friendofafriend
Greenlighter
- Joined
- Sep 15, 2013
- Messages
- 5
Hi guys,
I wanted to get your point of view on whether the mental health issues I now live with are a result of previous drug taking or not? I've spoken to my GP and they think not but as their name suggests they aren't specialists in the effects of illegal drugs.
2006 - 2009
I recreationally took ecstasy every couple of weeks, a couple of pills each time.
2009-2011
Pills became difficult to source around this time so I switched to Mephedrone/mcat and took a gram pretty much every week for nearly a couple of years. I used to buy it online and noticed it was quite a bit stronger than mates were getting it locally. My comedowns from mephedrone were horrible and lasted 3-4 days; sweating lots, brain fog, difficulty concentrating and articulating speech. It would usually take me half the working week to feel fine again. I used to take mcat after regular weekend clubbing sessions in which I would not sleep for nearly 48hrs.
I started drinking energy drinks towards the end of the week to get my energy levels up for going out again. Then I started to get into a cycle of energy drinks and over the counter sleeping pills, retarded I know! I should mention that I was also in a job that I had grown to hate because of incompetent managers, sometimes long hours so there was always stress with the job.
By 2011 I decided to stop taking mcat and move to London for a new job and a new start. The new job was fun but I found I was sleeping really badly. The over the counter sleeping pills I was taking had stopped working so I was increasingly drinking more and more energy drinks to keep me sane during the day. This had the knock on effect of reducing my sleep to maybe 3-4hrs a day, sometimes I'd get nothing. Moving to a new city, making new friends, new job could have also impacted on stress/sleep levels.
I saw my GP about it and started on a course of CBT (cognitive behavioural therapy) and instigated better "sleep hygiene". I came off the energy drinks eventually and got regular sleep of around 6hrs each day.
Over the last couple of years the job has become more stressful and longer hours so I now can suffer from brain fog from time to time. This seems to be made worse when stress at work is high. I still suffer from bad nights sleep but in general I probably get about 7 hrs sleep.
What worries me is I that the brain fog I used to get in an Mcat comedown is similar to the brain fog I seem to suffer from fairly regularly now. On a weekend when I get about 8-9 hrs sleep the feeling of brain fog seems to be worse. I can't work out why sleeping longer would have a negative effect on my wellbeing/cognitive function.
I know there is probably no way to know for certain what the cause is, if the brain fog is a result of the mcat use then it just scares the shit out of me that this is now irreversible.
I just wondered what you thought?
As there are no substantial studies which look at the long-term effects of mcat I think its important to at least communicate anecdotal stories such as this so we all know more about what we might be taking.
I wanted to get your point of view on whether the mental health issues I now live with are a result of previous drug taking or not? I've spoken to my GP and they think not but as their name suggests they aren't specialists in the effects of illegal drugs.
2006 - 2009
I recreationally took ecstasy every couple of weeks, a couple of pills each time.
2009-2011
Pills became difficult to source around this time so I switched to Mephedrone/mcat and took a gram pretty much every week for nearly a couple of years. I used to buy it online and noticed it was quite a bit stronger than mates were getting it locally. My comedowns from mephedrone were horrible and lasted 3-4 days; sweating lots, brain fog, difficulty concentrating and articulating speech. It would usually take me half the working week to feel fine again. I used to take mcat after regular weekend clubbing sessions in which I would not sleep for nearly 48hrs.
I started drinking energy drinks towards the end of the week to get my energy levels up for going out again. Then I started to get into a cycle of energy drinks and over the counter sleeping pills, retarded I know! I should mention that I was also in a job that I had grown to hate because of incompetent managers, sometimes long hours so there was always stress with the job.
By 2011 I decided to stop taking mcat and move to London for a new job and a new start. The new job was fun but I found I was sleeping really badly. The over the counter sleeping pills I was taking had stopped working so I was increasingly drinking more and more energy drinks to keep me sane during the day. This had the knock on effect of reducing my sleep to maybe 3-4hrs a day, sometimes I'd get nothing. Moving to a new city, making new friends, new job could have also impacted on stress/sleep levels.
I saw my GP about it and started on a course of CBT (cognitive behavioural therapy) and instigated better "sleep hygiene". I came off the energy drinks eventually and got regular sleep of around 6hrs each day.
Over the last couple of years the job has become more stressful and longer hours so I now can suffer from brain fog from time to time. This seems to be made worse when stress at work is high. I still suffer from bad nights sleep but in general I probably get about 7 hrs sleep.
What worries me is I that the brain fog I used to get in an Mcat comedown is similar to the brain fog I seem to suffer from fairly regularly now. On a weekend when I get about 8-9 hrs sleep the feeling of brain fog seems to be worse. I can't work out why sleeping longer would have a negative effect on my wellbeing/cognitive function.
I know there is probably no way to know for certain what the cause is, if the brain fog is a result of the mcat use then it just scares the shit out of me that this is now irreversible.
I just wondered what you thought?
As there are no substantial studies which look at the long-term effects of mcat I think its important to at least communicate anecdotal stories such as this so we all know more about what we might be taking.