And among the reasons I don't have a security clearance is to preserve the 
*option* of taking cocaine, at will. 8^) I agree with both you and Dave in that 
I would not choose to take cocaine. But I might choose to take other drugs. 
E.g. I've taken some THC since it's been legal, here. It's fun for a few hours, 
but then I almost always get a massive headache. So, I have a built-in 
Puritanifier ... well, Puritanical is mostly a word used to control *other 
people* ... So, we're definitely abusing the word, here.

The real question is about thrill-seeking. I can't imagine purposefully avoiding thrilling 
experiences. I may not seek them out like some do. But avoiding them seems like evidence of PTSD. 
Of course, given the violence of my childhood, maybe *not* avoiding them is evidence of PTSD. 8^) 
If so, then seeking it out would be something like psychosis. Regardless, I'm a firm believer in 
"resets". I enjoy moving, changing jobs, hanging out in unfamiliar places, traveling to 
foreign lands, etc. And that's how I view the psychedelics (both drugs and practices like 
meditation or even Cognitive Behavior Therapy), as ways to "reset". Anyone who 
purposefully avoids resets seems a bit strange to me. If you're simply too lazy to engage in 
resets, that's more reasonable than purposefully avoiding them.

On 11/20/19 10:07 AM, Marcus Daniels wrote:
Puritanism?  Among the reasons I don’t take cocaine is that I held/hold a 
security clearance and I would have been caught within a few months if I had 
done that.   For example, I also would not think of improving my computer by 
pouring gasoline on it.   Why would I expect some ham-handed intervention like 
that to work on my brain?   Why should I go out of my way to find more bad 
habits within unknown consequences?

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