High inhibition kills your looksmax even if your face and frame are solid. You can look good but still freeze, overthink, or sound awkward. This thread covers the best pharma options in 2026 to lower inhibition and social anxiety.
Goal: Get to a healthy low-inhib state (bold, spontaneous, talkative) without becoming reckless. Use pills as a bridge while doing real social practice.
Tier List:
S-Tier – Strongest Disinhibition
Pregabalin (Lyrica):
• Makes you carefree, chatty and flirty. Feels like alcohol but clearer.
• Dose: Start 75–150 mg/day, up to 300 mg (split doses).
• Pros: Very fast and powerful for social anxiety.
• Cons: Tolerance builds quick, withdrawal can be rough. Cycle it.
A-Tier – Strong & Cleaner Options
Etifoxine (Stresam):
• Clean calm without fog or heavy sedation. Lowers worry and social fear.
• Dose: 150 mg/day (usually 50 mg x3).
• Pros: Low addiction risk, no big withdrawal, good daily use.
• Cons: Harder to get outside Europe.
• Forum vibe: Safer alternative to pregabalin.
Baclofen:
• Relaxed alcohol-like feeling.
• Dose: 10–80 mg/day (start low and increase slowly).
• Good if pregabalin feels too strong.
B-Tier – Safe Daily Basics
Escitalopram (Lexapro):
• Boosts serotonin, quiets overthinking and fear of judgment.
• Dose: Start 10 mg once daily, can go to 20 mg.
• Takes 4–8 weeks to fully work.
• Best for long-term baseline calm.
Propranolol:
• Stops racing heart, shaking, blushing and sweating.
• Dose: 10–40 mg before social situations (or low daily).
• Super safe, no addiction. Great starter pill.
C-Tier – Support
• Duloxetine (Cymbalta): If you need calm + more energy.
• Trazodone low dose: Helps with sleep and daily worry.
Simple Game Plan:
1. Fix looks + gym + daily small social reps (compliments → chats → approaches).
2. Start with Propranolol for shaky moments.
3. Add Etifoxine (safer daily) or Pregabalin (max bold) short-term to make practice easier.
4. Use Lexapro long-term for steady low worry.
5. Taper pills once your real confidence improves.
Important Warnings:
• Don’t run high doses of pregabalin or baclofen forever (tolerance + withdrawal).
• Pills help you practice — they don’t replace actually talking to people
Goal: Get to a healthy low-inhib state (bold, spontaneous, talkative) without becoming reckless. Use pills as a bridge while doing real social practice.
Tier List:
S-Tier – Strongest Disinhibition
Pregabalin (Lyrica):
• Makes you carefree, chatty and flirty. Feels like alcohol but clearer.
• Dose: Start 75–150 mg/day, up to 300 mg (split doses).
• Pros: Very fast and powerful for social anxiety.
• Cons: Tolerance builds quick, withdrawal can be rough. Cycle it.
A-Tier – Strong & Cleaner Options
Etifoxine (Stresam):
• Clean calm without fog or heavy sedation. Lowers worry and social fear.
• Dose: 150 mg/day (usually 50 mg x3).
• Pros: Low addiction risk, no big withdrawal, good daily use.
• Cons: Harder to get outside Europe.
• Forum vibe: Safer alternative to pregabalin.
Baclofen:
• Relaxed alcohol-like feeling.
• Dose: 10–80 mg/day (start low and increase slowly).
• Good if pregabalin feels too strong.
B-Tier – Safe Daily Basics
Escitalopram (Lexapro):
• Boosts serotonin, quiets overthinking and fear of judgment.
• Dose: Start 10 mg once daily, can go to 20 mg.
• Takes 4–8 weeks to fully work.
• Best for long-term baseline calm.
Propranolol:
• Stops racing heart, shaking, blushing and sweating.
• Dose: 10–40 mg before social situations (or low daily).
• Super safe, no addiction. Great starter pill.
C-Tier – Support
• Duloxetine (Cymbalta): If you need calm + more energy.
• Trazodone low dose: Helps with sleep and daily worry.
Simple Game Plan:
1. Fix looks + gym + daily small social reps (compliments → chats → approaches).
2. Start with Propranolol for shaky moments.
3. Add Etifoxine (safer daily) or Pregabalin (max bold) short-term to make practice easier.
4. Use Lexapro long-term for steady low worry.
5. Taper pills once your real confidence improves.
Important Warnings:
• Don’t run high doses of pregabalin or baclofen forever (tolerance + withdrawal).
• Pills help you practice — they don’t replace actually talking to people


