Kojo Douglas
The Kavasseur
Interesting perspective.It's interesting how quickly the focus always shifts from the people who are inappropriately marketing both herbs to the existence of K@ being the issue.
It's hard to make a case for buprenorphine. If the medical community was treating opiod abuse appropriately we wouldn't have the opiod crisis. Bup is just a way for the pharmaceutical and medical industry to keep addicts dependent and continue to profit from the situation. These synthetic opiods used to manage addictions are also extremely difficult for people to get off of without the assistance of helpers like K@.
These things tend to be fairly limited, because they only work until they don't. They are awful while in vogue. But it is a con, one of the oldest grifts in the book and eventually people learn to dnftt, which is really the only way. Like a fire starved of oxygen, trolls are hard kill except by simply not feeding them. Don't give them free space anywhere, starting with one's own head.Yeah, unfortunately the cultural sensitivity part seems to have been lost years ago. With Bula on the Beach we had cultural appropriation. And now we have examples of Kava bars being associated with just complete jerks - misogynistic, insensitive, and intentionally outrageous.
That seems to be the winning strategy for the 2010s - be intentionally outrageous and generate oppositional anger to rile up the base.
Yep, I completely agree, starve this troll. Much love krunkie, it’s Aaron from your YouTube commentsThese things tend to be fairly limited, because they only work until they don't. They are awful while in vogue. But it is a con, one of the oldest grifts in the book and eventually people learn to dnftt, which is really the only way. Like a fire starved of oxygen, trolls are hard kill except by simply not feeding them. Don't give them free space anywhere, starting with one's own head.
you'n me both, brother, and a bunch of other folks, too. It don't feel good. Unlike kava. Kava feels good. So Bula! Much love and respect.....Yeah, I’ve been the troll before. It doesn’t come from a good place.
Indeed, as I have said before, the right dose of kava and I could hug the world all animosity evaporatesyou'n me both, brother, and a bunch of other folks, too. It don't feel good. Unlike kava. Kava feels good. So Bula! Much love and respect.....
Ibogaine may have a lot of potential. Several psychedelics have been studied for being able to reverse addiction. Probably part of the reason they are schedule 1 drugs at this point.You know there's an opiate problem when the local Walmart keeps their Immodium locked up.
Anyone heard of ibogaine therapy for addictions? It's apparently some kind of psychedelic that can completely erase addiction cravings. But the trip is fairly stressful and not recommended for people dealing with physical WD's.
My experience when I have briefly quit or had to quit drinking kava was not only is there no "withdrawal" but because you have kavalactones in your body that gently recede as they die off, or go to a better place, it's as if kava does a gentle self-tapering so you gently float back to where you were before, (but a better person, maybe). It also means for me that the good effects of kava continue even when I have stopped drinking it, so it's still there when I need it, like when people are slicing, hacking, mincing or otherwise perforating me. Strong effects of kava last 3 or 4 days and the mild ones about 2 weeks.This is a shame. I remember the fear I felt when still hooked on kr@tom when I believed it would be banned. I never want to worry about this with kava, however I know I would not have to fear insufferable withdrawals. Kr@tom, while infinitely better than street chems, is a powerful plant and produced a more painful withdrawal experience for me than several popular street opiates.