Taking psychedelics every day is not a good idea and can lead to profoundly negative consequences.
Honestly Xorkoth,... you surely agree with me that you need to have some serious problem, to begin with, to start taking psychedelics everyday. It's not something that MOST people ever think to.
I know that you did some time of your history, but man, I'm probably right if I guess that you were probably not in your more "rational and sensible" period of your life.
Now I'm going to give my opinion on this:
In my opinion, psychedelics are a very different type of substance. That doesn't mean it can't be as bad or even more dangerous than others. If you go crazy as a loon then it is more than clear that neither you nor your family are going to consider the positive aspects of psychedelics.
The question is not so much what bad things it can create in a given context (usually a negative, problem-prone context, such as a person with a family with cases of schizophrenia or the like) but rather what constructive, positive issues it can create, relative to other substances.
I do not know if you know Claudio Naranjo, he is a doctor, psychiatrist and pioneer in the study of psychedelics in therapy, he is also a Gestalt therapist (I do not like this therapy very much, but maybe it is important to mention it).
This guy considers empathogens to be psychedelics, in that they also show a part of the mind that is often blocked or not fully manifested. He calls psychedelic empathogens non-psychopathomimetic (as opposed to LSD or psilocybin which would be psychopathomimetic). It is clear that medical science and therapy with psychedelics has come a long way since then but the question is why psychedelics?
The question answers itself, psychedelics produce or can produce a series of profound changes in the mind and self-perception of people so that these changes help or catalyze a process of psychological or even existential healing that other substances do not produce or produce in a "falsified" way, not in the long term (for example the "confidence" of cocaine or other stimulants, the "peace" of morphine and heroin, always fragile).
If psychedelics have been chosen and follow a process in which they will be used as an aid to psychiatry, it is because they are in some way better, as more useful, at least, than other substances.
And by this I am not talking at all about their more spiritual, interdimensional, creative and other aspects, which are also relatively specific to psychedelics.