Wednesday, 23 August 2017

DIPHENHYDRAMINE (deliriant)
Benadryl, DPH, Nytol, Sominex, Unisom, Quil, Zzz.

[] WARNING: Diphenhydramine is known to cause extremely dangerous and unpleasent experiences. Because of this, it is strongly advised that users find a trip sitter before taking this substance.

Description:
"Diphenhydramine (DPH) is an antihistamine with anticholinergic and sedative effects. When taken in "recreational" dosages DPH becomes a notoriously powerful deliriant class hallucinogen, fully capable of producing hallucinations which are so realistic, they are indistinguishable from reality."


[] Available forms: cough syrups, liquid, pills, pure powder.

[] Routes of administration: IM, IV, oral.
[] Oral dosage: light: 100-200mg, common: 200-400mg, strong 400-700mg, heavy: 700mg+
[] Oral duration: 2-6 hours (onset: 30-90 minutes, come up: 45-90 minutes, peak: 1-4 hours, offset: 2-6 hours, after effects: up to 24 hours.)

[] Avoid using diphenhydramine in combination with:

Benzodiazepines (e.g. alprazolam, diazepam, lorazepam,) may suppress the visual effects of diphenhydramine.
- Selective serotonin reuptke inhibitors (SSRIs) (e.g. citalopram, escitalopram, fluoxetine,) may suppress the visual effects of diphenhydramine.
- Stimulants (e.g. amphetamine, cocaine, MDMA,) may put excessive strain on the heart resulting in cardiac complications including but not limited to life threatening arhythmias/dysrhythmias and heart attack.


EFFECTS OVERVIEW: 

DPH has a non-linear dose-response which is unlike other psychoactive substances. In other words, a light dose will not necassarily result in a light trip. Doses under 300mg commonly induce a body high and relaxation, while doses above 500mg may result in the user entering a state of full delirium, in which they will begin to see and hear fully-formed, extremely convincing hallucinations.


[] Physical effects:

- Considered positive: nausea suppression, tactile enhancement.
- Considered neutral: gustatory hallucinations, increased Heart Rate, motor control loss, olfactory hallucinations, perception of increased weight, pupil constriction, pupil dilation, rapid breathing, sedation, shivers, skin flushing, spontaneous tactile sensations, tactile hallucinations, tactile suppression, temporary erectile dysfunction.
- Considered negative: abnormal heartbeat, dizziness, frequent urination and difficulty urinating, increased blood pressure, increased bodily temperature, increased perspiration, muscle cramps, muscle spasms, nausea, physical fatigue, restless leg syndrome.

[] Cognitive effects:

The head space of DPH is dysphoric, is oftentimes described as negative, and has a tendency to incite extreme paranoia and feelings of impending doom. It is confusing, disorientating and will commonly result in a complete inability to communicate or understand normal language. 


- Considered positive: dream potentiation.
- Considered neutral: confusion, creativity suppression, emotion suppression, decreased libido, delirium, dysphoria, derealization, disinhibition, dysarthria, emotion suppression, focus suppression, information processing. language suppression, memory suppression, motivation suppression, sleepiness, thought deceleration, thought disorganization, time distortion, wakefulness.
- Considered negative: anxiety, cognitive fatigue, delusions, depression, feelings of impending doom, paranoia, psychosis.

[] Visual effects:

Unlike traditional hallucinogens, deliriants do not enhance visual stimuli but instead tend to decrease and degrade visual acuity and processing.


- Distortionary: brightness alteration, drifting, object alterations, visual haze.
- Hallucinationatory: CEV's and OEV's including but not limited to alterations in perception, autonomous scenarios, autonomous entities, dreamscapes, plots and immersive scenery.
- Object activation: perceiving a static object to move in a fashion which is lifelike.
- Peripheral information misinterpretation: repeated mistakes concerning what one is percieving in their peripheral vision.

- Suppressionary: double vision, pattern recognition suppression, visual acuity suppression.
- Shadow people: during this experience, the user perceives a patch of shadow in their peripheral vision or focused visual field to be a living, autonomous figure.
- Transformations: perceiving the metamorphosis of parts of (or the whole of) one's external environment.
- Unspeakable horrors: 
hallucinatory content which is scary, disturbing in nature and commonly influenced by one's personal fears.

[] Auditory effects:

- Enhancements: enhancement of the acuteness and clearness of sound.
- Hallucinations: the experience of hearing spontaneous imaginary noises that either occur randomly or manifest in the place of noises that are subconsciously (or consciously) expected to happen.
- Suppression: the experience of audible sound becoming perceived as distant, quiet and muffled.

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