(Part 2) Top products from r/opiates

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We found 20 product mentions on r/opiates. We ranked the 211 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the products ranked 21-40. You can also go back to the previous section.

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Top comments that mention products on r/opiates:

u/hydromofo · 1 pointr/opiates

Lol, it's comedic fiction.

I figured you were familiar with the hitchhikers guide to the galaxy. It's a series of books by Douglas Adams. Really great books, insanely funny with a subtle and dry wit. Anywaythe author invents a couple ways that space ships are powered. And nothing as dull as a photon drive or something.

They're phenomenal books, I highly recommend them. Some of the best humor/satire I've ever encountered.

Here's the first book (of five)
http://www.amazon.com/Hitchhikers-Guide-Galaxy-Douglas-Adams/dp/0345391802

u/FlorianApple · 1 pointr/opiates

Here is the book it's from, if anyone wants me to take a picture of their birth sign summary let me know and I'll try to accommodate when I can. (Getting my head right to go to a festival this afternoon, so I'm headed out for a few hours shortly. )
Born on a Rotten Day https://www.amazon.com/dp/0743225627/ref=cm_sw_r_sms_awd_xs_F41jybBBBQQ02

Also, this is my best friend:
https://www.drugs.com/drug_interactions.html

And for the love of god, do not take benzo's with methadone. My sister just lost her friend from snorting a klonipin while on it.

u/TheHighRover · 6 pointsr/opiates

For anyone who would like to know, the following books I've read are my favorite and I'd really recommend them to anyone: The Martian by Andy Weir, Gerald's Game by Stephen King, The Panther by Nelson DeMille, Unflinching by Jodi Mitic, American Sniper by Chris Kyle, and Fight Club by Chuck Palahniuk

EDIT: Oh, and Blackwater - The Rise of the World's Most Powerful Mercenary Army by Jeremy Scahill.

EDDIT 2: Oh, and Ender's Game by Orson Scott Card which is so much better than the movie. The movie does not do this novel justice. And Killing Lincoln by Bill O'Reilly.

u/snarfu · 6 pointsr/opiates

> Im looking more for decent evidence rather than anecdotal because placebo and other factors have so much to do with how much energy you have whhen you wake up, but good anecdotal evedince would be nice too.

I'm willing to bet that there have been no double-blind, peer reviewed studies on this.

But IMO, you also need to consider what your body is actually doing during sleep- healing, growing, regenerating, etc. Exactly how much whatever drug you're on impedes these processes would also need to be taken into account.

But really, like the book says, go the fuck to sleep.

u/bluMs_indasky · 1 pointr/opiates

if you got some spare cash, i HIGHLY recommend this book. straightforward, none of that religious bull type meditation (dont mind the forward). its geared towards a more productive life enhancing performance of the mind (i kno that sounds stupid). https://www.amazon.com/Real-Meditation-Minutes-Day-Relationships/dp/086171556X?ie=UTF8&*Version*=1&*entries*=0

u/xSnuggleBear · 1 pointr/opiates

http://www.amazon.com/Opium-History-Martin-Booth/dp/0312206674/ref=sr_1_7?ie=UTF8&qid=1463674994&sr=8-7

This is a badass book. I only made it like halfway through before I got distracted and started reading something else, now I gotta go pick it up again!

u/mbingham666 · 1 pointr/opiates

The Pill Book.

Its a book thats been published and updated forever...you can usually find a copy at any bookstore or even walmart.

It has pictures, descriptions, interactions...everything on 99.9% of pills available in the US.

The Pill Book Amazon

u/Ccd101990 · 2 pointsr/opiates

Dire straits self-titled, lol

Edit: also this book http://www.amazon.com/Love-Drug-Alaya-Dawn-Johnson/dp/0545417813 call me a sucker for symbolism

u/[deleted] · 1 pointr/opiates

http://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/0674005856

Also google David musto. Those are the two primary academic authors on opiate abuse in the us. Several interviews in the books. I used them on my thesis on opiates (it was a policy thesis I will send it to you if you want)

u/OldDocBenway · 3 pointsr/opiates

The definitive book on heroin, the junkie lifestyle, horrors of junk sickness, and the relief/pleasure of junk kicks. Just as relevant now as ever. Must read. Junkie by William S Burroughs

u/drugstorecowbro · 4 pointsr/opiates

If you don't get involved at the policy level things won't change. They televise senate hearings about the opioid epidemic and find the stupidist people they can find to talk about the death of their children, etc. We need to create policy that is based on research, and what is working in other countries. The US has been fixated on a punitive approach to drugs. Throw everyone in jail and start with the poorest minorities. You don't have to go to Washington DC to testify. You can go to your state capital when the house is in session and testify there (Should be able to find a docket with a list of sessions). The US is going to change as younger generations age. The "gotta be tough on crime" rhetoric was just a way to throw all the minorities in for-profit prisons to get rich. I recommend this book to anyone willing to stand up to legislators https://www.amazon.com/One-Hour-Activist-Powerful-Actions-Candidates/dp/0787973009

u/JustStopDude · 1 pointr/opiates

He only wrote like two and a half books before he died of liver failure. He was actually one of the first liver transplants recipients ever, but he couldn't stop drinking or using opiates. Found him on the side of the road in Florida I think.

His two books are basically biographical. Honestly, his writing reminds me a lot like "Catcher in the Rye" and "On the Road".

"Cursed from Birth" basically explains his life, his struggles, and his eventual decline and death through his journal, writings, and letters.

"Speed" is about his childhood as a frequent runaway. "Kentucky Ham" is about his time later when he was forced into a Federal mental hospital.

u/Sentriculus · 3 pointsr/opiates

I felt like it treated the symptoms but didn't really cure the disease. For me, social anxiety was more related to an inability to control my emotions and to always get stuck in negative mental loops. When I paired it with Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, I began to really fix the problem.