Over the past year, increased regulatory pressure in multiple regions like UK OFCOM and Australia's eSafety has led to higher operational costs, including infrastructure, security, and the need to work with more specialized service providers to keep the site online and stable.
If you value the community and would like to help support its continued operation, donations are greatly appreciated. If you wish to donate via Bank Transfer or other options, please open a ticket.
Donate via cryptocurrency:
Bitcoin (BTC):
Ethereum (ETH):
Monero (XMR):
anyone drank "sizzurp"?
Thread startertercermundista
Start date
You are using an out of date browser. It may not display this or other websites correctly. You should upgrade or use an alternative browser.
Stronger opioids such as heroin, fentanyl, or oxycodone are generally preferable as other types of opioids require much larger doses and thus have higher risk of failure. For example, heroin is about 10x as strong as morphine.
Preamble I wanted to write something similar to Stan's guide to SN but I hesitate to call this a guide because I can't in good conscience make a guide for something so unreliable in terms of access, lethality, and risk of permanent injury. I.e., traumatic brain injury from hypoxia. SN is a far...
Preamble I wanted to write something similar to Stan's guide to SN but I hesitate to call this a guide because I can't in good conscience make a guide for something so unreliable in terms of access, lethality, and risk of permanent injury. I.e., traumatic brain injury from hypoxia. SN is a far...
It will increase lethality but you have to put some things into perspective statistically. Any marginal increase is not very meaningful if we don't account for the actual proportional size of that effect.
E.g., Tripling the odds of dying if the base-rate odds are e.g., 0.1% only puts it up to 0.3%.
I'm not sure the exact odds of successful ctb with codeine or alcohol alone but working off the aggregate statistic of overdose suicides altogether being successful 1-6% of the time, we can assume polydrug suicide attempts are included; especially with alcohol considering it's one of the most accessible and commonly used drugs.
Inferring from this aggregate statistic, I doubt your method is much better than the higher end of this range; being perhaps closer to 6%
I wouldn't count on it considering the likelihood of vomiting and unreliable pharmacokinetics of both drugs, even when used conjointly.
For even just moderate (but far from good reliability still) Stick with stronger opioids used in massive doses preferably via IV or rectal administration; check out my opioid mega thread for more info. Even this method is only moderately reliable and has major confounding issues making it far from reliable even when controlling for drug purity and other vectors of error; the pharmacology of opioids are fundamentally unreliable no matter what peripheral controls you implement.
The only proven and reliable drug overdose methods that are accessible are SN or inert gasses *when extra-pharmacological factors such as environment, exit bag configuration, or antiemetic regimen* are tightly controlled. A few others are mentioned in the PPH but they typically lose some points on either reliability, comfort/painfulness, and accessibility (e.g., nembutal)
My grandmother died from a codeine overdose, but it was likely the additive butalbital/acetaminophen in her pills and not the controlled substance itself.
When rappers are rapping about "sizzurp" they're referring to Promethazine based cough syrup with codeine. This is often mixed with Sprite to create the iconic "purple drank" that you've heard about in pop culture. Sometimes they may also add the syrup to their blunts or lace it with other drugs for the crossfade.
This site uses cookies to help personalise content, tailor your experience and to keep you logged in if you register.
By continuing to use this site, you are consenting to our use of cookies.