<div class="FTQUOTE"><begin quote><i>Originally posted by: <b>sakasuka</b></i>
<div class="FTQUOTE"><begin quote><i>Originally posted by: <b>kswitch</b></i>
i'm no doc, but i do know that tolerance is a mental state.
</end quote></div>
That is far from the truth, to put it lightly.
Tolerance is not mental, it's physical. There are physiological changes that occure in the body when a tolerance is built up to a medical.
<div class="FTQUOTE"><begin quote> when we first start using a drug, the effects can be profound. as this profoundness wears off, they can feel less effective as the brain compensates for the altered state. </end quote></div>
not sure where you got that from, but again, this is flat out false.</end quote></div>
i get that from my experience, and readings into addiction. what kind of physiological changes might be occuring that make a drug less effective? chemical reactions don't build a tolerance and happen less efficiently without physical or chemical change. i don't dispute that it's possible, but what i question is whether the effect is due to the properties of the drug itself, or some other environmental factor.
if i am wrong, please enlighten me with an informative response rather than an antagonistic one. you're not helping me understand a lick, but i hope you feel better. is my medical knowledge not academic enough to partake of your infinite wisdom? or is your knowledge as opinionated and experientially obtained as mine is?
<div class="FTQUOTE"><begin quote><i>Originally posted by: <b>kswitch</b></i>
i'm no doc, but i do know that tolerance is a mental state.
</end quote></div>
That is far from the truth, to put it lightly.
Tolerance is not mental, it's physical. There are physiological changes that occure in the body when a tolerance is built up to a medical.
<div class="FTQUOTE"><begin quote> when we first start using a drug, the effects can be profound. as this profoundness wears off, they can feel less effective as the brain compensates for the altered state. </end quote></div>
not sure where you got that from, but again, this is flat out false.</end quote></div>
i get that from my experience, and readings into addiction. what kind of physiological changes might be occuring that make a drug less effective? chemical reactions don't build a tolerance and happen less efficiently without physical or chemical change. i don't dispute that it's possible, but what i question is whether the effect is due to the properties of the drug itself, or some other environmental factor.
if i am wrong, please enlighten me with an informative response rather than an antagonistic one. you're not helping me understand a lick, but i hope you feel better. is my medical knowledge not academic enough to partake of your infinite wisdom? or is your knowledge as opinionated and experientially obtained as mine is?