- Dołączono
- 27 Lut 2026
This isn't necessarily true. Though it is definitive that Jer has been physically and almost certainly psychological dependent and addicted to Benzo's and Alcohol for at least a decade (if not since Jer was prescribed the Xanax, and when he started drinking daily in high school, which it is my belief is the extraordinary scope of his addiction). We also know that he regularly takes Vicodin and he uses it often enough to doctor shop for it.he's on SSRI's, Xanax and Booze, he wouldn't survive also taking Opiates.
Jer never stops his Xanax and alcohol use. He is and has been dependent on both every single day and would withdraw if he decided to take a day off. So we know he at least somewhat regularly takes the trio of death without sobering up from either depressant, and we know that he is still alive.
Also I'd like to add that I think Jer (at least up until possibly recently) does not have the opioid supply to form a dependence on them and instead likely just would get a script doctor shopping, take 2-8 doses at once to chase the recreational high, run out, rinse and repeat when he can maybe a week a month or less.
Also, there are people who use opioids, benzodiazepines/muscle relaxers, and alcohol multiple times together daily for years. The risk of death ironically starts to reduce the more and more dependent and consistently addicted you are as your body forms enough tolerance to ward off aspiration or significant tolerance relative to what addicts can get their hands on and/or want to be taking as, most people are not trying to die while getting high... most...
Anyways I don't find the SSRI anywhere near the realm of relevance when compared with the literal most dangerously and unpredictably compounding three drugs that have some of the highest abuse potential aside from barbiturates. Best case Jer rarely mixes all three, worst case he's already dependent on all three. I quoted a post I go more in depth if you're a retard like me and somehow didn't get enough jer drug speculation over 5 paragraphs.
External Observational Analysis: Jeremy Hambly (TheQuartering) – Patterns of Alcohol and Benzodiazepine Use (~2025–2026)
The following is a pseudo-academic external look at Jeremy’s self-reinforcing cycle of heavy substance use, the resulting impaired behavior on stream, the mockery it generates, and how that feeds back into more use. This isn’t meant to excuse anything he’s done. It’s simply an attempt to highlight a major factor behind his behavior that I feel doesn’t get discussed as much as it should.
I’ve spent a decent amount of time in the academic niche of polysubstance abuse, particularly alcohol combined with GABAergic depressants, including some direct work with users. That background is why I found this pattern interesting enough to write about. I used Grok 4.3 to help edit and format it into something more readable. If anyone wants the much longer, rougher original version with extra rambling and less polish, feel free to PM me.
TL;DR (Non-Academic, Non-Objective)
Jer’s downfall has been massively accelerated by a self-reinforcing cycle of heavy alcohol and benzo abuse. It’s obvious to anyone watching that he’s frequently blasted on stream. He exhibits classic lolcow behavior with a major substance-induced component that’s actually pretty fascinating from an observer’s perspective, and it explains his behavioral patterns better than most people give it credit for.
Pharmacologically he’s in a bad spot. Decades of heavy drinking combined with short-acting benzos has created massive cross-tolerance, downregulation, and kindling. If he actually stopped cold turkey, he’d be at serious risk of seizures and possibly death. The fact that he’s still somewhat functional while being as absolutely blasted as he is just shows how high his tolerance (and therefore his abuse) has gotten. His behavior and the addiction aren’t separate things — the substances are making the mask slip harder and amplifying the same dysregulated, impulsive, retard traits he’s being laughed at for. Every public crashout and failed “detox” just makes it more obvious.
This isn’t meant to excuse anything. Jeremy would still be a piece of shit sober. The point is to lay out how bad the actual substance abuse has gotten and how it feeds into everything else. I’m working with public streams, self-statements, and logical extrapolation from observable patterns. I’ll be conservative with estimates throughout.
TL;DR
Public streams show a clear, ongoing pattern of heavy chronic alcohol use combined with benzodiazepine use (primarily alprazolam/Xanax). This has created a high-tolerance GABAergic polysubstance dependence profile after years of abuse.
Short-lived claims of quitting appear frequently but don’t seem to stick based on subsequent behavior. Abrupt cessation of alcohol at this level of dependence carries a real risk of seizures and other serious withdrawal complications. Adding benzodiazepine dependence makes any reduction significantly more dangerous and complicated.
Observable behavior during streams is consistent with frequent intoxication and high daily maintenance use. Without proper medical intervention, this kind of pattern carries elevated risk of acute medical events and high relapse rates. Some people in similar situations do stabilize with real medical detox and support, but the current trajectory shows sustained heavy use and repeated failed self-directed quits. This is external analysis based on public evidence, not a diagnosis or medical prognosis.
1. Scope & Methodology (External Only)
This is a sub-clinical, external observational analysis based on publicly available streams, videos, and commentary (primarily from 2026). No private medical records, bloodwork, exact dosages, or insider information were used. The goal is to give context to patterns that have already been widely discussed and documented by others.
2. Substances Involved (Public Evidence)
