When summer hits hard and temperatures spike, people tend to party more, stay out later, and take bigger risks. Mix that with substance use, and you’ve got a volatile combo.
Living with Dissociative Identity Disorder (DID) isn’t just about managing identities; it’s about managing daily life itself under pressure.
You’re out for a good time, looking for something that feels quick and easy; maybe someone hands you a bottle and says, “Try this; it’s just poppers.” It seems harmless, right? Not exactly.
Bottling up your feelings may seem harmless, maybe even helpful at times. But when ignored for too long, those emotions have a way of surfacing, often when you least expect it.
It’s easy to forget how deeply pain can affect your day until it hijacks even the simplest moments. If you’ve ever reached for a solution only to worry about what’s inside the bottle, you’re not alone.
Dissociative drugs flip your world. At first, it’s the numbness, the detachment, the illusion of relief. But what starts off feeling like power quickly becomes a chain.
When therapy for Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) isn’t sticking, it might not be because the tools are wrong; it might be because something more profound is in the way. One significant barrier in treatment is a deeply ingrained victim mindset.
Your cravings, your impulses, even the way your body reacts to heroin, could they be written in your DNA?
If you’ve never heard of Medetomidine, it might sound like something you'd only find in a vet’s cabinet, and that’s where it’s supposed to be.
Kicking addiction isn’t just about willpower; it’s also about biology. Recently, scientists have begun examining diabetes drugs in a novel way.