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1. The Most Common Drugs that Make a Person Aggressive or Angry
2. Take a free Truth About Drugs Free online course
3. The 5 Types Of Low Energy Symptoms

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The Most Common Drugs that Make a Person Aggressive or Angry

 

For some families, their first discovery that a loved one is using drugs is an all-out battle with someone who’d previously been calm and friendly. Without knowing that drugs are behind the aggressive tirade they’re witnessing, it’s a terrifying experience. The person often becomes violent putting others around him at risk. Police may be called; the drug user may be arrested or thrown out of the house.

If the angry aggression is severe enough to send the person into a breakdown, he (or she) may end up in the emergency room. Most people in this condition are unable to tell doctors what they have taken so medical staff have to guess, a risky tactic when they are trying to save the person’s life.

And these problems most often trace back to a small bag of whitish powder or crystals. Sometimes they are purchased from a drug dealer or they might come from China or Poland via an underground website.

The real danger of a drug that can make someone severely aggressive and angry is that some of them can also put a person into a physical meltdown that can result in death. Or they could become angry at the wrong person and find themselves on the receiving end of an assault.

Stimulants are Most Frequently the Culprits

To continue reading go to Drugs that Make a Person Aggressive or Angry


We invite you to take a free Truth About Drugs online course.
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The 5 Types Of Low Energy Symptoms

Hey, It’s Dr. Martin here…

When I was in clinical practice, I saw a lot of people struggling with low energy and what surprised me most were the different ways they described it.

There are a lot of different ways people experience low energy symptoms.

I remember a study from a while back that found that only 36% of doctors ask their patients open-ended questions that were designed to not really let patients explain their symptoms.

Most doctors stick to ‘yes or no’ questions.

Even worse, when doctors do ask an open-ended question the study said patients only get about 11 seconds to answer before being interrupted. 11 seconds—that’s it. In my experience people with low energy need more than 11 seconds to describe what they’re feeling.

And here’s something that really bothers me too many doctors tell people that feeling tired all the time is just a normal part of aging or that aging means “slowing down.”

But that’s not true.

Today, I want to share with you how people with low energy have described their symptoms to me. (Do any of them sound familiar to you?)

THE SHORT WICK.

This is a common type of low-energy symptom that I saw over the 45+ years I was in practice. Their energy is like a candle with a short wick quickly burning out. They may have a little bit of energy but even simple tasks drain their energy…

Leaving them exhausted, depleted, and barely holding on—just like a candle burned down to its last flicker.

THE BRAIN FOG.

Brain fog and low energy often go together—like Batman and Robin or Bonnie and Clyde.
Many people describe brain fog as if their brain is stuffed with cotton or wrapped in a heavy blanket. It’s like their thoughts are trapped in a fog, making everything blurry and confusing.

The reason? Your brain is an energy hog. It needs a lot of energy to function, and when your energy is low, your brain feels it too.

THE ZOMBIE.

Over the years, many have told me they feel like a zombie. Surrounded by people full of energy but moving through life feeling lifeless and drained.

THE BROKEN BODY

Many with low energy say their muscles feel like jelly even lifting a finger can seem like a monumental task. It’s like being stuck in quicksand all day. What’s hardest is that others often mistake them for being lazy.

THE EXHAUSTED

I've heard it countless times from men and women—feeling like they were born tired and are just tired of being tired. They go to bed exhausted and wake up just as drained.

People with this kind of low energy are often told they're depressed.

But let’s be real, it's hard not to feel down when you're constantly exhausted.

These are just a few of the ways people have described their low-energy symptoms to me over the years. Now just because doctors often overlook low-energy symptoms doesn’t mean you have to live with fatigue and brain fog.

Do you ever wonder why you have low energy?

It all comes down to the tiny batteries inside your cells called mitochondria. Your mitochondria are supposed to give you all the energy you need to feel fantastic. But just like an old phone battery your mitochondria can wear out over time or get damaged making you feel tired and sluggish.

People with high energy don't just have more mitochondria they have bigger ones too.

The bottom line is if you're struggling with low energy, your mitochondria are smaller and fewer and are not functioning well.

So, what can you do about it?

Address your Metabolism? What is metabolism? And how can it be improved?

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