When you guys are talking about DXM do you mean you just drink cough medicine? I know people who have done that and puked. Do some of you take it a pill form or somthin?
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When you guys are talking about DXM do you mean you just drink cough medicine? I know people who have done that and puked. Do some of you take it a pill form or somthin?
it is dextromethorphen or somethin like that, erowid.org, its on the front page
its in cough syrup and cough pills
read the site erowid.org
dxm is an ingrediant in some cough medicines. it can be dangerous if there are other active ingrediants in the syrup.you need to make sure that dxm and only dxm is the active ingrediant.i dont know the name of the ingrediant that makes you puke but :rasta: i know it starts with a "gau" in the beggining of the name.
yup, you are correct. i dont do it, but if you wana get high off it (which is stupid) just drink a bunch of cough medicine, or look on the indegrdients for Dextromethorphan. dont be a retard and do it, just smoke buds. its safe
a waste of time and moneyQuote:
Originally Posted by Smokey McPot
hahaha smokey mc pot has 420 posts currently
I'd say it's pretty damn good when you don't have any weed available. I spent $4 on a bottle of cough medicine a few hours ago and now I'm somewhere between drunk and high, and still have enough left to get high tomarrow night. Plus I had a cough and it's taken it away way better than cough medicine has at the recommended dose....Quote:
Originally Posted by KronicKilla
What else can get you high for ~6 hours for 2 bucks relatively safely?
Several years ago, JW Olney discovered that dizocilpine (MK-801), aQuote:
Originally Posted by BigBlock
chemical being tested to prevent brain damage from strokes, actually
caused damage to specific areas of the brain in rats. Since this time,
numerous other drugs in the same class (the dissociatives) have been
tested, and they all share this problem. As some of you might know, I
have spent a great deal of time trying to make sure that the Internet
community, and the larger world, has detailed information about this
complex, difficult-to-use, and often dangerous class of drugs. I first
learned of Olney's lesions a few years ago, but it has taken me much
time to review all the evidence, compare drug dosage within and across
species, speak to heavy dissociative users, and so on. I am now ready
to state my conclusions and make some recommendations, which are as
follows (explained in detail in the full document).
* Dissociatives definitely cause brain damage if used heavily.
One sub-anaesthetic "line dose" of ketamine, an equivalent dose of
PCP, or a third plateau DXM dose, is probably at least as damaging
to your brain as a few day "bender" on hard liquor, and possibly
more so because it affects specific areas of the brain.
* The risk of brain damage is worse the longer you stay high at any
given time; constant moderate-dose use is probably just as
damaging as a brief, high-dose use.
* Reaching the anaesthetic level is exceedingly hard on your brain.
* Ketamine is probably the least harmful, PCP the most, and DXM
somewhere in the middle, but this is a rough guesstimate. Nitrous
oxide is brief acting, but it too may be dangerous; it is also
known to damage both central and peripheral nerves by depleting
vitamin B12
Some people may be more susceptible to Olney's lesions than others.
There is, to my knowledge, NO way of knowing how susceptible you are.
In addition to brain damage, these drugs can also trigger psychosis,
limbic seizures, temporal lability, depression, and other neurological
and psychological diseases much more frequently than other types of
drugs. The dissociatives can be highly addictive to a minority of
users. In comparison, the marijuana and the serotonergic psychedelics
(LSD, psilocybin mushrooms, peyote, DMT) are many times safer.
People who have used dissociatives heavily have shown clear evidence
of brain damage. This is not necessarily conclusive, since the people
who become addicted to them might have underlying conditions
(specifically, temporal lobe complex partial seizures) which could be
responsible for some of the damage. Nonetheless, I can't ignore the
fact that most everyone who uses dissociatives both frequently and
heavily ends up with some sort of neurological or psychological
problem, ranging from impaired memory to a schizophrenia-like
syndrome. Many of the impairments correspond exactly to the areas of
the brain damaged in lab animals.
If you will not abstain from using dissociatives, there are several
steps you can take to protect your brain, ranging from limiting
frequency and dosage to taking nutrients and neuroprotective drugs.
You can also use alternative methods (ranging from safer drugs to
meditation) to reach the same places that dissociatives take you.
J.W. Olney isn't even as sure about disassociatives as you seem to be. Perhaps NAN should be named after you.Quote:
Originally Posted by KronicKilla
Must've had one erased. He now has 419. :stoned:Quote:
Originally Posted by acrca