Ladasten is the only psychoactive I've run into that claims to bring about long term changes.
Psychoanalysis and religious/political conversion are the only previous candidates.
The very idea of a patient being "cured" by a period of treatment is contrary to the way neuropharmacology works.
You CAN cure an infection with antibiotics, but the whole premise of neuropharmacology is that it temporarily
alters some receptors in the nervous system, and temporarily shifts some things around. The very idea of say
an antidepressant making you permanently cheerful is unthinkable. Or a pain reliever taking away your chronic
pain forever, no way. On the contrary, we EXPECT opposite rebound. Because that's how equilibria work.
Now imagine a drug that makes you all better for months after you stop taking it !? That implies that the
whole machine has been altered. Some receptors no longer being synthesized? The very DNA or its expression
being modified ? We don't have anything like that in our pharmacopoeia. And yet that's what they say. That
patients after a month long treatment with Ladasten are all better for months afterwards? THAT's scary, and
one reason I stopped taking even small doses after a couple of days. And yes, something persisted for days.
Is there any reason to think it's a highly lipid-soluble agent that has lipid-soluble active metabolites that could
be stored in body fat and leeched out for a long time? If not, then it's screwing with some fundamentals, and
that's a new and frightening mechanism. How about an agent that causes indifference, or lack of empathy, like
an SSRI, but PERMANENTLY? What military or police wouldn't see applications for those kinds of drugs?
But anyway, Ladasten doesn't cause anything like that. Even a quarter tablet, i.e. 12.5 mg, for me sublingually
is immediately noticeable. The lights are richer, yellows and greens look more saturated. A benign thickness
and lowering of anxiety, a bit of an improved mood, not wired, but liking doing things. After a couple of days
at 50mg divided up during the day, the feeling stayed with me and faded gradually. The visual thing is most
noticeable on first dosing. I wasn't comfortable taking it for longer than that.
The reason I feel OK taking Piracetam every day is because of the way it's prescribed in Eastern Europe. That's
where I first ran into it. It was Rx'd for my father after a TIA. He took it for ~ 8 years and was sharp until he died
at age 93.
There's another that had a bit of that color popping visual effect: AwakeBrain's N-Acetyl Semax. I took too
much the one time I tried it and it was uncomfortable. I'll dig out my protocol if you're interested.
Edited by Peak, 02 November 2015 - 08:14 AM.