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hello there!

@chippermonk but slavic countries are do religious. Especially older generations. Poland is catholic country. In my area i never met a person who wasn't baptised, had his first comunion and confirmation at 15/16(even if at age they didn't believe in God anyway, it was like 'go and do this or people will talk'. In villages, the small ones its visible, a lot people go to church every Sunday etc. But young generation is not as religious as older ones, because we have different view on this. Of course between young people there are still really religious ones
 
@streaM Freak in my case darkness was eating me when I had many problems, I was stressed for a while, and then, this one tiny thing went wrong or something bad happened. It was like you put a lil to much and everything falls. Once or twice Iet things go like this. Barely came back to normal life
 
Well it's a lot harder to live in the light than the dark so good job on your continued efforts to experience this one life that we all share
 
@jasperkent if you were reading this whole topic, since I said hello you know for sure that I'm european. Well, I would rather call it Slavic, because living between Eastern and Western world and actually not belonging anywhere makes slavic people just slavs. Honest question - What americans think about slavic people and how they are imagine them? Because i heard some stories from around the world and some of them were hilarious :D
 
@jasperkent if you were reading this whole topic, since I said hello you know for sure that I'm european. Well, I would rather call it Slavic, because living between Eastern and Western world and actually not belonging anywhere makes slavic people just slavs. Honest question - What americans think about slavic people and how they are imagine them? Because i heard some stories from around the world and some of them were hilarious :D
Frankly, people around here (and probably most of the South) don't know much about Slavic people because we don't interact with any. I'd guess that half of my local population couldn't say who or what a "Slav" is.
 
Hey @narcobarbie I´m newly single, have no problem with Polish chicks and am more than open to starting a sort of ¨Polish girl loves and financially supports American junkie¨-type of situation. I´m just saying, I´m open minded. I´m Jewish, so I would fit right in if I had to move to Warsaw.

In all seriousness, welcome to the forums. We are all really happy to have you here. A lot of us, myself included, love to hear about the scene in these foreign lands. You´re a few years behind the times as far as Oxycodone is concerned. That hasn´t really been a staple of the drug market here in the states for at least a decade now, ditto for any other prescription Opioids. It was Heroin post 2014 and it has been only Fentanyl since about 2020.

Tell us all about the scene in your native Poland please! Zdraswitye!
 
@Keif' Richards hello! First thing - Zdraswitye is russian, i speak russian because I was sudying it and I have a bachelor's. So you're kinda failed haha. No, im joking. People from abroad usually consider slavic people as once, but Russians, Poles, Ukrainians, Belarusians, Slovakians etc can be angry about that because we are kinda proud to be devided, have our culture, LANGUAGE, dishes etc. Be careful with Slavs. I am Polish, so actually my country is placet between East an West. We are the border of EU. If it goes about American junkies, since the oxy stuff being hot topic, we are consider Americans like oxy people. In Europe, in many countries(not Poland <3) everything is cured with paracetamol. I have experience when I was a student and decided to make some money between my years of studying in Netherlands. I was there with my ex, and once, when we were working with plans and flowers - just putting them on the special kind of 'trolleys' something happened to my spine. Work agency sent me to the doc, he told me to take paracetamol 5-7 times per day. In many countries in Europe they try to treat everything with paracetamol. I heard that in US it works similar with oxy because you don't have social insurance. So they give you strong meds, not like paracetamol. And in Europe we also heard that in US health security is like corporation, so you have to pay for absolutely everything. In Poland - most of the people have social one, so you dont have to pay fory anything but meds. And oxy is mostly used in ICU. Its's hard to get opioids from the doc. There is maybe two or three cities where there are herioine people there, in Cracow, where I live, its extremely hard to get some. Cracow flows on mephedrone, MDMA(pills), weed. Even amphetamine it is hard to get. I grown up in small town in other part(district? state?) of Poland and there you were able to get amph easly, I was taking it a lot during my last year of high school to pass exams because it was important if you wanted to go to Univeristy(also - many free ones - best ones, because it is hard to get there, paid ones are considered as 'you can buy a diploma without any knowledge', and honestly - it's truth in many cases, because if you pay- you pass, so many people just pay to pass, it doesn't work like that when you're student of the public univeristy, it has a prestige, they're have history, created a lot of popular scientist etc). If you'll about to plan to visit Cracow fell free to contact me for a drink or a walk around the city - I live here for 6 years ;)
 
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