Pagey
Bluelight Crew
Wow. Well thanks for taking time out of your life to make me feel worse. Really, cheers. 

That is not a very compelling reason to use. Just saying.
Pagey, you can just stop it if you want it. You are enough intelligent to do so.
I'm sure you mean that in the very best of ways but it's not entirely pleasing to suggest that addiction is purely a matter of intelligence. You do realise you just suggested vast numbers of people are simply a bit thick, yes?![]()
Wow. Well thanks for taking time out of your life to make me feel worse. Really, cheers.![]()
I'm sorry but this is not about a return to addiction and people should not be leading her down the path of substitution treatments. We are talking about a binge response to an underlying problem which needs addressing. A lot of the advice in this thread will turn her into someone who identifies as and will get treated as a junkie. She is not in need of methadone, clonidine, buprenorphine, ludicrous doses of codeine which can have a paradoxical effect of creating symptoms associated with withdrawal or any other substitution treatment. She needs support for a mental health issue. I have chosen to understand and specialise in addiction and some of the advice given in this thread is a special kind of stupid.
What's the view like from that ivory tower?
A person can have more serious problems in their life than a drug habit. Sometimes, getting temporarily stable is more important than getting off.
Fair enough.The issue here is that she is not really on. A week on heroin followed by a codeine supported detox and another dabble doesn't come close to opioid addiction requiring replacement therapy and Pagey's own account is proof of that.
OK, I'll admit it: I was a bit quick to judge you.It is not about ivory towers but simple reality.
Now that is interesting. I hadn't really thought about it that way before. Mainly because up the nose has simply never been my favourite RoA for any drug, I suppose .....Insufflation of heroin causes a partial but slow direct to bloodstream introduction of heroin combined (by sniffing through) with a partial oral introduction of morphine resulting from first-pass metabolism. The crap street heroin is cut with means insufflation becomes increasingly less effective because contaminant build up reduces absorption efficiency in the mucous membrane. Once you choose that route you are effectively tapering the minute you start.
Firstly unless it was #4 im v surprised you got high let alone wd's as the BA of snorting B is very low as its base and not water soluble so is very hard to get absorbed - te very few times i did it i just got a blocked nose and felt nothing in fact it was on a train and 6 hours later i stated to witdrawer but thats by the by.
There are a number of options,,as pointed out, if it were me i would keep taking gear just at a level to keep wd's at bay , to get thro' the next week/s then think about getting off. I don't know if you could pull a week sickie (probably not with exams) te options have all been gone through, clonadine and lofexadine don't really nail it and only help a little plus the BP effects are nasty and would make it V hard to work. Its amazing how little gear you need to stay 'well' as long as you have the self controll. Methadone is an option and is easily done if you have none in yer system; a 2 week taper from it is very doable with hardly any bad after effects , maybe a touch of PAWS but as you have only used for a short time it shouldn't be much of an issue.
The main thing is to be comfortable when taking yer exams - which ever route you take
Fair enough.
Would you say there is a bit of a Dunning-Krüger effect going on with respect to addiction, whereby people with very mild habits tend to overestimate the severity of their habit and those who are deeply addicted tend to underestimate it?OK, I'll admit it: I was a bit quick to judge you.Now that is interesting. I hadn't really thought about it that way before. Mainly because up the nose has simply never been my favourite RoA for any drug, I suppose .....
I have never met an addict who deliberately set out to become one...
I did. Was very much a conscious decision. Obviously I had no real insight into what the reality of addiction was when I made that decision but it was very much a decision all the same. I wanted to be a heroin addict. So I sought out heroin and used it until I became addicted. I actually find it a little odd that anybody taking drugs like heroin could not be making a decision to become an addict - it's not like the relationship between taking addictive substances and becoming addicted to those substances is some arcane mystery known only to adepts.
Also, I would describe myself as both quite clever and quite stupid. In my experience this applies to everybody - it's just the ratio the two have and the forms they take that differs.