nearjat
Bluelighter
Yeah he can definitely do whatever he wants, I just think it has the potential to really bite him in the ass.
Yeah he can definitely do whatever he wants, I just think it has the potential to really bite him in the ass.
Eye's use now appears to me to be self-medicating his depression.
I don't understand the receptor action / neurotransmitter re-uptake / neurotransmitter agonist / or whatever action of DXM BUT it really appears as though he's using it as an off label anti-depressant... still i don't agree with this choice of medication and I am sure there are better options.
ok. listen to me as a recovering alcoholic myself who has found rapture in dxm> dxm will take you if you let it, but it does have the potential to save you if your able to curb the craving. i took dxm for over a month strait 300mgs everyday...not good...will lead to alcohol when the money runs out or ya get scared of drug stores....but. one a week at no more than 200mgs ive found no bad reprocussions whatsoever. though your tolerence increases, as alcoholics we learn that living with less to feel normal is as good as drunk in most cases, use that mind frame and ou will find control and dxm will help, let it go and your screwed, dxm will hurt the brain, alcohol can fix it oddly enough but livir and kidney damage is to extreme to risk and alcohol even a shot to an alcoholic is deadly.......be advised....
3x a week is unsustainable for reasons of tolerance, as a non-naive person you should know that. You can only up the dose so for so long, and when you're still doing this to no more apparent benefit, what then? It's wonderful that this is helping you, but would it not be better to build a healthy and sustainable relationship with the drug now, while you still can? I think you underestimate the negative impact a dissociative addiction can have on a person, especially psychologically.
Edit: you addressed the above in your post while I was writing it..do you think you'll notice when the benefits start outweighing the risk every time? It seems you have never been psychologically addicted to anything, most people don't notice when it becomes bad. You know, denial and stuff, it has happened to many of us. We just don't want to see you end up in a worse place than before when you could have avoided it through some extra caution.
I don't think I'm being defensive at all. You are asking questions, and I'm answering them. I have said there are cravings, that I have observed tolerance building. We are taking a break now and will reassess. I would like this conversation to continue nonetheless.
Addiction is something that happens with a number of significant warning signals. It is slow and methodical, and if I note the signals and act responsibly about them, I feel I can continue with caution. I understand addiction VERY well. I have felt the pull of it many times, enough times that I recognize it very quickly.
Why is it you think I'm not actually dealing with issues? Why am I necessarily escaping? This process has been marked by some extremely difficult and emotional revelations, none of which I've shared with you, but I will lay some of them out for you. Would you like to hear? I've got no one besides my spouse to share this with, and it feels too important to keep secret. It was not my intent to use this drug as therapy, but that is what it is for now. I am also in counseling. I haven't told my therapist about the drug component, and I'm not sure it matters; I'm exploring what I thought about with her.
I have no idea whether or not you are looking for and working on the reasons for your DXM use. My point was just that asking somebody to stop their drug use without looking at the reasons for it is not necessarily helpful. I'm glad if you are making progress in whatever you are working on.
I have been on anti-depressants for most of my life. SSRIs like Lexapro cause me to have hypomanic episodes, so I don't take them. I take an old tricyclic called Tofranil and a very low dose of that. I do not have health insurance and order it from an offshore pharmacy; you know the situation for us here in the US.
I do think I'm addressing actual clinical depression, but not by escaping or taking pills to try to bandage the holes in my psyche. I think I'm doing the real work of looking at the shame and guilt I've been carrying with me and questioning the beliefs that have kept me paralyzed here for years and years.
I think this is an important thing I'm trying to convey. I'm listening to your questions and hearing some judgment, but your judgment is based on your own tired belief system. I understand that. I am sober right now, and utterly lucid. I am not under the influence of any drug.
We have discussed very low daily doses (say 100 mg?) strictly for its antidepressant effect at some point, but not right now and not any time soon.
We have discussed very low daily doses (say 100 mg?) strictly for its antidepressant effect at some point, but not right now and not any time soon.