What Is Aprofene? An Old-School Soviet Psychedelic?
Got bored of tripping on LSD, psilocybin mushrooms and DMT? Are you looking for thrills? Then you might be interested in Aprofene also known as Taren – an old-school Soviet psychedelic, one of the rarest and most potent hallucinogens ever sold on the
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What is Aprofene (Taren)?
Aprofene is a Russian pharmaceutical, developed in the USSR in the 1960s. In medicine, Taren is used to combat organophosphate poisoning, because its active compound (2,2-diphenylpropanoic acid N, N-diethyl aminoethyl ester hydrochloride) tackles intoxication symptoms. Moreover, Aprofene has proven to be effective in treating stomach ulcer, vasospasms and abdominal spasms.
Aprofene produces strong psychoactive effects when taken by a person who isn’t poisoned. Psychonauts report severe visual, auditory and tactile hallucinations, blackouts and profoundly altered state of consciousness. Until the late 1990s, the drug was included in all Russian army first aid kits. However, in 1998 the government listed Aprofene in the Controlled Psychotropic Substances Schedule and it disappeared from all AFAKs.
Aprofene was quite easy to find in the USSR because each soldier got a pack of pills. After the prohibition,
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and was primarily sourced from abandoned military storage facilities. Nowadays, it is rarely used as a recreational drug. Most people don’t like Aprofene trips and describe them as terrifying and unpredictable. But old-timers often recall Taren with a feeling of nostalgia for the long-gone Soviet era. Aprofenes used by Russian doctors for easing spasms and treating gastrointestinal tract diseases, that’s why
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. Some say that you can still find Tarenpills inside abandoned Soviet military bases. So, if you visit one of them, look for small yellow plastic boxes.Image: Aprofene found in a bomb shelter
Aprofene Side Effects
The average dose of Aprofene for recreational use is two 25 mg pills. The most common adverse after-effects that occur in people taking the drug include:
- excessive thirst;
- nausea and vomiting;
- urinary retention;
- constipation;
- blurred vision;
- high fever;
- drowsiness.
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Aprofene Trip Reports
Here’re some reviews made by Russian psychonauts who tried Aprofene:
- Taren frightens. Every time I take it, I travel to some shadowlands and find myself in a kind of dark pit of hell. I’ll never forget one trip, when my friend Aleksey and I were walking across a forest, laughing hysterically and watching our ears grow up to the size of elephants’ ones. We had sharp and long noses and huge mouths, filled with hundreds of shark teeth. We had better get out of that wood.
- I remember Aprofene. It’s an evil thing. After taking two pills, I climbed a tree and began shouting at non-existent pigeons to come and peck corn.
- The effect was always the same – I was hazy, had intense hallucinations and talked to dead people.
- The problem is not in hallucinations. Yes, they are terrifying but give me a lot to think. Instead of myself, there always appears another person, and that is the most horrible experience. Every ten minutes, this strange individual hides in a bathroom and tries to get out through the wall. After that, the creature almost tears off the thumb of the right hand, pinching it with a door. Why? I don’t have a clue.
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for those who are into such high and want to feel the taste of Soviet psychedelics – bitter, hardcore and odd.
Where to Buy Aprofene?
Aprofene was out of production in 1987. That’s why all Taren pills
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are taken from old first aid kits. The offer is quite limited – I found only one
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dealing the drug on Hydra marketplace.One pill costs not much – $8, but it’s delivered via
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in Krasnoyarsk, a city located in the South-East of Russia. Therefore, if you’re eager to trip on Aprofene, you’ll have to travel to Siberia or to find a person who can mail the substance from Krasnoyarsk.Must Read:
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