Not all drugs are equal. In fact, not all drugs are drugs. GHB, for example, is a food.
Anyway, addiction is a physiological phenomenon. It has nothing to do with willpower. Sure, a person who is addicted can use willpower to quit, but the addiction itself is a physical condition, not a weakness.
I have been addicted to coke. It's no joke, bud. And I am a VERY experienced drug user. I use a wide variety of drugs. A WIDE variety, see. But I will not touch coke again. Even H is easier to manage than coke once you get the routine down. (I do not do H anymore, either).
Coke is more addicting than people like to admit. I am telling you, coke has teeth.
I was not flaming you. Read your own words. You did coke and you want our opinion. Opinions were given, then you started defending your already planned use. You have already decided to do it again, and what you are looking for is for someone here to ratify that idea.
I am not going to lecture you about drugs. I am trying to point something out that you do not know, and that you did, in fact, ask about.
You WILL get addicted. The question is, how will you manage a coke habit?
After all, you work out alot, right? So what is going to keep you from bumping every time?
Nuttin'.
You ask, why would you increase your use? Well, because you will develop a tolerance to it. Soon, the bump that does you now will not do a damn thing, so you will have to do a bigger bump just to get the same stimulation.
That will result in you feeling less and less energetic when you do not take a bump. Soon enough, you will feel that your workout suffer without the bump.
And the tough nut is, you'll be right.
So what will you do at that point? Quit? If so, why start at all?
Coke is tough, and what everyone has said about heart attacks is absolutely true. Lot of pro wrestlers died from coke/roid use.
Meth is just as bad. There are better choices for stimulants.
Hey, do what you want. But don't say you weren't warned.