NireBryce

reality is the battlefield

the first line goes in Cohost embeds

🐥 I am not embroiled in any legal battle
🐦 other than battles that are legal 🎮

I speak to the universe and it speaks back, in it's own way.

mastodon

email: contact at breadthcharge dot net

I live on the northeast coast of the US.

'non-functional programmer'. 'far left'.

conceptual midwife.

https://cohost.org/NireBryce/post/4929459-here-s-my-five-minut

If you can see the "show contact info" dropdown below, I follow you. If you want me to, ask and I'll think about it.


otherwise, they don't get to prescribe them. It should be this simple. withdrawl (Oh, I'm sorry, Cessation Syndrome) is downplayed a whole lot in the lit.

if they don't have that experience, they really cannot be managing the course of treatment accurately.

I'd even settle for "they taper off it but it's something with a high initial dose like 50mg" so they feel that yes, it's still a problem even then.

But I know so many people on high doses, who's doctors then go on vacation or whatever and dont give them the heads up. Who just lose weeks.


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in reply to @NireBryce's post:

I would hope that such a practice would have the desired effect, but if I'm being honest I have a hard time seeing it.

I struggle to think of a situation where having been subjected to a form of potential pain or cruelty reliably stopped or discouraged people from inflicting that pain or cruelty on others when given the power or authority to do so.

Having to be pepper sprayed in training doesn't seem to discourage police from using pepper spray unnecessarily, and having experienced severe COVID-19 symptoms at some point doesn't seem to get people to wear masks.