queenscarlet88
Bluelighter
To classify drugs like amphetamine and diazepam as "medicine" is a distortion. Because many Americans are prescribed these drugs and take them everyday, long-term safety and efficacy is assumed by the general public to have been established beyond a reasonable doubt. These drugs' toxicity is ceaselessly minimized and ignored.
Those who become dependent upon such medication howl that they are "unable to function" without the Adderall or the Valium. Repeated ad nauseum is the refrain that anxiety in the absence of Valium, or difficulty focusing in the absence of Adderall, is a symptom of an underlying psychiatric disorder. Those making such a claim are quick to add something along the lines of "I've always had trouble focusing, even before the Adderall, and the Adderall just makes me normal."
What these people are ignoring is the fact that it is EXTREMELY difficult to recollect, after -- say -- 2 years of having been prescribed a drug, what that person's subjective experience of consciousness ACTUALLY was like prior to the drug having been introduced. The human condition is for the feelings of the present moment to seem eternal. You take the drug, you feel good, and you assume that the drug has always made you feel good and always will make you feel good. You don't take the drug,you feel shitty, and you assume that the drug is the only thing that can make you feel good. It seems that you have always felt shitty in the absence of the drug, and always will.
The "unable to function" crowd will be quick -- I am sure -- to denounce what I am saying. "How DARE you take your own, limited, personal experience and clam that everyone else reacts to drugs the same way that you do! Blame yourself, not the drug!"In this way, they insulate themselves against having to examine honestly their own decisions to become lifetime drug-dependent pill-poppers.
So much of what is lost while a person is intoxicated is intangible. A life spent intoxicated, even by drugs called "medicine," is so much flatter than it should be. And now the "unable to function" crowd -- held hostage by minds which have turned against themselves -- will harrumph about how their depression, or bipolar disorder, or ADD makes existence seem flat, and the drugs lend dimension to that existence.
Those who become dependent upon such medication howl that they are "unable to function" without the Adderall or the Valium. Repeated ad nauseum is the refrain that anxiety in the absence of Valium, or difficulty focusing in the absence of Adderall, is a symptom of an underlying psychiatric disorder. Those making such a claim are quick to add something along the lines of "I've always had trouble focusing, even before the Adderall, and the Adderall just makes me normal."
What these people are ignoring is the fact that it is EXTREMELY difficult to recollect, after -- say -- 2 years of having been prescribed a drug, what that person's subjective experience of consciousness ACTUALLY was like prior to the drug having been introduced. The human condition is for the feelings of the present moment to seem eternal. You take the drug, you feel good, and you assume that the drug has always made you feel good and always will make you feel good. You don't take the drug,you feel shitty, and you assume that the drug is the only thing that can make you feel good. It seems that you have always felt shitty in the absence of the drug, and always will.
The "unable to function" crowd will be quick -- I am sure -- to denounce what I am saying. "How DARE you take your own, limited, personal experience and clam that everyone else reacts to drugs the same way that you do! Blame yourself, not the drug!"In this way, they insulate themselves against having to examine honestly their own decisions to become lifetime drug-dependent pill-poppers.
So much of what is lost while a person is intoxicated is intangible. A life spent intoxicated, even by drugs called "medicine," is so much flatter than it should be. And now the "unable to function" crowd -- held hostage by minds which have turned against themselves -- will harrumph about how their depression, or bipolar disorder, or ADD makes existence seem flat, and the drugs lend dimension to that existence.
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