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Shady pills

sticky_fingahz

Bluelighter
Joined
Jun 4, 2001
Messages
54
Location
Fremont, Ca, USA
hey i got these pills w/ a "M" on dem der orange n hav da # 751... if these wernt from a good friend who hooks da best shit every time id hafta say dey wer bunk....does n e 1 no n e ting about thses??
 
Uh... usually ecstasy pills don't have ID Numbers on them.
This is NOT E, this is Cyclobenzaprine HCl - 10mg
This is a muscle relaxant, which should not be mixed with MAOI's or tricyclic anti-depressants. (it can cause death)
Also it interacts with alcohol and other CNS-Depressants.
i.e. This IS NOT ECSTASY.
(also talk normally, otherwise you probably won't get responses, and you'll just anger people)
TheGamer
 
What wasn't english about my post
smile.gif

TheGamer
 
actually, cyclobenzaprine is closely related to tricyclic antidepressants.
cyclobenzaprine HCl (Flexeril) is NOT recreationally abusable in any real way. it just makes you tired. "muscle relaxant" does sound like a fun category, but it's not. trust me.
learn to recognize a typical pharmaceutical tablet in the future because there's a fair amount of drugs being sold as E that OBVIOUSLY aren't.
a typical E will be round, could be white or colored, and will have a crude logo stamped in it. they're usually small and thick, relative to a commercially prepared tablet.
a commercial medicinal drug could really look like anything, but there's a few general rules things that might help you.
real E's are usually round: pharmaceuticals are often round too but they come in all kinds of shapes. you should pretty much ignore any e that isn't round; look at dancesafe and you'll see that e's that aren't round are quite a bit more likely to be DXM or something bad. a lot of pharms are strange shapes like pentagons or something, and you can ignore those if you want e.
look at the press: the logo will pretty much tell you if it's a pharm or not. Roche and Merck-Frosst don't put mitsu logos on their pills. if there's any writing on a pharm, it'll be small, clear and precise. there may be a manufacturer code, like CL or sometimes the name like NOVO. codes with a number like the pill you described are really common. really, that should be enough.
colors: pharms aren't always white, but they tend to be. if they're not, they tend to be a nice, calm institutional color like beige or peach. there *are* tabs of all kinds of colors, even blue (e.g. Adderal) and green (e.g. Rivotril, the canadian version of Klonopin).
size: if it's smaller than an E, obviously you don't want it. a general rule for judging pharms is that small pills are far more likely to be fun. if it's a big 500 mg tab, it's probably some antibiotic.
it is obviously never worth it to buy a pharm as E, even if you know it's fun.
 
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