Here's my story,
In high school my grades began suffering.
I couldn't stand the monotony and pointless assignments.
Graduated and got accepted to a mediocre university.
Same story, procrastinated and got mediocre grades in most of my classes.
Often I would wait till 6 in the morning before starting on my lab reports.
Junior year got much more intense with hours in the lab and reports that took a whole day of non-stop work to finish.
There were no ways to bull.... and get by anymore.
The smallest sig figs were scrutinized by my professor, and there lots of them.
I knew I was doomed if I didn't do something.
So like a lot of my classmates, I went to the doctors and got prescribed adhd med, focalin.
I had a choice to pick adderall but I refused based on my personal research.
Focalin worked well. It got me through junior year, but there was a problem.
I began developing higher and higher tolerance.
As I increased my dosage, the crash got worse and worse to a point where I just didn't want to take it anymore (I can't believe they give this stuff to little kids).
At first, the tolerance would come down when I took a month vacation, but not so anymore.
Senior year, I was in the same place. Doomed again.
I had a 30 pages research paper on peptides mass spec to finish and...I knew not a single thing about mass spec.
Running out of options, I did what normal people do. Good ol' coffee.
Caffeine has to be the ....tiest stimulant known to man.
Jitteriness and anxiety, I was all over the place.
The paper deadline was looming closer.
Being very active on researching nootropics, at this point I came across the idea of using nicotine patch.
ThenI came across this article that mentioned nicotine,
Science’s obsession: The search for a “smart pill” - Salon.com
and this, Nicotine
I went out and bought a box of nicoderm cq immediately.
Long story short, it worked well, it worked very well.
I always thought that nicotine was a sad high for normal people, like caffeine and alcohol.
Boy, was I wrong.
Nicotine doesn't feel like an upper or downer, it just feels right. I puts me in the zone where I can get work done and enjoy.
I started looking forward to studying, whereas before I want to jump out of my seat or put a pencil in my own eyeballs during physics lecture.
I graduated shortly after and started teaching myself to code at home.
Eventually the cost of the nicotine patch ate away at my budget.
So I looked into vaping, the cheapest option for nicotine delivery.
Now here I am.
That feeling when you're banging out code and stumbling across a hard problem.
Just leaning back, taking a deep drag and having a sudden epiphany to the solution.
I love that feeling.
I've never smoked an analog. I don't plan to quit vaping anytime soon.
In high school my grades began suffering.
I couldn't stand the monotony and pointless assignments.
Graduated and got accepted to a mediocre university.
Same story, procrastinated and got mediocre grades in most of my classes.
Often I would wait till 6 in the morning before starting on my lab reports.
Junior year got much more intense with hours in the lab and reports that took a whole day of non-stop work to finish.
There were no ways to bull.... and get by anymore.
The smallest sig figs were scrutinized by my professor, and there lots of them.
I knew I was doomed if I didn't do something.
So like a lot of my classmates, I went to the doctors and got prescribed adhd med, focalin.
I had a choice to pick adderall but I refused based on my personal research.
Focalin worked well. It got me through junior year, but there was a problem.
I began developing higher and higher tolerance.
As I increased my dosage, the crash got worse and worse to a point where I just didn't want to take it anymore (I can't believe they give this stuff to little kids).
At first, the tolerance would come down when I took a month vacation, but not so anymore.
Senior year, I was in the same place. Doomed again.
I had a 30 pages research paper on peptides mass spec to finish and...I knew not a single thing about mass spec.
Running out of options, I did what normal people do. Good ol' coffee.
Caffeine has to be the ....tiest stimulant known to man.
Jitteriness and anxiety, I was all over the place.
The paper deadline was looming closer.
Being very active on researching nootropics, at this point I came across the idea of using nicotine patch.
ThenI came across this article that mentioned nicotine,
Science’s obsession: The search for a “smart pill” - Salon.com
and this, Nicotine
I went out and bought a box of nicoderm cq immediately.
Long story short, it worked well, it worked very well.
I always thought that nicotine was a sad high for normal people, like caffeine and alcohol.
Boy, was I wrong.
Nicotine doesn't feel like an upper or downer, it just feels right. I puts me in the zone where I can get work done and enjoy.
I started looking forward to studying, whereas before I want to jump out of my seat or put a pencil in my own eyeballs during physics lecture.
I graduated shortly after and started teaching myself to code at home.
Eventually the cost of the nicotine patch ate away at my budget.
So I looked into vaping, the cheapest option for nicotine delivery.
Now here I am.
That feeling when you're banging out code and stumbling across a hard problem.
Just leaning back, taking a deep drag and having a sudden epiphany to the solution.
I love that feeling.
I've never smoked an analog. I don't plan to quit vaping anytime soon.
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