Does anyone have experience with Toddler Smile Shop?
I found them online and they look to be good quality clothes, they are on the pricer side so I was hoping for some feedback.
I found them online and they look to be good quality clothes, they are on the pricer side so I was hoping for some feedback.
I used coke very regularly with a large amount of people during college. I used at least 2-4 days a week most weeks and had an all night bender at least 1-3 times a month. I did have a few periods over that time when I wouldn't do any for a month though. I did coke with at least 30-40 different people during that time. Never once did me or anyone I was with feel paranoid in the slightest.
The only time I felt scared/inpending doom was the time that we accidently did meth laced coke all night. And even then it wasn't a "scared of police" type of paranoia.
For some reason, I have never been able to handle weed.
However, I get EXTREMELY paranoid even on a little bit of weed about every type of bad senario that could happen, and even now living in a legal state, the weed paranoia shifts to just hyperfocusing on mistakes in my past, and fear of the future. My spouse smokes daily and knowing what I know about myself, I have zero issues or pressures about not smoking at all.
Am I the only one who thinks the stereotype/trope about coke paranoia is vastly over exaggerated?
I also think that the addictiveness of coke is also very over exaggerated (I am not promoting it's use). At least in my experience, out of everyone I know that was a fairly heavy user in college, only two continue to use after college, and even they are functional users. I was able to stop without much effort. My theory is the mindset and purpose someone has for using a substance matters significantly in their risk of addiction. Most young people do drugs to have fun, party and relate to people better, while most addicts do drugs to escape some external problem in their life. I am aware of some study done with rats with morphine laced water where the rats in a healthy society only rarely used the water, and the isolated rats would usually get addicted and eventually overdose. And I'm my personal experience the findings of that study correlated to my lived experience.
I will say though, it is alot harder to stop when people around you are constantly using something, and especially when friends were offering it for free, like my fraternity brothers having a "coke room" that anyone could pop by during a party for a complimentary line or bump. It only became easy to stop when I removed myself from those settings (out of sight, out of mind).
Do y'all agree or disagree with any of this?