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Rob (c137)'s avatar

Whatever works for you to reduce your stress and rewire the "amygdala adjacent" areas. Robert Sapolsky talked about how the amygdala can reset but there's adjacent areas that are difficult to get over.

https://youtube.com/watch?v=f2pj3cj-dRI

There are a few drugs that help with anxiety and perhaps they can help reduce symptoms and reset the brain to not jump into sympathetic mode. They seem to help deal with those amygdala adjacent areas too.

I suspect this is why psychedelics are so useful in undoing the learned helplessness caused by trauma.

If we think

-Ketamine which is prescription only and you do it twice a week. It helps deal with the glutamate system and puts one in a meditative state similar to what yogis do.

-Dextromethorphan which is in cough suppressant works on the glutamate system too. It's over the counter in the US but avoid those because they have crap added like acetaminophen, etc. There's a brand called robocough and one only needs to take one 30mg in the morning and one in the afternoon. (It's on Amazon, not sure about in the UK and other parts of the world).

Here's some more info on both:

https://natashatracy.com/bipolar-disorder/depression-bipolar-disorder/dextromethorphan-vs-ketamine-a-new-affordable-depression-treatment-option-explained/

And here's an interesting experiment and observations by someone who did dextromethorphan long term.

https://www.bluelight.org/community/threads/dxm-60mg-daily-i-took-dxm-every-day-for-a-year-this-is-my-story-long.645718/

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Catherine's avatar

Gary, this sounds very promising. But I looked up Braintap on Trustpilot and it gets terrible reviews. As with so many apps that require a regular subscription, Braintap appears to have appalling customer service.

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