** addicted to the evil codein**

trader54321

Well-Known Member
wane yourself off very slowly,

i hate scripts, im f*****, im addicted to xanax, i really do not know what the long term effects of all these pharmecuticals is going be, but i cant imagine anything good....so sad half america is on scripts, when people need drugs to cope with society (anti-depressants etc) theres something very wrong....
 

Hedgehunter

Well-Known Member
its what the pharmecutical companies want, they make the drugs a certain way to get people hooked, its all about money.

they do not care about ruined lives,and to make it worse....they want you to beleive its your fault.
 

SableZen

Well-Known Member
Tramadol has been been used with some success to get people off opiates.
Not trying to start a fight about Tramadol and I know intentions are good here, just need to emphasize how bad of a medical decision it would be for anyone to try using Tramadol to help with an opiate addiction. To clear something up, it's common advice to hear - but it comes from when Tramadol was first marketed as a non-addicting alternative to opiates. Just like with heroin, they were wrong about it and how it works. Consider it an opiate just like any other, synthetic or not. Tramadol has only recently been forced to start placing addiction/dependence warnings in the drug information.

But bottom line is, Tramadol is every bit as addicting as any opiate out there because it *is* a synthetic opiate despite older marketing claims. In addition, withdrawal from Tramadol is often psychologically harder than most other opiates. And if you've ever been through withdrawal you'll know how hellish opiate addiction/dependence already is. You don't throw gasoline on a kerosene fire to put it out, and you don't take Tramadol to help with opiate withdrawal.

:peace:
 
Not trying to start a fight about Tramadol and I know intentions are good here, just need to emphasize how bad of a medical decision it would be for anyone to try using Tramadol to help with an opiate addiction. To clear something up, it's common advice to hear - but it comes from when Tramadol was first marketed as a non-addicting alternative to opiates. Just like with heroin, they were wrong about it and how it works. Consider it an opiate just like any other, synthetic or not. Tramadol has only recently been forced to start placing addiction/dependence warnings in the drug information.

But bottom line is, Tramadol is every bit as addicting as any opiate out there because it *is* a synthetic opiate despite older marketing claims. In addition, withdrawal from Tramadol is often psychologically harder than most other opiates. And if you've ever been through withdrawal you'll know how hellish opiate addiction/dependence already is. You don't throw gasoline on a kerosene fire to put it out, and you don't take Tramadol to help with opiate withdrawal.

:peace:
exactly my thaughts, i am the thread starter and know what iys like to cold turkey pff codein, the last thing ide want is tramadol to come off codein, i have experience with tramadol 2.

+rep for u m8.:peace:
 
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