i was fucked up the other day and i was dippin out and i got this sense that someone was next to me and immidiatley got up and said "what" like they were staring at me watching all fucked up ahahaha. any1 else ever have this................ p.s whats up everyone........... i went to rehab n shit but im back... i guess u could say
welcome back! btw the first time I ever did an opana I did that. I hallucinated pretty bad. Closed eye visuals mainly. I kept having hardcore flash backs and I was losing sense of reality. freaked everyone out. Then again I railed 4 perc watson 10s and then half of a opana 40 with little tolerance. do believe its normal to happen?... maybe.. and how was rehab? shitty?
Opiates have been long been considered to cause hallucinations, for thousands of years. The name Morphine is derived from Morpheus, the Greek god of dreams. The hallucinations they bring are today called hypnagogia. It is very normal.
im not talking about like closed or open eyed visuals, i just got the sense that someone was next to me and there wasnt
Hallucinations are any peceived sensation which has no external stimulus. As hypnagogia is a state which is not exactly dreaming, but rather an interface, this includes both waking and sleeping experiences. In fact, one of the MOST common reports concerning hypnagogic states is the sense of the presence of someone or something, exactly what you are talking about. Sometimes this presence is accompanied by a vision, or a silhouette. The feeling is most often reported to come from on top of the chest or directly next to the person. I have experienced the very same thing countless times, though more often it is of a presence in my home (i.e. walking in from the front door, or in my bathroom, or in my daughters room) rather then in the room with me, though this has also happened before. Anymore my hallucinatory experiences with opiates are more psychedelic in nature but this is because I have a heavy history of psychedelic use.
Some opioids work on the Kappa-Opiod receptor, which is VERY similar in effect to the NMDA receptor. So, if the K-Opioid receptor is agonised by a certain opioid (some are strong agonists some don't touch this sub-receptor...), you could experience NMDA-antagonist-like effects. And things like PCP and Ketamine are NMDA-antagonists, so it makes sense. I noticed that the opioid that caused the most 'hallucinatory' effects in me was Oxycodone. Now that I am on Buprenorphine, I don't get such effects (probably since Buprenorphine is a Kappa-ANTAGONIST).