DeathIndustrial88
Bluelighter
I disagree in one aspect.Using any recrarional drug that is reinforcing (ie addictive)
Is a horrible way to a manage depression that will likely make you end up far more depressed and with a whole new world of problems in addition to the depression
The only opioid that stopped helping my depression in the long run was buprenorphine.
Yet even after 7 years, it still helps to a slight degree to keep me from un-aliving myself some days. Where as normally I would be ready to die 24/7.
Yet I never had that issue on full agonists.
Sure I can get sad or down some times while on full agonists, but I still experience a wide array of emotions on them, unlike the flattened emotions I get from SSRI's or even bupe. But feeling a little sad or down isn't anything like an actual depression disorder.
I'm talking genuine depression where even just speaking some days is exhausting & you basically feel like an old family dog that needs to be taken out back & put out of it's misery, every day. That's how I feel every day normally. But on full agonists, I actually experience positive thinking/emotions & I enjoy getting my body moving & being productive. I also become more in tuned with my emotions on full agonists (mostly diacetylmorphine). These are all wonderful qualities from a drug that can enhance people's quality of life greatly.
Of course if you're depressed & pick up a habit & then eventually can't get your medicine or supply, then I absolutely agree with you.
However, if a depressed person did an addictive drug & ran out, they might be severely depressed during the initial withdrawal phase, like suicidal-depressed even, but after the withdrawal, you'll basically go back to being depressed like you were before.
So I get where you're coming from but depending on the drug & circumstances, I could say that some addictive drugs are absolutely the best antidepressants, as long as you have access to them.
Great observation! I never actually thought of it that way. "The idea of people that abuse alcohol think themselves above any other type of addict is delusional to me.
They are so lost in this aspect that they had to seperate themselves from NA. By having AA and NA as separate things
The alcoholics in AA can’t even say the words “ I am a drug addict” which is exactly what they are. They never even made it past step 1.
Granted AA where I live is full of plenty of poly drug addicts where alcohol was the worst one for them so they understand; but even within the addict world this separation of a drug as hard as alcohol from all other drugs as being “less hard” is straight up delusional.
You would think in the recovery world they would ba w the balls to say to alcoholics that you are a drug addict just like a cocaine addict is a drug addict; even within that world they can’t. So in society where everyone is an alcohol abuser, forget it
But you're right. Alcoholics don't get treated as seriously as other users either.
I've already lost my oldest sister to alcohol induced-liver failure. And I'm currently watching other people I know & care about drink themselves to death on a daily basis. Some of these people have told me that if they just had access to diacetylmorphine or an opioid they could quit drinking. And I completely empathize with that because opioids keep me from drinking as well.
I think it's absolutely criminal that people can't legally take & use diacetylmorphine & full agonists for a variety of reasons. Now a days you're lucky to even get anything if you come out of surgery. The opioid-phobia in the US is insane. And IMO it's intentionally been twisted this way in order to make Americans (along with the rest of the world) give up their bodily autonomy in exchange for "safety" from the big bad "scary" drugs out there, some which a lot less harmful than alcohol & tobacco. It's all a ruse meant to get people to accept having their freedom taken & to think it's okay to punish anyone who partakes in anything other than alcohol. It's absurd.