Christ, that's an awful shame, and it was clearly a suicidal dose. Cry for help, maybe? Perhaps she was lucid for a while, 'cause clonazepam really can take a while to kick in. However, once it did, I very much doubt she was able to get out of her chair - perhaps, and perhaps hopefully, she wasn't even conscious when the combination hit her and stopped her breathing.
The stigma is important and it's carried over to new people when they're impressionable young children by people who visit schools and hand out literature detailing the life of a drug user as something horrific and awful, as if we are (or were) human vermin; in actual fact there're more functional addicts than there've ever been before, what with pharmaceutical companies making sure their drugs are sold to people for any number of reasons, with no regard for the consequences...
I hope it was painless.
But there must have been signs: there should have been someone watching out for this girl. :-/
The stigma is important and it's carried over to new people when they're impressionable young children by people who visit schools and hand out literature detailing the life of a drug user as something horrific and awful, as if we are (or were) human vermin; in actual fact there're more functional addicts than there've ever been before, what with pharmaceutical companies making sure their drugs are sold to people for any number of reasons, with no regard for the consequences...
I hope it was painless.
But there must have been signs: there should have been someone watching out for this girl. :-/