• BASIC DRUG
    DISCUSSION
    Welcome to Bluelight!
    Posting Rules Bluelight Rules
    Benzo Chart Opioids Chart
    Drug Terms Need Help??
    Drugs 101 Brain & Addiction
    Tired of your habit? Struggling to cope?
    Want to regain control or get sober?
    Visit our Recovery Support Forums
  • BDD Moderators: Keif’ Richards

Poly drug use and cycling to minimize dependency & tolerance risk - In other words this idiot's addicted to being high

I had a heroic dose of LSD 30+ years ago and haven't touched psycs since then, I dipped my toe in the water with Ketamine and really loved the Khole, very mind expanding experience just as acid was for me back in the day. That gave me the confidence to try psycs again, but I'm being very selective & cautious with what I take.

I'm not after a mind expanding or life changing experience this time (been there and done that), I wanted something that mentally more gentle, shorter duration and more visual which is why I started with 2C-B. I've also got some hill billy mushrooms to try when I'm ready, and at some point I may give DMT a try given its short duration.
I just reread and it makes me wonder: how do you not get nauseous on 2cb??? It's the main reason for mine to need some dust off, as that nausea is rather intense and spoiling it partially...
Also I envy you for having access to DMT.. I'm sure we'd be best friends at first encounter...
 
Just exercise or addiction to exercise? Like breaking PR’s progressing in weight times diets etc ?
Cause we addicts stay addicted you know it’s just happened to be the gym that’s not a bad thing. I’ve had the best years of my life addicted to the gym and the weed wish I could go back in there.

Idk man, I’m kinda past the PR phase not entirely it’s only been 4 years but I’m obessed with just getting it stretched out and then “ballooning” I.e just getting a disgusting pump and leaving through the door and feeling the 120mg of codeine esque feeling.

For me it’s a brutal back to back, antagonistic superset full body, with no breaks, warm up sets at 50% for the first few movements as they warm the entire body up (shoulder press, pull ups etc) and then it’s game.

Then kinda blood and guts style, until technical failure has been hit, and your 1000% you couldn’t go anymore. I lift heavy in the 3-7 rep range and just do that every 2-4 days for one set each movement.

But I also do ultra low weight, robot form in my garden at home near Everday, to again get blood in the areas.

Both make me feel far less likely to off myself.
 
I just reread and it makes me wonder: how do you not get nauseous on 2cb??? It's the main reason for mine to need some dust off, as that nausea is rather intense and spoiling it partially...
Also I envy you for having access to DMT.. I'm sure we'd be best friends at first encounter...
low dose and empty stomach, not had any nausea so far at all.

liked minded people click!
 
Idk man, I’m kinda past the PR phase not entirely it’s only been 4 years but I’m obessed with just getting it stretched out and then “ballooning” I.e just getting a disgusting pump and leaving through the door and feeling the 120mg of codeine esque feeling.

For me it’s a brutal back to back, antagonistic superset full body, with no breaks, warm up sets at 50% for the first few movements as they warm the entire body up (shoulder press, pull ups etc) and then it’s game.

Then kinda blood and guts style, until technical failure has been hit, and your 1000% you couldn’t go anymore. I lift heavy in the 3-7 rep range and just do that every 2-4 days for one set each movement.

But I also do ultra low weight, robot form in my garden at home near Everday, to again get blood in the areas.

Both make me feel far less likely to off myself.
Damn bro I train exactly th same Blood n Guts style , one set to oblivion till can’t no more , I almost passed out the other day doing squats that way. And doing techniques to push past failure rest n pause etc. Blood n Guts is the most effective program I’ve tried also doggcrap is very good program ill do like a hybrid of both.
 
Damn bro I train exactly th same Blood n Guts style , one set to oblivion till can’t no more , I almost passed out the other day doing squats that way. And doing techniques to push past failure rest n pause etc. Blood n Guts is the most effective program I’ve tried also doggcrap is very good program ill do like a hybrid of both.

It goes against contemporary advice but I’m the biggest and strongest I’ve ever been, sometimes I only go once every 5-6 days on busy weeks and I still make sick gains

My program just cos I like nerding

Machine Neutral Shoulder Press
Neutral Pull-Ups

Machine Chest Press
One-Arm Cable Row (supinated)
One-Arm Kelso Shrug (pronated)

Breathing Pullovers

Overhead cable Extension
Cable Rope Curls

Lu Raises
Lying Face Pull
Hanging Leg Raises

Goodmorning
Leg Press
Calf Press

Leg Extension
Seated Ham Curl

Adductors
Abductors
 
Lots to update...

I've come to a few conclusions after a lot more research
1. My GABA system is fucked I need to take a break from it (think this might be the cause of my sexual dysfunction anorgasmia)
2. Alcohol is very bad for me in multiple ways
3. Nootropics can help me repair my GABA system & improve sexual function
4. Exercise is important for me
5. I might be using due to undiagnosed ADHD as a way to quieten my over active brain - on a waiting list for a diagnosis

My new plan....

Exercise more (walking, running, dumbbells) > stop taking GABA drugs > start taking a Nootripics stack > rotate other drugs while decreasing their usage > use Cannabis more to plug the gap

More excel.....:sleep::eek::devilish: the improvement shows how many days or weeks abstinence is required before positive effects, setback shows impact that each usage has, breakeven shows how long I must wait until there is a NET positive effect of using a drug, frequency is my planned max usage interval with a Break meaning I'm not going to use it.

Rotation-repair.png


Nootropics stack (+ vitamin D3)
Stack.png


EDIT: Cannabis should be daily...at least most days
 
Last edited:
Lots to update...

I've come to a few conclusions after a lot more research
1. My GABA system is fucked I need to take a break from it (think this might be the cause of my sexual dysfunction anorgasmia)
2. Alcohol is very bad for me in multiple ways
3. Nootropics can help me repair my GABA system & improve sexual function
4. Exercise is important for me
5. I might be using due to undiagnosed ADHD as a way to quieten my over active brain - on a waiting list for a diagnosis

My new plan....

Exercise more (walking, running, dumbbells) > stop taking GABA drugs > start taking a Nootripics stack > rotate other drugs while decreasing their usage > use Cannabis more to plug the gap

More excel.....:sleep::eek::devilish: the improvement shows how many days or weeks abstinence is required before positive effects, setback shows impact that each usage has, breakeven shows how long I must wait until there is a NET positive effect of using a drug, frequency is my planned max usage interval with a Break meaning I'm not going to use it.

Rotation-Repair.png


Nootropics stack (+ vitamin D3)
Stack.png
Only thing I would change is reduce your frequency of MDMA and Mephedrone use, once a month MDMA use + once a week 4-MMC use will bite you in the ass sooner than later
 
Only thing I would change is reduce your frequency of MDMA and Mephedrone use, once a month MDMA use + once a week 4-MMC use will bite you in the ass sooner than later
yeah good shout and I'm aware, right now I'm more like MDMA once every 3-4 months, and I go through phases of Mephedrone.

I'm thinking this is just a short term thing while I do a GABA break over the next 1-2 months, then I will add Pregablin and Diazepam back into the mix maybe once a month and reduce the MDMA and Mephedrone down to something sensible.
 
more AI research, thought i'd share in case anyone interested

my conclusion is to back off all drugs, shift to taking cannabis, with occasional 2C-B and ketamine use, and potentially after a GABA break i will add back in pregabalin.

i'm going to investigate 1. microdosing mushrooms in more detail, 2. microdosing ketamine (I usually just do a few bumps rather than khole, but still concerned about using it too frequently), 3. strains of cannabis to try to get the right high 4. using more CBD

Exercise is going well, I'm sleeping like a baby as a result!

for info my sexual function issue is mainly Anorgasmia, but there are similar parallels for other sexual function issues - if anyone has any questions on something specific pm me, i'm happy to help/take a look at things.

Occasional Use — Impact on GABA Recovery & Anorgasmia Recovery

Impact scale​

  • Very Low = minimal disturbance
  • Low = small, short-lived disturbance
  • Moderate = noticeable disturbance
  • High = strong disturbance
  • Very High = deepest, longest-lasting disturbance

📊 Summary Table (Qualitative Breakeven Impact)

SubstanceImpact on GABA RecoveryImpact on Anorgasmia RecoveryBreakeven Impact (Qualitative)
DMTVery LowVery LowVery Low
Psilocybin / PsilocinVery LowVery LowVery Low
2C‑BVery LowVery Low–LowVery Low
KetamineLowLow–ModerateLow
Cannabis (THC)Low–ModerateLow–ModerateLow–Moderate
AlcoholLow–ModerateLow–ModerateLow–Moderate
PregabalinModerateModerateModerate
Xanax (Alprazolam)ModerateModerateModerate
DiazepamModerateModerateModerate
CocaineLow–Moderate (indirect)HighHigh
AmphetamineLow–Moderate (indirect)HighHigh
MephedroneModerate (indirect)HighHigh
MDMALow–Moderate (indirect)Very HighVery High
Soma (Carisoprodol)HighHighHigh
MeprobamateHighVery HighVery High
PhenibutVery HighVery HighVery High
GBLVery HighVery HighVery High


1. How the breakeven point changes when you stop switching

When you stop rotating between GABA drugs (GBL, Phenibut, benzos, Soma, Pregabalin, Alcohol), something important happens:

⭐ Your breakeven point stabilizes.

Switching between different GABA drugs creates a kind of “noise” in the system:
  • different receptor types are being pushed and pulled
  • different half‑lives overlap
  • different rebound patterns collide
  • the nervous system can’t predict what’s coming next
When you stop switching, the system finally gets a consistent signal.

What this does to the breakeven point:​

It stops drifting upward

When you mix drugs, the breakeven point tends to stretch longer and longer because the system keeps getting hit in different ways. Stopping the switching removes that upward pressure.

It gradually shrinks toward the breakeven point of the drug you’re actually using

If you settle on a “lighter” GABA drug (like alcohol or pregabalin), the breakeven point slowly moves toward that drug’s typical pattern.

It becomes predictable again

Instead of the breakeven point being pulled in different directions by different substances, it becomes a single, stable curve.

Recovery becomes smoother

The nervous system prefers consistency. Stopping the switching allows:
  • receptor regulation
  • neurotransmitter balance
  • hormonal rhythms
  • sleep architecture
…to follow a more stable trajectory.

🧠 2. How long it takes for the system to “forget” the heavier drug

This is conceptual, not numerical.
The nervous system “forgets” a heavier GABA drug in layers, not instantly.
Here’s how the forgetting process works:

⭐ A) The brain forgets the acute effects first

This is the short‑term fog, sedation, or rebound. It fades relatively quickly once the heavy drug is gone.

⭐ B) Then it forgets the receptor-level disruption

Heavier drugs (GBL, Phenibut, Meprobamate, Soma) cause deeper changes in:
  • GABA‑B or GABA‑A receptor sensitivity
  • downstream dopamine tone
  • stress‑response circuits
These take longer to normalize.
During this phase:
  • the breakeven point is still influenced by the heavy drug
  • even if you’re now using something lighter
  • the system behaves as if it’s still “recovering from the big one”

⭐ C) Finally, it forgets the pattern of switching

This is the slowest part.
When you’ve been rotating between multiple GABA drugs, the nervous system adapts to unpredictability:
  • tolerance becomes generalized
  • rebound becomes more sensitive
  • recovery becomes less efficient
When you stop switching, the system slowly relearns stability.
This is when the breakeven point:
  • stops being inflated
  • stops being erratic
  • settles into a predictable curve again

🧠 3. The simplest way to picture it​

Stopping switching = the breakeven point stops stretching and starts shrinking.

Forgetting the heavy drug = the breakeven point slowly moves away from the heavy drug’s influence and toward the baseline of whatever you’re doing now (or toward full recovery if you’re abstinent).


Detail on each class

The short version: GABA‑B drugs push deeper, slower‑recovering systems than GABA‑A drugs do.

Here’s what that means in practice.

⭐ A) GABA‑B receptors recover much more slowly​

GABA‑A receptors (benzos, alcohol, Soma, meprobamate) adjust quickly:
  • fast tolerance
  • fast rebound
  • fast partial recovery
GABA‑B receptors (GBL, Phenibut) adjust slowly:
  • slow tolerance
  • slow receptor normalization
  • slow downstream dopamine recovery
  • slow stress‑system stabilization
This means:

→ A single GABA‑B hit stretches the breakeven point far more​

The system stays “tilted” longer.

⭐ B) GABA‑B drugs suppress dopamine more deeply​

GABA‑B activation strongly inhibits dopamine release in:
  • the reward system
  • the motivation system
  • sexual‑arousal circuits

How dopamine‑acting drugs (MDMA, cocaine, amphetamine) interact with this model

Here’s a clear, grounded explanation of how dopamine‑acting drugs (MDMA, cocaine, amphetamine) interact with the breakeven‑point model you’ve been exploring — meaning how they influence the nervous system’s ability to return to baseline after stress from GABA‑acting substances.
I’ll keep this conceptual, neuroscience‑based, and safe.
Even though MDMA, cocaine, and amphetamine don’t act on GABA receptors directly, they interfere with the same downstream systems that GABA drugs disrupt. This creates a kind of “cross‑talk” that affects recovery.
Let’s break it down.

1. They hit the same reward and motivation circuits that GABA drugs suppress

GABA drugs (especially GABA‑B ones like GBL/Phenibut) suppress dopamine release.
Dopamine‑acting drugs do the opposite:
  • Cocaine blocks dopamine reuptake → dopamine spikes
  • Amphetamine forces dopamine release → dopamine floods
  • MDMA releases serotonin + dopamine → emotional and sensory surge
After the high, all three cause a dopamine crash.

Why this matters:​

Your breakeven point is partly about how long it takes dopamine systems to stabilize again.
When you combine:
  • GABA drugs (dopamine‑suppressing)
  • stimulant/entactogen drugs (dopamine‑flooding)
…you create large swings in dopamine tone.

Result:​

The breakeven point becomes longer and less predictable.

2. They create “dopamine debt” that overlaps with GABA recovery

After the peak, dopamine‑acting drugs leave behind:
  • low dopamine
  • low motivation
  • emotional flatness
  • reduced libido
  • impaired reward sensitivity
These are the same systems GABA drugs also influence.
So the effects stack, even if the drugs are used on different days.

Result:​

The nervous system has to recover from two kinds of dopamine disruption at once.
This stretches the breakeven point further.

3. They amplify sexual‑function disruption

Sexual function depends heavily on:
  • dopamine (desire)
  • serotonin (sensitivity)
  • prolactin (post‑orgasm inhibition)
  • stress hormones
  • sleep quality
MDMA, cocaine, and amphetamine all disrupt these systems.
When combined with GABA drugs:
  • libido drops more sharply
  • arousal becomes more inconsistent
  • recovery takes longer
  • emotional connection feels blunted

Result:​

Sexual‑function breakeven points stretch more than GABA breakeven points.
This is why sexual recovery often lags behind GABA recovery.

4. They destabilize the recovery curve

Think of the nervous system like a balance scale:
  • GABA drugs push it down (sedation, suppression)
  • Stimulants push it up (activation, dopamine flooding)
  • MDMA pushes it sideways (serotonin surge → depletion)
When you mix these forces:
  • the system can’t find equilibrium
  • recovery becomes nonlinear
  • breakeven points become “wobbly”
  • emotional stability becomes harder to regain

Result:​

The breakeven curve becomes unstable, not just longer.

5. They interfere with sleep — which is the foundation of recovery

All three dopamine‑acting drugs disrupt sleep architecture:
  • REM suppression
  • rebound REM
  • circadian rhythm disruption
  • stress‑hormone elevation
GABA drugs also disrupt sleep, but in a different way.
When both categories are involved:
  • sleep becomes fragmented
  • hormonal rhythms destabilize
  • emotional regulation weakens
  • recovery slows down

Result:​

Breakeven points stretch because the system can’t repair itself efficiently.

⭐ The simplest way to understand it

GABA drugs push the system down.

(sedation, suppression, rebound)

Dopamine‑acting drugs push the system up.

(stimulation, flooding, depletion)

Together, they create instability.

The nervous system struggles to find a stable baseline.

This instability stretches breakeven points

— especially for sexual function, motivation, and emotional balance.

If you want, I can also explain:
  • How serotonin‑acting drugs (like MDMA or psychedelics) affect the breakeven curve
  • Why sexual recovery is more fragile than GABA recovery
  • How to visualize the breakeven curve as a “stress‑recovery seesaw”
  • How switching vs. abstaining changes the shape of the curve
Just tell me what direction you want to explore.

How serotonin‑acting drugs (like MDMA or psychedelics) affect the breakeven curve

Here’s a clear, grounded explanation of how serotonin‑acting drugs — especially MDMA and classic psychedelics like LSD and psilocybin — interact with the breakeven‑point model you’ve been exploring. I’ll keep everything conceptual and neuroscience‑based, without giving medical or harmful specifics.
To make this intuitive, I’ll break it into two parts:
  1. How MDMA affects the breakeven curve
  2. How psychedelics (LSD, psilocybin, DMT, 2C‑B) affect the breakeven curve
MDMA is unique because it hits three systems at once:
  • Serotonin (massive release → depletion)
  • Dopamine (moderate release → drop)
  • Oxytocin (bonding, emotional openness)
This creates a very specific pattern in the breakeven curve.

⭐ A) MDMA causes a “serotonin dip” that overlaps with GABA recovery​

After MDMA, serotonin temporarily drops below baseline. This affects:
  • mood
  • emotional regulation
  • sexual sensitivity
  • sleep
  • stress response
These are the same systems that GABA drugs also influence indirectly.

Result:​

The breakeven curve becomes longer, especially for sexual function.

⭐ B) MDMA amplifies sexual‑function disruption​

Sexual function depends heavily on:
  • dopamine (desire)
  • serotonin (sensitivity)
  • prolactin (inhibition)
MDMA temporarily disrupts all three.

Result:​

Even if GABA recovery is going well, MDMA can push sexual breakeven further out than expected.

⭐ C) MDMA destabilizes sleep and stress hormones​

GABA drugs already affect sleep architecture. MDMA adds:
  • REM suppression
  • cortisol elevation
  • circadian disruption

Result:​

Recovery becomes less efficient → breakeven stretches.

⭐ D) MDMA’s emotional “afterglow” can mask the disruption​

People often feel emotionally open or connected for a day or two after MDMA.
But underneath that:
  • serotonin is low
  • dopamine is low
  • prolactin is high

Result:​

The breakeven curve feels shorter than it actually is.
Psychedelics act primarily on serotonin 5‑HT2A receptors, not GABA or dopamine. This means their interaction with the breakeven curve is very different from MDMA.

⭐ A) Psychedelics don’t suppress GABA systems​

Unlike GABA drugs, psychedelics:
  • don’t downregulate GABA receptors
  • don’t cause rebound anxiety
  • don’t depress dopamine tone
  • don’t disrupt sleep architecture long‑term

Result:​

They barely affect the GABA breakeven curve.

⭐ B) Psychedelics cause a short, mild serotonin “after‑dip”​

After LSD or psilocybin, serotonin signaling briefly dips as receptors reset.
This can cause:
  • mild emotional flatness
  • slight sensitivity changes
  • temporary introspective mood
But it’s usually short‑lived.

Result:​

The sexual‑function breakeven curve is only slightly affected.

⭐ C) Psychedelics don’t create dopamine debt​

Unlike MDMA, cocaine, or amphetamine:
  • they don’t flood dopamine
  • they don’t deplete dopamine
  • they don’t cause reward‑system crashes

Result:​

They don’t stretch the breakeven curve through dopamine pathways.

⭐ D) Psychedelics can indirectly improve emotional stability​

Because they don’t suppress GABA or dopamine, and because they often promote:
  • introspection
  • emotional processing
  • stress reduction
…they can sometimes smooth the breakeven curve rather than stretch it.
(Not because they’re “healing,” but because they don’t interfere with the systems that GABA drugs stress.)
Mephedrone is a triple‑action stimulant:
  • dopamine releaser
  • serotonin releaser
  • norepinephrine releaser
It behaves like a hybrid of MDMA + cocaine, which gives it a very specific recovery profile.

⭐ 1. It creates a “double dip” in dopamine and serotonin​

After the peak, mephedrone leaves behind:
  • low dopamine (motivation, libido, reward)
  • low serotonin (mood, sensitivity, emotional tone)
These are the same downstream systems that GABA drugs also influence indirectly.

→ Result:​

The breakeven curve stretches, especially for sexual function, because both dopamine and serotonin are involved in arousal and sensitivity.

⭐ 2. It destabilizes the emotional curve​

Mephedrone tends to produce:
  • emotional spikes
  • emotional crashes
  • irritability
  • reward‑system volatility
This volatility interacts with the GABA recovery curve by making the “baseline” harder to stabilize.

→ Result:​

Breakeven becomes less predictable and tends to drift upward.

⭐ 3. It amplifies the “reward deficit” created by GABA drugs​

GABA drugs suppress dopamine. Mephedrone floods dopamine, then drops it.
The combination creates a larger swing than either drug alone.

→ Result:​

The nervous system takes longer to return to equilibrium → breakeven stretches.

⭐ 4. Sexual‑function breakeven is especially sensitive​

Because mephedrone affects:
  • dopamine (desire)
  • serotonin (sensitivity)
  • prolactin (inhibition)
…it tends to push sexual recovery further out than GABA recovery.

→ Result:​

Sexual breakeven is more distorted than GABA breakeven.
Ketamine is a dissociative NMDA antagonist, not a GABA drug and not a dopamine/serotonin releaser.
Its interaction with the breakeven model is almost the opposite of mephedrone.

⭐ 1. Ketamine doesn’t suppress GABA receptors​

Unlike benzos, alcohol, GBL, or phenibut, ketamine:
  • doesn’t downregulate GABA‑A
  • doesn’t downregulate GABA‑B
  • doesn’t create GABA rebound

→ Result:​

It barely affects the GABA breakeven curve.

⭐ 2. It doesn’t deplete dopamine or serotonin​

Ketamine can modestly increase dopamine in some circuits, but it doesn’t cause:
  • dopamine crashes
  • serotonin depletion
  • reward‑system burnout

→ Result:​

It doesn’t stretch the breakeven curve through dopamine pathways.

⭐ 3. It has a short “after‑effect window”​

Ketamine’s subjective effects fade quickly, and the neurochemical after‑effects are short‑lived.

→ Result:​

Breakeven curves remain mostly unchanged.

⭐ 4. It can temporarily reduce emotional stress​

Because ketamine can produce:
  • detachment
  • reduced rumination
  • lower anxiety
…it sometimes smooths the emotional side of recovery rather than destabilizing it.
(Not because it’s “healing,” but because it doesn’t interfere with the systems that GABA drugs stress.)

🔍 Side‑by‑Side Summary: Mephedrone vs Ketamine

FeatureMephedroneKetamine
Primary actionDopamine + serotonin releaserNMDA antagonist
After‑effectsDopamine/serotonin dipMild dissociation, short-lived
Emotional stabilityVolatileNeutral/calm
Interaction with GABA recoveryDestabilizesMinimal
Effect on sexual breakevenStretches significantlyBarely affects
Effect on GABA breakevenIndirectly stretchesMinimal
Overall impact on breakevenHighLow


⭐ The simplest way to picture it

Mephedrone

Creates big dopamine + serotonin swings → destabilizes recovery → stretches breakeven curves, especially sexual.

Ketamine

Barely interacts with GABA or dopamine systems → leaves breakeven curves mostly unchanged.

If you want, I can also compare:
  • Mephedrone vs MDMA
  • Ketamine vs psychedelics
  • Which substances tend to “stack” their effects on breakeven curves
  • How stress, sleep, and hormones fit into this model
 
Last edited:
more AI research, thought i'd share in case anyone interested

my conclusion is to back off all drugs, shift to taking cannabis, with occasional 2C-B and ketamine use, and potentially after a GABA break i will add back in pregabalin.

i'm going to investigate 1. microdosing mushrooms in more detail, 2. microdosing ketamine (I usually just do a few bumps rather than khole, but still concerned about using it too frequently), 3. strains of cannabis to try to get the right high 4. using more CBD

Exercise is going well, I'm sleeping like a baby as a result!

for info my sexual function issue is mainly Anorgasmia, but there are similar parallels for other sexual function issues - if anyone has any questions on something specific pm me, i'm happy to help/take a look at things.

Occasional Use — Impact on GABA Recovery & Anorgasmia Recovery

Impact scale​

  • Very Low = minimal disturbance
  • Low = small, short-lived disturbance
  • Moderate = noticeable disturbance
  • High = strong disturbance
  • Very High = deepest, longest-lasting disturbance

📊 Summary Table (Qualitative Breakeven Impact)

SubstanceImpact on GABA RecoveryImpact on Anorgasmia RecoveryBreakeven Impact (Qualitative)
DMTVery LowVery LowVery Low
Psilocybin / PsilocinVery LowVery LowVery Low
2C‑BVery LowVery Low–LowVery Low
KetamineLowLow–ModerateLow
Cannabis (THC)Low–ModerateLow–ModerateLow–Moderate
AlcoholLow–ModerateLow–ModerateLow–Moderate
PregabalinModerateModerateModerate
Xanax (Alprazolam)ModerateModerateModerate
DiazepamModerateModerateModerate
CocaineLow–Moderate (indirect)HighHigh
AmphetamineLow–Moderate (indirect)HighHigh
MephedroneModerate (indirect)HighHigh
MDMALow–Moderate (indirect)Very HighVery High
Soma (Carisoprodol)HighHighHigh
MeprobamateHighVery HighVery High
PhenibutVery HighVery HighVery High
GBLVery HighVery HighVery High


1. How the breakeven point changes when you stop switching

When you stop rotating between GABA drugs (GBL, Phenibut, benzos, Soma, Pregabalin, Alcohol), something important happens:

⭐ Your breakeven point stabilizes.

Switching between different GABA drugs creates a kind of “noise” in the system:
  • different receptor types are being pushed and pulled
  • different half‑lives overlap
  • different rebound patterns collide
  • the nervous system can’t predict what’s coming next
When you stop switching, the system finally gets a consistent signal.

What this does to the breakeven point:​

It stops drifting upward

When you mix drugs, the breakeven point tends to stretch longer and longer because the system keeps getting hit in different ways. Stopping the switching removes that upward pressure.

It gradually shrinks toward the breakeven point of the drug you’re actually using

If you settle on a “lighter” GABA drug (like alcohol or pregabalin), the breakeven point slowly moves toward that drug’s typical pattern.

It becomes predictable again

Instead of the breakeven point being pulled in different directions by different substances, it becomes a single, stable curve.

Recovery becomes smoother

The nervous system prefers consistency. Stopping the switching allows:
  • receptor regulation
  • neurotransmitter balance
  • hormonal rhythms
  • sleep architecture
…to follow a more stable trajectory.

🧠 2. How long it takes for the system to “forget” the heavier drug

This is conceptual, not numerical.
The nervous system “forgets” a heavier GABA drug in layers, not instantly.
Here’s how the forgetting process works:

⭐ A) The brain forgets the acute effects first

This is the short‑term fog, sedation, or rebound. It fades relatively quickly once the heavy drug is gone.

⭐ B) Then it forgets the receptor-level disruption

Heavier drugs (GBL, Phenibut, Meprobamate, Soma) cause deeper changes in:
  • GABA‑B or GABA‑A receptor sensitivity
  • downstream dopamine tone
  • stress‑response circuits
These take longer to normalize.
During this phase:
  • the breakeven point is still influenced by the heavy drug
  • even if you’re now using something lighter
  • the system behaves as if it’s still “recovering from the big one”

⭐ C) Finally, it forgets the pattern of switching

This is the slowest part.
When you’ve been rotating between multiple GABA drugs, the nervous system adapts to unpredictability:
  • tolerance becomes generalized
  • rebound becomes more sensitive
  • recovery becomes less efficient
When you stop switching, the system slowly relearns stability.
This is when the breakeven point:
  • stops being inflated
  • stops being erratic
  • settles into a predictable curve again

🧠 3. The simplest way to picture it​

Stopping switching = the breakeven point stops stretching and starts shrinking.

Forgetting the heavy drug = the breakeven point slowly moves away from the heavy drug’s influence and toward the baseline of whatever you’re doing now (or toward full recovery if you’re abstinent).


Detail on each class

The short version: GABA‑B drugs push deeper, slower‑recovering systems than GABA‑A drugs do.

Here’s what that means in practice.

⭐ A) GABA‑B receptors recover much more slowly​

GABA‑A receptors (benzos, alcohol, Soma, meprobamate) adjust quickly:
  • fast tolerance
  • fast rebound
  • fast partial recovery
GABA‑B receptors (GBL, Phenibut) adjust slowly:
  • slow tolerance
  • slow receptor normalization
  • slow downstream dopamine recovery
  • slow stress‑system stabilization
This means:

→ A single GABA‑B hit stretches the breakeven point far more​

The system stays “tilted” longer.

⭐ B) GABA‑B drugs suppress dopamine more deeply​

GABA‑B activation strongly inhibits dopamine release in:
  • the reward system
  • the motivation system
  • sexual‑arousal circuits

How dopamine‑acting drugs (MDMA, cocaine, amphetamine) interact with this model

Here’s a clear, grounded explanation of how dopamine‑acting drugs (MDMA, cocaine, amphetamine) interact with the breakeven‑point model you’ve been exploring — meaning how they influence the nervous system’s ability to return to baseline after stress from GABA‑acting substances.
I’ll keep this conceptual, neuroscience‑based, and safe.
Even though MDMA, cocaine, and amphetamine don’t act on GABA receptors directly, they interfere with the same downstream systems that GABA drugs disrupt. This creates a kind of “cross‑talk” that affects recovery.
Let’s break it down.

1. They hit the same reward and motivation circuits that GABA drugs suppress

GABA drugs (especially GABA‑B ones like GBL/Phenibut) suppress dopamine release.
Dopamine‑acting drugs do the opposite:
  • Cocaine blocks dopamine reuptake → dopamine spikes
  • Amphetamine forces dopamine release → dopamine floods
  • MDMA releases serotonin + dopamine → emotional and sensory surge
After the high, all three cause a dopamine crash.

Why this matters:​

Your breakeven point is partly about how long it takes dopamine systems to stabilize again.
When you combine:
  • GABA drugs (dopamine‑suppressing)
  • stimulant/entactogen drugs (dopamine‑flooding)
…you create large swings in dopamine tone.

Result:​

The breakeven point becomes longer and less predictable.

2. They create “dopamine debt” that overlaps with GABA recovery

After the peak, dopamine‑acting drugs leave behind:
  • low dopamine
  • low motivation
  • emotional flatness
  • reduced libido
  • impaired reward sensitivity
These are the same systems GABA drugs also influence.
So the effects stack, even if the drugs are used on different days.

Result:​

The nervous system has to recover from two kinds of dopamine disruption at once.
This stretches the breakeven point further.

3. They amplify sexual‑function disruption

Sexual function depends heavily on:
  • dopamine (desire)
  • serotonin (sensitivity)
  • prolactin (post‑orgasm inhibition)
  • stress hormones
  • sleep quality
MDMA, cocaine, and amphetamine all disrupt these systems.
When combined with GABA drugs:
  • libido drops more sharply
  • arousal becomes more inconsistent
  • recovery takes longer
  • emotional connection feels blunted

Result:​

Sexual‑function breakeven points stretch more than GABA breakeven points.
This is why sexual recovery often lags behind GABA recovery.

4. They destabilize the recovery curve

Think of the nervous system like a balance scale:
  • GABA drugs push it down (sedation, suppression)
  • Stimulants push it up (activation, dopamine flooding)
  • MDMA pushes it sideways (serotonin surge → depletion)
When you mix these forces:
  • the system can’t find equilibrium
  • recovery becomes nonlinear
  • breakeven points become “wobbly”
  • emotional stability becomes harder to regain

Result:​

The breakeven curve becomes unstable, not just longer.

5. They interfere with sleep — which is the foundation of recovery

All three dopamine‑acting drugs disrupt sleep architecture:
  • REM suppression
  • rebound REM
  • circadian rhythm disruption
  • stress‑hormone elevation
GABA drugs also disrupt sleep, but in a different way.
When both categories are involved:
  • sleep becomes fragmented
  • hormonal rhythms destabilize
  • emotional regulation weakens
  • recovery slows down

Result:​

Breakeven points stretch because the system can’t repair itself efficiently.

⭐ The simplest way to understand it

GABA drugs push the system down.

(sedation, suppression, rebound)

Dopamine‑acting drugs push the system up.

(stimulation, flooding, depletion)

Together, they create instability.

The nervous system struggles to find a stable baseline.

This instability stretches breakeven points

— especially for sexual function, motivation, and emotional balance.

If you want, I can also explain:
  • How serotonin‑acting drugs (like MDMA or psychedelics) affect the breakeven curve
  • Why sexual recovery is more fragile than GABA recovery
  • How to visualize the breakeven curve as a “stress‑recovery seesaw”
  • How switching vs. abstaining changes the shape of the curve
Just tell me what direction you want to explore.

How serotonin‑acting drugs (like MDMA or psychedelics) affect the breakeven curve

Here’s a clear, grounded explanation of how serotonin‑acting drugs — especially MDMA and classic psychedelics like LSD and psilocybin — interact with the breakeven‑point model you’ve been exploring. I’ll keep everything conceptual and neuroscience‑based, without giving medical or harmful specifics.
To make this intuitive, I’ll break it into two parts:
  1. How MDMA affects the breakeven curve
  2. How psychedelics (LSD, psilocybin, DMT, 2C‑B) affect the breakeven curve
MDMA is unique because it hits three systems at once:
  • Serotonin (massive release → depletion)
  • Dopamine (moderate release → drop)
  • Oxytocin (bonding, emotional openness)
This creates a very specific pattern in the breakeven curve.

⭐ A) MDMA causes a “serotonin dip” that overlaps with GABA recovery​

After MDMA, serotonin temporarily drops below baseline. This affects:
  • mood
  • emotional regulation
  • sexual sensitivity
  • sleep
  • stress response
These are the same systems that GABA drugs also influence indirectly.

Result:​

The breakeven curve becomes longer, especially for sexual function.

⭐ B) MDMA amplifies sexual‑function disruption​

Sexual function depends heavily on:
  • dopamine (desire)
  • serotonin (sensitivity)
  • prolactin (inhibition)
MDMA temporarily disrupts all three.

Result:​

Even if GABA recovery is going well, MDMA can push sexual breakeven further out than expected.

⭐ C) MDMA destabilizes sleep and stress hormones​

GABA drugs already affect sleep architecture. MDMA adds:
  • REM suppression
  • cortisol elevation
  • circadian disruption

Result:​

Recovery becomes less efficient → breakeven stretches.

⭐ D) MDMA’s emotional “afterglow” can mask the disruption​

People often feel emotionally open or connected for a day or two after MDMA.
But underneath that:
  • serotonin is low
  • dopamine is low
  • prolactin is high

Result:​

The breakeven curve feels shorter than it actually is.
Psychedelics act primarily on serotonin 5‑HT2A receptors, not GABA or dopamine. This means their interaction with the breakeven curve is very different from MDMA.

⭐ A) Psychedelics don’t suppress GABA systems​

Unlike GABA drugs, psychedelics:
  • don’t downregulate GABA receptors
  • don’t cause rebound anxiety
  • don’t depress dopamine tone
  • don’t disrupt sleep architecture long‑term

Result:​

They barely affect the GABA breakeven curve.

⭐ B) Psychedelics cause a short, mild serotonin “after‑dip”​

After LSD or psilocybin, serotonin signaling briefly dips as receptors reset.
This can cause:
  • mild emotional flatness
  • slight sensitivity changes
  • temporary introspective mood
But it’s usually short‑lived.

Result:​

The sexual‑function breakeven curve is only slightly affected.

⭐ C) Psychedelics don’t create dopamine debt​

Unlike MDMA, cocaine, or amphetamine:
  • they don’t flood dopamine
  • they don’t deplete dopamine
  • they don’t cause reward‑system crashes

Result:​

They don’t stretch the breakeven curve through dopamine pathways.

⭐ D) Psychedelics can indirectly improve emotional stability​

Because they don’t suppress GABA or dopamine, and because they often promote:
  • introspection
  • emotional processing
  • stress reduction
…they can sometimes smooth the breakeven curve rather than stretch it.
(Not because they’re “healing,” but because they don’t interfere with the systems that GABA drugs stress.)
Mephedrone is a triple‑action stimulant:
  • dopamine releaser
  • serotonin releaser
  • norepinephrine releaser
It behaves like a hybrid of MDMA + cocaine, which gives it a very specific recovery profile.

⭐ 1. It creates a “double dip” in dopamine and serotonin​

After the peak, mephedrone leaves behind:
  • low dopamine (motivation, libido, reward)
  • low serotonin (mood, sensitivity, emotional tone)
These are the same downstream systems that GABA drugs also influence indirectly.

→ Result:​

The breakeven curve stretches, especially for sexual function, because both dopamine and serotonin are involved in arousal and sensitivity.

⭐ 2. It destabilizes the emotional curve​

Mephedrone tends to produce:
  • emotional spikes
  • emotional crashes
  • irritability
  • reward‑system volatility
This volatility interacts with the GABA recovery curve by making the “baseline” harder to stabilize.

→ Result:​

Breakeven becomes less predictable and tends to drift upward.

⭐ 3. It amplifies the “reward deficit” created by GABA drugs​

GABA drugs suppress dopamine. Mephedrone floods dopamine, then drops it.
The combination creates a larger swing than either drug alone.

→ Result:​

The nervous system takes longer to return to equilibrium → breakeven stretches.

⭐ 4. Sexual‑function breakeven is especially sensitive​

Because mephedrone affects:
  • dopamine (desire)
  • serotonin (sensitivity)
  • prolactin (inhibition)
…it tends to push sexual recovery further out than GABA recovery.

→ Result:​

Sexual breakeven is more distorted than GABA breakeven.
Ketamine is a dissociative NMDA antagonist, not a GABA drug and not a dopamine/serotonin releaser.
Its interaction with the breakeven model is almost the opposite of mephedrone.

⭐ 1. Ketamine doesn’t suppress GABA receptors​

Unlike benzos, alcohol, GBL, or phenibut, ketamine:
  • doesn’t downregulate GABA‑A
  • doesn’t downregulate GABA‑B
  • doesn’t create GABA rebound

→ Result:​

It barely affects the GABA breakeven curve.

⭐ 2. It doesn’t deplete dopamine or serotonin​

Ketamine can modestly increase dopamine in some circuits, but it doesn’t cause:
  • dopamine crashes
  • serotonin depletion
  • reward‑system burnout

→ Result:​

It doesn’t stretch the breakeven curve through dopamine pathways.

⭐ 3. It has a short “after‑effect window”​

Ketamine’s subjective effects fade quickly, and the neurochemical after‑effects are short‑lived.

→ Result:​

Breakeven curves remain mostly unchanged.

⭐ 4. It can temporarily reduce emotional stress​

Because ketamine can produce:
  • detachment
  • reduced rumination
  • lower anxiety
…it sometimes smooths the emotional side of recovery rather than destabilizing it.
(Not because it’s “healing,” but because it doesn’t interfere with the systems that GABA drugs stress.)

🔍 Side‑by‑Side Summary: Mephedrone vs Ketamine

FeatureMephedroneKetamine
Primary actionDopamine + serotonin releaserNMDA antagonist
After‑effectsDopamine/serotonin dipMild dissociation, short-lived
Emotional stabilityVolatileNeutral/calm
Interaction with GABA recoveryDestabilizesMinimal
Effect on sexual breakevenStretches significantlyBarely affects
Effect on GABA breakevenIndirectly stretchesMinimal
Overall impact on breakevenHighLow


⭐ The simplest way to picture it

Mephedrone

Creates big dopamine + serotonin swings → destabilizes recovery → stretches breakeven curves, especially sexual.

Ketamine

Barely interacts with GABA or dopamine systems → leaves breakeven curves mostly unchanged.

If you want, I can also compare:
  • Mephedrone vs MDMA
  • Ketamine vs psychedelics
  • Which substances tend to “stack” their effects on breakeven curves
  • How stress, sleep, and hormones fit into this model
In regards to your anorgasmia Im curious how often you microdose or when you used psychedelics last?

Do you have as bad of an anorgasmia even when not having used any serotonergic drugs in 3 months?
 
In regards to your anorgasmia Im curious how often you microdose or when you used psychedelics last?

Do you have as bad of an anorgasmia even when not having used any serotonergic drugs in 3 months?
I've just started using psychedelics again after about 30+ years so there's no real relationship. I've taken 2 microdoses and 1 threshold dose of 2C-B in the last 4 weeks.

Anorgasmia has been a constant for me my entire life, though since puberty so as alcohol misuse, I always put it down to circumcision and just accepted it. I had a very brief reduction in Anorgasmia recently, once post MDMA use during the afterglow, and then again a few weeks later which I think was linked to a brief window of abstinence from Alcohol (though I'm not certain, which is part of the reason for giving up drinking again!).
 
bit of an update

I've been hitting the drugs far too often in the past couple of months, in fact there's rarely been a day that's gone by without me taking something.

In the past 3 weeks though I've made some conscious changes to my poly drug use
1. I've reduced the types of GABA drugs I take to give some of my GABA system a chance to recover - I've not taken GBL/Xanax/Phenibut in almost a month
2. I've reduced my soma consumption down to once every 4-5 days
3. usage of other drugs has reduced as well, 2 weeks since I last had ketamine, 1 week without cocaine (and I'm out and won't order more), 3 weeks since last had 2C-B

however as a result my alcohol intake frequency has increased a lot as a result, however I'm not bingeing and when I do drink it's much less and just a couple rather than to excess.

things are very hard at work and I'm unsure if it's that stress or rebound anxiety from reducing my GABA intake but I've been suffering with anxiety a couple of times a week.

slow progress but progress.

plan is to continue to take pregab and diazepam once a week, I think I will also start to reduce my Soma again and try to reduce alcohol too
 
Last edited:
I'm a poly drug user and could use some advice on how to minimize dependency and tolerance build up risk. I'm also clearly addicted to being high despite no specific drug dependency, I'm cutting back to address this by reducing dosage to threshold and increasing use of less harmful drugs.

I use something almost daily, mainly as a way to reduce my alcohol problem. I'm trying to keep everything I take at as low a dose as possible with intervals between uses of everything to prevent dependency and tolerance build up. I rotate drug uses as much as possible and try to also rotate drug classes where I can to minimize hitting the same receptor classes too frequently. Low dose cannabis eddibles almost daily, alcohol use significantly cut down to a few units a week with a view to stopping again (had a 3 month break already), currently experimenting with micro/threshold dosing of psychedelics as they carry less risk that the other drugs I'm using.

My drug use plan

image.png


Soma use has been too high at about 3-4 times a week, but no noticeable tolerance build up, I still nod out taking 600mg subliminal unless I have some caffeine with it (weird given it's rep for rapid tolerance build up, no issues when I stop using for a week or 2 either).

I love GABA, but scared of benzo dependency, my DOC is Pregab, I've been taking it recreationally weekly for ~10 months, it's an amazing base for lots of different combos and I use that a lot when I binge going through multiple different combos with it in a single day but may fav is with diazepam (it stops the hyperactivity phase) and cannabis , but then also add methedrone/cocaine/alcohol/caffeine/ketamine in the mix through the day depending on mood - NOTE I'm very experienced with these drugs, understand half lifes & dosing well, have carefully titrated doses up when I combo them while keeping trip logs so I can establish safe baselines based on my own body. Please don't start dicking about with these combos unless you know what you are doing & the risks, there's real danger in the mix here with CNS stacking, some of these are additive and some potentiate each other.

I think I've recently reset pregab back to baseline after a tolerance break, and will be cutting down usage going forward to prevent tolerance build up. Plan is to add in psychedelics at threshold level instead as a safer alternative.

I've been binging far too often when life is tough and for fun, have cut back on these sessions and aim to do it no more than once a month or 2 as a big treat.

Target rotation plan - Generally these are all at threshold/low doses unless I'm binging
image-2.png


Right now I'm taking more than this I would like but starting to implement this plan after a months GABA break. Cocaine has to date been an occasional treat once every 3 months or so.

My honest goal with all this is to make this a long term sustainable life style choice, I'm complementing my drug use with nootropics to help reduce drug usage further, but I have no intention to stop taking drugs, I know the risks, I'm taking drugs for fun not to mask any mental issues. I think my alcohol use has been driven by undiagnosed mild ADHD, I'm on a waiting list for diagnosis, but experimenting with ADHD nootropics seems to have a very positive effect at work so far, if I do have ADHD I don't plan on taking meds for it. The move from alcohol is also done for health reasons, drugs are simply less harmful. Have tried amphetamines but don't feel they fit in with my usage needs, I don't find them as much fun recreationally as other drugs.

Don't ever want or plan to start using opiods or meth, have tried and like Kratom very much but using it's not an option sadly given home situation.

I'm exercising more and eating better both of which are helping reduce drug use. Drug use is also help me eat less and coupled with exercise lose weight.

So in summary I'm an informed idiot who's addicted to being high but wants to try and do it in a safe way.

any advice? please give me double barrels! :ilovemypills::gat:
I laud your efforts and cant help but see a younger me in your post.

It sounds to me like you are already practicing harm reduction to a high degree. My only advice is against complacency. Addiction is smarter and more cunning than you will ever be. It will eventually catch up to you and bite you in the ass when you're already on the ground from some pertinent trauma. Addiction is an insidious motherfucker.

Nootropics and supplements are something that have helped me offset the damage from drug use, but always remember they are just as dangerous as drugs and can cause a lot of health issues themselves. Supplements and herbs have sent me to the hospital.

Never let your guard down. Practice Harm Reduction in all your activities; everything is chemicals. Try to help others. Namaste.
 
I laud your efforts and cant help but see a younger me in your post.

It sounds to me like you are already practicing harm reduction to a high degree. My only advice is against complacency. Addiction is smarter and more cunning than you will ever be. It will eventually catch up to you and bite you in the ass when you're already on the ground from some pertinent trauma. Addiction is an insidious motherfucker.

Nootropics and supplements are something that have helped me offset the damage from drug use, but always remember they are just as dangerous as drugs and can cause a lot of health issues themselves. Supplements and herbs have sent me to the hospital.

Never let your guard down. Practice Harm Reduction in all your activities; everything is chemicals. Try to help others. Namaste.
thanks for the kind & wise words.

good prompt on nootropics, I've been taking the stack above for ~2 weeks now and in all honesty I don't think it's doing enough for me to continue, there has been the odd day where I feel a slight GABA type effect, but otherwise I can't say that I'm seeing any benefit from them.

maybe that might be different if I actually stop taking all GABA drugs, but I don't intend to do that.

My plan is to continue taking the nootropics until my supply runs out and reevaluate things then, maybe stopping them and seeing if there's any difference might help me pinpoint if there's any benefit.

ironically, the nootropics that I do find very useful are the ones that improve the effect of GABA drugs - Taurine + L-theanine both redosed at T+ 6 hours.

biggest positive thing for me though is trying to take @Keif' Richards words to heart

No more than 2 drinks in one sitting (What do we say here? Perhaps 0.5mg-1mg Clonazepam is a unit, which would make 2mg the maximum)
Never two nights in a row
Not more than 2 nights a week
the 2+2+2 rule is making me think and deal with things differently, thanks Keif!

and should also add, I have another thread going on exercise, I'm pleased to say that I'm making progress there as well, in fact I went on my 1st jog today in ~9 months
 
Last edited:
The good thing with alcohol, at least for me, is that it doesn’t seem as addictive as the other substances. I’m speaking only for myself here. So I’ve used it quite a few times as a kind of “buffer,” you could say.

If I go overboard with alcohol, I don’t like the effects, and I definitely don’t like the hangover. If I’m drinking every day, I start to feel toxic. That’s why it isn’t as addictive for me. With other substances, I can just keep going… except benzos I don’t like abusing benzos either.
 
more AI research, thought i'd share in case anyone interested

my conclusion is to back off all drugs, shift to taking cannabis, with occasional 2C-B and ketamine use, and potentially after a GABA break i will add back in pregabalin.

i'm going to investigate 1. microdosing mushrooms in more detail, 2. microdosing ketamine (I usually just do a few bumps rather than khole, but still concerned about using it too frequently), 3. strains of cannabis to try to get the right high 4. using more CBD

Exercise is going well, I'm sleeping like a baby as a result!

for info my sexual function issue is mainly Anorgasmia, but there are similar parallels for other sexual function issues - if anyone has any questions on something specific pm me, i'm happy to help/take a look at things.

Occasional Use — Impact on GABA Recovery & Anorgasmia Recovery

Impact scale​

  • Very Low = minimal disturbance
  • Low = small, short-lived disturbance
  • Moderate = noticeable disturbance
  • High = strong disturbance
  • Very High = deepest, longest-lasting disturbance

📊 Summary Table (Qualitative Breakeven Impact)

SubstanceImpact on GABA RecoveryImpact on Anorgasmia RecoveryBreakeven Impact (Qualitative)
DMTVery LowVery LowVery Low
Psilocybin / PsilocinVery LowVery LowVery Low
2C‑BVery LowVery Low–LowVery Low
KetamineLowLow–ModerateLow
Cannabis (THC)Low–ModerateLow–ModerateLow–Moderate
AlcoholLow–ModerateLow–ModerateLow–Moderate
PregabalinModerateModerateModerate
Xanax (Alprazolam)ModerateModerateModerate
DiazepamModerateModerateModerate
CocaineLow–Moderate (indirect)HighHigh
AmphetamineLow–Moderate (indirect)HighHigh
MephedroneModerate (indirect)HighHigh
MDMALow–Moderate (indirect)Very HighVery High
Soma (Carisoprodol)HighHighHigh
MeprobamateHighVery HighVery High
PhenibutVery HighVery HighVery High
GBLVery HighVery HighVery High


1. How the breakeven point changes when you stop switching

When you stop rotating between GABA drugs (GBL, Phenibut, benzos, Soma, Pregabalin, Alcohol), something important happens:

⭐ Your breakeven point stabilizes.

Switching between different GABA drugs creates a kind of “noise” in the system:
  • different receptor types are being pushed and pulled
  • different half‑lives overlap
  • different rebound patterns collide
  • the nervous system can’t predict what’s coming next
When you stop switching, the system finally gets a consistent signal.

What this does to the breakeven point:​

It stops drifting upward

When you mix drugs, the breakeven point tends to stretch longer and longer because the system keeps getting hit in different ways. Stopping the switching removes that upward pressure.

It gradually shrinks toward the breakeven point of the drug you’re actually using

If you settle on a “lighter” GABA drug (like alcohol or pregabalin), the breakeven point slowly moves toward that drug’s typical pattern.

It becomes predictable again

Instead of the breakeven point being pulled in different directions by different substances, it becomes a single, stable curve.

Recovery becomes smoother

The nervous system prefers consistency. Stopping the switching allows:
  • receptor regulation
  • neurotransmitter balance
  • hormonal rhythms
  • sleep architecture
…to follow a more stable trajectory.

🧠 2. How long it takes for the system to “forget” the heavier drug

This is conceptual, not numerical.
The nervous system “forgets” a heavier GABA drug in layers, not instantly.
Here’s how the forgetting process works:

⭐ A) The brain forgets the acute effects first

This is the short‑term fog, sedation, or rebound. It fades relatively quickly once the heavy drug is gone.

⭐ B) Then it forgets the receptor-level disruption

Heavier drugs (GBL, Phenibut, Meprobamate, Soma) cause deeper changes in:
  • GABA‑B or GABA‑A receptor sensitivity
  • downstream dopamine tone
  • stress‑response circuits
These take longer to normalize.
During this phase:
  • the breakeven point is still influenced by the heavy drug
  • even if you’re now using something lighter
  • the system behaves as if it’s still “recovering from the big one”

⭐ C) Finally, it forgets the pattern of switching

This is the slowest part.
When you’ve been rotating between multiple GABA drugs, the nervous system adapts to unpredictability:
  • tolerance becomes generalized
  • rebound becomes more sensitive
  • recovery becomes less efficient
When you stop switching, the system slowly relearns stability.
This is when the breakeven point:
  • stops being inflated
  • stops being erratic
  • settles into a predictable curve again

🧠 3. The simplest way to picture it​

Stopping switching = the breakeven point stops stretching and starts shrinking.

Forgetting the heavy drug = the breakeven point slowly moves away from the heavy drug’s influence and toward the baseline of whatever you’re doing now (or toward full recovery if you’re abstinent).


Detail on each class

The short version: GABA‑B drugs push deeper, slower‑recovering systems than GABA‑A drugs do.

Here’s what that means in practice.

⭐ A) GABA‑B receptors recover much more slowly​

GABA‑A receptors (benzos, alcohol, Soma, meprobamate) adjust quickly:
  • fast tolerance
  • fast rebound
  • fast partial recovery
GABA‑B receptors (GBL, Phenibut) adjust slowly:
  • slow tolerance
  • slow receptor normalization
  • slow downstream dopamine recovery
  • slow stress‑system stabilization
This means:

→ A single GABA‑B hit stretches the breakeven point far more​

The system stays “tilted” longer.

⭐ B) GABA‑B drugs suppress dopamine more deeply​

GABA‑B activation strongly inhibits dopamine release in:
  • the reward system
  • the motivation system
  • sexual‑arousal circuits

How dopamine‑acting drugs (MDMA, cocaine, amphetamine) interact with this model

Here’s a clear, grounded explanation of how dopamine‑acting drugs (MDMA, cocaine, amphetamine) interact with the breakeven‑point model you’ve been exploring — meaning how they influence the nervous system’s ability to return to baseline after stress from GABA‑acting substances.
I’ll keep this conceptual, neuroscience‑based, and safe.
Even though MDMA, cocaine, and amphetamine don’t act on GABA receptors directly, they interfere with the same downstream systems that GABA drugs disrupt. This creates a kind of “cross‑talk” that affects recovery.
Let’s break it down.

1. They hit the same reward and motivation circuits that GABA drugs suppress

GABA drugs (especially GABA‑B ones like GBL/Phenibut) suppress dopamine release.
Dopamine‑acting drugs do the opposite:
  • Cocaine blocks dopamine reuptake → dopamine spikes
  • Amphetamine forces dopamine release → dopamine floods
  • MDMA releases serotonin + dopamine → emotional and sensory surge
After the high, all three cause a dopamine crash.

Why this matters:​

Your breakeven point is partly about how long it takes dopamine systems to stabilize again.
When you combine:
  • GABA drugs (dopamine‑suppressing)
  • stimulant/entactogen drugs (dopamine‑flooding)
…you create large swings in dopamine tone.

Result:​

The breakeven point becomes longer and less predictable.

2. They create “dopamine debt” that overlaps with GABA recovery

After the peak, dopamine‑acting drugs leave behind:
  • low dopamine
  • low motivation
  • emotional flatness
  • reduced libido
  • impaired reward sensitivity
These are the same systems GABA drugs also influence.
So the effects stack, even if the drugs are used on different days.

Result:​

The nervous system has to recover from two kinds of dopamine disruption at once.
This stretches the breakeven point further.

3. They amplify sexual‑function disruption

Sexual function depends heavily on:
  • dopamine (desire)
  • serotonin (sensitivity)
  • prolactin (post‑orgasm inhibition)
  • stress hormones
  • sleep quality
MDMA, cocaine, and amphetamine all disrupt these systems.
When combined with GABA drugs:
  • libido drops more sharply
  • arousal becomes more inconsistent
  • recovery takes longer
  • emotional connection feels blunted

Result:​

Sexual‑function breakeven points stretch more than GABA breakeven points.
This is why sexual recovery often lags behind GABA recovery.

4. They destabilize the recovery curve

Think of the nervous system like a balance scale:
  • GABA drugs push it down (sedation, suppression)
  • Stimulants push it up (activation, dopamine flooding)
  • MDMA pushes it sideways (serotonin surge → depletion)
When you mix these forces:
  • the system can’t find equilibrium
  • recovery becomes nonlinear
  • breakeven points become “wobbly”
  • emotional stability becomes harder to regain

Result:​

The breakeven curve becomes unstable, not just longer.

5. They interfere with sleep — which is the foundation of recovery

All three dopamine‑acting drugs disrupt sleep architecture:
  • REM suppression
  • rebound REM
  • circadian rhythm disruption
  • stress‑hormone elevation
GABA drugs also disrupt sleep, but in a different way.
When both categories are involved:
  • sleep becomes fragmented
  • hormonal rhythms destabilize
  • emotional regulation weakens
  • recovery slows down

Result:​

Breakeven points stretch because the system can’t repair itself efficiently.

⭐ The simplest way to understand it

GABA drugs push the system down.

(sedation, suppression, rebound)

Dopamine‑acting drugs push the system up.

(stimulation, flooding, depletion)

Together, they create instability.

The nervous system struggles to find a stable baseline.

This instability stretches breakeven points

— especially for sexual function, motivation, and emotional balance.

If you want, I can also explain:
  • How serotonin‑acting drugs (like MDMA or psychedelics) affect the breakeven curve
  • Why sexual recovery is more fragile than GABA recovery
  • How to visualize the breakeven curve as a “stress‑recovery seesaw”
  • How switching vs. abstaining changes the shape of the curve
Just tell me what direction you want to explore.

How serotonin‑acting drugs (like MDMA or psychedelics) affect the breakeven curve

Here’s a clear, grounded explanation of how serotonin‑acting drugs — especially MDMA and classic psychedelics like LSD and psilocybin — interact with the breakeven‑point model you’ve been exploring. I’ll keep everything conceptual and neuroscience‑based, without giving medical or harmful specifics.
To make this intuitive, I’ll break it into two parts:
  1. How MDMA affects the breakeven curve
  2. How psychedelics (LSD, psilocybin, DMT, 2C‑B) affect the breakeven curve
MDMA is unique because it hits three systems at once:
  • Serotonin (massive release → depletion)
  • Dopamine (moderate release → drop)
  • Oxytocin (bonding, emotional openness)
This creates a very specific pattern in the breakeven curve.

⭐ A) MDMA causes a “serotonin dip” that overlaps with GABA recovery​

After MDMA, serotonin temporarily drops below baseline. This affects:
  • mood
  • emotional regulation
  • sexual sensitivity
  • sleep
  • stress response
These are the same systems that GABA drugs also influence indirectly.

Result:​

The breakeven curve becomes longer, especially for sexual function.

⭐ B) MDMA amplifies sexual‑function disruption​

Sexual function depends heavily on:
  • dopamine (desire)
  • serotonin (sensitivity)
  • prolactin (inhibition)
MDMA temporarily disrupts all three.

Result:​

Even if GABA recovery is going well, MDMA can push sexual breakeven further out than expected.

⭐ C) MDMA destabilizes sleep and stress hormones​

GABA drugs already affect sleep architecture. MDMA adds:
  • REM suppression
  • cortisol elevation
  • circadian disruption

Result:​

Recovery becomes less efficient → breakeven stretches.

⭐ D) MDMA’s emotional “afterglow” can mask the disruption​

People often feel emotionally open or connected for a day or two after MDMA.
But underneath that:
  • serotonin is low
  • dopamine is low
  • prolactin is high

Result:​

The breakeven curve feels shorter than it actually is.
Psychedelics act primarily on serotonin 5‑HT2A receptors, not GABA or dopamine. This means their interaction with the breakeven curve is very different from MDMA.

⭐ A) Psychedelics don’t suppress GABA systems​

Unlike GABA drugs, psychedelics:
  • don’t downregulate GABA receptors
  • don’t cause rebound anxiety
  • don’t depress dopamine tone
  • don’t disrupt sleep architecture long‑term

Result:​

They barely affect the GABA breakeven curve.

⭐ B) Psychedelics cause a short, mild serotonin “after‑dip”​

After LSD or psilocybin, serotonin signaling briefly dips as receptors reset.
This can cause:
  • mild emotional flatness
  • slight sensitivity changes
  • temporary introspective mood
But it’s usually short‑lived.

Result:​

The sexual‑function breakeven curve is only slightly affected.

⭐ C) Psychedelics don’t create dopamine debt​

Unlike MDMA, cocaine, or amphetamine:
  • they don’t flood dopamine
  • they don’t deplete dopamine
  • they don’t cause reward‑system crashes

Result:​

They don’t stretch the breakeven curve through dopamine pathways.

⭐ D) Psychedelics can indirectly improve emotional stability​

Because they don’t suppress GABA or dopamine, and because they often promote:
  • introspection
  • emotional processing
  • stress reduction
…they can sometimes smooth the breakeven curve rather than stretch it.
(Not because they’re “healing,” but because they don’t interfere with the systems that GABA drugs stress.)
Mephedrone is a triple‑action stimulant:
  • dopamine releaser
  • serotonin releaser
  • norepinephrine releaser
It behaves like a hybrid of MDMA + cocaine, which gives it a very specific recovery profile.

⭐ 1. It creates a “double dip” in dopamine and serotonin​

After the peak, mephedrone leaves behind:
  • low dopamine (motivation, libido, reward)
  • low serotonin (mood, sensitivity, emotional tone)
These are the same downstream systems that GABA drugs also influence indirectly.

→ Result:​

The breakeven curve stretches, especially for sexual function, because both dopamine and serotonin are involved in arousal and sensitivity.

⭐ 2. It destabilizes the emotional curve​

Mephedrone tends to produce:
  • emotional spikes
  • emotional crashes
  • irritability
  • reward‑system volatility
This volatility interacts with the GABA recovery curve by making the “baseline” harder to stabilize.

→ Result:​

Breakeven becomes less predictable and tends to drift upward.

⭐ 3. It amplifies the “reward deficit” created by GABA drugs​

GABA drugs suppress dopamine. Mephedrone floods dopamine, then drops it.
The combination creates a larger swing than either drug alone.

→ Result:​

The nervous system takes longer to return to equilibrium → breakeven stretches.

⭐ 4. Sexual‑function breakeven is especially sensitive​

Because mephedrone affects:
  • dopamine (desire)
  • serotonin (sensitivity)
  • prolactin (inhibition)
…it tends to push sexual recovery further out than GABA recovery.

→ Result:​

Sexual breakeven is more distorted than GABA breakeven.
Ketamine is a dissociative NMDA antagonist, not a GABA drug and not a dopamine/serotonin releaser.
Its interaction with the breakeven model is almost the opposite of mephedrone.

⭐ 1. Ketamine doesn’t suppress GABA receptors​

Unlike benzos, alcohol, GBL, or phenibut, ketamine:
  • doesn’t downregulate GABA‑A
  • doesn’t downregulate GABA‑B
  • doesn’t create GABA rebound

→ Result:​

It barely affects the GABA breakeven curve.

⭐ 2. It doesn’t deplete dopamine or serotonin​

Ketamine can modestly increase dopamine in some circuits, but it doesn’t cause:
  • dopamine crashes
  • serotonin depletion
  • reward‑system burnout

→ Result:​

It doesn’t stretch the breakeven curve through dopamine pathways.

⭐ 3. It has a short “after‑effect window”​

Ketamine’s subjective effects fade quickly, and the neurochemical after‑effects are short‑lived.

→ Result:​

Breakeven curves remain mostly unchanged.

⭐ 4. It can temporarily reduce emotional stress​

Because ketamine can produce:
  • detachment
  • reduced rumination
  • lower anxiety
…it sometimes smooths the emotional side of recovery rather than destabilizing it.
(Not because it’s “healing,” but because it doesn’t interfere with the systems that GABA drugs stress.)

🔍 Side‑by‑Side Summary: Mephedrone vs Ketamine

FeatureMephedroneKetamine
Primary actionDopamine + serotonin releaserNMDA antagonist
After‑effectsDopamine/serotonin dipMild dissociation, short-lived
Emotional stabilityVolatileNeutral/calm
Interaction with GABA recoveryDestabilizesMinimal
Effect on sexual breakevenStretches significantlyBarely affects
Effect on GABA breakevenIndirectly stretchesMinimal
Overall impact on breakevenHighLow


⭐ The simplest way to picture it

Mephedrone

Creates big dopamine + serotonin swings → destabilizes recovery → stretches breakeven curves, especially sexual.

Ketamine

Barely interacts with GABA or dopamine systems → leaves breakeven curves mostly unchanged.

If you want, I can also compare:
  • Mephedrone vs MDMA
  • Ketamine vs psychedelics
  • Which substances tend to “stack” their effects on breakeven curves
  • How stress, sleep, and hormones fit into this model
This seems to be real quality information. Especially the table.

I was surprised to see phenibut up there as being so disruptive tbh.

So just to make sure I understand the Very High category is gonna take the longest to recover from and may potentially cause Irreversible damage?

Apologies if I've missed something or misread it.

OP, seems like you'll be a lot happier and have less stress if you can get off everything for a while and then just find your baseline.

Kudos on the exercise. Well done. Stick with it. You'll get there.
 
Oh and for what it's worth. Soma is dirty stuff when used at 'recreational' doses and absolutely messes with GABA system. Might be better just to leave it alone.?

I definitely feel better off it. In terms of more stable and less anxious.
 
If I go overboard with alcohol, I don’t like the effects, and I definitely don’t like the hangover. If I’m drinking every day, I start to feel toxic. That’s why it isn’t as addictive for me. With other substances, I can just keep going… except benzos I don’t like abusing benzos either.
Alcohol's a problem for me, i want to give it up entirely, did so for a couple of months before and was much happier


I was surprised to see phenibut up there as being so disruptive tbh.

So just to make sure I understand the Very High category is gonna take the longest to recover from and may potentially cause Irreversible damage?
i was surprised it and GBH/GBL are so high up as well, longest to recover yes, not sure it's irreversible damage though, if i remember correctly with time they all go back to baseline, the nootropics help repair the damage faster though.

OP, seems like you'll be a lot happier and have less stress if you can get off everything for a while and then just find your baseline.
yeah, that's a good way of putting it, i'm trying to find a much better and simpler baseline

Kudos on the exercise. Well done. Stick with it. You'll get there.

thanks!

Oh and for what it's worth. Soma is dirty stuff when used at 'recreational' doses and absolutely messes with GABA system. Might be better just to leave it alone.?

I definitely feel better off it. In terms of more stable and less anxious.
it's a sneaky little fucker of a drug, it's taken me ages to figure it out to be honest.

my biggest issue is i was using it for quite a while as a muscle relaxant in the evening, and was pretty much then asleep while the Meprobamate effects were kicking in, but that's what's causing all the GABA issues I think, suspect it's the cause of the rebound anxiety if that's what's going on.

definitely 1 that I'm going to run down and likely stop taking all together
 
Sounds like a sensible plan to give the soma the boot asap. Absolutely does give you rebound anxiety. Especially if your receptors are stressed with regular booze. I don't know what doses you're doing but I was doing the Holy Trinity thing and averaging about a gram a time. It's dirty as fuck though.

Yeah I feel what you're saying about the booze. Just keeping off it goes a long way to making me feel better. Problem is that it's so easily accessible and socially acceptable.

Well, good luck. Just keep working away at it. You'll get there.
 
Sounds like a sensible plan to give the soma the boot asap. Absolutely does give you rebound anxiety. Especially if your receptors are stressed with regular booze. I don't know what doses you're doing but I was doing the Holy Trinity thing and averaging about a gram a time. It's dirty as fuck though.

Yeah I feel what you're saying about the booze. Just keeping off it goes a long way to making me feel better. Problem is that it's so easily accessible and socially acceptable.

Well, good luck. Just keep working away at it. You'll get there.
was doing a 1 gram (occasionally 1.5 grams) almost every other day at my worst, but now every 4-5 days so progress. I maybe should have tapered it to be honest but hadn't even realised there was a dependence, I stupidly thought because my tolerance was only slightly increasing that meant there wasn't really any dependence yet, I suspect I was wrong!

Booze is a bitch, it's just too easy to obtain and doesn't have any real stigma around using it.

I did myself proud last night though, in a weak moment I bought a bottle of good whisky and a pack of strong beer and only had 2 whisky's and 1 beer which I left part of, (we'll gloss over the 300mg of pregabalin, 20mg of diazepam, and a significant amount of cannabis). 🤡
 
Top