There’s lots of modafinil info at gwern’s page. Wikipedia is also a pretty good source. The short (and only slightly inaccurate) version is that it gives you the good effects of caffeine, but stronger, and with no withdrawal or other drawbacks. It’s had positive effects on my mood and focus.
“deciding to start taking a drug without the advice and supervision of a licensed medical professional is bad” seems to be a decent heuristic to live by
Reasonable! Which is why I’m taking modafinil with the advice and supervision of a licensed medical professional. If you’re wary of self-medication, you might want to look into that route.
If you are so inclined, I would be interested in hearing how you approached the “advice of a medical professional” aspect; did you go to your GP and say “So I’m considering taking modafinil”? (If you’d prefer not to answer, I entirely understand, no need to even respond to say no; thank you in any case for your comment.)
I’d been seeing a psychiatrist to get treated for anhedonia. We tried a few different SSRIs, which didn’t help. Then I read about modafinil, and it seemed like it could plausibly help treat some of my symptoms (although not their causes), so I brought it up. He agreed it was a reasonable thing to try and prescribed it. I’ve been taking modafinil regularly for a year, now. It’s not a giant boost for me, but it is a boost, and the drawbacks are negligible.
That’s pretty remarkable, I would expect that most psychiatrists would be highly resistant to such a proposal. Also, having to try SSRIs first in order to maybe get them to agree is not an insignificant cost.
There’s lots of modafinil info at gwern’s page. Wikipedia is also a pretty good source. The short (and only slightly inaccurate) version is that it gives you the good effects of caffeine, but stronger, and with no withdrawal or other drawbacks. It’s had positive effects on my mood and focus.
Reasonable! Which is why I’m taking modafinil with the advice and supervision of a licensed medical professional. If you’re wary of self-medication, you might want to look into that route.
Thank you for the link, I will look into that.
If you are so inclined, I would be interested in hearing how you approached the “advice of a medical professional” aspect; did you go to your GP and say “So I’m considering taking modafinil”? (If you’d prefer not to answer, I entirely understand, no need to even respond to say no; thank you in any case for your comment.)
I’d been seeing a psychiatrist to get treated for anhedonia. We tried a few different SSRIs, which didn’t help. Then I read about modafinil, and it seemed like it could plausibly help treat some of my symptoms (although not their causes), so I brought it up. He agreed it was a reasonable thing to try and prescribed it. I’ve been taking modafinil regularly for a year, now. It’s not a giant boost for me, but it is a boost, and the drawbacks are negligible.
That’s pretty remarkable, I would expect that most psychiatrists would be highly resistant to such a proposal. Also, having to try SSRIs first in order to maybe get them to agree is not an insignificant cost.
Yeah, it doesn’t sound like Ben_LandauTaylor’s strategy of modafinil acquisition is viable for me.
No kidding!
How much data is there behind this conclusion. Is it comparable to the centuries of experience we have with caffeine?
Why are you asking, instead of looking?