this post was submitted on 09 Jul 2026
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Autism
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Ritalin is basically amphetamines.
I had it for a while, and then switched back to uncut speed. After I cleaned up, I found that exercising a lot had the same effect for me, and that got me through withdrawals :-)
It's focused on minimising side effects, unlike speed, which is focused on the high.
When it works, it's amazing. You also don't develop significant tolerances (aka physical addiction) to it, if you have ADHD. It ends up working with your homeostatic systems, rather than against them.
Apparently it is a running job with many specialists. People with ADHD regularly forget to take the "highly addictive" drug.
Maybe it didn't do the trick for me, then, because I'm more on the side of autism than ADHD.
Speed worked amazingly well for me, though. I could communicate enthusiastically with people, and it helped me with all aspects of my life ... the scene in Trainspotting where Spud has too much of it before an interview still makes me laugh :-)
Ritalin is amphetamine. Are you saying it's modified amphetamine?
It's in the amphetamine family. It was chosen due to the bias it has with where in the brain it acts. Speed has a different bias that create a different effect.