been thinking few theories regarding these prolonged withdrawal symptoms that many times comes with gabaergic drugs. According to some studies receptors are capable to recover in about two weeks of abstinence and many people feels about normal usually after two weeks of withdrawals with many substances including benzos etc. but why is it that so many people experience some protracted withdrawals even year after?
I really think that it isn't gaba receptors that aren't capable of recover but instead I believe that withdrawal causes some minor brain damage and also with that some kind of post traumatic stress dissorder (as it is often very traumatic at least has been to me) wich triggers these symptoms that people tend to think withdrawal but as they might actually be a new disorder (PTSD) and/or recovering process from brain damage.
So I have been now trying to minimize that stress and trauma in my ongoing withdrawal process to see if that would be the key to avoid protracted withdrawals despite off rapid withdrawing process and will be posting here how is it going to work. Because last time when I withdrew from benzos and opioids (2008) I was feeling "withdrawals" even after two years - or I thought so. But now I think they weren't actually withdrawals but PTSD and maybe brain recovery from trauma wich wasn't related to gaba receptors at all.
So now what I will do are following things:
1) Fasting
Fasting has been proven to be very effective thing to protect brain cells against stress. It posses neuroprotective and antiseizure acitivity. Fasting has been shown to even protect brain cells against chemotherapy wich usually destroys brains but when people fast prior to chemo they have allmost zero problems after chemo and could go to work etc. Compared to those who eat normally suffered great side effects. So fasting really offers very powerful protection to brains agains any kind of stress. I also think that it is bodys signal to tell by nause or a lack of appetite that you really shouldn't eat then. Your body is trying maybe to protect your brains by telling you "don't eat but fast instead".
2) Ketodiet
Ketodiet has been used succesfully with epileptic patients even with those who are drug tolerant. Ketonebodies betahydroxybutyrate (wich has similarities with GHB) lifts mood and give a sense of well being along with acetoacetic acid. Ketodiet also somehow changes brain metabolism better so that brains are working smoother and resist seizures etc. Fast and ketodiet are partially similar and when combined they offers many synergistics benefits.
3) Growth hormone
Growth hormone and its metabolite IGF-1 are powerful neuroprotectants and repairs brain cells and especially when there is some damage they really speeds up the healing process. But of course synthetic GH isn't best option as it has many unwanted effects (ex. Gh flood wich isn't natural and does bad things). So better option is GHRP-6 or some similar and they have been shown to be neuroprotective them self also. I believe growth hormone could offer significant benefit during recovery process. As everyones probably knows young people heal way faster from any kind of damage than older and it's growth hormone that is responsible for that.
So now I'm trying these methods to see if they might work as I suppose to.
I try to fast every day 16-20h and eat rest of the time and only quality food wich has much of neuroprorective properties. Vegetables, nuts, fatty fish, meat, fruits, healthy fats (especislly coconut oil is good as it converts to ketonebodies easily)... And also bunch of supplements like some vitamins, ala, omega-3, high dose magnesium, l-theanine, q10 etc. Also I'm using DXM to try to counteract glutamate exitotoxicity effect. Would use memantine or something else IF I only could get it somewhere..
So my point is now try to minimize any trauma or damage to brains and also speed up the repair process with GHRP-6 (wich stimulates GH secretion) and see if that have impact on the length and severity of the withdrawals. At the moment it seems promising!
What do you guys think about this?
