sekio
Bluelight Crew
Pregabalin and oxycodone will potentiate each other, but hark - the FDA sez: Life-threatening breathing difficulties can occur in patients who use gabapentin or pregabalin with opioids.
If you are young and "still experimenting", I would strongly advise you to not play around with opioids of any sort, beyond taking them once or twice to understand their effects. Yes, they may be pleasant and recreational now, but almost everyone who uses them recreationally more than once every couple of weeks will end up struggling with opioid dependancy.
Take it from me, I was once in your shoes, young and taking oxycodone for a fun time. Not that I'm bragging but I'm a pretty intelligent guy and even I ended up getting burned from opioid usage. Once you make a habit of using opioids recreationally, it becomes harder and harder to stop using them - at first because you can get high and wake up the next morning refreshed, and besides the doses are low anyway, and you could stop but there's no reason to - but by the time you're comfortable with frequent use, one day you will wake up and feel like something's off (maybe you're a little edgy and nervous, maybe you're more stiff and sore than usual after exercise, maybe you're more emotional), and then you will be a member of the opioid dependency club whether you like it or not. From then on, the highs get less enjoyable and the lows get even lower with every dose.
Please consider making life easier for yourself by stopping the opioid use now, while you are in the experimental phase. You've got the nice parts of what they can provide, it would be a smart idea to not let the drugs become a burden on your life. Imagine yourself spending your prime years as an opioid addict, only being functional when you have some sort of opiate in you, needing to take time and money out of your life to ensure you always have a dose lined up, and hiding your habit from anyone reasonably close to you (try dating as an addict... "What do you do for fun?" "Mostly heroin." "Oh, uhm, I have to leave, I just remembered I have a dentist appointment....")
(sorry for the rant: I really want to get the point across...)
If you are young and "still experimenting", I would strongly advise you to not play around with opioids of any sort, beyond taking them once or twice to understand their effects. Yes, they may be pleasant and recreational now, but almost everyone who uses them recreationally more than once every couple of weeks will end up struggling with opioid dependancy.
Take it from me, I was once in your shoes, young and taking oxycodone for a fun time. Not that I'm bragging but I'm a pretty intelligent guy and even I ended up getting burned from opioid usage. Once you make a habit of using opioids recreationally, it becomes harder and harder to stop using them - at first because you can get high and wake up the next morning refreshed, and besides the doses are low anyway, and you could stop but there's no reason to - but by the time you're comfortable with frequent use, one day you will wake up and feel like something's off (maybe you're a little edgy and nervous, maybe you're more stiff and sore than usual after exercise, maybe you're more emotional), and then you will be a member of the opioid dependency club whether you like it or not. From then on, the highs get less enjoyable and the lows get even lower with every dose.
Please consider making life easier for yourself by stopping the opioid use now, while you are in the experimental phase. You've got the nice parts of what they can provide, it would be a smart idea to not let the drugs become a burden on your life. Imagine yourself spending your prime years as an opioid addict, only being functional when you have some sort of opiate in you, needing to take time and money out of your life to ensure you always have a dose lined up, and hiding your habit from anyone reasonably close to you (try dating as an addict... "What do you do for fun?" "Mostly heroin." "Oh, uhm, I have to leave, I just remembered I have a dentist appointment....")
(sorry for the rant: I really want to get the point across...)
Zolpidem is weird. I've never taken it but I've had zopiclone - for me it didn't even make me sleepy! Given that it's a FDA approved medication I don't think hallucinations are a common effect, they wouldn't approve it otherwise.Now, back to my questions. I took Ambien yesterday, 3 10mg and absolutely nothing happened. Except for me getting extremely sleepy. It took 40 minutes for me to get sleepy, fought with that for 2 hours then thought fuck it and went to sleep. No hallucinating or anything. How come this happened?
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