danosaurous22
Bluelighter
- Joined
- Jun 10, 2025
- Messages
- 129
Maybe too vague of a thread, but finding Bluelight has made me really think about how alone I felt with my drug obsession in the "real world". Perhaps it was my upbringing, but nobody around me abused or abuses drugs the way I do. It is obsessive, reckless, and often done out of a curiosity of what exits beyond normal life. I have never met somebody who abuses drugs like I do, some people have partied with stimulants and psychedelics but they draw the line at opiates and don't seem to ever get addicted to drugs because they respect their wellbeing more than pushing their brain to its limits. The drawbacks of hardcore drug use scare them away, whereas with me I feel it is somehow a draw to the experience. The intense, insane, and horrific lows that come from pushing it to its limits are part of the "fun" (take that word with a grain of salt, it's definitely more complicated than that) to me, as though I'm breaking through the mundane and meaningless world into something with real stakes to it.
On this forum, I find people who have already pursued the things I'm pursuing to its greatest extents, to the point where they have better knowledge of their drug of choice and various ROAs and the real effects it has on life than many medical professionals. People who learn chemistry just because of their drug exploration/addiction, people who have tried so many research chemicals just to see what happens, people who throw caution to the wind and come back with horrific OD stories or horrific situations they've found themselves in seeking the drug out. I'm curious what you think brought you to this side of life, if you feel like you know about the line being crossed that I'm talking about. So many people, for instance, have told me they've used coke countless times but never purchased it. I just don't understand that at all, I feel like I'm an alien in comparison to that. From the moment I try a drug, I want a large supply to experiment with and see everything it has to offer. I've never IV'd, but I'm almost certain that I will someday, and none of my friends would ever ever ever even think of that. They would freak out at the possibility that I would even consider it, but to me it feels almost inevitable.
For me, I think it's out of the challenge it brings my brain and also a fascination with losing control of oneself. I have always been very tightly wound and bottle things up, so to see myself change so drastically is not something that scares me but something that really interests me. That is, until it starts scaring me and I've been to the brink of financial social and mental collapse. But even then I come out of it with the mindset that I'd rather regret doing something than hiding from it. I think some people are born into the world just really "asking for it"-- I never learn lessons until its too late, then I take it upon myself to try to teach people like myself before its too late. But I need to see it to believe it, for some reason.
On this forum, I find people who have already pursued the things I'm pursuing to its greatest extents, to the point where they have better knowledge of their drug of choice and various ROAs and the real effects it has on life than many medical professionals. People who learn chemistry just because of their drug exploration/addiction, people who have tried so many research chemicals just to see what happens, people who throw caution to the wind and come back with horrific OD stories or horrific situations they've found themselves in seeking the drug out. I'm curious what you think brought you to this side of life, if you feel like you know about the line being crossed that I'm talking about. So many people, for instance, have told me they've used coke countless times but never purchased it. I just don't understand that at all, I feel like I'm an alien in comparison to that. From the moment I try a drug, I want a large supply to experiment with and see everything it has to offer. I've never IV'd, but I'm almost certain that I will someday, and none of my friends would ever ever ever even think of that. They would freak out at the possibility that I would even consider it, but to me it feels almost inevitable.
For me, I think it's out of the challenge it brings my brain and also a fascination with losing control of oneself. I have always been very tightly wound and bottle things up, so to see myself change so drastically is not something that scares me but something that really interests me. That is, until it starts scaring me and I've been to the brink of financial social and mental collapse. But even then I come out of it with the mindset that I'd rather regret doing something than hiding from it. I think some people are born into the world just really "asking for it"-- I never learn lessons until its too late, then I take it upon myself to try to teach people like myself before its too late. But I need to see it to believe it, for some reason.
