George lamb can i get high legally




















Please update your billing details here to continue enjoying your access to the most informative and considered journalism in the UK. Accessibility Links Skip to content. Menu Close. Log in Subscribe. And decided that the god of television was telling me to go to bed. Published by lozzy at am on Fri 3rd July Published by Teresa at am on Fri 3rd July Published by Libertine at am on Fri 3rd July I had a baby six months ago didn't I?

Apart from the Meptid during labour and paracetamol for a couple of days afterwards as well then :oP. Published by Rocket Dog at am on Fri 3rd July Published by grumpyoldpunk at am on Fri 3rd July Published by daggg at am on Fri 3rd July Yes the Legal High program was a bit hysterical in both senses, I suppose in its underlying tone, though the surface was calm. Glad to see the subject of safety being broached. A steady approach helps, but he only had an hour. But now I am worried about people throwing out the baby with the bath water: there is a lot of useful stuff out there in the supplements field, not so dangerous as the stuff he covered.

A lot of gym supplements have upper effects: ephidra, a herb that is not currently controlled, has ephidrine in it. They have a lot of other things on offer too. Also for a long time, quietly in your high streets, Health Food shops where you can go "for the price and stay for the advice" have had mild uppers available and also mild aphrodisiacs. A lot of "legal highs" are just cribbing what many herbalists have known for years, I think. I seem to have a problem of "chronic fatigue" due to excess caffeine and lack of sleep causing adrenal exhaustion.

But I still have to get through the day, while exhausted sometimes. What begins with a classified ad ends with a headline-making international campaign. But you probably know all this. Who didn't consider applying? The point, last night, was to whittle down the top 50 to 10 or 15 as they decided later. This is where things started to get confusing.

The candidates were all told to get themselves as much publicity as possible, so that people would vote for them online. Weirdly, though, this didn't seem to affect how likely they were to get the job. Holly was my favourite, by a mile. One of the only girls who didn't include a bikini shot in her application, she's nice, funny, normal; though to be honest she didn't really stand a chance with the likes of Ben hanging around. Ben's the opposite of Holly, which is to say an utter berk.

He was constantly undermining the other candidates, pointing out why they shouldn't win. In the event, this seemed to work it always does. He got the job. Life, eh? Having passed his Harley street medical with flying colours - despite admitting to ecstasy and cocaine use - he puffed away on a bong filled with salvia, a herb banned in Sweden, Germany and Australia. If he lacked the gung-ho enthusiasm of Bruce Parry for this voyage into hallucinogenics, the effects were unmistakeable.

Clearly, these drugs do work. Which begs the question: If these substances are now banned in Guernsey, should the same happen here? And doesn't anybody smoke banana skins any more?



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