Just loved the music, huh? And it can ONLY be enjoyed in Da Club by a non-drug user... surrounded by drug addicts who are your close friends and who are dropping dead around you.... yeah, sure!
Just loved the music, huh? And it can ONLY be enjoyed in Da Club by a non-drug user... surrounded by drug addicts who are your close friends and who are dropping dead around you.... yeah, sure!
GHB has documented benefits, yes, but it also carries serious risks that can’t be brushed off as mere propaganda. Let’s break this down.
GHB does have a history of legitimate medical use. It’s been studied since the 1960s in Europe, initially as an anesthetic, and later for conditions like narcolepsy, alcohol withdrawal, and sleep disorders. In the U.S., its pharmaceutical form, sodium oxybate (Xyrem), is FDA-approved for narcolepsy, specifically to reduce cataplexy and excessive daytime sleepiness. Studies show it can enhance slow-wave sleep—the deep, restorative kind—which is why some patients report dramatic improvements. For example, research has found it increases delta sleep without suppressing REM, unlike many sedatives, and patients with narcolepsy often experience better nighttime sleep and daytime function on it.
But here’s where the safety claim gets shaky. GHB isn’t inherently “safe” in the way, say, melatonin or a warm glass of milk is. Its therapeutic window—the gap between an effective dose and a dangerous one—is razor-thin. Take too little, and it might not work; take slightly too much, and you’re risking unconsciousness, respiratory depression, or worse. Overdoses can lead to coma or death, especially if mixed with alcohol or other depressants, which amplify its effects. This isn’t just media hype—it’s pharmacology. GHB acts on GABA receptors in the brain, slowing everything down, and at high doses, it can slow breathing and heart rate to lethal levels. Case reports and emergency room data back this up: people have died from misjudging the dose
This comment reads like a cut and paste from a scientific article on GHB the commentator found somewhere ... or it was created by AI. The writing style totally differs from Merik-N-Drax's style elsewhere. For one, Merik-N-Drax writes sloppily and can't spell, while the above comment is linguistically faultless down to the last comma.
Also, your glossing over the information presented tells me one thing...Your out for a fight. Not my style. I got sucked into this "argument" through emotional memories and am only being attacked, personally for sharing my experience. My fault. Will not happen again. I have learned my lesson. I will definitely present a much stronger, well thought out response next time. Thanks for teaching me how some may be online. I am learning. Have a wonderful day.
hmmm differs from Merik-N-Drax's Style Elsewhere...were exactly. You should check my posts. When I'm lets call it "Emotional" I tend to make mistakes, after all these are just comments. I believe I need to up my Game. Not let strong emotion take over my thinking. Please see my account and check out my posts. This is exactly how Merik-N-Drax writes.
Just loved the music, huh? And it can ONLY be enjoyed in Da Club by a non-drug user... surrounded by drug addicts who are your close friends and who are dropping dead around you.... yeah, sure!
GHB has documented benefits, yes, but it also carries serious risks that can’t be brushed off as mere propaganda. Let’s break this down.
GHB does have a history of legitimate medical use. It’s been studied since the 1960s in Europe, initially as an anesthetic, and later for conditions like narcolepsy, alcohol withdrawal, and sleep disorders. In the U.S., its pharmaceutical form, sodium oxybate (Xyrem), is FDA-approved for narcolepsy, specifically to reduce cataplexy and excessive daytime sleepiness. Studies show it can enhance slow-wave sleep—the deep, restorative kind—which is why some patients report dramatic improvements. For example, research has found it increases delta sleep without suppressing REM, unlike many sedatives, and patients with narcolepsy often experience better nighttime sleep and daytime function on it.
But here’s where the safety claim gets shaky. GHB isn’t inherently “safe” in the way, say, melatonin or a warm glass of milk is. Its therapeutic window—the gap between an effective dose and a dangerous one—is razor-thin. Take too little, and it might not work; take slightly too much, and you’re risking unconsciousness, respiratory depression, or worse. Overdoses can lead to coma or death, especially if mixed with alcohol or other depressants, which amplify its effects. This isn’t just media hype—it’s pharmacology. GHB acts on GABA receptors in the brain, slowing everything down, and at high doses, it can slow breathing and heart rate to lethal levels. Case reports and emergency room data back this up: people have died from misjudging the dose
This comment reads like a cut and paste from a scientific article on GHB the commentator found somewhere ... or it was created by AI. The writing style totally differs from Merik-N-Drax's style elsewhere. For one, Merik-N-Drax writes sloppily and can't spell, while the above comment is linguistically faultless down to the last comma.
Also, your glossing over the information presented tells me one thing...Your out for a fight. Not my style. I got sucked into this "argument" through emotional memories and am only being attacked, personally for sharing my experience. My fault. Will not happen again. I have learned my lesson. I will definitely present a much stronger, well thought out response next time. Thanks for teaching me how some may be online. I am learning. Have a wonderful day.
hmmm differs from Merik-N-Drax's Style Elsewhere...were exactly. You should check my posts. When I'm lets call it "Emotional" I tend to make mistakes, after all these are just comments. I believe I need to up my Game. Not let strong emotion take over my thinking. Please see my account and check out my posts. This is exactly how Merik-N-Drax writes.
It is the Truth lady...sorry to tell ya.