you are administering a controlled substance to a person on a restricted substance.
this makes you liable under the law.
like a car driver driving with passengers who are not wearing their seat belts.
the law is quite clear.
if he dies of respiratory arrest from combined oxy & alcohol, you could be prosecuted for manslaughter/3rd degree?
or assisting suicide
while your heart may be in the right place & it being between 2 consenting adults, the law does not see it the same.
you may be better asking the questions in a pharmacological manner to avoid the ethereal mystical intent of people to try and manipulate in a religous conversion.
alcahol brings blood to the surface
oxy attaches to the red blood cells
alcohol shuts down the corpus Colosseum (this is why it is used soo much by psychiatric patients and emotionally troubled people)
Corpus Callosum - The Brain Made Simple
brainmadesimple.com/corpus-callosum.html
The
Corpus Callosum is the part of the mind that allows communication between the two hemispheres of the brain. It is responsible for transmitting neural ...
oxy attaches to the red blood cell which in turn removes the red blood cells ability to carry oxygen to the brain.
pain seeks to shut down reception of pain
trauma shuts down frontal lobe blood
when under stress or low oxygen the body shuts down blood to the frontal lobes(higher processing)
emotional processing is lowered when under the influence of alcahol.
thus singular emotions are experienced allowing for a lowering of over all emotional noise.
this in part reduces complex problems by removing the ability to process and think about several things at once.
is this a depressing mechanism ?
yes and no
it can drive a concept of obsession by pushing a single focus on one emotion in what ever is the strongest.
fear
hate
clinical conditions
sex
lust/desire/loss
pharmacological management of emotions is not mainstream and has many issues.
managing a single depressive emotion may be easier than trying to manage several sad emotions at once continually assuming they/there is no suicidal ideation at play.
oxy interferes with many things to act.
some of those things directly drive emotional states.
oxy can be a lifter, but once addicted is a downer
alcohol is a reducer
what is your next question ?
oxy is not a depressant because of its pharmacological metaphysical state.
it is a depressant when the user is an addict because it interacts with things that produce hormones in the long term over several days/weeks/months
this drives a long term emotional reality of being depressed to avoid depression.
when someone has long term severe pain their biology(and mind) changes
emotional depression may be an acceptable trade off to relieve the pain.
the emphasis is on reducing nerve activity
this action tends to act as a default depression state inertly to the psyche.