Okay, let me get this straight. Recently you said that the geometrics were b-fly.
'Recently' I suggested that the 'geometrics' may have been br-dfly; for given values of 'recently' and 'geometrics'. if we take recently to mean a couple months back, and 'geometrics' to mean 'strange blotters I bought with an interesting black and white intersecting line pattern, sold to me as geometrics', then yes, your statement is correct.
They were quantitively tested by the police to be 20 - 60 ug of LSD, as you mentioned later.
The 'aztec' design was tested, which had also been sold under the title of 'geometrics', but as I mentiuoned earlier, so was another design
I'd say that your judgement of psychedelics is then equally impaired to mine.
That, my dear child, is a ludicrous statement. I'm not going to be drawn into a little pissing match; but let's just say that your time in the spa would suggest that you have less of a handle on reality then the rest of us.
I've taken acid similiar to this with the design of a crop circle, it provided feelings much the same but was tasteless.
k, do you know what was on the crop circles? if not, irrelevant point.
Same source, same comedown. LSD does not cause 'severe migraines', regardless of the quality.
Unless, of course, you happened to be genetically pre-disposed to such things, or you were under the influence of other medications or even foods which could have precipitated a response in a person biochemically sensitive and that-a-way inclined.
A weaker batch of acid may be of a lesser strength and may cause fainter hallucinations, but it definitely does not make your head hurt one little bit.
Ehhh... Thankyou, Dr. Hofmann, for condescending to join our little forum and telling us the gospel truth, as you are clearly the most experienced and qualified person to assert one way or the other 'What acid does'.
I've dropped multiple of these tabs and have had a headache much the same as the one experienced by mal.
Wonder what else you have in common with mal? medically speaking, it could be far more relevant then whatever drugs you were both on (though that does tend to be the usual cause)
Also note that the red ohm's bear an unusual thickness. I don't study chemistry so i can't go into that side of things, but i've taken a bit of liquid lately and i know that the hallucinations from that were completely different to those induced by the red ohms.
So you personally can tell identify the precise active compound just based on the nature of your visuals? Excellent, I think I shall devise a pepsi test to prove this.
The dosage of liquid LSD i took would have surpased the amount of supposed LSD on the red ohms, if not doubled.
You don't have the faintest fucking clue how much liquid you took. I know for a fact that it had already been heavily diluted and poorly stored before it got to you and left you raving about how it was 'one of the strongest trips you'd ever had'
Yet the fractals the red ohms brought into my vision were much larger scale and different to those the acid caused.
8)
So if your theory is correct and my perception is just distorted, please explain which lysergic molecules can fit on blotter paper and cause vaso constriction, muscle spasms and headaches.

z
Well, sure.
Ergonovine - Shulgin says LSD-like actions at between 2 and 10mg, I've seen at least 3mg fit onto blotter that size before. Ergonovine is used clinically to prevent bleeding after childbirth by causing smooth muscle tissue in the blood vessel walls to narrow, thereby reducing blood flow, and can induce spasm of the coronary arteries. Given that it's a pharmaceutical too, wouldn't be too hard to steal a few crates and clean up the gakks, lay sheets...
LSD - "Physical reactions to LSD are highly variable and nonspecific. The following symptoms have been reported: uterine contractions, hypothermia, fever, elevated levels of blood sugar, goose bumps, decrease in heart rate, jaw clenching, perspiration, pupil-dilation, saliva production, mucus production, sleeplessness, hyperreflexia, and tremors. LSD users have reported numbness, weakness and nausea." - Schiff PL (2006). "Ergot and its alkaloids". American journal of pharmaceutical education 70 (5): 98.
D-Lysergic acid N-(α-hydroxyethyl)amide - You love HBWR, right? Suprise suprise, it contains vasoconstrictive lysergamides!
MLD-41 - "The 1-methyl homologue of LSD has more of somatic than sensory effect, has fewer visuals and is less well accepted than LSD, with the range of dosages being from 100 to 300 micrograms. This indicates that it is perhaps a third the potency of LSD which is in accord with both pupillary dilation and reflex action. However, the cardiovascular responses are actually increased. Besides being less potent than LSD, it appears to have a slower onset but it is equally long lived. There is cross-tolerance between MLD-41 and LSD."