<p>No, it is dangerous to your health and, since it creates an altered state of conscious, disrupts memory storage (meaning you aren’t able remember things you learned during that time as well as you otherwise could while in an unaltered state of consciousness)… But does that mean they won’t? Of course not.</p>
<p>You can get ahold of it pretty easily if you know the right people. I personally don’t use it but I know several people that do. I don’t like messing around with too much medication so I avoid it.</p>
<p>don’t need it. don’t like caffeine or anything of that sort (tried coffee twice and it’s horrible). if i want to stay up I’ll stay up on will. and my time management is **** poor. i do things at the last minute. but i still pass my classes with good grades. i think it helps I’m a nocturnal son of a gun tho. even though in school i have to sleep during the night, when I don’t have school my habits change to the exact opposite, so for me it isn’t very hard to stay up at night. somehow i don’t think I’m the only college student like that either.</p>
<p>This is dangerously incorrect. Chemically yes, they’re similar, but the effect which they will have is drastically different. Abused yes, either can mess you up, but meth is in a league by itself (compared to addy). Caffeine is also a stimulant, but it’s not close to addy or meth.</p>
<p>i should have explained my post a little better.
if you rail the same amount of addy as you would meth, you’re gonna be in a whole mess of problems. </p>
<p>BP-TheGuy88, you’re telling me you can lock yourself in a room and study SOLID(meaning not wanting to do anything else, or take a break to do something else) for 2 days before an exam?</p>
<p>well that’s what i did for all my finals this year. i’m not an overachiever (getting straight As all the time) but i got a 3.4 for this semester so far and i’m content with that. the only class i had to spend 2 days studying was accounting. for just about every other class i studied about 3-5 hours the day before. and i did this at night. studying during the day never works out for me. but when i know i have to get something done, i just get it done. simple as that. not sure why people need stimulants.</p>
<p>learning to manage your time more effectively would be a good alternative… and you’ll need those skills for the workforce! …Your future job’s not going to just let you pop adderall all day!</p>