Interesting, size. But would those pain meds satisfy the physical dependency of the heroine itself? I assume not. Would that lead to either seeking help (most likely psychological to start?) or to addiction to many drugs and eventual overdose experimenting toward the 'fix?'
Log said:Actually mostly they would. They use methadone, in essense an opioid, to wean people off of heroin, so the other drugs in that and related families would probably suffice.
So I was thinking about addiction the other day and I wondered:
If you were studying someone without their knowledge and had pretty much complete control over their environment and slowly got them addicted to heroin by adding it to various items they consumed, sometimes their coffee, sometimes their salad, sometimes their chewing gum, etc. how would the addiction affect them? They wouldn't be able to identify the source of the addictive substance, so what would they crave? If you slowly weaned them off would they be as likely as your average heroin addict to start using again? I mean, they wouldn't even know it was heroin they were addicted to. Would it be something that could easily be triggered, like if they got some lortab after a dentist visit or something they would go full blown nuts for the stuff immediately?
Maybe it's a dumb question. I don't know. Was just curious.
As has been said, the biochemical and physiological repercussions of these actions would probably lead the person to seek medical assistance for the adverse symptoms he/she seemed to be showing-- some of which could potentially be opiates.
Just give her MDMA, like I said. She'll just think the D put her in some intoxicated lustful high. She'll be yours forever, until her brain is completely mollied to the point she can't even remember who her parents were.True, but the hermopathial rhythms running through her gellafial stream may disrupt the gestivial flow to the collaxuary, no?
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True, but the hermopathial rhythms running through her gellafial stream may disrupt the gestivial flow to the collaxuary, no?
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this would be true, however, you seem to be discounting the effects of the fermathine present in the gellafial stream. this would negate the occurrence of the hermopathial rhythms and instead present signs of flagetrumellation. the only tested remedy to this malady is to remove the collaxuary altogether and replace it with a robotic mechanism to mimic the effects of the biofunctlaterial system.
Wow I think you are way off base here.
Removing the collaxuary would IMMEDIATELY cause the subject to go into dianphormic abrosia which leads to acute hymertosis of the liver in most individuals.
Recipe for disaster.
Not true when you take into account flagitated arterial paroxysm. This is common knowledge.