• southsamurai
    link
    fedilink
    24 months ago

    Drugs are trivial to get, for the most part.

    Theft is obvious, and you can buy most of the well known ones on the street. You can save up prescribed meds.

    If I wanted something like valium, as a loose example, I could have a bottle of thirty in about two hours. Opiates would be similarly fast. The more obscure the drug, the harder it is, and the less recreational value it has, the harder it is. Addictive drugs can actually be a little harder compared to the stuff that isn’t just because it’s market dependent. If the demand is high enough, finding a dealer that has the drug of choice in hand is harder.

    This is why I keep all my meds locked up, regardless of their recreational value. Desperate people just grab everything and go. Not just suicidal people, but addicts, folks in pain that can’t access healthcare, or just stupid kids looking to self medicate. That’s also one reason I don’t let strangers in the house, and nobody at all unsupervised, other than two friends that would kill themselves before stealing from a friend.

    Hell, I’m kinda surprised you don’t already know people that can/would get you drugs. There’s usually a black market around hospitals and other medical facilities, and it isn’t difficult to find them.

    • Don_DickleOPM
      link
      24 months ago

      When I was in Arkansas got addicted to Oxycotton or Hillbilly Heroin. But got that from a back door doctor. Who was also addicted to Opiods. Since then I have been clean and the only drugs I use is the occasional joint liquor and have a script for generic xanax which I don’t take with me because don’t want my vehicle busted into. I have one in a pill box. And yes before you say it I know that if I get pulled over or something and the fuzz finds it I am pretty much screwed but most cops don’t know what the generic looks like.

      • southsamurai
        link
        fedilink
        14 months ago

        The whole “original bottle” thing has exceptions in some states for things like pill organizers or those little containers clearly marked as for medical items, like people carry nitro in for angina. Dunno where you are, but there’s a decent chance you’d be fine. That’s just for casual conversation, not any kind of disagreement or hassling you.

        But, yeah, I feel you. I’m a chronic pain patient, and I used to have three different opiates prescribed. Got tired of it before I got hooked luckily. But I carry my breakthrough meds on my person, or lock them in my car safe (that’s a thing!).

        Nowadays, it’s NSAIDs and anti-spasm options instead of opiates because they’re more hassle than they’re worth for me. Just not willing to jump through hoops and be treated like a child because I’m in pain.

        It’s kinda scary how many doctors end up addicted to either opiates or amphetamines.

        • Don_DickleOPM
          link
          24 months ago

          As a nurse working in Washington State and smoking a joint. Cops asked me if they could search me and found half a xanax in my pill box. Then since it wasn’t in an orange bottle with my name on it is considered illegal apparently. They booked me and the whole nine yards spent two nights in jail. My mom called the local bail bondsman and got me bailed out. I paid her back but it was a fucked up situation. Maybe its because I am black…no playing the race card but 2 days for alprolazem a half pill is kind of fucked up.

          • southsamurai
            link
            fedilink
            14 months ago

            It’s definitely fucked up, and considering the history the “justice” system has with anyone not lily white, I kinda suspect that was in play.