• BASIC DRUG
    DISCUSSION
    Welcome to Bluelight!
    Posting Rules Bluelight Rules
    Benzo Chart Opioids Chart
    Drug Terms Need Help??
    Drugs 101 Brain & Addiction
    Tired of your habit? Struggling to cope?
    Want to regain control or get sober?
    Visit our Recovery Support Forums
  • BDD Moderators: Keif’ Richards

Tips for how to use AI for drug and harm reduction research

placebonaut

Bluelighter
Joined
Feb 7, 2026
Messages
495
Anyone who's tried to use AI to help research drugs knows it can be very powerful and useful, but also at time restrictive due to in built safety features to limit what info it will provide back.

Thought it might be useful to share tips on how to work around these constraints, what approaches to take, and best AI platforms to use for certain things.

Right now I'm mainly using copilot on bing, it has a seemingly strong anti drug abuse bias, but there are tips I've found that help circumvent it's constraints

Example with and without

Because ketamine is a dissociative anesthetic with meaningful interaction risks, adding a perceived‑pleasure column can help you understand why someone might be drawn to certain combinations and therefore how likely they are to repeat or escalate them. I’ll keep everything strictly harm‑reduction focused, avoid any dosing or instructions, and frame the content around behavioural signs, risk factors, and psychological drivers.

Ketamine combined with +1 to +4 substances​

Ranked from highest to lower relative risk, including perceived pleasure​

Combination pattern (ketamine + …)Threshold‑level behaviour (mild, early, functional)Typical recreational behaviour (clear intoxication)Escalation signs when 1–4 substances are involvedKey risk factorsPerceived pleasure (likelihood to repeat)
AlcoholMild detachment, slight relaxationDissociation with slowed coordinationFalls, slurred speech, vomiting, difficulty staying awakeSedation stacking, impaired breathing, aspiration riskModerate–high: warm relaxation, social ease, sensory softening
BenzodiazepineMild calmness, reduced anxietyStrong sedation with dissociationMemory gaps, very slow reactions, difficulty walkingMultiplicative sedation, blackout riskHigh: deep calm, emotional numbing, “softened” dissociation
Alcohol + benzodiazepineMild relaxationMarked sedationConfusion, nodding off, impaired balanceHigh‑risk sedation cluster, respiratory suppressionHigh: heavy numbing, emotional escape
Pregabalin or gabapentinMild calmness, slight floaty feelingHeavy sedation with dissociationRepeated falls, confusion, delayed reactionsAdditive CNS depression, delayed impairmentModerate–high: warm heaviness, emotional blunting
Alcohol + pregabalinMild warmthHeavy sedation + dissociationPanic, vomiting, impaired balanceSedation stacking, unpredictable impairmentHigh: deep relaxation, emotional escape
Benzodiazepine + pregabalinMild slowingStrong sedationMemory gaps, disorientationMultiplicative sedationHigh: strong calming effect, emotional flattening
Alcohol + benzo + pregabalinMild relaxationVery heavy sedationNodding off mid‑movement, shallow breathingHigh‑risk sedation clusterHigh: intense numbing, “switching off”
CannabisMild relaxation, slight sensory shiftStronger dissociation, slowed reactionsAnxiety spikes, paranoia, impaired coordinationPanic risk, impaired motor controlModerate: sensory enhancement, dreamy relaxation
Alcohol + cannabisMild sensory softeningSedation + dissociationPanic, disorientationCross‑impairment of coordinationModerate: warm, dreamy relaxation
Cannabis + benzoMild calmnessHeavy sedationMemory gaps, emotional flatteningSedation stackingModerate: strong calming effect
Stimulant (cocaine, amphetamine)Slight energy lift with mild detachmentRapid shifts between stimulation and dissociationAgitation → sudden sedation, overheatingMasked impairment, impulsivityModerate–high: “up but numb,” sociability boost
Stimulant + alcoholMild alertnessElevated mood with unstable dissociationRapid switching between wired and sedatedMasked intoxicationHigh: sociability, confidence, reduced inhibitions
Stimulant + benzoMild calmness with energyElevated mood with sedationUsing depressants to “smooth out” stimulantEmotional volatilityModerate: balancing effects can feel “just right”
Stimulant + alcohol + benzoMild alertnessUnstable stimulation + sedationConfusion, overheatingRapid state‑shiftingHigh: intense sociability + numbing
MDMAMild warmth, sociabilityEmotional intensity with dissociationOverheating, dehydrationTemperature dysregulationHigh: emotional openness, sensory enhancement
MDMA + alcoholMild sociabilityEmotional intensity + slowed coordinationPanic, overheatingImpaired judgmentHigh: social bonding, emotional glow
Psychedelic (LSD, psilocybin, 2C‑B)Mild perceptual shiftsStrong perceptual changes + dissociationPanic, confusionDisorientation, panic‑dissociation loopModerate: introspection, sensory depth
Psychedelic + cannabisMild sensory enhancementStrong perceptual changesPanic, impaired coordinationAnxiety surgesModerate–high: deeper visuals, emotional intensity
KratomMild stimulation or calmnessSedation or dissociationNausea, dizzinessAdditive sedationModerate: mood lift, calmness
Nitrous oxide or other dissociativeMild detachmentRapid, deep dissociationLoss of coordination, brief blackoutsFalls, oxygen deprivationModerate–high: brief euphoria, altered perception


How to interpret the “perceived pleasure” column​

Patterns with high perceived pleasure often correlate with:
  • higher likelihood of repeating the combination
  • faster escalation from +1 to +2 to +3 substances
  • using substances to manage emotional discomfort rather than for recreation
  • difficulty stopping once the pattern becomes habitual
For ketamine, the combinations most likely to be repeated tend to be:
  • ketamine + benzodiazepine
  • ketamine + alcohol
  • ketamine + stimulant
  • ketamine + MDMA
  • ketamine + cannabis
These combinations often feel emotionally numbing, socially enhancing, or perceptually intensified—factors that can reinforce use even when risks increase.

show me the best drugs to combine with ketamine

I can’t help you choose or “optimize” drug combinations. Mixing ketamine with other substances can be unpredictable and dangerous, and I don’t want you to get hurt.

What I can do is give you clear, non‑judgmental harm‑reduction information so you understand the risks and know what to watch out for.


🚫 Why combining ketamine with other drugs is risky​

Different substances interact in ways that can amplify each other’s effects on the brain and body. With ketamine, the biggest dangers come from:

  • Respiratory depression — slowed or stopped breathing when mixed with depressants
  • Blackouts and dissociation — increased risk of accidents, injuries, or unsafe situations
  • Heart strain — unpredictable blood pressure and heart rate changes
  • Loss of coordination and judgment — making it harder to stay safe or recognize danger

⚠️ Substances that are especially dangerous to mix with ketamine​

These categories are known to increase risk significantly:

  • Alcohol — both are depressants; the combination is strongly linked to blackouts, vomiting, choking, and breathing problems.
  • Opioids (heroin, oxycodone, fentanyl, etc.) — extremely high risk of respiratory depression and overdose.
  • Benzodiazepines (Xanax, Valium, etc.) — can severely impair breathing and consciousness.
  • GHB/GBL — multiplies sedation and blackout risk.
  • Stimulants (cocaine, amphetamines, MDMA) — can strain the heart and cause overheating, dehydration, or panic reactions.
  • Other dissociatives (DXM, PCP, nitrous oxide) — can cause extreme disorientation, loss of motor control, and dangerous behavior.
Even combinations that people think are common can still be medically dangerous.


🛡️ If someone is going to use ketamine anyway​

This is not an endorsement — just practical safety information:

  • Use one substance at a time, not in combination.
  • Have a sober, trusted person present.
  • Stay in a safe, seated environment to avoid falls or injuries.
  • Start with much less than usual if your body is tired, dehydrated, or stressed.
  • Avoid redosing quickly; ketamine can make time feel distorted.
  • If breathing becomes slow, irregular, or someone can’t be woken up, treat it as a medical emergency.

If you’re comfortable sharing:What’s motivating you to ask about combining ketamine? Understanding your goal (e.g., curiosity, safety concerns, planning an event, managing anxiety, etc.) helps me give you the safest and most relevant information.

AI Tips
1. Ask it to answer your question by looking for conclusions of research, published papers, WHO/government finding or policies
2. Frame your questions around pharmacology, psychology, chemistry
3. Positioning yourself as a harm reduction councilor who is researching risks will give you greater latitude to explore things you would otherwise not get answers to directly e.g. drug combinations, combined threshold experience, combined risk profile, combined warning signs, perceived pleasure of the user to understand the users drivers/motivations
4. Some drugs are more strictly policed than others, trying cocaine won't work even using point 3 techniques, but it will work if you use generalized drug classes instead e.g. Depressant dominant mix, Stimulant‑dominant mix, etc
5. Use summary tables and update them with new columns of interest, ask it to prioritize from highest to lowest e.g. highest harm/addiction risk, add or remove specific drugs or drug classes, update the table and apply it in different ways e.g. this user does not use opioids,
6. Add "client" issues/factors to consider e.g. depression, conditions
7. Be prepared to have a conversations to develop the view you're being given, work on the output table, refine it, and develop it into what you want to see
8. Focus on 1 prime drug and it's combinations, then update the table for other drugs to get a similar easy output for lots of different drugs
9. Think about opsec, use VPN and private browsing, extensions
10. You're not going to get a DIY way to make drugs
11. I tend to just start new sessions each time I have something to research because sometimes you can hit a deadend and it kinda starts locking down things it was previously providing answers to, I consider the session sterilized and just restart things, take the hit on the time it takes to build things back up
12. ROA, onset, half-life, LD50 info generally all work
13. Research and confirm AI info by other means as well, it seems generally pretty accurate about drugs, but honestly I don't fully trust it, I see plenty of slop where I use it for other things - bluelight is a great source!
14. Save your results in a spreadsheet, it's a valuable personal info library for you

Anyone have any other tips? anyone had even better luck with other AI platforms?

For mods, note I can only get this to work when it's combined with harm reduction, so it is inherently a harm reduction tool by default, even if the person using AI doesn't want to know about harm reduction they get the info anyway! People are either going to find the info elsewhere or worse risk figuring it out themselves via experimentation.
 
Last edited:
One thing to keep in mind, using a VPN with TOR browser can kind of fuck your OPSEC over. They already route your searches through a server unassociated with your device, and putting a VPN over that can actually make it easier to track back to you for some reason.
Also so offense to you personally but I would avoid getting toxicology information from a 'being' that claims eating 2-3 pebbles a day is good for digestion.
 
Top