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[Bad Trip Subthread] Have You Ever Had a Bad Trip?

Have you ever had a bad trip?

  • Yes I have.

    Votes: 346 49.4%
  • No I have never.

    Votes: 150 21.4%
  • No but I have had [b]difficult[/b] trips.

    Votes: 195 27.9%
  • I never have and am confident I never will.

    Votes: 6 0.9%
  • Other / Not sure (post alternative answer!)

    Votes: 3 0.4%

  • Total voters
    700
^Thats alot harder to do than to say

If you've only ever experienced bad trips or difficult experiences then when you start coming up on whatever psychedelic these feelings are going to be amplified because your not sure how to keep your mindset any different, whereas if you've had some good experiences you'd know how to steer the trip in this direction.

I'd suggest candyflipping (MDMA+LSD) to get you used to the positive side of tripping, the chance of a bad trip is greatly reduced with this combo

I might just be talking out of my arse though, i was put off psychedelics in my early use of them by a bad lsd trip, and am too 'scared' or worried about a bad trip to try them again
 
I've had two bad trips in my life on lsd. In both it was a direct cause of being around people i didn't know, like, or trust. I was still pretty lucid at the time and aware of what was going on, but just very disconcerted with the social dynamics that had been established. Each trip had it's good moments and alternately it's bad ones, and i can't say it was totally bad. At some points though, i felt more isolated, and inconsolable than i ever have. I kept everything to myself, and didn't bother to tell anyone else i was having a bad time, so as not to worry them.
I basically realized that on that drug, it is key to do it with at least one person who you feel comfortable confiding in or trust enough to do so. Problems on acid tend to linger longer in my mind as a result of the drug, and often need to be discussed or at least left to be figured out later so i can move on and enjoy the rest of the trip.
 
I've been slightly uncomfortable for moments while tripping, but I've never had one go wrong or be a terrible experience. Thankfully. :]]

<3
 
I drank shroom tea, made with about 7.5 grams of finely powdered shrooms. I split it in half with my fiance and so we began. The beginning of the trip was EH. I got nausea pretty badly, and we went for a walk to relax and get out of the house. My fiance led me to a park where we sat for a while and tripped out in the dark. It was beautiful, with fireflies every where and the planes were making rainbows in the sky. The shitty part started as we were leaving...

I blacked out. When I came to, I was walking down a street. I had no idea where I was. I kept stopping every few seconds and looking around. Well at this point, my fiance was starting to panic because I was unresponsive. He kept asking me, "Why are you stopping? Say something to me!" And the only thing I could say back was, "Everything's so.... wonderful." I was convinced that we were lost and would never get home. All I wanted to do was go home. After freaking out and not answering any of my (insanely worried) fiance's questions, we finally reached the house. I crawled into bed, and ignored my fiance. He would try to interact with me and I was basically in my own world. He asked me if I knew my name and I said the last 4 numbers of my cell phone number... I had no sense of self. He started crying, saying I was leaving him all alone and kept asking how I could do this to him. That helped snap me out of it a bit. Then every time I closed my eyes, I saw praying mantids everywhere. I have pet ones, which may explain the connection.

Then I was convinced that I was stuck in a time loop of about 5 minutes. I was convinced that every time I looked at the clock, the time was further back or exactly the same as the time I had looked at it before, no matter how many times I looked. I kept thinking that I could break myself out of it, and I would keep getting up and going to the bathroom, then I would get back in bed. Then my fiance would walk in, I'd walk past him... wash, rinse, repeat. Somehow in the middle of all this, I wet myself. I got changed, managed to calm down a bit, and was able to stay in bed without feeling stuck in time. You will never understand the terror of feeling that you were going to live the scariest five minutes of your life over and over again, with no way to break out of it. After being able to relax, I was then convinced that I could control the world around me.

With this knowledge, I started to believe there was no reality. I thought I was trapped in a Matrix styled world, where everything was subject to my wants. Since a lot of strange coincidences have happened in my life where I should have been dead, but wasn't, and that somehow I always get what I want, I was convinced that none of my friends were real and neither was my fiance. I would imagine him doing things in my head, and the scary part was that he would go and do them. He would say the things I wanted him to say in my head, and would do the actions I wanted him to. I was trapped in this world for about 4 hours. 4 hours of pure tortured hell.

It may not sound intense, and it may not have been the most visual trip ever... but I would take seeing something I could rationalize wasn't real after wards to something that was familiar being warped around me.
 
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the first time I took mushrooms I had what can only be described as a bad trip. I was only about 15 at the time and weed was still a novelty, and yet I decided to eat 30g of wet columbian cubes, in the middle of Manchester, next to a rotting canal, with a couple of mates and a group of goth kids who bought us the shrooms.. after about 20 mins i started feeling scared, really scared, I was trying to escape the visuals (which kept getting more intense) and soon started crying.. it was the most fearful experience of my life, but it didn't put me off mushrooms! :D every experience after that has been great, and my more recent experiments with LSD have never given me a bad trip, I just wasen't ready for the first one at all :o

I send my love to anyone in the world right now having a bad trip
stay cool! %)
 
I blacked out. When I came to, I was walking down a street. I had no idea where I was. I kept stopping every few seconds and looking around. Well at this point, my fiance was starting to panic because I was unresponsive. He kept asking me, "Why are you stopping? Say something to me!

I've been in both positions at different times - the blacker outer & the observor of someone else blacking out - neither are that great really. It can precipitate a dodgy trip for sure as the concern from the observor may well make itself known to the one who is blacking out - it might not as well mind you. Given the option I'd rather not black out or watch anyone do so - if it does happen DO NOT PANIC - easily said but still the best way
 
Edit: Whoops, post got a bit bigger than I intended, sorry guys. :P


Blush said:
I don't know if I even labeled it correctly as hope...but I get tempted every time any of my friends sheds light about their amazing psychedelic experiences. I've tripped on several occasions and I find that my feelings, anxieties, and overall way of being becomes tainted even more. I tripped about 5x and starting out I didn't really do too much, in fact I barely felt anything and felt slightly nervous about my situation (not that I was on drugs, but family situations that were happening during that time). I have to say that my last two trips were more terrible than badly manageable... I just feel like doing psychedelics is just a lost cause for me to enjoy any insightful experiences. Does any feel different about this? Have you ever felt like that and magically enjoyed a spiritual journey?

If I were less cynical and more spiritual/metaphysical, I might say something cheesy like "When you have a trip you don't take the trip you want. You get the trip you need. Or deserve. And some of us have some outstanding smacks upside the he head queued up for delivery."

I might also say something like "Don't go again until you understand the last one and are ready for the next test." But for me, trips have been more work than play. Much more like finals week than spring break.

I could probably say some more interesting things like what I thought during my first experience but I'm afraid of anyone who reads it recalling it and having it trigger a bad trip.


Link_S said:
^Thats alot harder to do than to say

If you've only ever experienced bad trips or difficult experiences then when you start coming up on whatever psychedelic these feelings are going to be amplified because your not sure how to keep your mindset any different, whereas if you've had some good experiences you'd know how to steer the trip in this direction.

I'd suggest candyflipping (MDMA+LSD) to get you used to the positive side of tripping, the chance of a bad trip is greatly reduced with this combo

I might just be talking out of my arse though, i was put off psychedelics in my early use of them by a bad lsd trip, and am too 'scared' or worried about a bad trip to try them again

This is true, but candyflipping worked for me. I did get into a point where I was reminded of my previous horrible experience but the MDMA comeup knocked me out of it before I got stuck. So I would recommend it for anyone experiencing difficulty. Note that since MDMA tends to have a shorter duration than many hallucinogens you may want to only take them once you start noticing the onset of the other drug.

However, even though I know it should not need to be repeated again, I will because in this case it's even more important than usual: test your goddamn pills in advance! If you don't have known good pills, hold off until you do! Otherwise your little safety net may turn out to be dental floss, or worse, barbed wire! I cannot emphasize this enough, because in this case it's not just the physical harm you risk with untested pills, but the potential psychological trauma. We have good science and medicine and doctors can usually help if you just have a physical issue like you poisoned yourself. But our understanding of the mind is far more limited, and damage there will be much much harder to treat!


Danashae said:
Then I was convinced that I was stuck in a time loop of about 5 minutes. I was convinced that every time I looked at the clock, the time was further back or exactly the same as the time I had looked at it before, no matter how many times I looked. I kept thinking that I could break myself out of it, and I would keep getting up and going to the bathroom, then I would get back in bed. Then my fiance would walk in, I'd walk past him... wash, rinse, repeat. Somehow in the middle of all this, I wet myself. I got changed, managed to calm down a bit, and was able to stay in bed without feeling stuck in time. You will never understand the terror of feeling that you were going to live the scariest five minutes of your life over and over again, with no way to break out of it. After being able to relax, I was then convinced that I could control the world around me.

With this knowledge, I started to believe there was no reality. I thought I was trapped in a Matrix styled world, where everything was subject to my wants. Since a lot of strange coincidences have happened in my life where I should have been dead, but wasn't, and that somehow I always get what I want, I was convinced that none of my friends were real and neither was my fiance. I would imagine him doing things in my head, and the scary part was that he would go and do them. He would say the things I wanted him to say in my head, and would do the actions I wanted him to. I was trapped in this world for about 4 hours. 4 hours of pure tortured hell.

It may not sound intense, and it may not have been the most visual trip ever... but I would take seeing something I could rationalize wasn't real after wards to something that was familiar being warped around me.

Been there over 16 hours once, which was my first time trying any hallucinogen. It's not a fun place. It's even less fun when each iteration of the loop is slightly altered and all you want to do is get back to how things used to be, or consists of slightly less time. 5 minutes is bad, until you notice it's 4, then 3, then 2, then 1, then you start considering what happens when there's not enough time for you to even realize there's time. The recovery took almost 2 years to the point where the fear didn't sneak up and pounce on me at random anymore.


Dalfir said:
Thought/Time loops are the worst...And crazy psychedelic deja vu.

I agree. Now toss in some understanding of quantum physics, astrophysics, cosmology, chaos theory, information theory and turn the processing power up to 11 so you can run multiple loops in parallel while cross-analyzing them faster than real-time.

If you've had dreams (without drug influences) that are both full-sensory (color vision, sound, smell, taste, tactile/pain) and lucid you're probably a candidate for this kind of thing. If you've had ones that have featured consistent higher order simulation (physics, economics, social dynamics, etc) as well, you almost definitely are.

A bit farther back in the thread someone mentioned finding the night sky relaxing and I said it was the trigger for bad experience. Let me explain that one:

We all have a fear of death, it's programmed into us at the deepest level since it's the point of life to try and survive. Anyone who didn't have this would have died off easily. However, since we are sentient we are capable of contemplating the future and hence our own mortality. For most people this is a rather scary and/or depressing place and most choose to seek comfort in the thought of an afterlife to sooth themselves. I will not belittle that choice, and I cannot prove things are otherwise.

However, most of us don't go around fearing our death every moment, to do so would be pretty horrible. So for much of the time we (especially when we're young) assume we're immortal, that we'll just live forever. Either we'll wind up somewhere else after or somehow something will work out and we'll beat this whole aging/dying thing with cloning or nanotech or uploading or whatever.

Now, this is where the night sky becomes a problem. If you look at the night sky you see stars. For me, at the point in the trip where I was, the stars seemed to zoom closer and split into rainbows of light. For most people, this is just a "woah cool!" effect. But for me, who has read things about the Big Crunch vs the Heat Death of the Universe, it was extremely alarming. Because if the stars were visibly moving closer it would mean the universe was collapsing at a rate which would indicate there were only seconds to minutes left. The rainbow effect would support this by showing evidence of doppler shift, and the speed it was happening at was provided by the feeling of time distortion the drugs caused.

Thus, comes the thought that "even if they conquer death, and we live forever, the universe will not. What then?" And then things went for a ball of shit. Obviously the universe did not end but my memory kinda shorted out and I kept getting deja-vu, which led to the bad time loop place. The time loops started to become a game along the lines of "find the one quantum probability in the exhaustive expression of the Many Worlds Theorem model where you don't die a horrible death this instant. P.S. You can search as fast as you want but your thought speed is finite and this haystack is infinite. You have until the continually accelerating cycles you're in reach a state where time ceases to exist, at which point so will everything else, including you."

Note: Being slapped at this point by someone else who's frightened by your screams can be helpful, since the physical pain is a new element that does not reset on each iteration and thus can be used as proof that an outside world still exists and that the stupid theory is a crock of shit.
 
B9 said:
I've been in both positions at different times - the blacker outer & the observor of someone else blacking out - neither are that great really. It can precipitate a dodgy trip for sure as the concern from the observor may well make itself known to the one who is blacking out - it might not as well mind you. Given the option I'd rather not black out or watch anyone do so - if it does happen DO NOT PANIC - easily said but still the best way

I had a blackout like this last month, as part of a seizure from wellbutrin. It was more disorienting than frightening for me at the time, but it sure gave the person I was with a scare!
 
I am curious, is this weird......? I have had 3, probably even 4 or 5 experiences that I think most would label "bad." Just these few after hundreds if not thousands in 20 years. At the time, I would describe things to be terrifying in addition to bad, scary, negative, uncomfortable, and most of all thought provoking. But, once everything is back to normal, I regard these few experiences and describe them great enthusiasm. I explain what I felt and experienced like it is one of the best times I had. What most hear me explain makes people uneasy, especially those who have been to that point before. Anyway, my point being, anyone else like what most would call a bad trip? I always think of it like a roller coaster. Before and when it is happening, it is scary as hell. Once it is over, it is something that you want to do again. I have had a handful of bad experiences, but I consider them to be the most enlightening and thought provoking once I can reflect on what went on.
 
^^ You're not weird... I'd call that having a good outlook and properly integrating your experiences. I remain convinced that apart from a full-on psychotic break, any trip can be positive in retrospect, no matter how terrifying or how much you wanted to die right at that moment. At least that's been my experience.
 
Thank you for the numerous feedbacks, everyone. Seeing your answers and reading your experiences were more helpful than anything else I've come across.
 
Gldm said:
We all have a fear of death, it's programmed into us at the deepest level since it's the point of life to try and survive. Anyone who didn't have this would have died off easily. However, since we are sentient we are capable of contemplating the future and hence our own mortality. For most people this is a rather scary and/or depressing place and most choose to seek comfort in the thought of an afterlife to sooth themselves. I will not belittle that choice, and I cannot prove things are otherwise.

However, most of us don't go around fearing our death every moment, to do so would be pretty horrible. So for much of the time we (especially when we're young) assume we're immortal, that we'll just live forever. Either we'll wind up somewhere else after or somehow something will work out and we'll beat this whole aging/dying thing with cloning or nanotech or uploading or whatever.

Thus, comes the thought that "even if they conquer death, and we live forever, the universe will not. What then?" And then things went for a ball of shit. Obviously the universe did not end but my memory kinda shorted out and I kept getting deja-vu, which led to the bad time loop place. The time loops started to become a game along the lines of "find the one quantum probability in the exhaustive expression of the Many Worlds Theorem model where you don't die a horrible death this instant. P.S. You can search as fast as you want but your thought speed is finite and this haystack is infinite. You have until the continually accelerating cycles you're in reach a state where time ceases to exist, at which point so will everything else, including you."

Note: Being slapped at this point by someone else who's frightened by your screams can be helpful, since the physical pain is a new element that does not reset on each iteration and thus can be used as proof that an outside world still exists and that the stupid theory is a crock of shit.


Reading your post reminded me of something during my last bad trip!

Since I felt that reality was subject to my whims, I thought that by simply not accepting death, you would never die. I honestly believed that! It was very serene.
 
Danashae said:
Reading your post reminded me of something during my last bad trip!

Since I felt that reality was subject to my whims, I thought that by simply not accepting death, you would never die. I honestly believed that! It was very serene.


But what would you do once the sun exhausted its hydrogen supply and started to expand?
 
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