๐ŸŒŸ๐ŸŒŸ Social ๐ŸŒŸ๐ŸŒŸ What Was YOUR Nightly Fix? v. Smoking the Midnight Oil

Spice paper has been proving to be interesting, but honestly kind of subtle compared to doing fat bong rips of this shit. Earlier I watched the leaves on a branch of a tree take the form of a humanoid and crawl away, almost with a "reptilian squat" sort of stance. Also learned that 2C-B can seriously cut through NBOH/NBOMe tolerance, but pan cyan mushrooms could barely, which was interesting. Tonight's just a mild etizolam and tizanidine kind of night, but I still can't sleep for the absolute life of me, because I took my bupropion too late and it's one of very few things that can keep me awake.

Anyone else here ever used tizanidine? I only find it to be active sublingually or intranasally, and 2mg is enough to sedate me noticeably, 4-6mg is enough to have me stumbling around the house tripping over my own feet and shit.
 
Blame it on day two of a messy attempt to taper but I have to add a word about cis or cishet as you call it - a term your gen invented. Gender dysphoria is not a new phenomenon and probably experienced by everyone during puberty. In my case had you asked me anytime between 10 and 20 yo I'd have told you with a passion that I hated my painful useless ugly and disturbing breasts that I never ordered in the first place and wanted them removed until probably my thirtes. Just that during that time there simply was no option to adjust your body to your wishes. Glad it wasn't cause otherwise I would never have had the chance to feed my own kids, which IS absolutely a precious experience. So by now I have no issues with them despite losing any optical attractivity they may ever have had. I just accepted them finally. The other thing is that I always have and still do hate the female role (!). Or why on earth does having a tail grant so many freedoms over those who don't?! I would have 100% preferred being a boy just for that and being stronger.
Generally I don't believe in a male or female soul or mind. Mind is beyond those differences and always has both elements. Imo.
I cooled down a bit when I changed my beliefs and I am pretty convinced that I was male and female countless lives before and this one is just my home for a few decades more if I have that much left... So why bother?
If I had any say in these things I would abolish all those labels aside the biological ones. If you wanna hear a "Miss" today, dress like one. If you wanna hear a "Sir" tomorrow, dress like one. That would be freedom for me rather than a whole set of new complicated labels making it difficult to address anyone at all ๐Ÿ™„ (at least in German the new gender police has absolutely violated the language)
My mother had this similar experience, she was born in '62 in rural South Florida, which is a VERY rough time to be in a VERY rough place. It was arguably safer in the majority of Mexico and the Middle East at that time, than the specific area she was in. She's half Romani (most white people still use the slur 'gypsy' when talking about us, but have never even heard the name of our people, Romani, before) so when the race riots happened, she was getting fire hosed with the other brown people, and the black people. She however has green eyes (oddly enough, with a gold/yellow ring around them?) so her nickname was "Devil Eyes", which I still think would be a kickass name for a metal band. Up until she was married off and impregnated at the age of 14 because Romani people have a culture that hasn't really been updated since the 1850's in that regard, she told everybody that she was a boy stuck in a girl's body, that her name was actually Toby, not [redacted for personal safety, but insert generic female name here], and she couldn't understand why she was put in the wrong body. Upon becoming pregnant at 14 and having my older sister at 15, she just had to lock the fuck in and handle business, raising her children, working enough to get by while in states of poverty I find even homeless people in Portland Maine don't experience. Homeless for years before the age of 14, literally sleeping in trees and shit. That's all on top of a variety of sadistically abusive people in her life as a child.

She continues to respect trans people, use the pronouns they ask for, etc., and is now kind of reluctantly settled into femininity.

The etymology of the word cisgender is pretty new, it dates back to 1994, Defosse in a usenet group coined the term as a logical way to talk about the inverse of "trans", if you've ever looked into chemistry and noticed this concept called "cis-trans isomerism", that's another incidence of the same thing being used, where the antonym of 'trans' is 'cis', so what do you call someone who's on the opposite of the spectrum from transgender? Normalgendered? Nottrans? Cisgender seems like the logical term to use, just from my perspective as a native anglophone with a super deep obsession with linguistics.

I highly sympathize with your stance of being anti-labelling, and I do my best to embody it myslef, but there are some certain practical points where it helps in my opinion. Especially when discussing among other queer folks to be able to communicate concepts surrounding queerness with words well established in literature and which make sense. An example would be things like a trans woman saying something like "Cisgender heterosexual men aren't really what I'm looking for, I'm more comfortable with other trans people", such as people who look for t4t (trans-for-trans) relationships.

I personally think that neo-pronouns, things like "xe/xer" instead of "they/them" are goofy, terrible optics for the queer community, and lack a complete understanding of linguistic evolution. I suspect that the path to queerness being more secure in the future is going to come from two things, firstly a normalization of queer people as being just as normal as cisgender hetersexuals (the term cishet abbreviates). I suspect that the second part of it will come from being adequately militarized, here in the US the people who want us dead and forgotten about have been arming themselves for much longer, and there's this culture of gen z queers that are just these soft, dainty, conflict-avoidant people who I can only describe as weak. If, as a queer person capable of physical combat (aka not AFAB), and you haven't been knocking the teeth out of homophobes' mouths for years, you've been inadequately protecting your community in my opinion. The point is not to make people hate queer folks, it's to send the message of "This shit is not welcome in our community, and here is what happens when you do bring it in". Where I grew up, a kid was beaten almost to death and then thrown off a bridge to drown. Nowadays, some redneck used a homophobic slur referring to some random art student kid and lost 3+ teeth over it within 12 hours, because half of the violent gangbanger types in my school were also queer, and frankly they all had guns and police batons and no fear of using them. Without adequate protection, no community will survive, as all will be targeted by fascists eventually, it's the classic "first they came for the Jews and we did nothing, then they came for the communists and we did nothing" sort of deal. Vigilante justice is almost always a bad idea in a stable society, but here in the USA, we've long lost that stability in my opinion. Maybe it was just where I grew up in Maine, idk.

Sorry about the rant, I'm just huge on historical linguistics and the arming/training of the queer community.

Edit: Wanted to say, I agree with you @Mushoku_Sensei , just felt like articulating a bunch on this as a queer zoomer who has spent a ton of time doing my best to understand the lived experiences of others, and who also has a deep obsession with linguistics and the way that linguistics and society interface with one another.
 
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My mother had this similar experience, she was born in '62 in rural South Florida, which is a VERY rough time to be in a VERY rough place. It was arguably safer in the majority of Mexico and the Middle East at that time, than the specific area she was in. She's half Romani (most white people still use the slur 'gypsy' when talking about us, but have never even heard the name of our people, Romani, before) so when the race riots happened, she was getting fire hosed with the other brown people, and the black people. She however has green eyes (oddly enough, with a gold/yellow ring around them?) so her nickname was "Devil Eyes", which I still think would be a kickass name for a metal band. Up until she was married off and impregnated at the age of 14 because Romani people have a culture that hasn't really been updated since the 1850's in that regard, she told everybody that she was a boy stuck in a girl's body, that her name was actually Toby, not [redacted for personal safety, but insert generic female name here], and she couldn't understand why she was put in the wrong body. Upon becoming pregnant at 14 and having my older sister at 15, she just had to lock the fuck in and handle business, raising her children, working enough to get by while in states of poverty I find even homeless people in Portland Maine don't experience. Homeless for years before the age of 14, literally sleeping in trees and shit. That's all on top of a variety of sadistically abusive people in her life as a child.

She continues to respect trans people, use the pronouns they ask for, etc., and is now kind of reluctantly settled into femininity.

The etymology of the word cisgender is pretty new, it dates back to 1994, Defosse in a usenet group coined the term as a logical way to talk about the inverse of "trans", if you've ever looked into chemistry and noticed this concept called "cis-trans isomerism", that's another incidence of the same thing being used, where the antonym of 'trans' is 'cis', so what do you call someone who's on the opposite of the spectrum from transgender? Normalgendered? Nottrans? Cisgender seems like the logical term to use, just from my perspective as a native anglophone with a super deep obsession with linguistics.

I highly sympathize with your stance of being anti-labelling, and I do my best to embody it myslef, but there are some certain practical points where it helps in my opinion. Especially when discussing among other queer folks to be able to communicate concepts surrounding queerness with words well established in literature and which make sense. An example would be things like a trans woman saying something like "Cisgender heterosexual men aren't really what I'm looking for, I'm more comfortable with other trans people", such as people who look for t4t (trans-for-trans) relationships.

I personally think that neo-pronouns, things like "xe/xer" instead of "they/them" are goofy, terrible optics for the queer community, and lack a complete understanding of linguistic evolution. I suspect that the path to queerness being more secure in the future is going to come from two things, firstly a normalization of queer people as being just as normal as cisgender hetersexuals (the term cishet abbreviates). I suspect that the second part of it will come from being adequately militarized, here in the US the people who want us dead and forgotten about have been arming themselves for much longer, and there's this culture of gen z queers that are just these soft, dainty, conflict-avoidant people who I can only describe as weak. If, as a queer person capable of physical combat (aka not AFAB), and you haven't been knocking the teeth out of homophobes' mouths for years, you've been inadequately protecting your community in my opinion. The point is not to make people hate queer folks, it's to send the message of "This shit is not welcome in our community, and here is what happens when you do bring it in". Where I grew up, a kid was beaten almost to death and then thrown off a bridge to drown. Nowadays, some redneck used a homophobic slur referring to some random art student kid and lost 3+ teeth over it within 12 hours, because half of the violent gangbanger types in my school were also queer, and frankly they all had guns and police batons and no fear of using them. Without adequate protection, no community will survive, as all will be targeted by fascists eventually, it's the classic "first they came for the Jews and we did nothing, then they came for the communists and we did nothing" sort of deal. Vigilante justice is almost always a bad idea in a stable society, but here in the USA, we've long lost that stability in my opinion. Maybe it was just where I grew up in Maine, idk.

Sorry about the rant, I'm just huge on historical linguistics and the arming/training of the queer community.
Interesting. Your mom's looking like a tough person. My respect goes to her. And I hope that she will never have to go through such hardship anymore ๐Ÿ™
I get your point with the practical use of terms to define differences. It still feels like an expression of a hyper focus on those details, I don't know how to explain that any better... When I first read the word "Cishet" I thought it's a city in Poland ๐Ÿ˜….
I'm not an English native speaker but it's strange for me to use the plural form for any one person - sounds awfully like Pluralis Majestatis... So why "they/them"? Are they more than one or what's the point?
I admit that for me this whole thing is a strange new world. When I first registered for BL discord, the first thing they ask is the pronouns. I was like: "WTF!?!" If I wanna tell you what I am then I will do it, but not like a signboard shouting it out at everyone. So I was relieved when I found out how to remove the pronoun from my name...๐Ÿ™„
I mean anonymity is why I'm here. Those pronouns are none of everyone's business unless I choose to... I hope this was understandable...
And I also admit I found it quite strange how some people manage to talk about themselves in plural form... It's just so up in the face. I mean why is that so important? It really seems like a hyper fixation on that point. And it's making things a bit complicated isn't it?
In English at least you have the advantage that you have no gender asigned to nouns. In German everything has a gender. And now the new etiquette demands to make every address to the public gender encompassing by always addressing people in minimum two forms or using the passive form which really sounds awkward.
I mean can't you just feel accepted without recreating the whole language!? Sorry this is probably specifically German but it's troublesome I swear...
You can't just say Dear friends anymore. You have to say: Dear male, female and other friends. And instead of "to the workers", you have to say "to those working". ๐Ÿ™„/Rant end

As per the militarisation of the queer I admit it's looking like a specific thing for the US. I might be wrong but it's totally out of the range of my experience. So I can't really comment on it... (As in: no one here carries guns outside the worst slums of the biggest cities. Shootings are a very rare thing to occur in general - and I'm glad that is the case,)
 
So why "they/them"?
There are records back to Shakespeare as having used they/them as a non-gendered third person pronoun. The sticking point for it in English is what to do about the words uncle/aunt, and nephew/niece, as brother/sister can be sibling, mother/father can be parent, son/daughter can be child, but what would we use for nephew/niece, or uncle/aunt? Tbh, I have no clue.
"Cishet" I thought it's a city in Poland ๐Ÿ˜….
You're incredibly right about this, it's just an abbreviation often used among queer people, usually if I'm speaking with straight people I say things like "Straight people who aren't trans", just to communicate it more simply and in a less abbreviated manner.
I mean anonymity is why I'm here. Those pronouns are none of everyone's business unless I choose to... I hope this was understandable...
This is absolutely understandable, I personally as a native anglophone use they/them for people whose gender identities I'm unfamiliar with, as it's kind of like a neutral default if that makes sense.
And I also admit I found it quite strange how some people manage to talk about themselves in plural form... It's just so up in the face. I mean why is that so important? It really seems like a hyper fixation on that point. And it's making things a bit complicated isn't it?
I'm curious about where you've noticed this, people saying things like "We love that for you"? That's a common colloquialism amoung younger people. If you want to throw examples of this at me, I can try to find the best equivalent in German, I haven't used German in 4-5 years but English has this weird ambiguity with the words we/us/our, where we can refer to almost anything with it. I could say "We hate hot peppers", and be referring to myself and a random friend that was brought up earlier in the conversation, I could be referring to people who resemble myself in general, hell I could be talking about myself as well as the person that I'm speaking to at that moment. English is genuinely an incredibly confusing language, even for native anglophones.
mean can't you just feel accepted without recreating the whole language!? Sorry this is probably specifically German but it's troublesome I swear...
You can't just say Dear friends anymore. You have to say: Dear male, female and other friends. And instead of "to the workers", you have to say "to those working". ๐Ÿ™„/Rant end
I would argue that it's not recreating a whole language, but the goal is to make the smallest change possible to make space for nonbinary folk. I use Spanish and French much more than I ever used German, and in Spanish people tend to use -e instead of -o/-a, ,so saying a nonbinary person is cute in Spanish would use the word "linde", a woman it would be "linda", and a man it would be "lindo" (though the word lindo is rarely used for masculine presenting people, Spanish has a LOT of connotations pertaining to gender identity). I'll also mention that for the most part, people don't really get upset over this shit, there's a super small and vocal minority that love bitching and moaning about this but really, as long as people just try to be respectful, that's all that matters imo.

The way that the phrase "Dear friends" is unacceptable in German at the moment is fascinating to me, Freunde vs Freundinnen complicates things in the way that English has words like waiter and waitress that vary by gender, and instead we just use the term waitstaff if we're referring to a group of mixed gender waiters/waitresses, whether there are nonbinary people in there or not. In Spanish I've heard people used phrases like mis amigos to refer to mixed gender groups (including nonbinary people), but I've also heard "amiges" used in place of "amigos", and frankly nobody cares as far as I've ever noticed, but I've only used Spanish for the last ~6 years or so because of moving to Florida. What confuses me more, because that's changing from "to the [noun]" versus "to those [doing an action]", it feels more like a passive aggressive move to imply some people don't work when they're supposed to, at least that's how I'd interpret that in English.
As per the militarisation of the queer I admit it's looking like a specific thing for the US. I might be wrong but it's totally out of the range of my experience. So I can't really comment on it... (As in: no one here carries guns outside the worst slums of the biggest cities. Shootings are a very rare thing to occur in general - and I'm glad that is the case,)
Germany is a much safer nation in general relative to the USA, it sucks when violence and echoing trauma is just part of your culture, but hopefully it'll get better within the next few decades or so. I suspect we're about to resemble the collapse of the USSR in many ways, personally.

If you have any translation questions, especially as they pertain to queer matters, don't hesitate to hit me up and ask btw, the more normalized queer people become, and the easier we can fit into natural languages, the better off we'll be in my opinion.
 
^Very interesting conversation being had but I may have to split it off into its own thread if it carries on much longer just fyi, keeping things on topic and all that...

Speaking of which, I find myself approaching bedtime sober as a judge which won't do. I've got a little bit of hash and thaistick left so I'm going to smoke a bowl of that and see how I feel.

I'm feeling pretty anxious and wired tonight and am really tempted to just knock myself out with a zoplicone but also have this creeping feeling I might have to get up in the middle of the night and don't want to be too out of it incase my phone rings. Probably why I'm feeling anxious too.

Fingers crossed the weed gets some nice sleepy vibes going.
 
Fingers crossed the weed gets some nice sleepy vibes going.
An old trick I used to do was to close my eyes in a dark room, and count to 100 slowly when stoned to get to sleep, I rarely even got to 70 or 80 when doing this.
Speaking of which, I find myself approaching bedtime sober as a judge which won't do. I've got a little bit of hash and thaistick left so I'm going to smoke a bowl of that and see how I feel.
How is the Hash where you are? Iirc you're located in Europe, and I've heard great things about European hash.

Last night I took a bump of tizanidine (~500ug or so), took about 4mg of etizolam, and smoked maybe 10-12 bowls of MDMB-4en-PINACA weed because I accidentally took a nearly fatal amount of my antidepressant, Bupropion, and I was super desparate to calm my heart rate down. I felt like I'd eaten 60+mg of methamphetamine all day, it was unreal. Not uncomfortable, but I just try to maintain a somewhat sane sleep schedule, but I still only got to bed ~4:00AM. I had taken a couple days off of the etizolam, so it had me staggering all over the place and tripping on my own toes, but it didn't exhibit meaningful sedation, so I'm probably going to just throw the whole sheet of etizolam tabs back in the safe and try to get a scrip for hydroxyzine to replace it.

Has anyone here successfully utilized melatonin? Even up to 30mg I notice absolutely nothing from it, and I'm not sure as to why.

Edit: My apologies about getting off topic, it's too easy for me to get on nerd rants about linguistics and its interface with society, I'll try to keep that more reeled in (or just on its own thread) in the future.
 
Fuckssake

Had 10mg ritalin earlier today to get a shit ton of excess and quite urgent work done (gotta be handed in first thing tomorrow)

An old friend I hadn't seen in around a year was passing earlier and called in for a cuppa. I mentioned that my ritalin-boost was starting to flag and was only halfway through my tasks and then...to my horror revealed that he had some 20mg dexy's in his car, so I ofc thought that it would be the greatest ever idea to crush n snort half of one around 6.30pm (it's 10pm now)...so we proceeded to chat away for an hour and then ofc it was suddenly fucking 3 hours later aaaaha, fucking oops

Anyway he gone now, I got some jazz playing and getting stuck into what I estimate will be 3-ish hours of work so should finish 1am-ish, give or take (If I fully apply that is, which I really must).

Have gotta be up at 8, so the plan is to knock myself out by 3am latest. Only downers I have in house are 20mg Nitrazepam, so I guess I'll try half of that 2am-ish and see whats what (oh, plenty of cannabis too)
 
How is the Hash where you are? Iirc you're located in Europe, and I've heard great things about European hash
If you want a rundown on the current state of UK hash then @ageingpartyfiend is probably going to be your guy.

Oh, speak of the devil...
Edit: My apologies about getting off topic, it's too easy for me to get on nerd rants about linguistics and its interface with society, I'll try to keep that more reeled in (or just on its own thread) in the future
Oh and don't worry about it, little tangents happen all the time it's just when it starts getting to more than a page or so I might have to do some housekeeping
:laughing:

An old friend I hadn't seen in around a year was passing earlier and called in for a cuppa. I mentioned that my ritalin-boost was starting to flag and was only halfway through my tasks and then...to my horror revealed that he had some 20mg dexy's in his car, so I ofc thought that it would be the greatest ever idea to crush n snort half of one around 6.30pm (it's 10pm now)...so we proceeded to chat away for an hour and then ofc it was suddenly fucking 3 hours later aaaaha, fucking oops
I'm sure I remember you telling a story a few months back about popping into a friend's for a cuppa and leaving high on crack.

You have cool friends.
 
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40mg Codeine
A few joints (Banana Cake)
7.5mg Zopiclone
Cutting down nicely on cigarettes/ using disposable (One Use AirsPops - got a bubblegum and a peach ice on hand ) - 5% nic salts 3ml and seems to be working, so only smoked 5 cigarettes the whole day to day, and not that much vaping either :p not bad from a 40 a day habit.

starting to yawn, so good night all.
 
Nitrazepam
How would you compare Nitrazepam to other benzos? As somebody in the USA, I've never encountered it, but I suspect it resembles Diazepam?
Cutting down nicely on cigarettes/ using disposable (One Use AirsPops - got a bubblegum and a peach ice on hand ) - 5% nic salts 3ml and seems to be working, so only smoked 5 cigarettes the whole day to day, and not that much vaping either :p not bad from a 40 a day habit.
Congrats on the tapering! Nicotine's wicked tough to put down.
 
How would you compare Nitrazepam to other benzos? As somebody in the USA, I've never encountered it, but I suspect it resembles Diazepam?
Not to me but I'm no expert

I find Diazepam to be an excellent 'all-rounder' but for me Nitrazepam is merely a super-potent sleep agent - I don't recall any other noticeable effect apart from a sledgehammer into unconsciousness even at 10mg (15mg for me after stims maybe

You also mentioned hashish...I think there may well be quite a lot of quite poor quality hash in the UK but in the more established, older and more underground circles there's definitely a steady supply of very good to quite exquisite quality to be had, which helps matters no end I find!
 
Not to me but I'm no expert

I find Diazepam to be an excellent 'all-rounder' but for me Nitrazepam is merely a super-potent sleep agent - I don't recall any other noticeable effect apart from a sledgehammer into unconsciousness even at 10mg (15mg for me after stims maybe

You also mentioned hashish...I think there may well be quite a lot of quite poor quality hash in the UK but in the more established, older and more underground circles there's definitely a steady supply of very good to quite exquisite quality to be had, which helps matters no end I find!
Thank you for the information here!!!

I'm shocked that there aren't more people isomerizing CBD, infusing it into kief from a CBD dominant strain like Charlotte's Web, and also infusing it with terps.

As much as people love to shit on "fake weed", I've personally made many of my personal favorite cannabinoid products by getting to mix things like THC-H, THC-B, THC-B, โˆ†9, and various botanically derived terpenes that cannabis could never generate. Usually I keep it as distillate and throw it in my box mod, but I've dissolved it into ethanol before to infuse into herb, hash, or in very high dose concentrations, I would just dip a filled cone like you would with PCP.
 
Tonight I decided to test if 15mg each of 2C-B and allylescaline would cut through recent NBXX tolerance, and while the visuals are a bit muted, the stimulation and headspace is still heavy and my senses are highly amplified. One of my tiny Lophophora diffusa buttons may be dying soon, so if so, I'll dry it out and save it for dinner.
 
That's an insane ratio (50/110) to congratulate you, you must've done a great job! Congratulation, it's never an easy thing to do.
I may be exaggerating a bit. Probably not that many people but a lot of people did come up to me, and my great aunt (sister of mt grandfather who died) wrote me an email. There was a memory table at the reception. Some tools he used on the farm, some photos, etc. Well she emailed me and said she had been reading it and thinks that I have a knack for writing and that I should consider taking a class at the local community college. I've been wanting to take a writing class for a long time so that makes me feel good that she feels that way. I guess that I did do an okay job
Hell yeah, I recall asking my cishet homies once if I appeared queer and they used to always say the same thing, "We honestly can't distinguish you from any other metalhead. You've got long hair, you paint your nails black, sometimes you wear contact lenses to have green or blue eyes, and you're always on a skateboard." I'm currently waiting to do my nails until I get a job (need to pick up good base coat and top coat) but I'm mad excited to, despite being some weird agender identity I don't care much to label as it seems irrelevant, I certainly do feel most like myself with that, as my cishet homies put it, "metalhead" type of aesthetic. I don't even have tattoos or piercings or anything, I guess it's just the vibe I present.
Yeah I always felt that labels did me more harm than good over the years. I'm not someone who fits neatly into any category when it comes to gender identity and sexuality: so for the longest time I just figured I'd forgo it, but now I;m feeling confident in the Trans-fem label
The way that trans people in my life have talked to me about this is that, while unpleasant, they view it as the "before" side of a transitional period in their life where they later juxtapose it to the "after" side of their transition and it provides a reference point of sort which increases the gender euphoria that they experience in that "after" phase, it reminds me of the before-and-after shots of people who are out of shape but then get in really good shape, if that makes sense. As an agender person, I feel like I'm even more privileged than cis people in a way, as even cis people can experience gender dysphoria at points, but I don't think I've ever felt either gender euphoria or dysphoria, I'm just me. I suppose "agender" is the right term but, as we've already spoken on, labels themselves are pretty goofy.
Yeah, I agree that labels are goofy. I never thought that I felt much in the way of dysphoria, just thought that I hated my body hair and broad shoulders and voice for dome reason, but now that I've accepted myself, I am definitely feeling gender euphoria, I'm realizing that I never felt happy in my whole life until now. Now I'm giddy and bubbly. I feel really fucking good, Thought I was just suffering from depression but it turns out that I was just dealing with the consequences of hiding from myself. I feel like I'm on drugs. I've never felt this good taking any chemical before. So I'm certain that I've made the right decision. I've been considering it for over 10 years so I think I made the right choice.
The way that trans people in my life have talked to me about this is that, while unpleasant, they view it as the "before" side of a transitional period in their life where they later juxtapose it to the "after" side of their transition and it provides a reference point of sort which increases the gender euphoria that they experience in that "after" phase, it reminds me of the before-and-after shots of people who are out of shape but then get in really good shape, if that makes sense. As an agender person, I feel like I'm even more privileged than cis people in a way, as even cis people can experience gender dysphoria at points, but I don't think I've ever felt either gender euphoria or dysphoria, I'm just me. I suppose "agender" is the right term but, as we've already spoken on, labels themselves are pretty goofy.
Yeah, labels are pretty goofy and pointless. They help in some cases and hurt in many others so its like, whats the point? I agree that cis people can experience gender dysphoria. Like how men taking testosterone is gender affirming care. They maybe have low testosterone and the extra boost helps them feel more like themselves. I don't know how to explain it.

This is nutty, I had brain damage that left me schizotypal until ~20 so up until then I uonly used amphetamine, methamphetamine, various benzos both RC and prescription, gabapentin, a variety of pharmaceutical and RC opioids (but I fucking hate heroin) and I've just been eating weed like it's the bottom of my food pyramid since I was 13. Salvia and DXM were tried as a 15-16 year old, and while they were interesting, I mostly just found them confusing and thought to myself something along the lines of "Well I guess I'll revisit these when I feel called to."
DXM is actually a very serious drug. I have had MANY profound experiences with it. I've been wanting to revisit it but the hangover can be really draining. From the ages of like 7-17 I had very bad insomnia due to a profound fear of death. My mother was diagnosed with cancer when I was young, so I would be up from a very young age, terrified of what might happen to her after she passed away. I was scared that she'd just go into nothingness. Long story short, I had a near death experience on DXM during my teenage years that cured me of that existential dread. DXM has he capability of producing some profound states of mind


I'll respond to the rest tomorrow. I really have to get some sleep.I'll talk to you later on
 
On topic: I had planned on knocking myself out of the WD last night with 20 mg Zolpidem boofed. Dissolved and prepared - and then I fell asleep with the kids without even brushing my teeth ๐Ÿ™„.
Anyways it's still there and ready for tonight ๐Ÿ˜

@Esperighanto: Wanna continue in dms? We can also leave it at that though, I got the point with the they/them thing - the rest would make it a long off topic rant again ๐Ÿ˜…
 
On topic: I had planned on knocking myself out of the WD last night with 20 mg Zolpidem boofed.

What are you withdrawing from?

If youโ€™re ever in a heavy opioid withdrawal literally nothing will make you go to sleep. No amount of benzos will knock me out during a heavy withdrawl and if they do itโ€™s for like 30 minutes max.
 
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