.:Holy::Toast:.
Bluelighter
Travel is very good too, and by travel I mean go explore and see different places and absorb your culture, don't just go to a resort in mexico and get drunk for 5 days
You are saying that a person is going to get better if they take LSD again.Hi Livelight,
As others have mentioned, this sounds like a kind of existential crisis.
I'd say the LSD did exactly to you what it does - it opened you up to new ways of looking at things. It was a beautiful and wonderful experience, but it's left you in a situation where you're not sure if you can handle what is now going on in your mind.
At your age, that's hard. If you were older, I'd probably advise having another LSD trip, with a suitable 'guide' there to talk you through it. At your age however, I honestly don't think you've got the life experience necessary to do this without it being even harder for you. I don't mean any disrespect when I say that - you do seem quite mature for your age - but looking back on myself and the people I knew at that age, the life-experience just isn't there.
I think the counsellor/therapist will be good for you. I definitely second to stay away from the medicine though - antidepressants are all too often prescribed when they're not needed and they come with their own set of problems as .:Holy::Toast:. has said.
Try to find a good friend (maybe your sister?) and talk honestly and open about your state of mind since the experience. Talk about these same things with the therapist as well of course; but remember that your friend will always be there for you - the therapist won't.
There's a good chance that you can turn this around and your new state of mind will make you a better and more whole person as you grow in to adulthood. You've experienced something very powerful and that does change a person. Being changed isn't always bad - and you can even make it really good with the help of others.
I wish you all the luck in the world.
You are saying that a person is going to get better if they take LSD again.
That seems to be wreckless advice without evidence to support it.
Personal statements are more convincing than the weight of all the evidence. You need to learn to separate the two. Enjoy yourself but do be suspicious (safe).please don't fight.Any advice is welcomed, at the end i will always do what is right for me and what makes me happy. I respect everyone's advice in which i believe everyone on here has had some experience. I'm 100% sure i will do lsd again but once i'm in my early 20's. For now, i'm going to stay away from drugs/alcohol/cannabis and live a healthy life. Thank you everyone
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Wow. They deleted my thread where I asked the five questions livelight asked earlier.Livelight...I'm wrestling with similar nagging questions about life, death, the universe, eternity, suicide, etc stemming from a horrific lsd experience. Thats all...no advice. Just letting you know you're not alone in this battle![]()
Actually there really is significant evidence that psychedelics can be very helpful in certain therapeutic situations. Given that bluelight is home to the MAPS forums, I would have hoped that most bluelighters would be aware of this.You have no tangible evidence that what you are prescribing her would work any differently for an adult, or even work at all.
That sounds like a good choice livelight - live healthy and happy and then when (and if) you're ready in 5 to 10 years time, try it again.I'm 100% sure i will do lsd again but once i'm in my early 20's. For now, i'm going to stay away from drugs/alcohol/cannabis and live a healthy life. Thank you everyone![]()