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>> The problem is, is there time to sleep? In general, if you sleep a lot, without forcing yourself to move physically, at least walk for 10 km, then the receptors can remain in a depressed state forever. In order to do this, substances such as bupropion or armodafinil are needed so that the body is not long depressed and not fixed so.
Here I agree, two main problems.
On the one hand, if you have a job - then do not sleep, and work without amphetamine - this is hard at first.
And even it seems that it is better to sleep, that sleep heals and normalizes that you fall asleep for years of lack of sleep.
But in practice, it turns out that in the end, working and not being able to sleep all day and suffering because of it and forcing yourself to get up painfully and so on, you recover and get back to normal when you can live without amph - much faster than if you just lie down and sleep and do what you want.
And being able to work, not suffer the fuck, is the same.
In short, these receptors are, of course, regenerated through suffering and willpower tension, not by themselves. The body understands that now the new normal is when you are without any stimulants raving sleepy at work and work - and adapts you to it.
>> I've got a massive amph-meph withdrawal this week. And at work the blockage is such that it came to the point that my questions with the provider was ready to solve the deputy mayor of our city. And he was on my job with an international organization and the press. I was sitting in the corner in a torn state, falling asleep and waking up with willpower once a minute, my eyes rolling. The ass was full, barely steered without a hit.
Well, I would take another amph, if the blockage is not a sin and marathon.
(And here's how amph and meph combine - I'm hz, to be honest)