• Select Your Topic Then Scroll Down
    Alcohol Bupe Benzos
    Cocaine Heroin Opioids
    RCs Stimulants Misc
    Harm Reduction All Topics Gabapentinoids
    Tired of your habit? Struggling to cope?
    Want to regain control or get sober?
    Visit our Recovery Support Forums

Opioids Methadone high & people using Methadone recreationally.

That combo sounds like you simply overwhelmed your CYP2D6 enzymes in your liver and your body was just trying to play catch up” at such a young age which isn’t really a great idea. It’s good that you pulled through srsly…
Hmm I was thinking so too, but overwhelming the CYP2D6 enzyme should have left me with more unmetabolized compounds and a more lackluster experience. Oh well, I wont question it.

And dont worry that was many years ago, Im in my mid 20s now coming up on 6 years clean in about 4 months or so. I was definetly dumb as shit as a teen but unfortunately that combo is far from the worst I did 😅
 
Hmm I was thinking so too, but overwhelming the CYP2D6 enzyme should have left me with more unmetabolized compounds and a more lackluster experience. Oh well, I wont question it.

And dont worry that was many years ago, Im in my mid 20s now coming up on 6 years clean in about 4 months or so. I was definetly dumb as shit as a teen but unfortunately that combo is far from the worst I did 😅
No worries! Oh, trust me…I was even worse at that age lmfao 🤪
 
When you had lower tolerance did you ever find tramadol lasted more than 8hrs?
Absolutely!
There would be mornings where I'd wake up the next day & still be itching or have a sort of "opioid hangover".

Some of my most memorable & euphoric opioid highs were on tramadol too. It's right up there with heroin in my book (for the people it works for any way). When I had a tolerance to heroin though, tramadol barely stopped the withdrawals, which was kind of odd, but it is very low potency. And I never took over 400mg a day because I definitely was scared of the seizure risks. I had taken above 400mg a few times through my decade spent on it & every time I did that, I would get bad body twitches & jerks & this weird "feeling" like I was about to have a seizure or something. So I basically had to train myself to stay at 400mg no matter what. But even then, if it wore off before the day was done, I'd usually just try to potentiate the remainder of it or I'd go to bed early so that I could wake up the next day & take it again.

I always had clonazepam around though too, just in case.

I'll never understand why tramadol had such a strong effect on me the way it did. Other opioids like hydrocodone, codeine & even fentanyl bore me to tears. Heroin was great though. It shared a lot of the same "content/inner peace" feelings that tramadol gave me. And even gave me energy like tramadol gave me. It just lasted waay shorter obviously. And lacked a lot of those serotonin-like side effects. But I still consider heroin to be one of my favorites. I'd probably put it above tramadol just because it's a tad stronger & is a more rounded feeling. But tramadol would be right behind it.

Buprenorphine also had a nice, stimulating warm glow to it when I had no tolerance. But not quite as good as tramadol or heroin, but it was good enough for me to get on it permanently. Unfortunately though, that effect fades fast with daily use of buprenorphine. And then it becomes nothing more than a sedative for me. Where as with tramadol & heroin, I could gain a tolerance but it would still keep me awake, motivated & feeling alive.

Tramadol + low dose buprenorphine is actually quite nice too. The tramadol gives you that euphoric, brightened mood, feels like the sun is shining on your face & you just wanna get shit done. And the buprenorphine gives you that more "stoned", sedated, lazy classic opiate feeling (although it lacks the euphoria, but the tramadol makes up for that). If I could use tramadol + buprenorphine every day, legally, I could probably actually quell my cravings & desire for heroin. But instead, I'm stuck with just buprenorphine.

Man I miss trams! My mom gave me hers for 10 years cause she didn't care for em. It was almost 20 years ago now when I first started taking them. And I can still remember those days as some of my fondest memories ever. I have never felt such a clear-headed, peaceful high in all my life. Not from weed, not from booze, not from MDMA, not from psychedelics...Only from tramadol. And heroin obviously.
I’m not judging you. What works and helps you…you know? I understand though because I took suboxone strips for over a year when I messed up my ankle since it was cheaper than going to the doctor and paying for prescription meds. I love opiates, but it is all a matter of maintaining some level of self-control while remaining realistic with yourself, bc once you begin to bullshit yourself things usually spiral out of control. I wish you the best. Godspeed
Oh absolutely! I'm probably a little bit more on the responsible side than most "addicts". For example, I never got into shooting heroin. Loved it. But it worked just fine for me through the nose, so why make a good thing more hazardous by introducing a needle, ya know?

I've been on opioids for 20 years & have never once overdosed or anything, so I think that says a lot as well.

How did the subs help for your ankle pain? Just curious. Bupe helped my pain a bit when I first started using it, but of course it faded pretty quickly & mostly just started making me tired & lazy. But I know some people who actually prefer bupe to full agonists, but everyone reacts differently to drugs I suppose.

Just for clarification too, I am technically an "opioid addict". Although I also do deal with pain, which stems from both major depression & supposedly "fibromyalgia" (which is just a made up term for doctors to throw at people who say "my entire body hurts all the time & I don't know why"). I have found through my experience that opioids are life-savers for people with my kind of depression. And the majority of them are much more "benign" on my body & brain than many legal things like alcohol or even sugar. So I'm very much an avid opioid lover & I spend most of my time online arguing with people over why opioids should be legal & why people should have access to them for pain & depression. I might not be here today if it weren't for opioids being able to induce that classic "sense of well-being". Western medicine loves to demonize this as some "unwanted side effect", but for a person in the throes of severe unrelenting depression, a "sense of well-being" can actually be life-saving.
 
Last edited:
Absolutely!
There would be mornings where I'd wake up the next day & still be itching or have a sort of "opioid hangover".

Some of my most memorable & euphoric opioid highs were on tramadol too. It's right up there with heroin in my book (for the people it works for any way). When I had a tolerance to heroin though, tramadol barely stopped the withdrawals, which was kind of odd, but it is very low potency. And I never took over 400mg a day because I definitely was scared of the seizure risks. I had taken above 400mg a few times through my decade spent on it & every time I did that, I would get bad body twitches & jerks & this weird "feeling" like I was about to have a seizure or something. So I basically had to train myself to stay at 400mg no matter what. But even then, if it wore off before the day was done, I'd usually just try to potentiate the remainder of it or I'd go to bed early so that I could wake up the next day & take it again.

I always had clonazepam around though too, just in case.

I'll never understand why tramadol had such a strong effect on me the way it did. Other opioids like hydrocodone, codeine & even fentanyl bore me to tears. Heroin was great though. It shared a lot of the same "content/inner peace" feelings that tramadol gave me. And even gave me energy like tramadol gave me. It just lasted waay shorter obviously. And lacked a lot of those serotonin-like side effects. But I still consider heroin to be one of my favorites. I'd probably put it above tramadol just because it's a tad stronger & is a more rounded feeling. But tramadol would be right behind it.

Buprenorphine also had a nice, stimulating warm glow to it when I had no tolerance. But not quite as good as tramadol or heroin, but it was good enough for me to get on it permanently. Unfortunately though, that effect fades fast with daily use of buprenorphine. And then it becomes nothing more than a sedative for me. Where as with tramadol & heroin, I could gain a tolerance but it would still keep me awake, motivated & feeling alive.

Tramadol + low dose buprenorphine is actually quite nice too. The tramadol gives you that euphoric, brightened mood, feels like the sun is shining on your face & you just wanna get shit done. And the buprenorphine gives you that more "stoned", sedated, lazy classic opiate feeling (although it lacks the euphoria, but the tramadol makes up for that). If I could use tramadol + buprenorphine every day, legally, I could probably actually quell my cravings & desire for heroin. But instead, I'm stuck with just buprenorphine.

Man I miss trams! My mom gave me hers for 10 years cause she didn't care for em. It was almost 20 years ago now when I first started taking them. And I can still remember those days as some of my fondest memories ever. I have never felt such a clear-headed, peaceful high in all my life. Not from weed, not from booze, not from MDMA, not from psychedelics...Only from tramadol. And heroin obviously.

Oh absolutely! I'm probably a little bit more on the responsible side than most "addicts". For example, I never got into shooting heroin. Loved it. But it worked just fine for me through the nose, so why make a good thing more hazardous by introducing a needle, ya know?

I've been on opioids for 20 years & have never once overdosed or anything, so I think that says a lot as well.

How did the subs help for your ankle pain? Just curious. Bupe helped my pain a bit when I first started using it, but of course it faded pretty quickly & mostly just started making me tired & lazy. But I know some people who actually prefer bupe to full agonists, but everyone reacts differently to drugs I suppose.

Just for clarification too, I am technically an "opioid addict". Although I also do deal with pain, which stems from both major depression & supposedly "fibromyalgia" (which is just a made up term for doctors to throw at people who say "my entire body hurts all the time & I don't know why"). I have found through my experience that opioids are life-savers for people with my kind of depression. And the majority of them are much more "benign" on my body & brain than many legal things like alcohol or even sugar. So I'm very much an avid opioid lover & I spend most of my time online arguing with people over why opioids should be legal & why people should have access to them for pain & depression. I might not be here today if it weren't for opioids being able to induce that classic "sense of well-being". Western medicine loves to demonize this as some "unwanted side effect", but for a person in the throes of severe unrelenting depression, a "sense of well-being" can actually be life-saving.
Tarmadol is able to induce seizure at even lower dosage ? It’s why when I use it I always take a benzo along side but still the seizure makes me uncomfortable so I never fully enjoyed Tarmadol
 
Absolutely!
There would be mornings where I'd wake up the next day & still be itching or have a sort of "opioid hangover".

Some of my most memorable & euphoric opioid highs were on tramadol too. It's right up there with heroin in my book (for the people it works for any way). When I had a tolerance to heroin though, tramadol barely stopped the withdrawals, which was kind of odd, but it is very low potency. And I never took over 400mg a day because I definitely was scared of the seizure risks. I had taken above 400mg a few times through my decade spent on it & every time I did that, I would get bad body twitches & jerks & this weird "feeling" like I was about to have a seizure or something. So I basically had to train myself to stay at 400mg no matter what. But even then, if it wore off before the day was done, I'd usually just try to potentiate the remainder of it or I'd go to bed early so that I could wake up the next day & take it again.

I always had clonazepam around though too, just in case.

I'll never understand why tramadol had such a strong effect on me the way it did. Other opioids like hydrocodone, codeine & even fentanyl bore me to tears. Heroin was great though. It shared a lot of the same "content/inner peace" feelings that tramadol gave me. And even gave me energy like tramadol gave me. It just lasted waay shorter obviously. And lacked a lot of those serotonin-like side effects. But I still consider heroin to be one of my favorites. I'd probably put it above tramadol just because it's a tad stronger & is a more rounded feeling. But tramadol would be right behind it.

Buprenorphine also had a nice, stimulating warm glow to it when I had no tolerance. But not quite as good as tramadol or heroin, but it was good enough for me to get on it permanently. Unfortunately though, that effect fades fast with daily use of buprenorphine. And then it becomes nothing more than a sedative for me. Where as with tramadol & heroin, I could gain a tolerance but it would still keep me awake, motivated & feeling alive.

Tramadol + low dose buprenorphine is actually quite nice too. The tramadol gives you that euphoric, brightened mood, feels like the sun is shining on your face & you just wanna get shit done. And the buprenorphine gives you that more "stoned", sedated, lazy classic opiate feeling (although it lacks the euphoria, but the tramadol makes up for that). If I could use tramadol + buprenorphine every day, legally, I could probably actually quell my cravings & desire for heroin. But instead, I'm stuck with just buprenorphine.

Man I miss trams! My mom gave me hers for 10 years cause she didn't care for em. It was almost 20 years ago now when I first started taking them. And I can still remember those days as some of my fondest memories ever. I have never felt such a clear-headed, peaceful high in all my life. Not from weed, not from booze, not from MDMA, not from psychedelics...Only from tramadol. And heroin obviously.

Oh absolutely! I'm probably a little bit more on the responsible side than most "addicts". For example, I never got into shooting heroin. Loved it. But it worked just fine for me through the nose, so why make a good thing more hazardous by introducing a needle, ya know?

I've been on opioids for 20 years & have never once overdosed or anything, so I think that says a lot as well.

How did the subs help for your ankle pain? Just curious. Bupe helped my pain a bit when I first started using it, but of course it faded pretty quickly & mostly just started making me tired & lazy. But I know some people who actually prefer bupe to full agonists, but everyone reacts differently to drugs I suppose.

Just for clarification too, I am technically an "opioid addict". Although I also do deal with pain, which stems from both major depression & supposedly "fibromyalgia" (which is just a made up term for doctors to throw at people who say "my entire body hurts all the time & I don't know why"). I have found through my experience that opioids are life-savers for people with my kind of depression. And the majority of them are much more "benign" on my body & brain than many legal things like alcohol or even sugar. So I'm very much an avid opioid lover & I spend most of my time online arguing with people over why opioids should be legal & why people should have access to them for pain & depression. I might not be here today if it weren't for opioids being able to induce that classic "sense of well-being". Western medicine loves to demonize this as some "unwanted side effect", but for a person in the throes of severe unrelenting depression, a "sense of well-being" can actually be life-saving.
That’s good that you are at least consciously aware of your habit (I hate the word “addiction” since it means someone lost control), and as for how buprenorphine helped my ankle, well, let me explain: I have three herniated disks in my thoracic spinal region from an old workout injury (powerlifting), a fractured wrist from skating as a teenager, and I messed my ankle up three times in my life where the third time was the worst. I went out jogging one night in NYC, and there was a random sinkhole about 1ftx1ft that I didn’t see in the dark, and my right foot fell right into it while it twisted as I pulled away unknowingly (ouch). Bupe basically helped relieve my pain without giving me the desire to redose regularly (only once per day), and I was cutting my strips (8mg) into eight pieces (1mg ea.) so that way I could know exactly how much I was taking daily (~1-2mg/day). Also, I like using opioids via the IV route, but suboxone also prevented me from wanting to do that since IV subs ain’t all that anyway; not to mention, it’s probably very bad for you with all the fillers and flavorings. I’ve been off hard opioids for years now and even in the past I’ve gotten off them for over a year without fail, but I just enjoy them as well and use them for chronic pain. These days I only use whole kratom leaf powder though and it is enough to get me through the day since my ankle, back, and wrist still act up in cold weather or from overuse even after being “healed” for many years. I actually first tried heroin when I was thirteen, but back then I didn’t care much for it. It wasn’t until I first got seriously injured (age 17) that the doctors gave me Vicodin, codeine followed by Percocet where I finally started liking opioids probably also due to the fact that they not only relieved my pain, but I grew up with an alcoholic dad who was abusive, so the opioids sure helped me “escape” both types of pain (physical/emotional) as well.

P.S. I totally agree with you on that we should all have access to some type of safer yet legal opioid (not super-potent) such as a Kratom alkaloid (7-OH?), O-DSMT, or even just straight and natural codeine. Codeine used to be OTC in many countries, but nowadays it has been demonized by the governing bodies, and here in the USA they simply push DXM on us as a cough suppressant while DXM is a powerful dissociative anesthetic and psychedelic in its own class (lol)!
 
Last edited:
Tarmadol is able to induce seizure at even lower dosage ? It’s why when I use it I always take a benzo along side but still the seizure makes me uncomfortable so I never fully enjoyed Tarmadol
Yup, it lowers your body’s seizure threshold making them more likely, but O-DSMT doesn’t operate the same way as prescription Tramadol itself.
 
Yup, it lowers your body’s seizure threshold making them more likely, but O-DSMT doesn’t operate the same way as prescription Tramadol itself.
The first time I took tramadol, I was paranoid about the seizure risk. I’d never had one myself, but I’d seen a friend go through it, so it was in the back of my mind.

So I take it, already a bit on edge, and as it starts kicking in, suddenly the whole house starts shaking walls, floor, everything. Even my vision felt off. I’m thinking, “that’s it, I’m having a seizure on my first dose”

Turns out it wasn’t the tramadol at all it was a massive earthquake. I only realized when I saw the ceiling lamp swinging like crazy and all the furniture moving too. :LOL:
 
The first time I took tramadol, I was paranoid about the seizure risk. I’d never had one myself, but I’d seen a friend go through it, so it was in the back of my mind.

So I take it, already a bit on edge, and as it starts kicking in, suddenly the whole house starts shaking walls, floor, everything. Even my vision felt off. I’m thinking, “that’s it, I’m having a seizure on my first dose”

Turns out it wasn’t the tramadol at all it was a massive earthquake. I only realized when I saw the ceiling lamp swinging like crazy and all the furniture moving too. :LOL:
I’ve had a seizure from taking too much Tramadol when I was 16 (~300mg) and you won’t know if you’re having a seizure bc you’ll just wake up out of it on the floor assuming that you just passed out or something, unless someone else witnesses it and tells you.
 
I’ve had a seizure from taking too much Tramadol when I was 16 (~300mg) and you won’t know if you’re having a seizure bc you’ll just wake up out of it on the floor assuming that you just passed out or something, unless someone else witnesses it and tells you.
Did you experience any pain?
 
I’ve had a seizure from taking too much Tramadol when I was 16 (~300mg) and you won’t know if you’re having a seizure bc you’ll just wake up out of it on the floor assuming that you just passed out or something, unless someone else witnesses it and tells you.
Damn that’s bad that’s why I don’t wanna fck with substances that have seizure risks.
 
Did you experience any pain?
Not at all. My dad woke me up off the floor and called an ambulance. They took me to the hospital but it was a waste of time since there was nothing to do really bc I was already awake and fine.
 
  • Heart
Reactions: bvc
The first time I took tramadol, I was paranoid about the seizure risk. I’d never had one myself, but I’d seen a friend go through it, so it was in the back of my mind.

So I take it, already a bit on edge, and as it starts kicking in, suddenly the whole house starts shaking walls, floor, everything. Even my vision felt off. I’m thinking, “that’s it, I’m having a seizure on my first dose”

Turns out it wasn’t the tramadol at all it was a massive earthquake. I only realized when I saw the ceiling lamp swinging like crazy and all the furniture moving too. :LOL:
Damn what a crazy fucking coincidence. Did it ruin the rest of the experience for you or did you find the opposite in that the tram helped relax you from the fact that an earthquake had just happened?
 
Damn what a crazy fucking coincidence. Did it ruin the rest of the experience for you or did you find the opposite in that the tram helped relax you from the fact that an earthquake had just happened?
The experience was fine the tramadol high felt good, but I stayed alert since earthquakes here often come in multiple waves. I’m not sure what the correct term is in English, maybe “aftershocks.”
 
The experience was fine the tramadol high felt good, but I stayed alert since earthquakes here often come in multiple waves. I’m not sure what the correct term is in English, maybe “aftershocks.”
Yes, aftershocks is the correct term. I’ve only experienced one mild earthquake in NYC back in 2012 (4.5), and those aren’t really supposed to happen on the east coast of the USA which is crazy to have experienced. I was sitting at a cafe at the table and my coffee began rocking in front of me for just a few seconds. There are videos of the skyscrapers in Manhattan wobbling back and forth from the news that day too! Our city isn’t designed to withstand that kind of tremor, so it is a miracle nothing awful happened during that time.
 
Last edited:
Yes, aftershocks is the correct term. I’ve only experienced on mild earthquake in NYC back in 2012 (4.5), and those aren’t really supposed to happen on the east coast of the USA which is crazy to have experienced. I was sitting at a cafe at the table and my coffee began rocking in front of me for just a few seconds. There are videos of the skyscrapers in Manhattan wobbling back and forth from the news that day too! Our city isn’t designed to withstand that kind of tremor, so it is a miracle nothing awful happened during that time.
You were lucky we’d say you had a “guardian angel” where I’m from. Earthquakes aren’t common in the US, and neither the infrastructure nor people are really prepared for them. What surprises me, though, is that even with frequent hurricanes, most houses aren’t built with reinforced concrete like they are in Europe.

Here in the Mediterranean, earthquakes are very common. In my hometown, we could have 3–5 quakes a day, usually mild ones. The strongest one I’ve experienced was around a 6.0 (maybe even higher). It was intense I could see the walls of my house swaying left and right like they were about to crack.
 
You were lucky we’d say you had a “guardian angel” where I’m from. Earthquakes aren’t common in the US, and neither the infrastructure nor people are really prepared for them. What surprises me, though, is that even with frequent hurricanes, most houses aren’t built with reinforced concrete like they are in Europe.

Here in the Mediterranean, earthquakes are very common. In my hometown, we could have 3–5 quakes a day, usually mild ones. The strongest one I’ve experienced was around a 6.0 (maybe even higher). It was intense I could see the walls of my house swaying left and right like they were about to crack.
I didn’t visit Florida for over ten years and when I went to visit my father a little over a year ago I experienced two hurricanes back to back (Helene & Milton)—-everything was messed up but at least my dad’s building was reinforced with concrete and had back up generators. Even then, we lost power and there was flooding all over the streets for like two weeks.
 
Opioids for a twisted ankle? What the fuck I guess I should go to hospital more people tell me that a lot or when the ambulance take me I'm usually out after getting stitched up.

But I guess I have heroin or methadone but still I feel like people are pussies a lot now.
 
Opioids for a twisted ankle? What the fuck I guess I should go to hospital more people tell me that a lot or when the ambulance take me I'm usually out after getting stitched up.

But I guess I have heroin or methadone but still I feel like people are pussies a lot now.
You do realize that ankle injuries can be severe especially if they are repeatedly stressed causing partially torn ligaments, etc; not to mention, that ankles, knees, elbows along with every other joint in your body is an essential part of your physiology. Also, being in crutches for over six months and then needing a cane to walk for the rest of the time ain’t fun too. You probably can’t get any opioids from the doctor since you have a drug history on the record and/or have “drug seeking behavior” written all over the file. Mocking a person’s pain and/or injuries is a very low blow especially on a forum that is supposed to be about harm reduction.
 
Around here you won’t get any opioids if you’re not dying from cancer or have very serious injuries , I had a nasty mouth infection very rare infection I was in a bad pain 24/7 for around 50 days , unbearable pain doctor told me “you will be in much pain for lot of time” then proceed to give me ibuprofen and paracetamol. Idk how I went trough it at some point I managed to get some codeine and paracetamol pills but they didn’t even touch the pain at all. I’ve done lots of crazy and intense things in my life but let me tell you I legit have PTSD from this period of my life , I haven’t been to dentist from that time and honestly I don’t want too even today 3 years later I get sometimes “flashback” pain.
I was so angry and hopeless why we have opioids in the first place if you can’t use one the time you need it. Of course never going to that doctor instead i felt like he was genuinely wanted me to suffer bc he was jealous or something.
 
When I was on methadone I was prescribed 50mg a day. When I got carries I'd sometimes double up and take 100mg and I'd get high.

I really like methadone and will gladly take a methadone oral high over street H any day because my tolerance is high and the H in the UK is even shitter now than it was prior to the Taliban taking over Afghanistan again.

When I first started getting high on methadone maintenance, I never tried it prior, I started out by tripling my maintenance dose, now I need to quadruple or quintuple it unfortunately.



@Dextro .45 are you trying to piss me off bro?! First, nobody can make objective statements regarding an experience that is almost entirely subjective. Secondly, Oxymorphone (Opana; Numorphan) is better than Oxycodone. That isn´t just my opinion. 9 out of 10 Americans prefer the fucked-upedness of Oxymorphone as per a statistic I just made up. I think I´m experiencing an emotion similar to jealousy when I read about your daily drug cocktail. Good for you man! ;)

Like everything, there is a huge difference between a person who is relatively naive to powerful Opioids and those who are dependent/addicted already. For said naive individual, Methadone would likely be evert bit as euphoric, pleasurable and powerful as a ¨more favorable¨ Opioid like Oxycodone. Also, as with all Opioids in a naive individual, nausea can be quite bad. In my experience, Methadone is more prone to nausea than Oxycodone, but pretty similar to Morphine.

A totally naive individual, who doesn´t experience heavy nausea, is likely to feel nice and intoxicated for ~10 hours with a few more hours of rapidly diminishing effects. This kid I knew, who had experience with small dosages of Oxycodone, decided he wanted to try Methadone. I gave him some and told him how much he could take. I explained the delayed onset of action. He fell for the trap and redosed the entirety of the 50mg Methadone I had given him when he did not feel effects fast enough. I had told him to take it in 25% increments at most but he thought he knew what we was doing.

50mg Methadone had this kid violently nauseous for 36 and maybe even 48 full hours. He was bedridden with the puke bucket next to his bed. I guess the point is, it is a powerful Opioid agonist with all of the hallmarks one would expect. The primary difference is that Methadone lasts approximately twice as long as most regularly prescribed Opioid agonists. Fun fact, Methadone was chosen as the first true ¨maintenance drug¨ for its duration of action more than anything. Hence we have a functional drug, yet it is often described as ¨not enough¨ by long-term users. It just doesn´t hit all f those spots that we want hit, but it comes really close.

A person with a history of Opioid usage is likely to view Methadone as one of the least desirable drugs available on the street. One can buy a hit of Fentanyl 10x as strong as that 50mg Methadone for 10 bucks. The slow onset of action makes Methadone inherently less likeable when compared to Opioids with a short(er) onset .

If I were to sit in a sensory deprivation tank after taking my dose of Methadone in the morning, I´m sure I could start to identify the drug´s action with some accuracy. When I´m living life, going to work, doing fun shit, I don´t even notice. This is, in my opinion, the ideal effect from Methadone as a maintenance medication. It works in the background. Just because you don´t notice it at all times, it is working. It keeps you in homeostasis, which in its own way feels good when you have broken free from compulsive usage.
Keif is 100% right, oxymorphone is better than oxycodone, everyone who's tried them both at decent doses/tolerance say oxymorphone is better.
Also a lot of people who tried IV methadone ampoules (I don't mean shooting methadone solution, syrup etc.) have said it's better than IV Heroin.
Other fully synthetic opioids that are better than oxycodone are dipipanone and ketobemidone.



Eukadol (Oxycodone HCL) was synthesized in Germany in the early 1900’s and patented ……along with Dilaudid (Hydromorphone) hypodermic tablets & injectable formulas, Heroin (Diacetylmorphine), Morphine, etc

Most opioids derived from Morphine are very sedating, histamine release, and frequently cause nausea, tolerance & addiction (obviously)

Eukadol (Oxycodone) which is synthesized from theBaine is actually a non-sedating POTENT and VERY EUPHORIC mu-opioid receptor agonist, with excellent oral bioavailability. In the original patent & Eukadol literature it actually specifies the drugs “narcotic type euphoria similar to Cocaine” ……Eukadol was actually Adolf Hitlers favourite drug, Dr. Morell often providing Eukadol via I.V. injection

Why did Purdue Pharma select Oxycodone for its NEW OxyContin……when MS-Contin (Morphine Sulphate) already existed……because oral Oxycodone is actually SIGNIFICANTLY more pleasurable then oral Dilaudid and various morphine type compounds

In my entire lifetime…….only Oxycodone & Ritalin (Methylphenidate) gave me significant overpowering euphoria, even better than injecting decent Heroin from 20+ years ago when it actually was Diacetylmorphine (which was confirmed by my urine analysis which showed the presence of 6-MAM & Morphine)

I will NEVER forget that unbelievable EUPHORIC BLISS that oral Oxycodone gave me …..ever

Oxycodone is definitely sedating.

Also Adolf Hitler's doctor didn't tell him he was giving him oxycodone/Eukadol after the 1944 July 4th bombing assassination attempt.
He did like the injections but didn't know what they were or that it was an opioid until he was rattling in the Fuhrer Bunker and soldiers had run in to the ruins of Berlin to see if they could get opioids from bombed pharmacies.

He also didn't know that he was being given Pervitin (methamphetamine) injections for his fatigue from mid-late 1942 or early 1943 to the Fuhrer Bunker.

I don't know if he knew or not that he was using cocaine eyedrops for his Parkinson's symptoms in 1945.


I can answer this beyond the obvious euphiroa aspect you covered. It boils down to two main things: 1) They had applied for and been granted an exclusive patent for time-release oxycodone. Which they knew would bring in massive profits if they could market it widely to people normally adverse to taking opioids. Number 2) is that the general public was naive about oxycodone being as addictive as morphine. Back in the 90s if you told someone you were on a morphine pill they figured you had cancer or were going to die soon. People were afraid of it and the other handful of opioids they knew about from TV and ER visits. They were weary of becoming junkies. These people were not aware that taking oxycodone (and hydrocodone) was the same thing as being placed on potent opioids/opiates they already knew about.

In other words oxycodone did not have the stigma of being "pharma heroin" at that time where morphine already did. The time release formulation of OxyContin is just the tip of the ice berg. In the mid-late 90s it was very common for GPs to prescribe potent opioids to very young children for things like minor throat soreness/coughing. Old well known medications like codiene were quickly being replaced with patented formulations of stuff like time release hydrocodone (Tussinex). The latter was deemed a better drug for children because of the taste (it tastes like candy) and having less issues with histamine reactions/possible life threatening allergic reactions.

It was also much more effective orally (more doses per weight = more profits) and would be made from a wider variety of material. Like the opium pods that were legal to grow within America at scale because they produced mostly thebaine instead of morphine. This fact is why you start to see a ton of new opioids hit the consumer market (meaning: tablets/orally dosed at home) starting in the 90s. Most all of them were derived from thebaine (hydrocodone, oxycodone, oxymorphone, hydromorphone and many others). The pharma companies maintained a massive crop of opium farms in places like Arizona at that time.

In the 80s-2000s there was a race going on between the pharma companies to get exclusive rights to market and patent re-formulations of existing drugs (usually through a time release mechinism) and patent new drugs. These would be aggressively marketed directly to GPs. When prescribed they cost much more money than existing generic drugs where no one had exclusive patent rights. The patents were set to expire every 10-15 years but often a company would re-formulate the time release and apply for another patent to extend that time frame.

The above allowed multiple people in the chain to charge insurance companies a lot of money on each individual pill/prescription. Something that cost pennies to produce could be sold for $1-10 per tablet on the controlled market within America. Most regular people never saw that cost coming out of their own pocket because insurance was picking up 80-100% of the bill in most cases. In other words: They ran a big scam. The more addicts they created the more profits they could bring in. Far more than they could make selling heroin to existing junkies on the street.

These methods were already well established by the time the 1990s rolled around. Purdue made massive profits off marketing Valium in a similar way during the 1950s-1970s. They were just pulling the same trick with a different class of drugs they already knew were addictive.

They have pulled the same trick multiple times: Market some new drug they claim isn't as addictive as the old cheap drug. Even though they know it's usually more addictive. Then it takes everyone 20 years or so to catch up and everyone says "How could we allowed this to happen?". Rinse and repeat and do it again.

Once the second war in the middle east started and the American military allowed opium farming again we see a massive uptick in production of all opioids starting around 2003. Which they kept going into the mid-2010s. After 2015 or so we start to see a massive decline in production once those lands were taken over by native factions again that outlawed opium farming. The US military wasn't there guarding the crops anymore. It's important to note that we saw both a jump in production on the legal and illegal sides of the opioid market in America during those years. Heroin (real heroin) started pouring in all over the country during the mid-late 2000s-2010s despite only being a staple drug in large open-air drug markets in select cities before. We hadn't seen heroin in every small town in America since the 1980s when it was run out after the war on drugs started. Heroin was one of the first things they stamped out in small town America because it wasn't as socially acceptable as cocaine was.

Anyway, my greater point in the legal side (pharma companies and families running them) were working hand-in-hand with the illegal side of the market. They knew that there would eventually be push-back with stuff like oxycodone. But it was very useful for them to produce a new generation of addicts. Who would eventually be forced to turn to street heroin and later back to drugs like bupe. In other words: They profited and won three times. Four if you count each death being a good thing, which they do (the same people that sell opioids on the legal market are the same people that advocate for massive reduction in the world's population).

This has gotten long (most of my posts do) but I've barely scratched the surface on this. The actual marketing they did towards the poor/middle class Americans in mostly rural-suburbian areas was really fucked up. Their own internal documents talk about how they wanted to market to elderly and middle aged patients because they knew their children would eventually get into the substances. They also go at length about marketing certain substances like tussinex (liquid time release hydrocodone) to very young children being a top priority because it would prime them to becoming addicted later in teenage/early adult years when they were exposed to opioids again as a result of injuries later in life.

The documents are also filled with casual racism towards poor-middle class white people who were the primary targets of the marketing effort. It reads like their goal from the start was to cause a drug crisis among white Americans and to bust up the family unit within that class of people. Ensuring that their children would not go on to have stable families of their own. There was a lot of that going on around the same time in other parts of society (the so-called "latch key kid" issue was primarily a problem among white families).

What I'm saying is they targetted the white communities in America with opioids like they targetted the black communities with crack cocaine. Different drug but same issues resulted on both sides. Same result on both sides: Bust up the family unit and make such people more reliant on the Government/system. If you manage to kill a bunch in the process that's great. They don't want us alive in the first place.

I personally believe I was primed to fall into the trap as my own GP as a child prescribed myself and my siblings liquid hydrocodone multiple times and I was regularly given hydrocodone tablets (usually about 5mg) for minor pain complaints and stuff like headaches. In my parent's defense my father eventually figured it out and stopped allowing the GP to give us the liquid hydrocodone and stopped breaking tablets in half to give me every few months after he realized he himself was getting addicted to opioids in the mid-late 90s. But by then the damage was already done.


I don't know where you're getting your info but a lot of that post is blatantly wrong and even conspiratorial nonsense.

1. Timed Release Opioids : The only one created in the 80's and lost it's patent in 1995 was MSContin by Purdue. They created OxyContin cause they wanted the massive profits that a patent allows a company to make.
Hydrocodone wasn't released as a slow release tablet, ZoHydro being the first, until early 2014.

I'd have thought a lot of doctor's and other people in the US would have heard of oxycodone prior to OxyContin cause Percodan and Percocet had been around since the 1950's or 60's.

2. Thebaine : Semi-synthetic opioids such as oxycodone which are supposedly more often than not made from thebaine nowadays can also be made from codeine and morphine.

3. USA Opium Poppy Farming : This was banned in the USA under the Opium Poppy Control Act 1942, a lot of farmers in California, the state with the most Growers at the time even had what was called the Poppy Rebellion and some farmers grew for another year but they that attempted a crop the year after were either lucky and just had their crop destroyed in the field, harvested and burnt or if very unlucky and this happened to hardly any, they were taken to court and I think some served time.

A lot of farmers and politicians and the public found it strange that just as the USA enters WW2 and the allies are going to need huge amounts of opium/Morphine the USA banned it and it had raised significantly in price too cause (world) wars create massive opioid demand.
It was banned cause of anti-opium/drug user BS.
A few people (Something like less than 100!) had been caught in the US in the 1930's either growing opium at home and using it (One guy was a Sikh Indian immigrant who'd used it for years back home and continued for a few years in the US until some how the Narcotics Officers found out.) or they were rattling morphine/Heroin users and had snatched dried pods from farms in California to make tea.
The majority caught were actually old immigrants from Eastern Europe who'd been growing and using poppy tea for years.

I've previously read that the American airmen volunteers fighting Japan in the China as the Chinese Fighting Tigers, working more so with the Chinese Nationalists under Chiang-Kai-Shek aka the Kuomintang (KMT) than the far less corrupt Mao and the Chinese Communists, were like the KMT, smuggling opium.
Apparently they were getting it smuggled back to the US so it could be used to make morphine for the US govt and military. The KMT often traded corruptly with the Japanese instead of fighting them, they'd trade opium for Japanese arms.

Another article also said that the US govt was importing opium from Mexico too.

Pharmaceutical corporations in the US don't have licenses to grow them in massive amounts needed to supply demand.
They may get the rights, like universities,to grow or source some for reason but it's not massive amounts.

Also the mostly thebaine poppies you're thinking of are grown in Tasmania, Australia.

What you're thinking of if you saw massive fields in Arizona or in the Pacific North West in the 90's and 2000's will have farmers growing them for dried flower floral arrangements and possibly but I doubt it also poppy seed for food and oil use.
In the 90's till the early 2000's on eBay you could by large amounts of cheap dried poppies that a lot of users were buying but the DEA found out and got the USA eBay to stop selling them and apparently warmed companies selling too.

4. Targeting "poor middle class" white people with opioids : I think you generally mean white working class people who could afford insurance cause all it was was capitalists doing what capitalists always do under capitalism and that is try to turn a profit and aiming at those who are most likely to be your customer and in the US white people made up the majority and those with insurance would have been the targets.
Capitalism is the problem.
Also you clearly don't pay much attention to US politics but the oligarchs who run those companies all tend to be Republican and hate government and hate welfare, so the idea that they want you dependent on the government/system is idiotic.
The Republican's would rather you die, they want zero government assistance for the average citizen, poor or disabled.
The idea the oligarchy and their Republican tools want people dependent on the state is far-right conspiracy BS. If they wanted you dependent on the state the welfare system would be far, far better and far easier to get on.

5. "Second war in the Middle East" and the US allowing opium growing again.
: This is fucking painfully ahistorical BS and the fact you not only didn't name the war or country (The War on Terror and Afghanistan.) and called it the "Second war in the Middle East", shows how little you know about US history, Afghanistan, the Middle East and war involving all those three.
I like Americans and this website has a lot of intelligent one's but fuck me the stereotype is that you's can only name places you've have bombed and you couldn't do it!

The country is called Afghanistan and the war there from 7th October 2001 to 30th August 2021 involving the US, NATO and other nations was not only not the second war in Afghanistan, it wasn't even the second war that the US has been involved in in the Middle East never mind not being the second Middle East war.
Not sure if you know but civilisation started in the Middle East, Mesopotamia which is modern day Iraq, there's been a lot more than two.
The US even operated in the area during WW2 before it started trying to make enemies of everyone there.

Anyway, opium was being in the 90's in Afghanistan by the Taliban who pretended to have suppressed it totally in the areas they controlled but (And this was what was assumed they'd do 2021 onwards but they've not.) really they made deals with large growers and traffickers in the country to only grow a certain amount so demand would continue to grow increasing prices significantly but not increasing supply.
The Northern Alliance (Different warlords who worked together against the Taliban and mostly controlled Northern States) continued to grow opium though, it was these people who were US allies when the US invaded who started growing more and cause they were allies and Afghan's were not only extremely poor but they also didn't want to turn them against the US/allies, they gave up destroying opium after 2003.
The Taliban began to tax it and Heroi and later ended up even growing it in certain areas and operating and taxing Heroin labs to help fund their war.

Over the course of the war no more than 2% of Heroin used in North America came from Afghanistan.
Even though some of the big dealers were on the CIA payroll there's unfortunately no evidence the CIA was helping smuggle opium/Heroin out of Afghanistan to the US and no evidence that Afghan Opium was being used by US pharma companies to make opioids.
The US already buys around 75% of opioids that Turkey produces and a load from Tasmania and even some pharma grade opium gum from India and all of that is above board.

There was a push from 2004 - 2007 or '08 to do on Afghanistan with opium what had been done in Turkey in the early 70's and have them grow it for the legal pharmaceutical market and buy it all up but the US was against it saying Afghanistan was too corrupt.

Right, I think that's enough shite wrote by me. I'm off for more methylphenidate.
 
Top