Yup, Kristin. Wasn't tired. I think the insomnia fairy may have hit me.
Spike's Bitches 22: You've got Angel breath
[NAFDA] Spike-centric discussion. Lusty, lewd (only occasionally crude), risque (and frisque), bawdy (Oh, lawdy!), flirty ('cuz we're purty), raunchy talk inside. Caveat lector.
I wouldn't mind insomnia so much if the insomnia fairy didn't have bad breath
The insomnia fairy is a busy little fairy. She's been visiting me, and I had to get up early to do a telephone interview with an extraordinarily cheerful person. There should be some way to isolate people who are extraordinarily cheerful in the morning. They could all be on Morning Person Island, while the rest of us nurse our gronk in silence.
Emma is totally the cutest. Also tiny.
And, timelies. Happy Monday.
I'd just never heard of the med before she went on it. I might even be wrong about which med she's on. Her dad didn't want her on it. Her doctor did, and she wanted to, too. They talked her mom into it.
I've got some freinds on Adderall, and pretty much all of them have said that, either in college or high school, either someone tried to buy some from them or a friend stole some from their bottle. It seems like pretty few kids who are actually prescribed it get addicted; I'm not sure why -- it could be because of the different way it works in kids with ADD and kids who don't have it, or it could just be that, if a kid is prescribed it, there's usually a parent keeping track of it. (Or I could be wrong about pretty few of the kids who are prescribed it getting addicted, but I've only known one.)
move=oww
gronk
coffee?
I'm not sure why -- it could be because of the different way it works in kids with ADD and kids who don't have it, or it could just be that, if a kid is prescribed it, there's usually a parent keeping track of it. (Or I could be wrong about pretty few of the kids who are prescribed it getting addicted, but I've only known one.)Your theory makes sense though, Hil.
I'm not sure why -- it could be because of the different way it works in kids with ADD and kids who don't have it, or it could just be that, if a kid is prescribed it, there's usually a parent keeping track of it.
There's a similar effect with some of the heavy-duty painkillers, I seem to recall from when my mother was doing pain management studies. People in serious pain can take mega doses of things like morphine and not become addicted in the same way that recreational users would. Not all meds, of course, or in all cases, but it's part of the pain management controverises where doctors are sometimes reluctant to give patients adequate meds for their pain out of fear of additction that isn't quite accurate.
Timelies! The concert was very cool...might post some thoughts in lj, if I get a chance, but see new tag. People can do amazing things from chairs sometimes, but I bet it helps to be a legend already, somehow.