Jellopanda
Member
- Joined
- Sep 27, 2016
- Messages
- 232
I felt this section of the forum needed a thread for people to discuss various sleeping aids, share their experiences and receive advice from people who have tried different solutions. This is my attempt at such a thread
I'd like to give a brief (turned out to be not quite as brief as i intended) account of my own experiences as i have been suffering from sleeping problems for over a decade now. Most benzos have a sleep-inducing effect such as d1@z, Lowrasep@m and M1dasolam, but in my experience these only make you a little bit drowsy, and while helpful, doesn't necessarily make you sleep, though other people may have different experiences and i'd love to hear about those
My experiences with hypnotics is better, tho zolp has only partially worked for me, sometimes it makes me sleep, but many times i lay awake for hours and when i've finally can't stand lying in bed anymore and get up, the zolp only makes me feel worse than what i would normally. For those who like zolp, but have trouble with waking up in the middle of the night i've tried one drug called Ambeen CR or generic name zolp tartrate which has two components, one fast-dissolving one that helps you fall asleep, and one slow-dissolving one that helps you stay asleep. The stay asleep part worked for me.
My go to med is Z0pi. 15 mg knocks me out after i've waited about 45 min for it to take effect (and those 45 min feels awesome btw, relaxed and euphoric), though i sometimes take 22.5 mg when i have to be absolutely sure i need to sleep and be alert in the morning because of some engagement, appointment or other. 30 mg though gives me a hangover and i feel shitty the rest of the day. My only problem with z0pi is that i sometimes wake up after 3 or 4 hours and can't sleep again. taking three pills usually doesn't make that happen.
I've been thinking about trying Est@solame as it's apparently helpful in reducing awakenings in the middle of the night.
I've shared my experiences and hope that they may be helpful to someone else. My hope is that this thread could be place for others to share theirs, make suggestions, educate and learn about different ways to deal with their problem
I'd like to give a brief (turned out to be not quite as brief as i intended) account of my own experiences as i have been suffering from sleeping problems for over a decade now. Most benzos have a sleep-inducing effect such as d1@z, Lowrasep@m and M1dasolam, but in my experience these only make you a little bit drowsy, and while helpful, doesn't necessarily make you sleep, though other people may have different experiences and i'd love to hear about those
My experiences with hypnotics is better, tho zolp has only partially worked for me, sometimes it makes me sleep, but many times i lay awake for hours and when i've finally can't stand lying in bed anymore and get up, the zolp only makes me feel worse than what i would normally. For those who like zolp, but have trouble with waking up in the middle of the night i've tried one drug called Ambeen CR or generic name zolp tartrate which has two components, one fast-dissolving one that helps you fall asleep, and one slow-dissolving one that helps you stay asleep. The stay asleep part worked for me.
My go to med is Z0pi. 15 mg knocks me out after i've waited about 45 min for it to take effect (and those 45 min feels awesome btw, relaxed and euphoric), though i sometimes take 22.5 mg when i have to be absolutely sure i need to sleep and be alert in the morning because of some engagement, appointment or other. 30 mg though gives me a hangover and i feel shitty the rest of the day. My only problem with z0pi is that i sometimes wake up after 3 or 4 hours and can't sleep again. taking three pills usually doesn't make that happen.
I've been thinking about trying Est@solame as it's apparently helpful in reducing awakenings in the middle of the night.
I've shared my experiences and hope that they may be helpful to someone else. My hope is that this thread could be place for others to share theirs, make suggestions, educate and learn about different ways to deal with their problem