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Heroin Proglumide reversal of heroin tolerance?

A) It's extremely hard to source.
B) The long-term effects on human health aren't well researched.
C) There is a much better, more reliable solution to reducing and maintaining tolerance low, and that is ULDN. To make matters even better ULDN both shortens as well as lessens the intensity of withdrawals by like 80%. This is something that I accidentally discovered back in April when I ran out of heroin. I was mentally preparing for three days of absolute hell, but all I experienced was anxiety, freezing, sweating, insomnia, depression, goosebumps and all of these symptoms subsided after 24h, leaving me only with PAWS. I actually linked to a study written by the biochemist Jonathan Ott self-experimented with Naltrexone in microgram dosages to obviate withdrawals:
https://bluelight.org/xf/threads/ul...tolerance-to-opioids-low.914985/post-15823696

This substance is so incredibly versatile that it's a godsend for us dope fiends. Without it I would have to go through 3 days of full spectrum body-mind-splatter-gore-torture and then 7 days of residual symptoms until I feel somewhat well again. ULDN however seems to cram all this into 24h (might be shorter or longer depending on your metabolism) and also massively decreases the intensity. Just try it out yourselves guys. I'm suprised this isn't well known.

By the way, the pharmaceutical industry once had plans to create a CombiPrep consisting of Oxy and naltrexone in microdosages but when they found out that it effectively and reliably prevents tolerance from building up in patients they quickly discarded this project as it would massively cut into their profits.
I am most definitely going to have to look into this! Just the anticipation of wd is crippling for me
 
I am most definitely going to have to look into this! Just the anticipation of wd is crippling for me
I am looking forward to your experience report in the ULDN thread. I wish you all the best and if you have questions just ask me!
 
Can you elaborate please?

So you took 2 shots of ketamine, and then for the next few days your tolerance to morphine was half?

Afterwards you reversed again to normal. Can you not inject ketamine again and again reverse the tolerance?
Low dose DXM does the same thing and most NMDA antagonists (i.e. dissociative anesthetics) will have a similar effect on tolerance. There’s plenty of information on this online if you want to read through the literature.
 
I see this substance a lot on the dark web, and it is claimed to reverse opiate tolerance.

This guide is designed for resetting tolerances for practically all drugs. It uses only OTC items, nothing expensive or experimental. Many of the items mentioned share the same key property as naltrexone that makes it so effective for opioid recovery (ie blocking TLR4).

The combo does what SR-17018, buprenorphine, methadone, proglumide and suboxone cannot as these do very little to repair the dopamine and metabolic system (which is essential for preventing relapse). Of course they remain useful for tapering support.
 
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This guide is designed for resetting tolerances for practically all drugs. It uses only OTC items, nothing expensive or experimental. Many of the items mentioned share the same key property as naltrexone that makes it so effective for opioid recovery (ie blocking TLR4).

The combo does what SR-17018, buprenorphine, methadone, proglumide and suboxone cannot as these do very little to repair the dopamine and metabolic system (which is essential for preventing relapse). Of course they remain useful for tapering support and can be used alongside this combo.
You don’t need any drugs to repair said systems in order to prevent relapse. Go to the gym (train smart), eat well (macro and micronutrients), take 5g creatine per day, hydrate, sleep a minimum of eight hours each day, and keep your head out of your ass—-it’s actually very simple and you’ll see results much faster than any “bandaid drug”.
 
You don’t need any drugs to repair said systems in order to prevent relapse.
You don't but it achieves in a month what would otherwise take a year. Plus it repairs things that are usually overlooked and remain unacknowledged.

Go to the gym, eat well, take 5g creatine per day, hydrate...it’s actually very simple and you’ll see results much faster than any “bandaid drug”.
That's not realistic for many people out there, it's also fairly slow compared to what is possible using "bandaid drugs" ...most of the items I mentioned aren't "drugs". If someone can use those cheap supplements to facilitate recovery in half the time it takes without then that's worthwhile.
 
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You don't but it achieves in a month what would otherwise take a year. Plus it repairs things that are usually overlooked and remain unacknowledged.


That's not realistic for many people out there, it's also fairly slow compared to what is possible using "bandaid drugs" (most of the items I mentioned aren't "drugs").
I’ve gotten off a gram per day IV heroin habit multiple times in my life, and I’ve been powerlifting for over fifteen years now while training dozens of men and women over the years too. If you’re trying to say that a healthy individual cannot do any of that for themselves (even with help) then you are very wrong, because I’ve known handicapped folks who do more in the gym on the regular than most of society. It’s just straight up bullshit and you know it. People love making excuses for themselves. Planet Fitness has a gym membership for $10 a month and if you can’t afford that then there are even free gyms in public parks; not to mention you can workout at home too. It just comes down to pure laziness and a lack of self-discipline.
 
I’ve been powerlifting for over fifteen years now while training dozens of men and women over the years too. If you’re trying to say that a healthy individual cannot do any of that for themselves...

Of course I agree.
The thing is that many habitual drug users have underlying health issues which tend to be unacknowledged, so they can't accurately be labelled as "healthy individuals".

Regardless, the guide I wrote is capable of resetting all drug tolerances. Whether someone wants to use it for recovery and drug cessation is up to them.
 
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Of course I agree.
The thing is that many habitual drug users have underlying health issues which tend to be unacknowledged. They're not someone whose been powerlifting for over fifteen years etc.

Regardless, the guide I wrote is capable of resetting all drug tolerances. Whether someone wants to use it for general recovery and cessation is up to them.
I wasn’t like that either. I changed my life by doing it and the point is that they can too. It only took me about four months of consistent training to turn around over a decade of hard drug use. YMMV
 
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