@Telis, we raised this subject before and you know my view.^^
Like with everything the amount makes the poison.
Guys, we are talking here wine and beer and not bottles of Jack or rum. You have to differentiate! Not every alcoholic beverage is the same. Just like not every T is the same. Matter of fact, wine is actually healthy in moderation. For instance, take the French or Italian they drink everyday a glass or two of wine and they smile.
I drink wine and the tipsy feeling helps to cope a little, it takes off the edge of T. I don't drink everyday, but if I drink -- it's party time.
Just kidding. I drink one or two glasses of wine. But I also detox.
I tried benzos before but they make my T just worse the next day whereas wine doesn't.
I totally agree with
@Evian and
@Gabrielle you gotta do what you gotta do to make it somehow through this hell. Besides, who wants to live long with this kind of ailment?
And anybody that believes that popping heavy drugs are the **safer** path to stride in the long run be my guest, or I should rather say pharmaceutical guinea pig.
I can only endorse to give wine or beer a try before popping heavy pills. Wine and beer is of vegetable origin. It's part of nature. And I rather trust nature than greedy humans that thrive on the exploitation of their fellow men.
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@linearb, of course why should the volume/nature of the noise have any impact on the amount of distress the patient experiences, right?
According to some patients *without gray-matter loss* cutting off their finger or leg is virtually the same thing: little to no distress. Really?
Gray-matter, white-matter, black-matter, no-matter, speculative brain imaging, blah, blah, blah. You only subscribe to this view cos you have it **mild** just like your friend that isn't bothered with his T at all.
Last time I checked there's is huge difference between whispering and shouting or the sound of music and an air hammer. Anyhow, the next time someone is hollering next to your ear and you feel distressed about it you probably just lack some gray-matter in the head. No need to worry. It's definitely not the volume/nature of the sound that makes you wince in pain. No way!
Now you can go ahead and point out that we must differentiate between T which is in the head/brain and shouting into someone's ear which has the potential to injure the cochlea. Splendid! and so is **pain**. By that definition everything is just in the head/brain. Conclusion, go eat more gray-matter.