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Topics - Dopameme
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211
« on: April 14, 2015, 11:57:24 AM »
just look at this compelling evidence how many more kids need to ruin their lives with drugs before we stop this atrocity?
212
« on: April 11, 2015, 05:53:49 PM »
ask away while i'm still sober
213
« on: April 11, 2015, 12:05:04 AM »
i've seen at least 10 new unique accounts tonight. now, either someone is having a little fun with alts or we somehow managed to get a bunch of new people in the 24ish hours since i last visited
214
« on: April 06, 2015, 07:52:22 PM »
you da real MVP
215
« on: April 05, 2015, 11:17:15 PM »
Hi, how are you?
216
« on: April 05, 2015, 10:42:09 PM »
i am curious as to where that little chicken has scurried off to, i miss his presence
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« on: April 05, 2015, 01:25:35 PM »
if we are all gOD's children, and gOD left us on this earth, does that mean that gOD is black? I believe so
discuss this shocking discovery
218
« on: April 04, 2015, 05:14:42 PM »
keep this somewhat family-friendly so that those faggot mods don't come in here and oppress my thread i like to think that lemon looks a little something like this
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« on: April 03, 2015, 10:28:57 PM »
i could exert 100% of my energy into my upper body and glamour muscles at the gym, meaning i could skip leg day every day for the rest of my life.
instead of going through the trouble of having sex without legs, i could just get someone to blow me. problem solved.
brb gonna go cut my legs off
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« on: April 03, 2015, 04:51:38 PM »
anyone who has ever consumed some quality sour diesel should know that Sativa is the best choice.
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« on: April 01, 2015, 10:34:23 PM »
don't even deny it, faggots
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« on: March 30, 2015, 05:04:35 PM »
Come this July, all 8th and 11th grade students in the public school system will be required to watch the film "America" before they graduate. Here's an excerpt straight from the bill itself: 1003.447 Patriotic film screening.—Each district school board shall ensure that each middle school and high school within its jurisdiction requires its 8th grade and 11th grade students, respectively, to annually attend a screening of the film “America: Imagine the World Without Her.” The school board shall require each such student to attend the screening unless the student’s parent requests in writing that the student be excused. Section 2. This act shall take effect July 1, 2015 I don't know how there hasn't been a single thread on this issue yet, you'd think at least one liberal would rip it to shreds by now. Anyway, what do you all think of this? Keep in mind that the legislator who wrote and pushed this bill through congress, Senator Alan Hays, is the same guy who tried making it illegal for public buses to stop on the side of the road to pick up passengers because he had to wait behind one that stopped traffic for a few minutes.
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« on: March 30, 2015, 04:41:29 PM »
all the kids are about to be let out for recess, i can't wait to see the looks on their faces
224
« on: March 27, 2015, 08:00:15 PM »
usually i like a post if it manages to make me chuckle or if the person meme'd someone real good.
225
« on: March 26, 2015, 09:32:21 PM »
my straight-edge friend tried telling me that LSD stores in your spine and can make you trip at a random point in the future when I told him about my first trip over the past weekend. needless to say i laughed in his face and explained how he was just so wrong in so many ways.
please, feel free to share, fellow faggots
226
« on: March 26, 2015, 08:47:31 PM »
is it external responsibilities? the sudden urge to pee? are people expecting to see you? really think about what i'm asking you. what do you think it is that motivates yourself to step out of your comfort zone?
227
« on: March 26, 2015, 08:26:55 PM »
Spoiler pepperidge farm remembers now that i got my dank meme of the day out of the way, how have all of you faggots been doing? feels like i haven't really talked with anyone here in a coon's age
228
« on: March 23, 2015, 08:08:05 PM »
i've wondered this myself for some time and i find that i definitely speak with less slang and a little more intelligence when i'm typing compared to when i'm speaking to someone.
i also call my friends nigga
229
« on: March 22, 2015, 10:45:04 AM »
It just so happened that I was awake at four in the morning and I found what seems to be the weirdest, freakiest show I have ever seen. I'm probably really late about sharing this but whatever, fuck you. for those who haven't seen these before, you're in for a treat
230
« on: March 21, 2015, 01:10:52 AM »
do it, faggots
i'm not going to bed anytime soon
231
« on: March 18, 2015, 09:09:10 PM »
Go into as much detail as you'd like My first sexual experience was rather...uneventful to say the least. I was 17 and at some homecoming after party with my date who was just a friend at the time. We were both pretty damn drunk, and I was horny as fuck the entire night because of hormones and being a sex-craving virgin. Anyway, we ended up in one of the bedrooms in the house where the party was and made out for I don't know how long before I eventually manned-up and took my pants off. The best part of my first time is that it was my first for a lot of things: making out, head, and sex. Unfortunately the sex wasn't amazing because...I came after like 5 pumps. But it was my first time and that hasn't happened to me again since :^)
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« on: March 17, 2015, 10:18:14 PM »
Happy St. Patty's day everyone :^)
233
« on: March 12, 2015, 02:49:02 PM »
most of the girls that I work with are always telling me how big my butt looks, and there have been other times where I even get confronted by a group of girls just for them to say something about my butt.
is this a good or a bad thing?
234
« on: March 11, 2015, 12:00:33 PM »
I scored a 95/100 on the first major essay for this bullshit online humanities class that everyone has to take, and I wrote the entire thing high off my ass
I scored a 152/200 on the second paper and I was more sober than a nun, not sure what to think of this. Maybe I'm better at writing about artsy shit when I'm under the influence
discuss times when you scored much higher than you anticipated on assignments
235
« on: March 10, 2015, 11:26:15 PM »
i feel like getting laid tonight, and i know that you guys have the best girl advice around. what should i say?
236
« on: March 09, 2015, 07:32:11 PM »
Why do you have to be so salty over something someone does that doesn't even effect your life at all? Just let them do their own thing, they obviously know the risks so you acting with your higher-than-thou attitude won't convince them.
Just let people live their lives, man.
237
« on: March 09, 2015, 02:52:46 PM »
yeah i'm an idiot and stranded outside of my room, ask me stuff
238
« on: March 09, 2015, 01:35:18 PM »
Purebreds always come with a high chance of getting a fuck-load of health problems and various other bad shit. Selective breeding is pretty much satan incarnate.
discuss why mutts are the better dog compared to purebreds
239
« on: March 06, 2015, 04:37:11 PM »
Simple enough, right? You don't necessarily have to be in the picture so don't worry about that. I'll be dumping various photos that I have stored on my computer from my trips to Italy and other places that I've traveled to. View from the front of my cousin's house in Salerno, Italy Photo of the actual house Photo I took while we were in the town This is probably my favorite photo in this album, and it's currently my wallpaper. View of the town from the highest point Photo I took while visiting the isle of Capri Here's a collection of photos I took during my second trip to Italy, when we visited Pompeii, Rome, and Florence. Pompeii: Florence: These next 4 pictures were all taken from the top of the Duomo, which is the building in the first photo of this section Rome: I have many more but uploading bulks of photos to imgur is a grind, might add more in later. Can't wait to see people's contributions, though.
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« on: March 04, 2015, 09:29:57 PM »
LinkyThe psychedelic drug in magic mushrooms may have lasting medical and spiritual benefits, according to new research from Johns Hopkins School of Medicine.
The mushroom-derived hallucinogen, called psilocybin, is known to trigger transformative spiritual states, but at high doses it can also result in “bad trips” marked by terror and panic. The trick is to get the dose just right, which the Johns Hopkins researchers report having accomplished.
In their study, the Hopkins scientists were able to reliably induce transcendental experiences in volunteers, which offered long-lasting psychological growth and helped people find peace in their lives — without the negative effects.
“The important point here is that we found the sweet spot where we can optimize the positive persistent effects and avoid some of the fear and anxiety that can occur and can be quite disruptive,” says lead author Roland Griffiths, professor of behavioral biology at Hopkins.
Giffiths’ study involved 18 healthy adults, average age 46, who participated in five eight-hour drug sessions with either psilocybin — at varying doses — or placebo. Nearly all the volunteers were college graduates and 78% participated regularly in religious activities; all were interested in spiritual experience.
Fourteen months after participating in the study, 94% of those who received the drug said the experiment was one of the top five most meaningful experiences of their lives; 39% said it was the single most meaningful experience.
Critically, however, the participants themselves were not the only ones who saw the benefit from the insights they gained: their friends, family member and colleagues also reported that the psilocybin experience had made the participants calmer, happier and kinder.
Ultimately, Griffiths and his colleagues want to see if the same kind of psychedelic experience could help ease anxiety and fear over the long term in cancer patients or others facing death. And following up on tantalizing clues from early research on hallucinogenic drugs like LSD, mescaline and psilocybin in the 1960s (which are all now illegal), researchers are also studying whether transcendental experiences could help spur recovery from addiction and treat other psychological problems like depression and post-traumatic stress disorder.
For Griffiths’ current experiment, participants were housed in a living room-like setting designed to be calm, comfortable and attractive. While under the influence, they listened to classical music on headphones, wore eyeshades and were instructed to “direct their attention inward.”
Each participant was accompanied by two other research-team members: a “monitor” and an “assistant monitor,” who both had previous experience with people on psychedelic drugs and were empathetic and supportive. Before the drug sessions, the volunteers became acquainted enough with their team so that they felt familiar and safe. Although the experiments took place in the Hopkins hospital complex in order to ensure prompt medical attention in the event that it was needed, it never was.
As described by early advocates of the use of psychedelics — from ancient shamans to Timothy Leary and the Grateful Dead — the psilocybin experience typically involves a sense of oneness with the universe and with others, a feeling of transcending time, space and other limitations, coupled with a sense of holiness and sacredness. Overwhelmingly, these experiences are difficult to put into words, but many of Griffiths’ participants said they were left with the sense that they understood themselves and others better and therefore had greater compassion and patience.
“I feel that I relate better in my marriage. There is more empathy — a greater understanding of people and understanding their difficulties and less judgment,” said one participant. “Less judging of myself, too.”
Another said: “I have better interaction with close friends and family and with acquaintances and strangers. … My alcohol use has diminished dramatically.”
To zero in on the “sweet spot” of dosing, Griffiths started half the volunteers on a low dose and gradually increased their doses over time (with placebo sessions randomly interspersed); the other half started on a high dose and worked their way down.
Those who started on a low dose found that their experiences tended to get better as the dose increased, probably because they learned what to expect and how to handle it. But people who started with high doses were more likely to experience anxiety and fear (though these feeling didn’t last long and sometimes resolved into euphoria or a sense of transcendence).
“If we back the dose down a little, we have just as much of the same positive effects. The properties of the mystical experience remain the same, but there’s a fivefold drop in anxiety and fearfulness,” Griffiths says.
Some past experiments with psychedelics in the ’60s used initial high doses of the drugs — the “blast people away with a high dose” model, says Griffiths — to try to treat addiction. “Some of the early work in addictions was done with the idea of, ‘O.K., let’s model the ‘bottoming-out’ crisis and make use of the dark side of [psychedelic] compounds. That didn’t work,” Griffiths says.
It may even have backfired: other research on addictions shows that coercion, humiliation and other attempts to produce a sense of “powerlessness,” tend to increase relapse and treatment dropout, not recovery. (And the notorious naked LSD encounter sessions conducted with psychopaths made them worse, too.)
Griffiths is currently seeking patients with terminal cancer to participate in his next set of experiments (for more information on these studies, click here); because psychedelics often produce a feeling of going beyond life and death, they are thought to be especially likely to help those facing the end of life. Griffiths is also studying whether psilocybin can help smokers quit.
Griffiths and other researchers like him are hoping to bring the study of psychedelics into the future. They want to build on the promise that some of the early research showed, while avoiding the bad rep and exaggerated claims — for example, that LSD was harmless and could usher in world peace — that became associated with the drugs when people started using them recreationally in the 1960s. The resulting negative publicity helped shut down the burgeoning research.
This time around, caution may be paying off. Dr. Jerome Jaffe, America’s first drug czar, who was not involved with the research, said in a statement, “The Hopkins psilocybin studies clearly demonstrate that this route to the mystical is not to be walked alone. But they have also demonstrated significant and lasting benefits. That raises two questions: could psilocybin-occasioned experiences prove therapeutically useful, for example in dealing with the psychological distress experienced by some terminal patients?
“And should properly-informed citizens, not in distress, be allowed to receive psilocybin for its possible spiritual benefits, as we now allow them to pursue other possibly risky activities such as cosmetic surgery and mountain-climbing?”
The study was published in the journal Psychopharmacology. What do you all think of this? I think it's amazing that this stuff exists purely in nature, yet our laws don't allow us to reap any benefits from it. Since I have had firsthand experience with mushrooms I can say that, what the participants were talking about happening to them, such as reducing their anxiety, depression, and helping them break an addiction are all things that happened to me as well. Is there a chance that doctors can utilize this as treatment in the future? I think that further research is required to find any major side effects of using these magic mushrooms and if there are long-term negative effects as well.
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