I’ve been ordering diclazepam for tapering purposes from Absolute for some time, with no interest in going out of my way to purchase recreational benzos. Due to dosing tests and the receipt of an incorrect RC labeled as diclazepam, I realized that had been receiving inert solution for some time, and unbeknownst to me, I was actually no longer physically dependent.
When the mysterious mislabeled RC benzo arrived, I was surprised to get high off of a very small dose, and though I no longer enjoy recreational benzos, ended up getting high every day for three weeks due to inhibitions and compulsive reducing.
Now I’m extremely curious to as to what the mislabled benzo might have been. It had a duration of about 12 hours, with some mild remaining effects on the mornings following administration.
This is obviously an abhorrent business practice, and particularly dangerous to those of us who are dependent and tapering, but it’s so counfounding. Why would Absolute do this, when they otherwise run their business efficiently, always ship in a timely fashion, etc? It’s truly reprehensible.
All of that aside, if anyone has a clue as to what the mystery benzo might have been, I’d be grateful for your guesses. The only point of data that I can offer is that it was not strong enough to be clonazolam.
@pfunkallstar I didn’t catch your post before writing this, but it sounds like we’ve come to the same conclusion. Truly awful.