this post was submitted on 19 Feb 2024
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I don't doubt that, but I'm sure there are better, healthier ways of doing that. Like talking to a therapist.
Sure but psychedelics and ketamine have shown extremely good results in therapy but it's hard or impossible to get to those in many places. Normal therapy can go on for very long time before good results and it can be very expensive. I personally got my depression cured pretty much overnight with lsd.
Of course there are always risks assosiated and people should always test their drugs and research the topic properly before using but ketamine and classical psychedelics are physically really safe. Ketamine has been long used for anesthesia and it's considered very safe. Psychedelics don't also really do any physical harm to you.
Edit: of course they are still not some magic compound that makes everything go away. It can give the necessary kickstart or help solve some trauma but if you have bad lifestyle choices that lead to the depressiom in the first place it's going to easily just come back if you don't make proper changes to your life
I've seen many miraculous claims about them (quick and easy solutions to complicated problems), but if they were so good, I assume the majority of psychiatrists would adopt them as one of the standard methods of treatment. It's great that it worked for you, but there is a reason why rigorous testing is done in science. I think it might be dangerous for people to do this on their own, since they are not experts in this field. I suspect that there might be a few experts who believe that psychedelics are a good method of treatment, but a small fraction is not enough. Sometimes there are bad scientists in every field and we can't just cherry pick the ones we agree with (I'm not accusing you of that, just saying that people do that). I would like to know the truth, though. This is a popular topic lately and I'm curious if it's just pseudoscience or maybe there is something that I'm missing.
I think it might be easy to get addicted to any drug and I know of at least one long lasting effect of psychedelics, but this one seems to be very rare.
I have a good friend who is a headache neurologist at a leading US hospital, and about 20% of her patients use ketamine therapy in some capacity. Apparently it is extremely effective at preventing migraines.
Oh, that's interesting. I'm reading now that it's also an effective antidepressant, but I'm not sure if it's actually used for that purpose.