Babygirl25
Bluelighter
Wow, now I remember taking these back in the day. They were one of my favourite drugs. The nose burn feeling went off after about 2 doses in. But as you've pointed out Hemenevrin, affects our memory in as much as you forget when you last fosed. Then you redose again. The other thing about this drug is that if you stopped using them, abruptly, after a weeks use you'd have a complete psychotic episode needing hospitalisation. But the high was definitely worth the agony if this occurred. This really took me back. Little grey/very light purplish rubber feeling capsules. Like temazepam when it first came out, Heminevrin capsules seemed to be a gel filled, you could squeeze them, and they'd go back to their original shape. Keith Moon was lucky to have got to the age he did without anything bad happening to him. Still he was so badly missed. Rock on Keith.We were taught a very simple rule which is 'there is no such thing as a non-addictive CNS depressant'.
Some may not produce physical dependence, although Iwould still take the box outside and read the small print even on stuff like clonidine) but the body will always attempt to maintain homeostasis and since being wide awake was and to an extent still is an evolutionary advantage, the body will tend to respond if you try to dampen that down.
So after much tooing and froing with my consultant, I'm prescribed the myoclonus medication with the least CNS depressant side-effects and an analgesic that positively wakes me up (but not in a good way).
Never forget what a given medication is supposed to do. If you are simply after what any doctor would consider a side-effect, you are likely to be taking quite a lot.
Doctors struggle with the interaction of just two medications so as you are prescribed more than two, it's only their experience that guides them as to the likely outcomes.
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I give you the example of Keith Moon. Took literally tens of thousands of pills in his lifetime, was hospitalized twice - once because he was spiked, the other just because he was too messed up to play. But he survived it all.
Then he had a few lines of coke, two glasses of wine and his prescribed clomethiazole (Heminevrin). Now he did take a lot of them but who is to say that being such a potent CNS depressant, he forgot he had taken them and took more. This was quite common. Jimi Hendrix did the same with alcohol and an unfamiliar German-brand of barbiturate which was FOUR times more potent than the ones he was used to. It happens. But surviorship bias means BLers cannot tell us when it's all gone horribly wrong.
Babygirl. X