Well I use 100mg Diphenhydramine and 4mg Chlorpheniramine basically every night and have been for almost 2 years now. Some people I know are using these Clonidine I got the 0.2mg Pills also to potentiate the Effects of Opioids/Opiates and Benzodiazepines I figured it can not be that safe using it in those ways..... But than again they are all still alive and reported to have slept and I qoute "Great nights sleep." lol. Is there actually 2mg Clonidine Pills in a different country lol in that case I doubt 0.3 could be dangerous than again could be wrong which why I am asking here for a more accurate answer.
I would never mix clonidine with opiates. One of the reasons why I like using clonidine for opiate withdrawal is that I know that if someone calls me offering me dope, I will turn it down since the clonidine has me so 'out of it' that it would ruin the high, as well having me worried about dying or something. People that take clonidine to potentiate opiates are probably the kind of people that just try to get as fucked up as possible, without caring as much about the quality of the high.
Oh also I have no idea if this matters or not but when I was 7 years old I was prescribed Ritalin not sure what dosage and Clonidine to help me sleep again not sure what dosage and was given them for basically about 3 full years until I was 10 years old.
Clonidine is also prescribed for ADHD, particularly in the way it was prescribed to you, i.e in combination with stimulant medications to help with sleep while possibly treating other symptoms.
"Clonidine has been investigated and prescribed first as an antihypertensive drug in the 1950s. It has found new uses later, including treatment of some types of neuropathic pain, opioid detoxification, sleep hyperhidrosis, and as veterinary anaesthetic drug. Clonidine is used to treat anxiety and panic disorder. It is also FDA approved to treat ADHD in an extended release form. It is becoming a more accepted treatment for insomnia, as well as for relief of menopausal symptoms.
Clonidine is increasingly used in conjunction with stimulants to treat attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), for which it is administered in late afternoon or evening for sleep, and because it sometimes helps moderate ADHD-associated impulsive and oppositional behavior, and may reduce tics, a problem in which a part of the body moves repeatedly and suddenly.[
1] Clonidine can be used in the treatment of Tourette syndrome (specifically for tics).[
2] Clonidine along with Methylphenidate has been studied for treatment of ADHD. [
3][
4] In 2010, the Food and Drug Administration approved the use of clonidine either as an adjunct to traditional stimulant therapy or as a monotherapy in the treatment of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (
source)."