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Ketamine for sale
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December 31, 2015 at 5:25 pm
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katamine, mephedrone, and some crystalls
katamine, mephedrone, and some crystalls
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December 12, 2015 at 11:18 am
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Can Ketamine cure Depression?
Hi Everyone,
I wanted to share this article from NPR about Ketamin and depression.
Is drug use a temporary fix for depression or can science prove certain recreational drugs to be safe and actually the cure to problems like depression.
The Link to the article is below!
http://www.npr.org/blogs/health/2014/04/03/298770933/growing-evidence-that-a-party-drug-can-help-severe-depression
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December 11, 2015 at 2:26 pm
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UK Ketamine drout. Can anyone help me out?
As title really. Ketamine has been hard to come by this year in my part of the UK. The past 3 months - there hasn't been any at all. I've tried to find silkroad or similar (agora?) using TOR but I'm not having any look. Looking for personal amounts of crystal or liquid. Can anyone send me an Agora invite or point me in the direction of the latest Silkroad? or a dodgy vet? ;) Cheers
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November 24, 2015 at 4:52 pm
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Back in Brighton, UK after 5 years – help!
I am a 31 yr old bloke living in Brighton. Trying to go back and meet my party pals who I moved down here for back in 2010 but to much time has passed and they are all still bang on the partying. Heard Ketamine is off the radar now, is that right?
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August 31, 2015 at 2:29 pm
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sex
Hi I wanna get laid on ketamine
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March 11, 2015 at 3:25 am
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Advice on Ketamine?
hiya guys so basically i wondered what ketamine did for you guys iv taken it a couple of times n really it didnt do an awful lot for me just made me feel a tad confused any experiences would be helpful and also whats your favourite method for taking it
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February 25, 2015 at 9:36 am
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Pinned
Ketamine drought or MDMA returning saving the party vibe scene?
As a regular free party goer for few years now I have noticed the free party atmosphere changing.
I am not saying that this is the case for all parties/people as I know a lot of mates including myself that can have fun without drugs.
But have defiantly notice a difference in people which I beleive changes this 'party vibe'.
From loved up people that make friends with any random joe to people that can't speak or even walk. These people thats get to this sort of state on ketamine which I believe was getting more and more popular to the point it was accepted and normal has killed a bit of the friendly vibe.
I openly admit that I do enjoy ketamine this is came about when the pills and mdma was in a draught a year-ish ago. I just recon that I'v enjoyed a party more when people were more connected.
I have noticed this from the ketamine draught and the return of mdma and this in my eyes has brought back a nicer party feel. For both users and non users.
More sociable with people making loads of new friends that you may have never approached is what makes the party a party besides the music.
LEGALISE THE TEKNIVAL the right to party in freedom!
Please comment nicely with respect to others x
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February 3, 2015 at 10:48 pm
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Ketamine to treat depression!
Sorry if this article has been posted before but it's new to me!
New types of drugs for schizophrenia, depression and other psychiatric disorders are few and far between—and a number of companies have scaled back or dropped development of this class of pharmaceuticals. One exception stands out. Ketamine, the anesthetic and illegal club drug, is now being repurposed as the first rapid-acting antidepressant drug and has been lauded as possibly the biggest advance in the treatment of depression in 50 years.
A few trials by large pharma outfits are now underway on a new, purportedly improved and, of course, more profitable variant of ketamine, which in its current generic drug form does not make pharmaceutical marketing departments salivate.
Some physicians have decided they simply can’t wait for the lengthy protocols of the drug approval process to be sorted out. They have read about experimental trials in which a low-dose, slow-infusion of ketamine seems to produce what no Prozac-like pill can achieve, lifting the black cloud in hours, not weeks.
With nothing to offer desperate, sometimes suicidal patients, physicians have decided against waiting for an expensive, ketamine lookalike to arrive and have started writing scripts for the plain, vanilla generic version that has been used for decades as an anesthetic. Ketamine, it seems, has captivated a bunch of white coats with the same grassroots energy that has propelled the medical marijuana movement.
No formal tally of off-label ketamine prescriptions has been made. But Carlos Zarate of the National Institute of Mental Health, a leader in researching ketamine for depression, receives numerous e-mails from physicians and patients. “It’s being used in many states,” Zarate says. “I know of [people in] California, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, New York, Texas Florida and around the world, Australia, Germany, the U.K.”
Physicians are allowed to prescribe drugs off-label—in other words, uses for which they have not received approval from a regulatory agency. The practice is widespread: in fact, ketamine itself is often administered for chronic pain, a use never approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.
Legalities aside, not every physician thinks ketamine has met the required thresholds of safety and efficacy to become a mainstay of a walk-in clinic. “Clearly, the use of ketamine for treatment-resistant depression is not ready for prime time,” says Caleb Alexander, a physician who is a professor of epidemiology at Johns Hopkins University and co-director of the Johns Hopkins Center for Drug Safety and Effectiveness. “We have remarkably little solid scientific evidence to support its use in nonexperimental settings, that is to say, to support its use beyond research settings.”
Ketamine has a well-known side effect of inducing a trancelike state that club aesthetes dub the “K hole”—the reason it is known in clinical terminology as a “dissociative” anesthetic. Some users get sucked into the vortex spun by Special K, Vitamin K, “jet,” “special L.A. coke,” “K,” or one of the drug’s other monikers, The physician and neuroscientist John Lilly, known for his work on dolphin communication, almost drowned under the influence while immersed in his own invention, the sensory deprivation tank and had to resuscitated by his wife. Undeterred, Lilly continued binging, at one point injecting himself almost hourly for three weeks. Others haven’t been as lucky and have succumbed fatally to what Lilly’s wife called “the seduction of K.”
In the low doses administered in off-label clinics, side effects are rare or mild. “If I closed my eyes, images would present themselves like the opening credits of Dr. Who, with a tunnel of light,” says one patient.” Even so, a prospective patient must be carefully screened and turned away if there is any history of psychotic episodes.
In prescribing ketamine for depression, clinicians take it upon themselves to determine proper treatment protocols through trial and error, either by consulting colleagues or reading the methods sections of scientific papers that report the results of preliminary experimental trials not intended to evaluate the drug for clinical use. The risks are worth taking, say some psychiatrists, particularly if a patient has tried psychotherapy and one antidepressant after another with poor results—and any mention of electroconvulsive therapy produces a look of abject terror.
“I have patients who will try anything that is reasonably safe, says David Feifel, the physician who heads Adult Psychiatric Services at the University of California, San Diego, Medical Center. Feifel read the major study by Zarate in 2006 and decided to put in place one of the first clinical programs anywhere for ketamine therapy. After receiving approval from the hospital’s pharmacy and therapeutic committee, Feifel and his team began providing ketamine therapy on a routine basis in 2011. So far, 50 people with depression that did not respond to other treatments have been willing to pay out of pocket for the infusions. As many as three times that number, some from outside the U.S., have made inquiries.
Feifel shared some e-mails: “So many days I wake up and want to die, but not today,” wrote one patient after the therapy. “Thank you so much for this day of hope and contentment. It was the most beautiful day I can remember. I was a new person today and I’m looking forward to tomorrow, which is something I never say.” Another wrote: “I wanted to go out to eat last night and go for a walk today—both things I haven’t wanted to do for years.”
Feifel estimates that seven out of 10 patients have improved, a substantially higher number than respond to Prozac and other conventional antidepressants and a rate comparable to reports in experimental studies. Side effects have been minimal—and the high from the drug, no problem. “If anything, the patients enjoy that,” Feifel says.
Feifel does not see himself in the role of proselytizer. Whether ketamine becomes a depression breakthrough depends on overcoming treatment effects that often last just a few weeks, even with multiple infusions. “This is in my opinion the biggest challenge, whether this is really going be a game changer for depression or a limited tool is if we can figure out how to make this a durable benefit,” he says.
Feifel always lays out multiple treatment options tailored to a particular patient, not just ketamine alone. He might, for instance, try to disabuse patients of misconceptions about the dangers of electroconvulsive therapy. The hospital is also exploring other new approaches: transcranial magnetic stimulation, a magnetic field trained on a brain area affected by depression; and treatment with scopolamine, another anesthetic that may possibly offer patients quick mood relief.
Off-label prescribing of ketamine does not usually take place at major university hospitals like U.C. San Diego Medical Center but, rather, in small clinics, some of which appear to be largely devoted to dispensing the drug. “There’s nothing else they have to offer really,” Feifel says. That one-track approach has the drawback of possibly leaving a patient who doesn’t respond to ketamine feeling even more desperate.
Read part 2 about patients with major depression who pay thousands of dollars of uncovered medical expenses for ketamine treatment at small clinics and physicians’ offices.
From Club to Clinic: Physicians Push Off-Label Ketamine as Rapid Depression Treatment, Part 1 | Talking back, Scientific American Blog Network
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November 8, 2014 at 6:20 pm
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I LOVE KETAMINE
Addicted To Ketamine?
Is it really possible?
Having Ketamine around me and my friends over the last 3years end having used K to knumb my unhappy existance as a depressent nearly everyday... I do believe I am. I don't drink, dont smoke and don't actually enjoy many other drugs. I suffer from BDD and OCD and get social anxiety... so as anyone could imagine the drug has helped me through some lonely times and places... mostly being the four walls of my bedroom. Although I'm trying to get off this addiction and help myself in all the areas (above) I need too... this drug still calls me everyday.
I don't do it everyday anymore but everyday if it was there I'ld do it all until It was gone and I do actually really really want it. I love Ketamine but at the same time hate it for what it has created. I look at some of my closest friends and they too are addict, supressed and trapped in the supposably non-harmful substance.
The sad thing is I love Ketamine and I know I'm not alone!
x x x x
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November 8, 2014 at 5:40 pm
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Pinned
Ketamine is Killing the Rave Scene & Don’t You Know It
This thread contains a discussion of the drug Ketamine, it's use and effects...
I am just writing to anyone who has information on Ketamine. I love it but don't really know what the proper damages are. I know the Ketty we do is not horse tranq as we do a human form which is actually used as a cancer agent (believe it or not!).
So does anyone else like it?
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October 9, 2014 at 7:24 pm
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ketamine chemical scam fraud rip off
This is a warning to anyone thinking of buying through a listing via directories such as indiamart, exporters india or tradeindia.
These listings are scammers and rip off merchants. They don't even represent the real company. You'll have names like pfizer pharma (jiovani petersen) or lupin pharma but they're email will end in gmail or yahoo or blumail. They'll insist on a minimum order of atleast $500USD, will never offer samples, demand payment via western union or moneygram and once they payment is made they'll be gone, never to be heard of and seen again or they'll say there's something wrong with the shipment and request more money. Seriously, don't fall for it.
YOU'VE BEEN WARNED.
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September 30, 2014 at 1:39 am
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MIND BLOWN!!!!!! Part 2
So straight to the point; this weekend I did quite a bit of Ket and found myself thinking very profound things. I mean I've hit the K-hole before but Ketamine generally makes me too confused to have any (abstract) logical thoughts. I tend to just ramble complete bollocks either in my head or if there's people about I'll express my thoughts but it is usually really stupid shit which isn't worth a second consideration. This time though my mind invented a new theory as to what the afterlife may consist of.
How I found myself thinking this I really don't know; the idea just sought of leapt to the front of my mind and I found it really hard to shake off the feeling that there might be something in it until I'd sobered up. In retrospect I don't believe this idea I just find it an interesting theory; more plausible in my opinion than the religious variation of the afterlife where you are punished for living a negative life and rewarded for positivity.
Anyway the thought was this. What if when you search the skies at a night and you can see the Milkyway (or any other galaxy/collection of stars) what you're actually seeing is a collection of souls/energy from deceased beings here on earth congregating to create a larger and greater energy. What if this collective energy is slowly building to form the foundations of the next cycle of life. Earth and the other planets in our solar system are a fairly insignificant speck in relation to the vastness of the infinite universe where we reside. It seems unlikely that Earth is the first and only planet to have supported any level of intelligent life. We could well just be at a point in time where we are the only planet supporting such life forms at the moment.
When Earth ceases to support life who's to say that the cycle won't be restarted on another planet in another galaxy. Perhaps the 'Big Bang' occurred once enough energy had gathered from the previous sequence, perhaps this is waiting or even on the verge of happening somewhere again soon.
Perhaps just a daft drug fuelled delusion (my favourite kind of delusion) but to me it seems more likely that when we expire our energy/soul is released into 'heaven'. Except heaven isn't as it appears in a religious context, there is no higher being with any intended fate for us, no eternal tranquillity or torment. We simply gather (without any level of conscious awareness or thought) together in harmony waiting to be bound together or for something to trigger that 'big bang'. Perhaps even different personality types are drawn together to different areas of space to form particular atmospheres and environments.
Who's with me and who thinks I'm a witch again lol.
Hmm seeing my thoughts written down and reading them, doesn't make as much sense as I initially thought, I just come across as a metalist lol.
Damn it! Ketamine made it make sense.
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September 23, 2014 at 11:37 am
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Ketamine: Simultaneously the best and worst experience of my life!
My cat was at a party last night with some friends who he had not seen for about a year. He started off drinking a few pints of cider and was feeling pretty drunk. My cat's friend, who's house they were in, has a hot-tub and as everyone was having a really good time, it seemed like a good idea to get in. They were passing around a bottle of cider and all had glasses of whisky and were just sitting around and chatting. The conversation eventually got onto weed and one of the guys that my cat had not met before mentioned that he had some in his jacket pocket, so my cat grabbed his papers and they went upstairs to roll a joint. They eventually managed to roll one, it was pretty difficult because they were so drunk at this point, and went down to the bottom of the garden to smoke it.
As soon as my cat took a toke, he felt it have an effect on him, this was probably the strongest weed he had ever smoked, he felt amazing. Him and his new friend stood and chatted for a while. This is the point where my cat's memory starts to fade. From what he can remember, they went back to the hot-tub, but he isn't sure about that. What he is sure of is that he started tripping really hard. Everything changed, but stayed the same. And he started really worrying about, and analysing, where he was which is when he realised that he was 'trapped'. In his mind, he knew that if he didn't fight to get out he would never leave and he would be here forever. All of this happened in and around the hot-tub where everyone else was, but he was sure that they didn't want him to leave and were trying to do everything they could to keep him in this place forever.
It then gets a little bit hazy. After getting out of the hot-tub, he thinks he remembers trying to physically break this world so that he could escape. Next thing he knew, he was sitting in a chair with people from the real world trying to help him escape. He tried to focus on these voices because he knew the clearer they were the easier it would be to get out. He remembers trying to physically move to get out of the world, but either he was being held down by people in the real world or he was experiencing some ketamine like effects.
He now thinks it was definitely more like a ketamine trip, because after nearly making it back to the real world, he fell into some kind of auditory echo whirlpool. The only was he can describe this is as a massive bowl that was constantly moving, affected by the voices which were echoing and looping really loudly, that his consciousness had fallen into. When he was in this whirlpool, he could see the outside of it and it was like nothing he had ever seen before, full of colours and faces. At first he was enjoying it, but he started to panic that it would never end and this would be his eternity.
Faced with being in this state forever, he felt he needed to do something to get out. Now in normal life, my cat is an atheist, but he is sure that he either communicated very deeply with himself or felt like he talked to some kind of deity and convinced himself that he was being punished. Is this what hell feels like? So my cat tried to reason with either himself (who logically, he knows is the one in control of the trip) or god (who logically, he doesn't believe exists) about ending this. This conversation/argument seemed to go on forever and round in circles, and mainly focussed on my cat's use of drugs and atheism.
He doesn't even know what happened after this, all he remembers is regaining some sort of consciousness, but no physical ability to move, in the toilet with two paramedics that his friends had called. He doesn't think that the weed was having any kind of affect at this point, he was just absolutely hammered beyond what he has ever been before. He remembers trying to give them the information that they take (name, age, etc.), particularly the name and number of his parents who the paramedics asked to come and pick him up and take him home. Time seemed to pass a lot quicker than it had been and once his parents arrived he was dragged to his dad's car and put in the seat.
That is all he remembers up until this morning when he woke with a cracking headache. Obviously the alcohol had a huge effect on the trip because this is like no cannabis experience he has ever had before. He thinks that it was the strength of the weed, plus the amount of time (probably 2/3 months) that he hasn't smoked for, and the unxepectedness of the whole trip that made it so intense. As scary as it was at the time, mainly due to the eternity it all seemed to last for, he actually found it quite enjoyable (bar the paramedics) and wouldn't mind repeating it.
He feels like this trip and the experiences within it, particularly from the conversation he had, could possibly have been a warning from his body to stop using drugs or to think again about his atheism. The eternity thing could have been a warning, firstly of an eternity in hell, or secondly that the drugs are doing things in my body and mind that will be there forever.
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September 7, 2014 at 6:57 pm
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Help!! What has SWIM taken?!?
Hey hey,
First time poster...
So, SWIM asked his usual Molly guy for some coke. Usual molly guy delivered, SWIM went home & did the old snifferoo...
It wasn't coke. So SWIM needs to know what it was to be safe! If anyone here can play detective, SWIM would really appreciate it!
The facts...
- The feel in the nostril was a burn like molly.
- It was white powder, not crystals & it's slightly salty to the the taste.
- Heart rate significantly increased.
- Hands shaking.
- Pupils NOT dilated.
- It kicked in properly after a couple of mins.
- SWIM felt light headed immediately after X kicked in.
Can anyone please offer any thoughts? SWIM called a more experienced friend who thought it might be Ketamine, but can't be sure.
Thanks!!!!!!!!!
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July 16, 2014 at 10:57 pm
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