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MDMA Single use - Long periods of not very niceness - (can anyone relate/help)

Defo wish someone told me to just take a little bit of it, i was eating bombs like sweets!!

This is a pretty clear example of what is wrong with the drug community, especially among younger users.
After nearly 30 years of MDMA use, you would think that this guys 'friends' would actually know a couple of facts and WARN him about the most important risk factor.

*clears throat*
DOSAGE!

While this is true of all drugs, it is particularly important for MDMA.
And attitudes like these only contribute to the lack of understanding...

Self-induced anxiety man :)
Stop being a pussy and man up, it's all in your head.

^This

Let me share this with you...my comedowns have actually gotten way better as i've gotten older and it's not cause i do less cause i sometimes do more. It's because i know after crashing hard so many times that I will WITHOUT A DOUBT always return to normal over time. A lot of the crash people experience is compounded by getting over anxious and paranoid about what's going on in your body. This is why i'd suggest a nice long run. It will release endorphins which will greatly reduce your anxiety and help you sleep better. Make sure you run outside too...exercising outdoors during the winter has been shown to reduce depression UP TO 70%...that's a HUGE number.

Ok...
So the OP is first called a pussy.
Then he is assured by an older roller that 'comedowns have actually gotten way better' and the crash is 'compounded by getting over anxious and paranoid'.

Let me ask you guys a fucking question...
Are these the statements you would have made just prior to his intake?
Would you have lifted even a single finger to prevent a 6 WEEK+ comedown?

Or would you have watched, as his drug-using friends did, without saying the words...
"MDMA is a neurotoxin proven to cause more damage in higher or repeated doses."

I do believe that personal approach and choice play a role in recovery.
I do NOT believe that they determine the true EXTENT of anxiety.

Over a GRAM of MDMA is certainly neurotoxic.
100-250mg is recognized as the 'safe' dose on BL with newer users sticking to the lower end.
While redosing is fairly common, unfortunately, it should not be possible for a new user to go SO OVERBOARD without strong warnings from those around him.
If we have not succeeded in preventing this type of nonsense, then BL has failed the drug using community.
Not just bluelight - all drug users that came before this one had a responsibility to say reasonable things.
To give worthy advice.

I have read enough stories to understand that some MDMA users take over a GRAM in a night without more than a few shitty days afterwards.
This is not the trend, but it does happen.

I also believe George in his claims that comedowns do get easier with each use and you will always return to normal eventually.
I myself must admit that after the first few rolls, I found future rolls to be easier to handle - less grinding and quicker recovery.
Is this a sign of improvement?

No - it is a sign of adaptation.
Of 'toxicity'.

And even 14 months into recovery I am still learning that there is some 'normal' state that is always within my reach.
And I will one day achieve equilibrium.
The brain is truly astonishing in its ability to return to 'normal'.
Is this a sign of improvement?

No - it is a sign of adaptation.

The fact that rolls get easier to handle as use continues...
The fact that clinical recovery from anxiety/depression eventually happen for the vast majority of 'heavy' users...
The fact that individual behavior during recovery can influence anxiety...

This is all evidence for the plasticity of the brain.
For the awesome recovery potential from LIFE that we are gifted with.

The ability to 'roll' in the first place stems from such a gift.
MDMA, a potent neurotoxin, releases serotonin in ways that very few serotonergic substances do.
By reversing the transporter, a massive dump is achieved brain-wide.

The brain attempts to defend itself by releasing massive levels of cortisol.
This lowers brain serotonin by increasing its metabolism - its turnover.
At the same time, serotonin is inhibiting dopamine activity in 3 of the 4 major dopamine pathways.
It is also causing increases in brain blood flow as small capillaries respond.
This is a normal activity for serotonin - it is the extent that is abnormal.

Once the release of serotonin peaks and begins to fall, so does cortisol.
And dopamine is finally allowed to flow again.
Like a rubber band held under tension, the push of dopamine throughout the frontal lobes and meso-limbic reward pathway is extensive.
It is this release of dopamine, not serotonin, that truly results in magic.

Other dopamine releasing drugs exist, such as cocaine, crack, and methamphetamine.
But MDMA has a unique talent because it is not a direct dopamine releaser - it suppresses dopamine first.
And when the dopamine is released, so is a symphony of oxytocin and prolactin.
Because prolactin and dopamine do not occur simultaneously in normal brain function, it is the extended release of these two brain chemicals that truly results in a unique and magical high.

The pleasure center of the brain, the nucleus acumbens, does not normally allow this combination.
Prolactin released during orgasm actually down-regulates dopamine receptors.
And dopamine down-regulates prolactin receptors.
They have a contradictory relationship...until MDMA.

With SSRIs, it is the eventual and extended prolactin release that causes the clinical anti-depressant effect.
This can take WEEKS to set in.
And MDMA does this in about two hours.

SSRIs are also known to cause down-regulation of serotonin in the higher brain, which can result in a worsening of endocrine functioning following 'treatment'.
Sexual side-effects including anorgasmia, ejaculatory anhedonia, complete erectile dysfunction, and lack of lubrication are known to occur in many current SSRI users.
Between 60-80% report some sexual side-effects.
Shockingly, a minority of these SSRI users go on to live with complete loss of sensation, orgasm, or libido for YEARS after discontinuation.
Known as PSSD, or Post SSRI Sexual Dysfunction, this crippling disorder is thought to be caused by long-term or permanent down-regulation of dopamine receptors in the Nucleus Acumbens by extended high levels of prolactin. It actually alters gene expression, according to the epigenetic theory.

MDMA is a 'potent neurotoxin'.
Not my words.

Anything that increases serotonin can damage the SERT.
Since the transporter protein is a function of axonal density (among other things) - it can be said with reliability that anything that increases serotonin has the potential to destroy axons.

And the higher brain is home to the axons that are thinnest and most fiber-like.
The Prefrontal Cortex is the highest evolved region of our brains, sitting just behind our foreheads.
The serotonin that reaches this region has to travel the farthest from the brainstem, where all serotonin originates in the brain.

Ironically, it is not the brain that contains the most serotonin.
Up to 90% resides in the intestines.

Digestion is the primary purpose of serotonin.
Tryptophan, an amino acid found in many proteins, converts to bile and eventually serotonin.
As it is excreted and reabsorbed along the gastro-intestinal tract, it causes the smooth muscle chain that surround the GI to contract.
The intestines are not only home to the vast majority of the serotonin and serotonin receptors in the body, but they are gifted with more smooth muscle and blood vessels than any other organ in the body!
They are, in fact, a series of organs that posses their own nervous system.

It is the connection between the two nervous systems that allows serotonin to have such powerful effects on the mind.
Serotonin is the 'brain-gut' circuitry.

In the brain, serotonin activity (meaning digestion), plays a profound role in blood distribution.
This may be the reason that the serotonin network is the most dense of all neurotransmitter systems.
It also suppresses dopamine in nearby circuits, effectively giving serotonin control of dopamine targets.
Most of our dopamine is in the frontal lobes, and this is also where the most intricate and vulnerable serotonin nerves live.

The relationship between these two ancient neurotransmitter systems is beyond the true understanding of modern science.
The words I use in this post are fairly basic for a reason.
Even the most advanced scientists are unable to claim a solid understanding of these systems, despite the complexity of their language.

One thing that has been determined in MDMA research over a period of 20+ years is that MDMA causes 'toxicity' or 'adaption' in the serotonin system.
The most neutral statement is this - "MDMA is a selective neurotoxin that causes a lasting/permanent re-organization of the 5-HT network leaving higher cortical regions with lower density and limbic structures with original or higher density."

There is no debate about these findings.
But words exchanged on BL would suggest otherwise.
Somehow the young drug-using culture we are born into has forgotten the value of science.

There are still questions for sure. And science strives to achieve something that would be deemed impossible by almost any other field of study.
But there are still truths to be learned.
There are absolutes in this world.

During recovery from certain toxic doses of MDMA, one of the brain structures known to be hyper-innervated is the hypothalamus.
This is a striking finding, because the HYP is the control center for the endocrine and adrenal system.
Known as the HPA Axis, this critical juncture in the brain is the target of ALL antidepressant treatments - from SSRIs to ECT!

The hypothalamus sits at the front of the brainstem and acts as a relay station for serotonin nerves extending into our frontal lobes.
It is responsible for the massive cortisol release by the adrenal glands, which reaches 8 times the normal level!
It directs the Pituitary to release powerful hormones into the brain, such as oxytocin, prolactin, and ADH during a 'roll'.

It is here that the 'magical' effects of the drug are realized.
And it is HERE that damage is done.

Not all MDMA use reaches 'toxic' or detectable levels of 'adaptation'.
Even animal research suggests that some adaptation is so minor it is beyond current abilities to stain slices of the brain or produce images of a living brain.
This does not mean that toxicity has not occurred - it simply falls beneath the threshold of detection if doses are kept to a 'reasonable' level.
And perhaps this is enough to mean that it falls below the threshold of consequence.

But past a certain dose, or with repeated doses, the 'threshold' is left far behind.
Even after many years of recovery the higher brain is seen to exhibit loss of serotonin density.
To the OP - doses required to produce permanent and detectable changes are quite high.
Higher than the dose you took, with multiple days of dosing required in primates.

Humans are widely believed to be more sensitive than primates and the dose required to cause long-lasting changes in humans is unknown.
It depends on a variety of factors other than dosage, such as age, body mass, body temperature, gender, and likely the contents of the GI.
But dosage remains the most easily controlled and reliable factor in 'toxicity'.

Poly-drug users are at an increased risk, with long-term heavy cannabis use linked to greater psychopathology among MDMA users.
But MDMA dosage still remains the greatest controllable factor.

Former MDMA users display severe HPA Axis dysfunction - including prolonged periods of high cortisol and prolactin release.
These both implicate improper serotonin transmission.
An imbalance of dopamine can also be seen in a minority of users, similar to that seen in schizophrenics.

Eventually the brain does establish the capacity to handle the new serotonin axons.
Even long-term heavy users of MDMA tend to recover within 12-24 months of abstinence.
But the definition of 'recovery' is limited to clinically significant anxiety and depression.
Up to 2.5 years, ongoing detectable deficits in delayed verbal recall are present in some users.
As well as lowered prolactin response to MDMA, d-fenfluramine, m-CPP (piperazine), or tryptophan challenge.
Since prolactin is considered a reliable marker of overall serotonergic function, it can be concluded that for some former users even 2.5 years of abstinence is not adequate to restore full serotonin function. Longer studies are quite difficult and will likely reveal a prolonged and only partial recovery.

Up to 3 years abstinence, PET scans have revealed ongoing depletions in striatal dopamine - a pathway in which dopamine is preferentially inhibited over other pathways. This is evidence of long-term serotonin re-wiring, or inappropriate transmission.

Despite that damning evidence that, for some users, MDMA is certainly toxic and has life-long effects...
The trend still suggests the brain is capable of handling this remarkably well.
I am reminded of the 'man who took 7,000 tabs of Ecstasy'.
Even 7 years after he quit, he continued to experience severe problems including pain and tightness around his neck and jaw.
He also demonstrated a severe lack of episodic and short-term memory.
But the doctors noted that he was unaware of the memory deficit.

This was one of the most shocking reports I have read.
And it elucidates how members of BL could make such bold claims about the OP being a 'pussy' or how 'comedowns get better'.
It also elucidates how talented the brain is at maintaining function.

Despite an endless cycle of up and down, back and forth head-pressure, anxiety, depersonalization...loss of concentration (including desire to write)...
Despite all of this, I must agree that the brain is highly plastic and capable of handling truly astonishing levels of change.
I continue to be in AWE at just how pliable the mind is.

Yet I refuse to make statements that ignore science.
I will not parade around claiming that the negative effects of the drug are somehow a figment of the mind.
Should we assume that the primates given high doses were also victims to their own undisciplined thought processes?
Should we conclude that the pliability of the brain renders the neurotoxic debate pointless?

I think not.

There are absolutes in this life.
If only we care to learn them.

The 'brain-gut' circuitry gives rise to our most highly evolved emotions, including empathy, guilt, remorse, libido, and an unbridled form of love only humans are heir to. Billions of years of evolution have gifted us with these concepts.
The brain evolved around the intestines, not the other way around.

And MDMA simply takes advantage of this fact.
MDMA does not posses some new 'magic'.
The magic is already in you.

This is a lesson learned by few.

It is difficult to convince people online just how critical the connection between the intestines and the brain really is.
Just convincing them of the basic facts is hard enough.
Asking them to accept that all that is good in life, all that makes life worth living - resides in the connection between these two nervous systems...
This is beyond words.

I hope I have convinced someone today.
MDMA is a drug to be used on special occasions, in careful doses.
Only a disciplined and respectful approach can prevent the detectable and 'toxic' alterations in the brain.

FBC
 
^ Man you have way to much time on your hands.

do you just copy and paste this every time? i think your sick in the head!

I don't know what happened to you but it certainly isnt the same as whats happening here,

I am feeling great atm, i take no supplements and just eat well and exercise, just feel a little anxious at times!

to any one thats going through this it does get better!
 
to any one thats going through this it does get better!

Its unfortunate you learnt your lesson for taking 1gram of mdma the hard way, and the people around you should have told you,
but to be fair though noone i know in the rave scene has ever said any sort of limits.
Luckily my thoughts have always kinda left me a 200mg limit i guess.

At least your on the mend now. :)
 
do you just copy and paste this every time? i think your sick in the head!

I don't know what happened to you but it certainly isnt the same as whats happening here,

I am feeling great atm, i take no supplements and just eat well and exercise, just feel a little anxious at times!

Excuse me?

In an entire year of posting, you are the first OP to make such a statement.
Sounds like a fucking troll...

There are far too many vague threads like these for this to be untrue.
I suspect you are simply Brimmy wishing to make your immature point of views heard.
Regardless of who you are, something does not add up.

You say you are feeling great atm...
Read your first post again!

You had such a severe reaction that you told your parents and moved back in with them.
Then you said - "i feel the The hole thing could be over and i could be feeling normal apart from this problem i have with my vision . its like if i look around i get slight light headedness. and now this is along time after taking the drug. could this be still anxiety i dont know.
The fact there is still something wrong with me means i cannot forget the hole episode. I want to go back to just being free of being aware of my bodys every move."


Ok.

If you are still having problems with vision, bodily awareness, and anxiety (however fleeting) six weeks after...
If this story is genuine, you would be fairly interested in learning some simple facts about the serotonin system.
Your lack of interest and respect...along with the discrepancy in your stories...
Go troll somewhere else, brimmy.
You are the only pussy around here.

Looks like I'm not the only one 'sick in the head'.
And I will absolutely admit a level of insanity on my part. :D

But I have never copied and pasted and I will be on BL repeating the basics LONG after you are gone.

If you are genuine and simply disinterested in my contribution....fine.
I don't post in threads like these solely for the benefit of the OP.
The idea is to expose the most readers to my 'copy and paste' rant.
And I have met quite a few people like me as a result.

I guess we are all just 'pussies'.
Enjoy living with your parents...
 
FBC, I don't think that OP aimed that reponse you quoted at you.


This is the ecstasy discussion forum right? Where is the PLUR?
= (
Bluelight is for information, harm reduction, research and friendly chat.
 
haha, ok sorry your post just pissed me off! tbh the last thing you need to know is how the brain works when your feeling like shit!

No i am not "brimmy" im sure brimmy has much better things to do than make up fake threads! Yes it was so bad i moved in with my parents, yes thanks i will enjoy that, im 20years old and probably earning more a month than you earn in a year. Living with my parents extends my bank balance!!

I know you want to educate the youth to not abuse mdma, but lets face it, posting on here isnt going to acheive that! The only time someone posts on here is if its too late and they have already learned the hard way, or are a content user of the drug and is fully familiar with its properties and dosage.

you need to get off the pc and do something in real life! I know about the seretonin production, no where near as much as you i know. But my friends both took more than i did and were back to normal within days.

I think knowing about whats going on in your brain is ten times worse than not knowing. I was the one that spent time researching why i felt bad, where as they just got on with it and before long they were fine.

Then there is me that sat on forums and websites wrecking my head worrying so much, of course its self induced anxiety, your a fool to think not! Of course you cannot deney the facts of what mdma does your brain. bur a postive mind frame can over come that i KNOW!

In the last few days iv come to terms with the hole time. its ridiculous!
 
you need to get off the pc and do something in real life! I know about the seretonin production, no where near as much as you i know. But my friends both took more than i did and were back to normal within days.

I think knowing about whats going on in your brain is ten times worse than not knowing. I was the one that spent time researching why i felt bad, where as they just got on with it and before long they were fine.

Ignorance is bliss...

you must be fucking ecstatic.


and how else do you suppose we go out and educate people? Should we all devote ourselves and run around with dancesafe handing out fliers? Yeah those are cool, but if you want REAL information you go to the library or the internet (its a virtual library)


FBC gave me all the basic information I needed to learn everything I have today, and even though Ive spent hours researching, I still have no fucking clue about how this shit works.


So be GLAD that someone like him who does understand these things, takes the time to break it down and explain it for you. If you dont want to read a long post, then get the fuck out



also no shit they went back to normal in a few days, thats your brain adapting to the new minimal-levels of serotonin in your brain. That doesnt mean the damage just goes away.
 
also no shit they went back to normal in a few days, thats your brain adapting to the new minimal-levels of serotonin in your brain. That doesnt mean the damage just goes away.

Thats the words ive been looking for to explain it to someone i know..
 
Darkside - it looks like he did aim it at me.
But it appears he was just feeling anxious and pissed about my troublesome information.
Its not the first time I told someone more than they wanted to hear.

Papoose -

I accept your apology and extend my own.
It was not my intention to add to your concern or interfere with your ability to maintain a positive mind-set.
I always believed that a positive mind-set played a role in recovery, but it is NOT the determining factor.
That would be a rather simple conclusion to reach considering anxiety is the primary feature of serotonin toxicity.

In my experience with other people recovering from severe problems with MDMA, there are three groups.
The first group shows recovery in the first few days. I used to belong to this group.
The second group takes 4-12 weeks and will experience anxiety, changes in vision, appetite, social interaction...
The third group takes 12-24 MONTHS and initially experiences a MUCH more severe onset of anxiety than what you are describing.
They describe what amounts to the destruction of the soul, the loss of self.
As the months tick by, some features improve while others steadily decay.

It is the extent of damage in the serotonin system, NOT the attitude of the person, that determines which group they belong to.
I have spoken with people who dropped out of school, moved in with parents, stopped seeing friends, layed in bed all day....nearly gave up on life.
I have also spoken with some who forced themselves to stay in school, to interact with friends, to work on a daily basis.
I also know a guy who saw several doctors and therapists, some highly qualified, and tried medication.

Attitude does impact the severity of the depression, but not the length.
And in all my experience on BL, it is the initial damage done that really determines the length of the recovery process.
If positive outlook can play a relevant clinical role at all, I believe it would be only in the first few weeks when the majority of serotonin re-sprouting occurs.
Such a statement fails to recognize just how extreme it can be!

Some people's 'anxiety' is so severe they die the first night.
This is known as serotonin syndrome.
While severe anxiety was a major factor in that night, there is absolutely no way I could have intervened on that event no matter how Zen-like my discipline.

Those that are young and haven't been smoking pot for years in a row normally fare better.
Cannabis is a significant risk factor among MDMA users, with chronic long-term use firmly linked to greater psychological problems.
This is the case for me and many whom I have counseled.
The mere fact that you are 20 protected you more than you know.

I chuckle at the idea that you can predict my income based on my presence on BL.
Or my level of activity in life.

I am 30 years old and quite successful financially - considering a transfer to a large financial services company.
I am married to a gorgeous woman and have a perfectly behaved 3 year old girl.
Despite my long posts on BL, I spend much less time on it than I did in the first several months of my recovery.
And I don't do much research anymore as 'life' has gotten in the way.
I should have been a doctor...

I detect definite signs of research fatigue in your statements.
It looks like you exhausted yourself on trying to figure it out, just like so many of us have in the initial stages.
I congratulate you on stepping away from it and accepting what has happened.
And I hope that your vision and balance return within the next several weeks.
Based on your attitude about it, I suspect they will.

You are likely in group number two.
Very fortunate for you, considering the dose you took.

I have heard of a few people that experienced ongoing changes in vision and self-perception that occurred without major anxiety.
They claim to feel 'different' but not nearly as crippled as the others.
I have a lot of confidence that extent of cannabis use and age are critical factors in the difference.

As far as helping others...
I am content primarily helping those that have already hurt themselves.
Occasionally they are VERY relieved to hear my breakdown of information.
My ability to translate very complicated information into plain English saves them a LOT of frustrated reading.
It enables them to step away from the forums and research, as you have done.

At the same time, I have been told by several people that have not harmed themselves that my advice led to a greater understanding of MDMA and a change in their habits.
If I can modify a current user's behavior, then I can actually save someone from the 'brain damage' that MDMA is capable of.
And considering the volume of non-posting visitors on BL every month, there is a pretty good chance that my message is influencing young MDMA users around the world.

One person has already told me that my plain advice on lowering body temperature and drinking electrolytes saved their life during an extreme reaction.
I cannot know how much good I am really doing here, but that won't stop me.
Too many people glorify this drug without even acknowledging that it is a neurotoxin with LOTS of research proving permanent brain 'damage'.
And eventual plasticity/recovery.

All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing.
Edmund Burke
 
I apolagise agian. The mannor in which you wrote your other posts i feel was somewhat different to that! I too would love to stop anyone doing what I did! Your doing the right thing. Thanks! Adam
 
jesus over a gram in a weekend your first time o_O. That's like 10 pills man, *stay safe*.
 
Darkside - it looks like he did aim it at me.
But it appears he was just feeling anxious and pissed about my troublesome information.
Its not the first time I told someone more than they wanted to hear.

Papoose -

I accept your apology and extend my own.
It was not my intention to add to your concern or interfere with your ability to maintain a positive mind-set.
I always believed that a positive mind-set played a role in recovery, but it is NOT the determining factor.
That would be a rather simple conclusion to reach considering anxiety is the primary feature of serotonin toxicity.

In my experience with other people recovering from severe problems with MDMA, there are three groups.
The first group shows recovery in the first few days. I used to belong to this group.
The second group takes 4-12 weeks and will experience anxiety, changes in vision, appetite, social interaction...
The third group takes 12-24 MONTHS and initially experiences a MUCH more severe onset of anxiety than what you are describing.
They describe what amounts to the destruction of the soul, the loss of self.
As the months tick by, some features improve while others steadily decay.

It is the extent of damage in the serotonin system, NOT the attitude of the person, that determines which group they belong to.
I have spoken with people who dropped out of school, moved in with parents, stopped seeing friends, layed in bed all day....nearly gave up on life.
I have also spoken with some who forced themselves to stay in school, to interact with friends, to work on a daily basis.
I also know a guy who saw several doctors and therapists, some highly qualified, and tried medication.

Attitude does impact the severity of the depression, but not the length.
And in all my experience on BL, it is the initial damage done that really determines the length of the recovery process.
If positive outlook can play a relevant clinical role at all, I believe it would be only in the first few weeks when the majority of serotonin re-sprouting occurs.
Such a statement fails to recognize just how extreme it can be!

Some people's 'anxiety' is so severe they die the first night.
This is known as serotonin syndrome.
While severe anxiety was a major factor in that night, there is absolutely no way I could have intervened on that event no matter how Zen-like my discipline.

Those that are young and haven't been smoking pot for years in a row normally fare better.
Cannabis is a significant risk factor among MDMA users, with chronic long-term use firmly linked to greater psychological problems.
This is the case for me and many whom I have counseled.
The mere fact that you are 20 protected you more than you know.

I chuckle at the idea that you can predict my income based on my presence on BL.
Or my level of activity in life.

I am 30 years old and quite successful financially - considering a transfer to a large financial services company.
I am married to a gorgeous woman and have a perfectly behaved 3 year old girl.
Despite my long posts on BL, I spend much less time on it than I did in the first several months of my recovery.
And I don't do much research anymore as 'life' has gotten in the way.
I should have been a doctor...

I detect definite signs of research fatigue in your statements.
It looks like you exhausted yourself on trying to figure it out, just like so many of us have in the initial stages.
I congratulate you on stepping away from it and accepting what has happened.
And I hope that your vision and balance return within the next several weeks.
Based on your attitude about it, I suspect they will.

You are likely in group number two.
Very fortunate for you, considering the dose you took.

I have heard of a few people that experienced ongoing changes in vision and self-perception that occurred without major anxiety.
They claim to feel 'different' but not nearly as crippled as the others.
I have a lot of confidence that extent of cannabis use and age are critical factors in the difference.

As far as helping others...
I am content primarily helping those that have already hurt themselves.
Occasionally they are VERY relieved to hear my breakdown of information.
My ability to translate very complicated information into plain English saves them a LOT of frustrated reading.
It enables them to step away from the forums and research, as you have done.

At the same time, I have been told by several people that have not harmed themselves that my advice led to a greater understanding of MDMA and a change in their habits.
If I can modify a current user's behavior, then I can actually save someone from the 'brain damage' that MDMA is capable of.
And considering the volume of non-posting visitors on BL every month, there is a pretty good chance that my message is influencing young MDMA users around the world.

One person has already told me that my plain advice on lowering body temperature and drinking electrolytes saved their life during an extreme reaction.
I cannot know how much good I am really doing here, but that won't stop me.
Too many people glorify this drug without even acknowledging that it is a neurotoxin with LOTS of research proving permanent brain 'damage'.
And eventual plasticity/recovery.

All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing.
Edmund Burke


Wish there were more people like you around here.
 
There are some evidences telling that serotonin lack of high or continuous MDMA dosages is the main reason why neurotoxicity exists.

I had big doses of MDMA like 7 years ago. I was 17. Then I was not conscious about any harm reduction, or valid dosage knowledge. I took more or less the same amount than you, in pills (that`s even worst, because all the excipients).

I started to have self-anxious believing that I had many diseases, and I ended up just thinking (I hard believe it is true) that after a HARD experience like this, one tends to look closer to his body, experiences, health and feelings. In my experience, all the important symptoms after this hard experience passed progressively.

It will help a lot to have a considerable period of time of "cleaning process" to integrate psychologically the experience and give explanation to all the answers.

Also, as a suggestion, JUST think that now you are more aware about EVERYTHING related to your life, including your health. Try to be objective when determining that something you feel is the consequence of the experience you had. Also think that this symptoms may withdraw progressively with the time. After REALLY considering all of this, looking afterwards to your situation, you continue thinking that you have severe symptoms you just cannot "wait to see if it fixes by itself", go to look for medical assistance. Always remember that you had a very intense experience, and everybody must integrate -in one way or in the other- this experiences in their minds and lifes.

ANYWAY, and again, don`t show an excess of interest on "checking that everything on your body is working as it should", as the normal/common behavior on humans psychology does not include this, and will lead into an excess of worry without being really to be worried.
 
ty so much for this, seriously. copy and pasted or not its amazing information and has convinced me to never buy molly again.
 
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