<SpaceHead>
Bluelighter
- Joined
- Jan 22, 2009
- Messages
- 227
I've been struggling with the idea of labeling myself as an addict. Admitting you're an addict is supposed to be the first step to recovery right?
For a long time I didn't even think of calling myself an addict because I pretty much only used psychedelic drugs, learning about myself and the universe. Eventually I built a huge mental tolerance and started taking crazy mixtures of psychedelics, then adding lots of dissociatives and finally kratom and phenibut. At one point I almost died from ODing on DXM, thats when I first realized something was really wrong. Earlier this year I decided to be sober for three months in hopes to build a healthier relationship with drugs when I started again. When I started taking drugs again I was in an extremely stressful situation and happened to get some GBL which totally removed my anxiety when I was on it. It also ruined my judgement. Later I started to use phenibut every day and became physically addicted.
I was in a relationship with someone I dearly loved for many years which just recently ended, largely because of my drug use and how it changed my personality. So I have been heart broken, and as I expected I have been gravitating towards escapist drugs. Took DXM four times in a week, then this last week I have been drunk every day which isn't like me at all.
When I admit to myself that I am an addict I feel condemned, "I have always been this way and I will always be this way" and I take the nearest sedating drug. When I deny that I'm an addict I take drugs because I don't have to worry about my habit, clearly I can control it if I do just enough.
So what is the most productive way to think about it? Is it a black and white kind of thing or a gradient? I want to go in the right direction but I do not have the strength or desire to quite all drugs.
For a long time I didn't even think of calling myself an addict because I pretty much only used psychedelic drugs, learning about myself and the universe. Eventually I built a huge mental tolerance and started taking crazy mixtures of psychedelics, then adding lots of dissociatives and finally kratom and phenibut. At one point I almost died from ODing on DXM, thats when I first realized something was really wrong. Earlier this year I decided to be sober for three months in hopes to build a healthier relationship with drugs when I started again. When I started taking drugs again I was in an extremely stressful situation and happened to get some GBL which totally removed my anxiety when I was on it. It also ruined my judgement. Later I started to use phenibut every day and became physically addicted.
I was in a relationship with someone I dearly loved for many years which just recently ended, largely because of my drug use and how it changed my personality. So I have been heart broken, and as I expected I have been gravitating towards escapist drugs. Took DXM four times in a week, then this last week I have been drunk every day which isn't like me at all.
When I admit to myself that I am an addict I feel condemned, "I have always been this way and I will always be this way" and I take the nearest sedating drug. When I deny that I'm an addict I take drugs because I don't have to worry about my habit, clearly I can control it if I do just enough.
So what is the most productive way to think about it? Is it a black and white kind of thing or a gradient? I want to go in the right direction but I do not have the strength or desire to quite all drugs.
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