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Reply #30 posted 03/29/12 2:47pm

dJJ

KingBAD said:

was ali g ever funny??? eek

naw.

Not at all.

Southpark is geniusly funny.

99% of my posts are ironic. Maybe this post sides with the other 1%.
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Reply #31 posted 03/29/12 3:31pm

Dave1992

KingBAD said:

was ali g ever funny??? eek

I ignited a discussion about that a couple of weeks ago - it went horribly wrong. lol

He's one of my favourites. I know a lot of Europeans who did him a lot. Ya no, maybe it just a Bri'ish / American tin' shrug

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Reply #32 posted 03/29/12 4:15pm

Serious

avatar

Dave1992 said:

KingBAD said:

was ali g ever funny??? eek

I ignited a discussion about that a couple of weeks ago - it went horribly wrong. lol

He's one of my favourites. I know a lot of Europeans who did him a lot. Ya no, maybe it just a Bri'ish / American tin' shrug

Freudian slip lol?

With a very special thank you to Tina: Is hammer already absolute, how much some people verändern...ICH hope is never so I will be! And if, then I hope that I would then have wen in my environment who joins me in the A....
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Reply #33 posted 03/29/12 4:21pm

Dave1992

Serious said:

Dave1992 said:

I ignited a discussion about that a couple of weeks ago - it went horribly wrong. lol

He's one of my favourites. I know a lot of Europeans who did him a lot. Ya no, maybe it just a Bri'ish / American tin' shrug

Freudian slip lol?

falloff !

DIG! And no, not dig into his anus or throat. I really meant genuinely liking his humour! disbelief lol

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Reply #34 posted 03/29/12 4:30pm

Serious

avatar

Dave1992 said:

Serious said:

Freudian slip lol?

falloff !

DIG! And no, not dig into his anus or throat. I really meant genuinely liking his humour! disbelief lol

I knew you meant dig, but I did not expect you to now say something about digging into his anus or throat falloff. Nasty no no no! lol!

With a very special thank you to Tina: Is hammer already absolute, how much some people verändern...ICH hope is never so I will be! And if, then I hope that I would then have wen in my environment who joins me in the A....
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Reply #35 posted 03/29/12 4:37pm

Dave1992

Serious said:

Dave1992 said:

falloff !

DIG! And no, not dig into his anus or throat. I really meant genuinely liking his humour! disbelief lol

I knew you meant dig, but I did not expect you to now say something about digging into his anus or throat falloff. Nasty no no no! lol!

Guess Sigmund was right after all. shrug

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Reply #36 posted 03/29/12 4:39pm

Serious

avatar

Dave1992 said:

Serious said:

I knew you meant dig, but I did not expect you to now say something about digging into his anus or throat falloff. Nasty no no no! lol!

Guess Sigmund was right after all. shrug

You just proved him right nod!

With a very special thank you to Tina: Is hammer already absolute, how much some people verändern...ICH hope is never so I will be! And if, then I hope that I would then have wen in my environment who joins me in the A....
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Reply #37 posted 03/29/12 4:39pm

XxAxX

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america's 'war on drugs' eh??? check this out:

Risky antipsychotic drugs prescribed ‘recklessly’ for unapproved uses

Posted March 14, 2012, at 9:05 a.m.
Metro Creative

Adriane Fugh-Berman was stunned by the question: Two graduate students who had no symptoms of mental illness wondered if she thought they should take a powerful schizophrenia drug each had been prescribed to treat insomnia.

“It’s a total outrage,” said Fugh-Berman, a physician who is an associate professor of pharmacology at Georgetown University. “These kids needed some basic sleep (advice), like reducing their intake of caffeine and alcohol, not a highly sedating drug.”

Those students exemplify a trend that alarms medical experts, policy-makers and patient advocates: the skyrocketing increase in the off-label use of an expensive class of drugs called atypical antipsychotics. Until the past decade these 11 drugs, most approved in the 1990s, had been reserved for the approximately 3 percent of Americans with the most disabling mental illnesses, chiefly schizophrenia and bipolar disorder; more recently a few have been approved to treat severe depression.

But these days atypical antipsychotics — the most popular are Seroquel, Zyprexa and Abilify — are being prescribed by psychiatrists and primary-care doctors to treat a panoply of conditions for which they have not been approved, including anxiety, attention-deficit disorder, sleep difficulties, behavioral problems in toddlers and dementia. These new drugs account for more than 90 percent of the market and have eclipsed an older generation of antipsychotics. Two recent reports have found that youths in foster care, some less than a year old, are taking more psychotropic drugs than other children, including those with the severest forms of mental illness.

In 2010 antipsychotic drugs racked up more than $16 billion in sales, according to IMS Health, a firm that tracks drug trends for the health-care industry. For the past three years they have ranked near or at the top of the best-selling classes of drugs, outstripping antidepressants and sometimes cholesterol medicines.

A study published last year found that off-label antipsychotic prescriptions doubled between 1995 and 2008, from 4.4 million to 9 million. And a recent report by pharmacy benefits manager Medco estimated that the prevalence of the drugs’ use among adults ballooned more than 169 percent between 2001 and 2010.

Critics say the popularity of atypical antipsychotics reflects a combination of hype that the expensive medicines, which can cost $500 per month, are safer than the earlier generation of drugs; hope that they will work for a variety of ailments when other treatments have not; and aggressive marketing by drug companies to doctors and patients.

“Antipsychotics are overused, overpriced and oversold,” said Allen Frances, former chair of psychiatry at Duke University School of Medicine, who headed the task force that wrote the DSM-IV, psychiatry’s diagnostic bible. While judicious off-label use may be appropriate for those who have not responded to other treatments for, say, severe obsessive-compulsive disorder, Frances said the drugs, which are designed to calm patients and to moderate the hallucinations and delusions of psychosis, are being used “promiscuously, recklessly,” often to control behavior and with little regard for their serious side effects. These include major, rapid weight gain — 40 pounds is not uncommon — Type 2 diabetes, breast development in boys, irreversible facial tics and, among the elderly, an increased risk of death.

Doctors are allowed to prescribe drugs for unapproved uses, but companies are forbidden to promote them for such purposes. In the past few years major drugmakers have paid more than $2 billion to settle lawsuits brought by states and the federal government alleging illegal marketing; some cases are still being litigated, as are thousands of claims by patients. In 2009 Eli Lilly and Co. paid the federal government a record $1.4 billion to settle charges that it illegally marketed Zyprexa through, among other things, a “5 at 5 campaign” that urged nursing homes to administer 5 milligrams of the drug at 5 p.m. to induce sleep.

Wayne Blackmon, a psychiatrist and lawyer who teaches at George Washington University Law School, said he commonly sees patients taking more than one antipsychotic, which raises the risk of side effects. Blackmon regards them as the “drugs du jour,” too often prescribed for “problems of living. Somehow doctors have gotten it into their heads that this is an acceptable use.”

Physicians, he said, have a financial incentive to prescribe drugs, widely regarded as a much quicker fix than a time-intensive evaluation and nondrug treatments such as behavior therapy, which might not be covered by insurance.

In a series in the New York Review of Books last year, Marcia Angell, former editor in chief of the New England Journal of Medicine, argued that the apparent “raging epidemic of mental illness” partly reflects diagnosis creep: the expansion of the elastic boundaries that define mental illnesses to include more people, which enlarges the market for psychiatric drugs.

“You can’t push a drug if people don’t think they have a disease,” said Fugh-Berman, who directs PharmedOut, a Georgetown program that educates doctors about drug marketing and promotion. “How do you normalize the use of antipsychotics? By using key opinion leaders to emphasize their use and through CMEs (continuing medical education) and ghost-written articles in medical journals,” which, she said “affect the whole information stream.”

James H. Scully Jr., medical director of the American Psychiatric Association, sees the situation differently. He agrees that misuse of the drugs is a problem and says that off-label prescribing should be based on some evidence of effectiveness. But Scully suggests that a key factor driving use of the drugs, in addition to “intense marketing and some effectiveness,” is the growing number of non-psychiatrists prescribing them. Many lack the expertise and experience necessary to properly diagnose and treat mental health problems, he said.

Among psychiatrists, use of antipsychotics is rooted in a desire to heal, according to Scully. “All of the meds we use have their limits. If you’re trying to help somebody, you think, ‘What else might I be able to do for them?’ ”

Since 2005, antipsychotics have carried a black-box warning, the strongest possible, cautioning against their use in elderly patients with dementia, because the drugs increase the risk of death. In 2008 the Food and Drug Administration reiterated its earlier warning, noting that “antipsychotics are not indicated for the treatment of dementia-related psychosis.” But experts say such use remains widespread.

In one Northern California nursing home in 2006 and 2007, 22 residents, many suffering from dementia, were given antipsychotics for the convenience of the staff or because the residents refused to go to the dining room. In some cases the drugs were forcibly injected, state officials said. Three residents died.

A 2011 report by the inspector general of the Department of Health and Human Services found that in a six-month period in 2007, 14 percent of nursing home residents were given antipsychotics. In one case a patient with an undetected urinary-tract infection was given the drugs to control agitation.

“The primary reason is that there’s not enough staff,” said Toby S. Edelman, senior policy attorney for the Center for Medicare Advocacy, a Washington-based nonprofit group, who recently testified about the problem before the Senate Special Committee on Aging. “If you can’t tie people up, you give ‘em a drug” she said, referring to restrictions on the use of physical restraints in nursing homes.

Nursing home residents aren’t the only ones gobbling antipsychotics.

Mark E. Helm, a Little Rock pediatrician who was a medical director of Arkansas’ Medicaid evidence-based prescription drug program from 2004 to 2010, said he had seen 18-month-olds being given potent antipsychotic drugs for bipolar disorder, an illness he said rarely develops before adolescence. Antipsychotics, which he characterized as the fastest-growing and most expensive class of drugs covered by the state’s Medicaid program, were typically prescribed to children to control disruptive behavior, which often stemmed from their impoverished, chaotic or dysfunctional families, Helm said. “Sedation is the key reason these meds get used,” he observed.

More than any other factor, experts agree, the explosive growth in the diagnosis of pediatric bipolar disorder has fueled antipsychotic use among children. Between 1994 and 2003, reported diagnoses increased 40-fold, from about 20,000 to approximately 800,000, according to Columbia University researchers.

That diagnosis, popularized by several prominent child psychiatrists in Boston who claimed that extreme irritability, inattention and mood swings were actually pediatric bipolar disorder that can occur before age 2, has undergone a reevaluation in recent years. The reasons include the highly publicized death of a 4-year-old girl in Massachusetts, who along with her two young siblings had been taking a cocktail of powerful drugs for several years to treat bipolar disorder; the revelation of more than $1 million in unreported drug company payments to the leading proponent of the diagnosis; and growing doubts about its validity.

Helm said that antipsychotics, which he believes have become more socially acceptable, serve another purpose: as a gateway to mental health services. “To get a child qualified for SSI disability, it is helpful to have a child on a medicine,” he said, referring to the federal program that assists families of children who are disabled by illness.

Psychiatrist David J. Muzina, a national practice leader at pharmacy benefits manager Medco, said he believes direct-to-consumer advertising has helped fuel rising use of the drugs. As former director of the mood disorders center at the Cleveland Clinic, he encountered patients who asked for antipsychotics by name, citing a TV commercial or print ad.

Some states are attempting to rein in their use and cut escalating costs. Texas has announced it will not allow a child younger than 3 to receive antipsychotics without authorization from the state. Arkansas now requires parents to give informed consent before a child receives an anti-psychotic drug. The federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services announced it is summoning state officials to a meeting this summer to address the use of antipsychotics in foster care. And Sens. Herb Kohl, D-Wis., and Charles E. Grassley, R-Iowa, introduced legislation that would require doctors who prescribe antipsychotics off-label to nursing home patients to complete forms certifying that they are appropriate.

Medco is asking doctors to document that they have performed diabetes tests in patients taking the drugs. “Our intention here is to get doctors to reexamine prescriptions,” Muzina said.

“In the short term, I don’t see a change in this trend unless external forces intervene.”

This article was produced in collaboration with Kaiser Health News. KHN is an editorially independent program of the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation, a nonprofit, nonpartisan health-policy research and communication organization not affiliated with Kaiser Permanente.

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Reply #38 posted 03/29/12 8:12pm

lezama

avatar

Do you do them regularly? Only if alcohol is considered a drug.

What is your personal definition of "drug"? Something that gets u fucked up.

What have you tried? No comment.

Any experiences you want to share? I had my first drink at 11, first experience with drugs at 12, and I still turned out pretty good.

Which drugs should be made legal/illegal? I think weed and hallucinagens should be legal, all the the highly addictive stuff like heroin, crack, crystal meth etc should continue to be illegal. Coke should be available by prescription, to keep the coke heads in check.

Were you an addict at some point? No, I've always been able to start and stop anything I've tried without too much trouble.

Are you completely against the use of drugs? Why? No. They're not for everyone, but for those that can handle particular drugs, as long as they're responsible and don't cause any lasting harm to themselves or anyone else, there's nothing wrong with it.

Change it one more time..
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Reply #39 posted 03/29/12 8:19pm

kimrachell

i've known some people in my family, etc...such as my uncle that is a drug user, and i have to say i've never seen any good come out of their addictions. i've seen it destroy their careers, relationships, trust, and just about everything in their lives. sad

[Edited 3/29/12 20:20pm]

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Reply #40 posted 03/30/12 2:59am

Mya

Do you do them regularly?

No, not anymore but I did. That's what your youth is all about, right? Well, at least mine was. I'm not a drinker, either ~ maybe every few months with friends. I drink caffiene before exams/when I'm studying. I've been smoking on & off for years which I guess counts too!

What is your personal definition of "drug"?

Alters your mindframe & changes your perspective, takes your mind completely outside of the box. Not necessarily a release from what's troubling you, but more of divulge.

What have you tried?

I smoked marijuana daily for years, can't even touch the stuff now. Other than that I've done party pills, ectasy, mdma, speed, legal highs, hashish .. I'm pretty sure that's it lol

Any experiences you want to share?

Hmm .. car broke down before the night had even started. Spent $1000 on pills between 7 people. Events blurred, somewhere in the night we ended up at this Uni student's party where everyone was wearing 'Abu' style hats & playing indie music ~ I naturally changed what was playing to Busta Rhymes lol Deep & meaningful conversations in the pouring rain for hours that seemed like minutes. Going home at 6 in the morning on the back of a tow truck, going over the harbour bridge & watching the sun rise into a pink/orange sky ~ beautiful.

Raggamuffin music festivals, I went twice!! A definite highlight was grooving & smoking spliffs to the original Wailers in the sun, amazing atmosphere, even better music .. Basically the only event where it's a given you'll get away with it lol

When my best friend & I were having a night in, rolled a blunt worth a few hundred dollars just for the sake of it .. I've never one as large as what we smoked that night. Ended up watching Coneheads & going to sleep lol lol


I could go on .. but I won't. Don't want to tell all my secrets shhh

Which drugs should be made legal/illegal?

Irrelevant ..

Were you an addict at some point?

I was dependent on marijuana to the point where I couldn't go to sleep without being under the influence from it so I think that's a yes nod

Are you completely against the use of drugs? Why?

No, I actually owe alot to my drug use as I used it as a positive - I was off the rails before I started taking drugs believe it or not, & they helped me realize how I was portraying myself, what I was putting up with & how I could change for the BETTER .. I wouldn't change my past as I wouldn't be where I am today if it wasn't for it.

I believe it all depends on your intentions for taking them in the first place nod

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Reply #41 posted 03/30/12 3:59am

BobGeorge909

avatar

Mya said:

Do you do them regularly?


No, not anymore but I did. That's what your youth is all about, right? Well, at least mine was. I'm not a drinker, either ~ maybe every few months with friends. I drink caffiene before exams/when I'm studying. I've been smoking on & off for years which I guess counts too!



What is your personal definition of "drug"?


Alters your mindframe & changes your perspective, takes your mind completely outside of the box. Not necessarily a release from what's troubling you, but more of divulge.



What have you tried?


I smoked marijuana daily for years, can't even touch the stuff now. Other than that I've done party pills, ectasy, mdma, speed, legal highs, hashish .. I'm pretty sure that's it lol



Any experiences you want to share?


Hmm .. car broke down before the night had even started. Spent $1000 on pills between 7 people. Events blurred, somewhere in the night we ended up at this Uni student's party where everyone was wearing 'Abu' style hats & playing indie music ~ I naturally changed what was playing to Busta Rhymes lol Deep & meaningful conversations in the pouring rain for hours that seemed like minutes. Going home at 6 in the morning on the back of a tow truck, going over the harbour bridge & watching the sun rise into a pink/orange sky ~ beautiful.



Raggamuffin music festivals, I went twice!! A definite highlight was grooving & smoking spliffs to the original Wailers in the sun, amazing atmosphere, even better music .. Basically the only event where it's a given you'll get away with it lol



When my best friend & I were having a night in, rolled a blunt worth a few hundred dollars just for the sake of it .. I've never one as large as what we smoked that night. Ended up watching Coneheads & going to sleep lol lol




I could go on .. but I won't. Don't want to tell all my secrets shhh



Which drugs should be made legal/illegal?


Irrelevant ..



Were you an addict at some point?


I was dependent on marijuana to the point where I couldn't go to sleep without being under the influence from it so I think that's a yes nod



Are you completely against the use of drugs? Why?


No, I actually owe alot to my drug use as I used it as a positive - I was off the rails before I started taking drugs believe it or not, & they helped me realize how I was portraying myself, what I was putting up with & how I could change for the BETTER .. I wouldn't change my past as I wouldn't be where I am today if it wasn't for it.



I believe it all depends on your intentions for taking them in the first place nod


I have no idea why I had such a "good girl" image going in in my mind for you. :hi5: !
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Reply #42 posted 03/30/12 10:31am

NDRU

avatar

Mya said:

Were you an addict at some point?

I was dependent on marijuana to the point where I couldn't go to sleep without being under the influence from it so I think that's a yes nod

Are you completely against the use of drugs? Why?

No, I actually owe alot to my drug use as I used it as a positive - I was off the rails before I started taking drugs believe it or not, & they helped me realize how I was portraying myself, what I was putting up with & how I could change for the BETTER .. I wouldn't change my past as I wouldn't be where I am today if it wasn't for it.

Two good answers that I could have said just as easily about myself

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Reply #43 posted 03/31/12 10:10am

Deadflow3r

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I tried pot several times from age 11 to 29. Years would pass by between uses. I would be at a party of out with friends. Each time I became paranoid. Despite sometimes being 5 years between uses it seemed like I was becoming increasingly paranoid. So I have not "tried" it since maybe 1996 again.

Because my body reacted so strangely to pot i never tried anything else.

I am bipolar, type II to be exact. That is what i was diagnosed as having anyway. I suffered from huge depressions in the past. I just see my brain as already chemically altered naturally and I don't want to tip the cart by adding to the chemical brew that I already have naturally.

I do not take even the drugs perscribed for me now.

There came a time when the risk of remaining tight in the bud was more painful than the risk it took to blossom. Anais Nin.
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Reply #44 posted 03/31/12 6:55pm

iloveannie

Dave1992 said:

Do you do them regularly? ...

What is your personal definition of "drug"? Something that alters the mind/body from the norm.

What have you tried? ...

Any experiences you want to share? some good some bad. When does one outweigh the other?

Which drugs should be made legal/illegal? control is the only answer. The fight is lost.

Were you an addict at some point? ...

Are you completely against the use of drugs? Why? No and yes. They have ruined lives and stolen time. In fact the latter part is the truer. I guess some can moderate and control themselves. Others, well...

In my idealistic world, every drug should be made legal, but every single person would still choose to turn their back on 90% of all drugs out there.

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Reply #45 posted 04/01/12 10:28am

PURplEMaPLeSyr
up

avatar

Do you do them regularly?

no, unless music counts

What is your personal definition of "drug"?

a thing that temporarily mimics your natural brain chemistry

What have you tried?

alcohol

Any experiences you want to share?

being super-sensitive, i don't even like to live with people who use drugs smile

Which drugs should be made legal/illegal?

i just wish all children could grow up without having to be around them. any drug that dims your awareness enough to not respect the children should be regulated.

Were you an addict at some point?

no

Are you completely against the use of drugs? Why?

yes, i can only speak for myself, being terribly sensitive. it may be that a one-time use of drugs has offered many people a profound new perspective, but regular use seems only palliative in dealing with issues in one's emotional life. if there are toxins in the brain physiclaly blocking the neurotransmitters of bliss from being produced, i feel it's better to chelate out those toxins and let the brain then naturally produce happiness. if there are emotional toxins in the mind, i prefer non-chemical methods such as vivation, etc to curatively heal the emotions for good. seems like most quick fixes have undesirable side effects. i could go on and on wink

flowing through the veins of the tree of life...purplemaplesyrup
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Reply #46 posted 04/01/12 12:34pm

iloveannie

Being fucked on e or meow is wonderful. With friends it can produce incredible nights. The awareness, energy, empathy and stimulus that music gives is second to none. Nothing can top it. The comedown, both short and longterm, is nasty. They get worse with repitition. You lose time, feel shit, get moody and suffer terrible guilt. Well I do. The paranoia that I suffer from regular use is most unpleasant.

Oh, sexual desire is enhanced beyond belief. I can devour my wife for hours on end. It's so intense. Love is not impacted in the slightest.
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Reply #47 posted 04/01/12 12:34pm

Vendetta1

iloveannie said:

Being fucked on e or meow is wonderful. With friends it can produce incredible nights. The awareness, energy, empathy and stimulus that music gives is second to none. Nothing can top it. The comedown, both short and longterm, is nasty. They get worse with repitition. You lose time, feel shit, get moody and suffer terrible guilt. Well I do. The paranoia that I suffer from regular use is most unpleasant. Oh, sexual desire is enhanced beyond belief. I can devour my wife for hours on end. It's so intense. Love is not impacted in the slightest.

What is meow?

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Reply #48 posted 04/01/12 12:38pm

iloveannie

Worst thing that ever happened to me. Both ashamed and heartbroken. If I could turn back time...
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Reply #49 posted 04/01/12 12:42pm

iloveannie

Vendetta1 said:



iloveannie said:


Being fucked on e or meow is wonderful. With friends it can produce incredible nights. The awareness, energy, empathy and stimulus that music gives is second to none. Nothing can top it. The comedown, both short and longterm, is nasty. They get worse with repitition. You lose time, feel shit, get moody and suffer terrible guilt. Well I do. The paranoia that I suffer from regular use is most unpleasant. Oh, sexual desire is enhanced beyond belief. I can devour my wife for hours on end. It's so intense. Love is not impacted in the slightest.

What is meow?


Google it. Legal high until last year in the uk. Very strong, very cheap. Great at first but then the tolerance kicks in.
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Reply #50 posted 04/01/12 12:50pm

kewlschool

avatar

iloveannie said:

Being fucked on e or meow is wonderful. With friends it can produce incredible nights. The awareness, energy, empathy and stimulus that music gives is second to none. Nothing can top it. The comedown, both short and longterm, is nasty. They get worse with repitition. You lose time, feel shit, get moody and suffer terrible guilt. Well I do. The paranoia that I suffer from regular use is most unpleasant. Oh, sexual desire is enhanced beyond belief. I can devour my wife for hours on end. It's so intense. Love is not impacted in the slightest.

Interesting. I really don't do drugs (Other than sugar). And all the things you say that you feel while on E is the way I feel naturally. hmmm Although, I don't have to deal with the comedown.

It sounds as if you have changed your life toward the better. Good for you.

As for drug usage, I feel it is up to the individual to decide if they want to use it or not.

And Pot should be legal.

99.9% of everything I say is strictly for my own entertainment
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Reply #51 posted 04/01/12 1:32pm

iloveannie

kewlschool said:



iloveannie said:


Being fucked on e or meow is wonderful. With friends it can produce incredible nights. The awareness, energy, empathy and stimulus that music gives is second to none. Nothing can top it. The comedown, both short and longterm, is nasty. They get worse with repitition. You lose time, feel shit, get moody and suffer terrible guilt. Well I do. The paranoia that I suffer from regular use is most unpleasant. Oh, sexual desire is enhanced beyond belief. I can devour my wife for hours on end. It's so intense. Love is not impacted in the slightest.


Interesting. I really don't do drugs (Other than sugar). And all the things you say that you feel while on E is the way I feel naturally. hmmm Although, I don't have to deal with the comedown.


It sounds as if you have changed your life toward the better. Good for you.



As for drug usage, I feel it is up to the individual to decide if they want to use it or not.



And Pot should be legal.



Sorry, it was four things, music appreciation being the fourth. My life hasn't changed. The temptation never goes away and sometimes I still dabble. It's a curse to be honest. If only I had greater self control sad
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Reply #52 posted 04/02/12 5:00pm

lezama

avatar

iloveannie said:

Being fucked on e or meow is wonderful.

TMI.. smile

Change it one more time..
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Reply #53 posted 04/02/12 5:04pm

lezama

avatar

lezama said:

iloveannie said:

Being fucked on e or meow is wonderful.

TMI.. smile

Oooooh. u mean being fucked UP on E.. lurking thought we were talking about something else there.. tonk

Change it one more time..
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Reply #54 posted 04/02/12 8:59pm

iloveannie

lezama said:



lezama said:




iloveannie said:


Being fucked on e or meow is wonderful.


TMI.. smile




Oooooh. u mean being fucked UP on E.. lurking thought we were talking about something else there.. tonk


That too wink
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Reply #55 posted 04/02/12 11:24pm

Mya

BobGeorge909 said:

I have no idea why I had such a "good girl" image going in in my mind for you. :hi5: !

It's because I am a good girl .. well these days anyway lol

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