WishIwereHere
Greenlighter
- Joined
- Nov 16, 2014
- Messages
- 6
I've had bad trips before, been in mental hospitals 6 times, diagnosed schizoaffective. I've taken psychedelics 50 times....40 times since my diagnosis and barely felt any negatives anymore of taking psychedelics. If anything I've been cured tenfold from shrooms and as long as I didn't get a bad batch of acid or take too much, it didn't affect me badly either. Acid and shrooms isn't gonna cause me a psychotic break unless something seriously bad happened. You guys always say "NO IF YOU HAVE ANY MENTAL PROBLEMS YOU CANT SMOKE WEED OR DO HALLUCINOGENS" that's bullshit. because im pretty dandy alright. Yeah I take anti-psychotics and it might negate the trip a little but you overrate mental illness. All the people I met in mental hospitals and IOP's have done hallucinogens and weed a thousand times and theyre all relatively fine (with thanks to modern day medicine improved). No one is an "acid casuality" or a "glass of orange juice" from doing too much hallucinogens with mental issues. And you can smoke on your medication and the medication still helps. It's all overrated. You guys are overrated. Makes me sensitive to asking questions on this board without being judged too harshly because I am perfectly fine having done hallucinogens. Maybe it makes me a little more inside my own head, but YOLO. It's only life, relax. After 5 months sober from weed and hallucinogens I am better than I have ever been, even before I was diagnosed. If anything I was self-medicating. I'm not saying I'm going back to hallucinogens in the future, but certainly can't regret it, because it only made me better. That's all.
P.S. maybe this well get deleted but it shouldn't because everyone is responsible for their own actions so we should discuss this rather than continue to exaggerate the subject and ignore the benefits of hallucinogens for treating mental illness and conceal it.
P.S. maybe this well get deleted but it shouldn't because everyone is responsible for their own actions so we should discuss this rather than continue to exaggerate the subject and ignore the benefits of hallucinogens for treating mental illness and conceal it.