Hacker News new | ask | show | jobs
by nkingsy 303 days ago
I’ve only taken it once.

I woke up feeling sick, stiff, and lethargic while staying with a friend in NYC in 2008. My friend said “I’ve got just the thing” and gave me one of his adderall.

20 minutes later I was feeling better than I’ve ever felt in my life. We had one of the most exciting, memorable days in my life, just pinging all over the city. That night we went out to a club, where I somehow charmed a girl way out of my league.

We met up the next day and she was very disappointed.

That is to say, it was quite pleasant for me.

I sometimes think I have undiagnosed ADHD (my daughter has it), but this would seem like evidence against it, as it was undeniably stimulating.

2 comments

An untrained dose of amphetamine will hit you hard even if you have ADHD, especially if it’s higher than the entry level dose, so I would say it gives you zero information about whether you have the condition.

Funny story though. I have a similar story after my friend walked up to me in a club with a line of coke on his hand. Then I proceeded to charm the girl that became my next girlfriend.

I’m not so sure about that. My very first dose of Adderall was anticlimactic. I was bracing for the rush from an energy drink or something, and instead felt… nothing. I was just able to focus on work better that day.

Also, cocaine and amphetamines are very different drugs. They’re both stimulants, but that’s about all they have in common.

> the rush from an energy drink

I must be dead inside.

(I probably need a caffeine tolerance break...)

You see this in ADHD groups where someone will start stimulant medication for the first time and say "This is incredible. I can't believe this is what everyone else feels like all the time"

And the crowd emerges to reinforce that, no, you're euphoric, this isn't normal, after about a week it'll go away and you'll just feel normal but more productive and have better executive function.

And that's on a starter dose, the parent commenter probably took 2-3x that

The previous poster habitually drinks coffee, and thus already has tolerance to the stimulant effects / increased neurotransmission.
I’m not buying that. An enormous percentage of the US population drinks coffee. I’m not an unusual case study here.
Not all of the stimulants work the same way. When (if?) you build up a tolerance to one, you change to a different med. I expect the same applies to the caffeine -> adderall change.
Coffee is not just caffeine. It contains biologically relevant amounts of monoamine oxidase inhibitors.