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  • BDD Moderators: Keif’ Richards

ending a dph trip?

mtt

Greenlighter
Joined
Sep 6, 2011
Messages
1
I've read a lot about dph trips being unpleasant, but also a lot about certain people really enjoying them, and I've decided to try a light dose and see what it's like. I've tried before but I didn't take enough (200mg) and wound up just falling asleep so I plan to take more than that this time (probably around 350mg - I'm a 120lb female and from what I've read 350 seems like it should do the trick) but there is something I am curious about. In the past, certain prescription medicines have been very quick in ending (or at least alleviating the effects of) dxm trips and lsd trips. The most noticeable "trip ending" effects have come from klonopin - taking 2 or 3 mg during a dxm trip usually clears my head up almost instantly and brings back my motor skills. I'm curious about whether these effects would also occur were I to take the klonopin during a dph trip - just in case it turns out I can't handle it. I'm going to have friends around while I do the dph, so I'm not all that worried, but it would be good to know if there's any chance of klonopin helping to end the trip, or if I would just be wasting klonopin.
 
Delirium is NOT fun

Anyone that's said they've had a good time "tripping" on Benadryl is full of shit, imo
 
The best antidote for a DPH trip is physostigmine which you don't have. Benzos will make your memory loss even worse and you will be guaranteed to be fucking bonkers.
 
^ ninja'd half my post.

Theoretically any cholinergic drug would counter the effects of diphenhydramine but you really don't want to attempt to mess with that outside of a clinical setting nor would you likely have access unless you attempted to rob an ER for a somewhat uncommon alzheimer drug.

Benzodiazepines are typically the choice antidote if someone is experiencing intensely negative effects from LSD however it is NOT typically used clinically in people who are experiencing intensely negative effects from drugs like atropine or diphenhydramine (this is commonly referred to as anticholinergic toxidrome).

I don't think it is advisable to add profoundly sedating medications (even in relatively low doses) to large doses of other sedating medications - in this case, diphenhydramine - and you've already received the absolute best advice you can regarding this... just don't take any dph in the first place. There are over 567 more pleasurable and/or safer alternatives discussed in this forum.
 
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