ollie989898
Member
I've had a micro-version of this with an olbas inhaler, found myself carrying it in my pocket everywhere I went and just using it a couple of times an hour because it 'made me feel better', even though I wasn't actually ill.
A long time ago I spent a fair while in hospital, with lots of surgeries and lots of morphine (IV then oral). Wasn't easy getting back into everyday life once I was out of hospital.
Is this basically what happened to Michael Jackson?
I can't remember the details but I seem to remember that Michael Jackson was on all kinds of stuff and basically needed propofol (a serious anaesthetic, not just a high-street drug) just to be able to fall asleep normally. Overdo that stuff and you go into a sleep you won't wake up from... It's serious stuff, as I understand it (only had a cursory interest in this so might be totally wrong) only bonafide anaesthetists equipped with some pretty serious equipment (brain monitoring and the like) would be using the stuff. Anyone who has had a procedure under general anaesthetic may well be familiar with it- normally it is loaded into a syringe driver and it looks like milk as it is formulated as a white coloured emulsion.