158 lines
7.2 KiB
Plaintext
158 lines
7.2 KiB
Plaintext
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From: irg@waikato.ac.nz
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Newsgroups: alt.drugs
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Subject: Re: Amyl Nitrate?
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Message-ID: <1993May6.133551.16120@waikato.ac.nz>
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Date: 6 May 93 13:35:51 +1200
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Amyl nitrate is a rush. It is used as an antidote for cyanide poisoning.
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However the a local handbook on "Hazardous Chemicals in the Laboratory" says
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that it should not be administered unless the patient loses conscienceness (so
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my spelling is not that good).
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Needless to say when used as a recreational drug it can produce quite a
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euphoric feeling (but the buzz only lasts for a short time similar to laughing
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gas).*
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My experience with amyl nitrate does not include mixing it with sex. But when
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taken at the right time can heighten an already happy occasion. I've heard of
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sky divers cracking a vial of rush as they throw themselves from the plane (now
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that indicates a pretty hard core attitude).
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I'm sure that there can be no doubt as to the detrimental effects that such a
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powerful drug would have if abused (we used it several times over a couple of
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days and I had a head ache for a week).
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* Another similarity with laughing gas is that amyl can mix quite well with
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THC.
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Good Luck but be careful.
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============================================================================
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From: rowe_s@med.wcc.govt.nz
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Newsgroups: alt.drugs
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Subject: Re: Amyl Nitrate?
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Date: 3 May 93 17:39:18 NZST
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Message-ID: <1993May3.173918.1@med.wcc.govt.nz>
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On the subject of Amyl......I've sniffed this on occasion - just out
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of a small 'medicine-type' bottle. It can be bought cheaply from sex
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shops, and while I've never tried it during sex, a friend who has says
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it's amazing!! It produces a head rush, a flushed feeling (you tend to
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go bright red in the face sometimes - but not always) and a lack of focus
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for a minute or so, followed by a 'head shrinking brain hum' (sorry, but
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that's the only way I can describe it since it's been a while) then your
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back. Your circulatory system is sped up as well, but not harmfully. It
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is apparently used as part of a treatment for some sort of heart condition
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so it can't be too bad for you, but it has a 'solvent sort of feel' due
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to the smell - in fact I recall someone saying it _is_ a solvent - and also
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due to the type of head rush. I imagine it kills off a few braincells each
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use, but so does living. I don't enjoy it much, personally, but I know
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several people who do.......a nitrous oxide cannister through an empty
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cream gun or sodawater thing lasts about the same time and is much more
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pleasant IMHO......
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Sam
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=============================================================================
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From: elf@halcyon.com (Elf Sternberg)
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Newsgroups: alt.sex,alt.drugs,alt.sex.masturbation
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Subject: Re: Poppers Review
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Date: 12 Jun 1993 04:20:59 -0700
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Message-ID: <1vce6s$jn@nwfocus.wa.com>
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In article <1993Jun11.192559.25484@mcs.kent.edu>
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msimone@Nimitz.mcs.kent.edu (Muttley) writes:
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>In article <1993Jun10.104332.24599@fuug.fi>,
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> an23378@anon.penet.fi writes:
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>> It seems that vibrators, underwears, lubes, pubic hair color, etc.
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>> have been reviewed in this group. Now anything to say about poppers,
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>> which last longer, price/quality ratio, potential danger of overuse
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>> etc ?
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> Call me naieve, (sp?), call me ditzy, but I have no idea what you're
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>talking about.....
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"Poppers" are any of a variety of physiological-effect chemicals.
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Typically, they are some sort of n-nitrite compound, where 'n' is any
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convenient organic chemical. The original "poppers" were amyl nitrite,
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which came in small glass sphericals you 'popped' and then inhaled the
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vapors through your nostrils.
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The common poppers found in sexual circles came in tiny amber
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bottles. Typically, these were sold as 'room deoderizers' or 'incense'
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(an absurdity, since they smell like used socks) and came in many
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names, such as "Rush," "Jolt," "Locker Room" (an honest name, at any
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rate), "Jack Hammer," ect. They were sold in adult bookstores.
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Poppers are an inhalant, as n-nitrites have very low vapor points
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and become airborne almost immediately. The most common method of
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taking them is to simply open the bottle, hold it under one's nose, and
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inhale.
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Amyl nitrite was defined as a 'medical use only' drug and its
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manufacture and sale made illegal. The manufacturers switched to butyl
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nitrite, then to i-butyl nitrite. The US finally passed a
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comprehensive legislation that, it appeared, covered all forms of
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n-nitrite. However, as of February a version of poppers with the
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chemical form of "cyclohexylnitrite" has been available in the United
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States.
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The -nitrite portion of the molecule is what affects you, regardless
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of what organic molecule it's attached to. The effects are the same
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regardless. The basic effect is to cause all of the muscles of the
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body to relax, which is why poppers were so popular among gay men--
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they made anal intercourse easier. One of the related effects is
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vasodilation, or relaxation of blood vessels. This gives the user a
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warm sensation all over the body and causes large amounts of
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oxygen-bearing blood to rush through the brain, thus giving the user a
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'rush.' The increase in oxygen also leads to a sudden intensification
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of current positive emotions, thus increasing one's lust and lack of
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inhibition, encouraging a sense of raw animal sexuality.
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Some users, however, report an intense feeling of 'falling' when
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taking the drug, a feeling that everything is spinning around. Others
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report that the body's overcompensation for the vasodilation effect
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gives them a massive headache.
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It's funny that, for a drug so associated with sex, poppers dilate
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the blood vessels in the penis as well, making erection difficult.
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Poppers are not physically addictive. The effect lasts for less
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than two minutes, typically, just long enough to facilitate penetration
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or terminate in ejaculation, and the chemical dissembles in the blood
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stream too quickly thereafter to physically addict. However, some
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people find the drug a welcome stimulant and become so dependent on
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them that they cannot climax any other way. (Believe me, I've tried
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poppers in the past, and it took a lot of self-discipline and self-
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restraint for me to control how "nice" they made orgasm feel.
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Personally, though, when I'm with a partner I prefer to have all my
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faculties about me, so I avoid anything like poppers, or even beer,
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when I'm going to be in bed with someone.)
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People with heart problems should not use poppers, and it's widely
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agreed that people with supressed immune systems should avoid them as
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well. All forms of poppers are highly flammable; don't use them if
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you're smoking or have candles nearby. n-nitrites are harmful if
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swallowed and burn the skin (and mucous membranes of the nose if you're
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not careful).
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In short, this is one of those things I seriously recommend against.
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But then, I tend to dislike anything that encourages self-destructive
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or otherwise unsafe sex, and during the 'high' a popper gives you, you
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may well forget to put a condom on, and you're taking your chances if
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you do.
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Elf !!!
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--
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elf@halcyon.com (Elf Sternberg)
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"Mr. Sternberg, you should never again attempt to write anything in
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the English language. It is clearly not your native tongue."
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- Thomas W. Button, Jr., third form (ninth grade) English teacher.
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