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☮ Social ☮ PD Social Tripping Thread: aLL aBoArD tHe MoThErShiP 👽🛸

been having dreams of tripping hard on LSD every night. Feel likes its calling me to the realm. Almost like the future is revebrating back into the past the energy of the trip itself warps spacetime throughout the entire spacetime continum affecting my dreams.

Still scared shitless of taking such a large dose though. 440 ug is gonna be fucking insane.

last time I ever dosed a similar amount of LSD was in 2021.

Shit was intense on the come up threw up, I still remeber how intense the visuals were total reality bending dimesion travels, thought loops, time travel, total transcendece of normal reality
I remember tossing back a liquid vial one night in 2019. So intense. Gotta love when you enter the mystical headspaces where you begin to understand things in a way never thought possible.

Traversing heaven and hell recognizing the perfection in the experience and letting go of fear, attachment, and embracing love.

That day I would wander my parents house naked without shame because of how enlightened I felt. Or maybe because I couldn't remember how to put on clothes. lol
 
I remember tossing back a liquid vial one night in 2019. So intense. Gotta love when you enter the mystical headspaces where you begin to understand things in a way never thought possible.

Traversing heaven and hell recognizing the perfection in the experience and letting go of fear, attachment, and embracing love.

That day I would wander my parents house naked without shame because of how enlightened I felt. Or maybe because I couldn't remember how to put on clothes. lol
i always tripped naked or in my underwear in my own place anyway lol. Its the best way. Clothes feel restricting
 
Most of my salvia experimentation was before I tried any other psychedelics. As an altered state, I actually found it to be quite comfortable, and I never found the stronger trips to be in any way anxious or disturbing like actual psychedelics. Partly this may be because they were always very short---usually no more than a minute for the strongest effects. That said, I thought the breakthrough experiences resembled dreaming a lot. When I dream, they don't really have to make sense. Sometimes the physics can be completely bent or restructured for the sake of advancing the plot. Even when I recall a lot of detail about a dream, it always feels like I've only captured 0.1% of the experience. Salvia was definitely like that. OTOH, none of my salvia experiences were really emotional. The dreams I remember best usually have heavy emotional and/or erotic content, and often it's those feelings that stick with me the most.

A common theme of my two strongest salvia trips involved infinite copies or versions of reality arranged into a kind of hyperdimensional array or matrix. On my first real breakthrough with some 6X, I was lying on the couch, feeling strange twisting sensations in my body and then a *snap*. Then everything kind of went crooked, like I'd fallen out of position within some dimension I didn't know existed, and now my crooked self was suddenly aware of this seemingly infinite matrix of realities. In each such reality I was lying on a sofa, but the room was completely gone. The sofa was essentially floating and all I could see was this matrix of sofas with a body like mine lying in it. I'm not sure if these were merely copies or my reality or if each was a unique alternate reality. I did seem to occupy one of these, which I had momentarily "fell out of", allowing me to look out over the others. Shortly after, I felt a reorientation. My sense of gravity returned, and all I had left were the lingering body sensations.

In a later stronger experience (10X I think), I went through a similar *snap*, this time in what seemed to be a downward motion, but again a motion within an alternate dimension I was not normally aware of. When I went "down below", I saw an infinite array of conveyors belts, stretching out forever. One of these belonged to me. It seemed like my conveyor In this "underworld" was what was responsible for animating everything in my more familiar overworld. Something was wrong though. There was a silence. The conveyors were powered down. They had all just stopped for some reason, like someone had hit the "emergency stop" switch. There was a sense of confusion and concern about what had gone wrong along with murmurs of speech about how important it was to getting the machine running again and keep it going. And then my belt lurched back into motion again and I snapped back into my body.

I should say that I never felt at all threatened during these experiences, but the memory of the last one did kind of creep me out. It seemed to suggest not only a lack of free world but that my entire life experience might just be some amusement park ride. Of course, there's no particular reason why I am obligated to accept a salvia experience as somehow being "revealing of the true nature of reality", and anyway, given how difficult it is to bring these experiences back, I realized there was consider danger of me over-thinking the whole thing. I never had a breakthrough after that and haven't tried very hard. I found true psychedelic experiences to be far more consequential to my life, in a good way, even if the experiences themselves were extremely difficult.

Also, right after that experience, my sitter took his turn and had a very strong experience that caused him to get up and walk around while completely *gone*. What was eerie is that he talked to me in a way that seemed completely sober, even though I had no clue what he was talking about. I wish I could recall the details. As I understand it, he awoke in the jungle surrounded by amazons, who he presumed had kidnapped him but for reasons he could not understand. For some reason they let him stand up, and I guess he thought I was his partner or something there with him, and we had to escape together. He was very insistent about it. When he came down, he was quite amazed at how thoroughly convincing and realistic the vision had been, but his reaction kind of spooked both of us in retrospect. I'm not sure he took it again after that.
 
So I had my 6 mg 2C-I yesterday. It was not at all what I expected. it's interesting how dramatically experiences can vary even with similar set, setting, and substance. In this case, I would have assumed the 6 mg would give me what the 3 mg did except more, but instead the experience was totally different. I had almost zero body euphoria. I didn't feel bad either, it just felt very neutral. My mood was also very neutral. I felt little stimulation. I did some raking early on, and did not feel fatigued by it, but I felt no urgency and moved quite langourously. At many points in the experience, I actually felt a bit sedated. At about T+7 when I was definitely still feeling effects, I managed to nod off a bit. I actually just closed my eyes and watched the show, and after a few minutes, that show became part of my dream. And then I woke myself up because I didn't want to actually sleep then even though I was feeling the urge. (Yes, I have a lot of catnapping experience and can do this.)

Another thing is I experienced significant visuals---nothing strong, but not threshold either. While outdoors, everything was rather fascinating to look at. I experienced considerable color enhancement. The most remarkable visual was at T+5 or so when I had a good hit of cannabis and for a minute or two I had some rather intense visual impressions. I was in a dim room looking at the ceiling when these ribbons of color appeared in the vision which were followed by an incredibly detailed moving tapestry. What really stood out were THE COLORS and the detail. The colors were extremely bright and saturated from the whole spectrum and were part of what seemed to be extremely fine and intricate designs, but the whole experience was very fleeting. Still, the vividness of the colors really stands out as something I don't recall in my earlier life trips. Yeah, I'd had many visual trips with a variety of substances and doses. I saw rainbows, geometric pattern, facial morphing, breathing, shadow movement, etc. I took 2C-I up to 25 mg, which tended to produce some serious open eye melting but otherwise seemed a bit superficial. My high dose cactus trip also produced strong open eye melting but with perhaps a bit more depth. On ayahuasca (with DMT) I saw some mind blowing intricate designs, but they were more monochromatic in character. This vision had close to that kind of intricacy but in stunningly brilliant colors that I just can't recall seeing, except perhaps imitated (inadequately) in certain works of art. Now I wonder where 10 mg will take me.

I'm not sure I'll be tripping next weekend. Probably not. I need to better understand the condition of my body and get some idea of whether my the consequences of my semi-regular use (low doses, spread out reasonably to avoid tolerance) is having a net positive or negative effect on my health. I am experiencing substantial remission of chronic symptoms for days after each experience, but is this helping me heal in the long run? Or am I merely suppressing symptoms and accumulating a health debt I will be forced to repay after a longer period (more than a week or so) of sobriety? I hope to better understand this soon, and certainly hope this regular tripping is in fact doing my body good.
 
i always tripped naked or in my underwear in my own place anyway lol. Its the best way. Clothes feel restricting
Yeah there is something so natural and even profound about nakedness. I find it really interesting how psychedelics can break down that barrier and eliminate the shame associated with being naked.

I found myself coming to all sorts of epiphanies surrounding the purpose of being naked.

I also remember experimenting with all sorts of shameless sexual activities with myself as I soared through the different dimensions.

I essentially broke down every fear barrier and was very open to exploring my body in ways I never would sober.
 
Most of my salvia experimentation was before I tried any other psychedelics. As an altered state, I actually found it to be quite comfortable, and I never found the stronger trips to be in any way anxious or disturbing like actual psychedelics. Partly this may be because they were always very short---usually no more than a minute for the strongest effects.

I also find salvia to be comfortable and not really disturbing, and I don't think it's just because it's short in my case. I just like it, and even when I don't like it that much, it just doesn't really feel like an aggravating anxiety like cannabis or an extreme fear like from a bad serotonergic psychedelic trip or something. At most I would say it usually feels like... disorienting, sometimes very much so to a point that it's kind of like I freak out, but that just reflects my confusion more than my actual emotional state, or at least that's how it feels looking back on it in retrospect. One of my favorite things about salvia is that while I actually do find it to be very, very comparable to other similar types of psychoactive drugs like serotonergic psychedelics and antiglutamatergic dissociatives, the way it affects my mind and body is often more comparable to opioids or cannabinoids, and the latter more often in more enjoyable ways so far I think, which all together actually makes it one of the downright easiest powerful hallucinogens to take of anything I've ever taken before. Pretty much the only thing that stops me from using it all the time is the fact that it's a little too weird to just want to spend all my time in that state of mind, plus these days as I become a more fully grown adult it's just a little too strong for me to want to dedicate a lot of my free time to as I have other things to do or that I want to focus on too, but still, I use it more than I would have predicted I would by this point back in the day. It's just so nice and convenient for what it is, and what it is is truly fascinating to me, not just trippy in a superficial and shallow kind of way.

That said, I thought the breakthrough experiences resembled dreaming a lot. When I dream, they don't really have to make sense. Sometimes the physics can be completely bent or restructured for the sake of advancing the plot. Even when I recall a lot of detail about a dream, it always feels like I've only captured 0.1% of the experience. Salvia was definitely like that. OTOH, none of my salvia experiences were really emotional. The dreams I remember best usually have heavy emotional and/or erotic content, and often it's those feelings that stick with me the most.

I don't know if you saw the posts I was making a few months ago, but I currently have a theory that salvia is, in a sense, kind of like a "mirror reflection" of dreaming, which is also to say: I think it's kind of like the same thing and simultaneously the exact opposite. Humor me while I attempt to succinctly explain it....

I don't claim to fully understand dreaming (as I don't think anyone does) but I do know that the most vivid and narrative dreams seem, based on our current science anyway, to occur during REM sleep, at which point the activity of the brain is more similar to is during waking states than it is during other stages of sleep. One of the similarities seems to be that during REM sleep, dopaminergic neurons are firing at a similar or perhaps even greater rate compared to the default, resting waking state, whereas they are either silent or closer to it during other sleep stages. There is a lot of science on this with varying views and results to look into, but, for example, here's a study that claims that dopamine in the basolateral amygdala acting at D2 receptors initiates a transition from non-REM sleep to REM sleep.

Our understandings of the dopamine system and human consciousness in general are also obviously incomplete. However, I will state that the way I tend to think of the way the human mind works and especially potentially with respect to the dopamine system is in terms of "playing a game" so to speak. Based on the research I've done and the experiences I've had, I think it's plausible that the human brain essentially thinks of waking life as a domain where "games are played" to speak in a way that is probably easier for modern humans to understand, although I also want to stress that modern understandings of "games" might make that seem less serious than it is, because I'm talking about the way we've always processed reality, long before our modern concept of games existed. Examples of ancient games that might occur to the human brain could be: figuring out a complicated set of steps required to overcome the obstacles standing in the way of you obtaining a food reward that you're aware could be in your future if you manage to overcome those obstacles properly, or being in a life-or-death struggle with another human being who is challenging you for control over a limited supply of resources. Of course, I think the same systems in the brain could still be applied to how we understanding modern games, like competing in a sport or playing video games.

Personally, I would propose that it's plausible that REM sleep dreams, again the more narrative and vivid kind, reflect essentially what I would refer to as the human brain playing simulated games with itself. That is to say, what I would propose is that while we're awake, our brain interprets our senses in such a way that it determines whether or not we are actively playing any games and how we are supposed to play those games, but when we're asleep and dreaming, our brain is instead creating games for us to play with ourselves (possibly as some sort of training for wakefulness or something to get into evolutionary biology theories, but regardless of the reason(s) why) and that it then generates the dream sensations we have from the logic of those games it's generating for us to play, rather than the other way around, or something to that effect at least. I would propose that this may be why what we think of as dreams seem to be consistently task-oriented, to the point that, for example, if you become lucid in your dream and just stop doing anything, it's pretty well-established that the dream will most likely just end and you'll wake up, potentially, again I would say, because if you stop performing tasks, you're no longer playing the game(s) that your brain has created for you to play.

Something that's interesting about the dopamine system is that, at least during the waking period, it seems to have a negative corollary in the dynorphin system, which is the primary system that engages the kappa-opioid receptor, the receptor that salvinorin A binds to and activates to produce its hallucinogenic effects. In neuroscience, at least based on the current science we have as far as I'm aware, it is typically proposed that dopamine is responsible for producing sensations and related behaviors that we refer to as "reward" processing, while dynorphin is responsible for producing sensations and related behaviors that we refer to as "aversion" processing, although there does seem to be a more complex picture than that if you look closer into things, but the brain is a mushy, abstract computer, not a computer like we would program ourselves, so I don't expect things to really line up perfectly with our human desires that cause us to make things like skyscrapers and paved roads as opposed to the complexities of natural environments, but still, it seems like a lot of the time at least, there might be something to this whole reward vs aversion setup with respect to dopamine and dynorphin, respectively.

Again, personally, what I would propose is that the dopamine and dynorphin systems are involved in processing the games that are being played around and with us, and in probably a more complex way that "like" and "don't like" like the terms "reward" and "aversion" can imply, but still, perhaps along those lines. In general, it seems to me that drugs that increase dopamine levels often make us feeling like we're "winning" the games we're playing, so to speak. I would propose that this might be why dopamine is thought as the "reward" molecule because most of the time most of us probably want to feel like we're winning the games we're playing, and that that's why we like drugs that increase dopamine and make us feel like we're succeeding in life. On the other hand, drugs that release dynorphin or activate the kappa-opioid receptors seem to me like they might be able to produce in us feelings that we are "losing" the games we're playing, although, just to give another perspective that I think might possibly be a little easier to grasp based on the trip reports I'm actually aware of with these kinds of drugs, I would propose that another way to think of it could plausibly be: dopamine might be kind of like the thing that makes us feel like we're playing games with someone else, like we're the one in control and they're the butt of a joke or something, and dynorphin might be kind of like the thing that makes us feel like someone else is playing games with us, and we're the butt of the joke instead. Drugs like salvia, nitrous oxide, and high dosages of cannabinoids I think I would place into the latter category, as opposed to things like stimulants and opioids and alcohol which obviously go into the former category most of the time.

In this way, I would propose that perhaps dopamine and dynorphin help place our consciousness along a continuum which is similar to a number line, which is to say that there is a zero point that is neither positive or negative, and then there are trajectories going out from the zero point in opposed directions, positive and negative, and yet, those trajectories are also fundamentally identical to each other other than going out from the zero point in completely opposite directions, because, for instance, that is to say, 1 correlates to -1, 2 correlates to -2, 3 correlates to -3, and so on, ad infinitum. In other words, I am proposing that they may be like mirror reflections of one another: in one way essentially identical in structure, and in another, simultaneous and inescapable way, complete exact opposites of one another, oriented in the exact opposite horizontal directions from one another. And from that, I would ask: if what we think of as normal, REM sleep dreaming is driven by dopamine, and what we think of as "dreams" are simulations of us essentially playing a game in such a way that is more associated with reward or us having an advantageous position in a game, is it possible that other states - such as, perhaps, the state induced by salvinorin A - which are associated with dynorphinergic neurological activity, and what we think of more along the lines of like a "salvia breakthrough" are simulations of us essentially playing a game in such a way that is more associated with aversion or us having a disadvantageous position in a game, essentially being like a mirror reflection of typical, REM sleep dreaming?

I think lucid dreaming is an interesting point to get into, because while normal REM sleep dreaming may involve these "playing a game" systems I've been proposing, I think it's also worth pointing out that most of us are literally delirious most of the time while we're dreaming, which of course seems like it could complicate the psychological picture of what dreaming actually is, but this theoretical limitation is removed under the context of lucid dreaming, in which we are both actively participating in a dream and behaving as if we are awake. For what it's worth, in my experience and observations, people who are having lucid dreams usually behave as if they are all-powerful deities, or at least try to behave that way whether they succeed or not in the specific things they try to do, and I'll say first of all that I don't think that's crazy since it's just a dream and you're not going to hurt anyone by doing whatever you want in your dreams, but I also think it's notable how readily everyone seems to tend to behave this way literally the instant they became lucid, like everyone just kind of gets it and runs with it pretty much immediately from the looks of it. I wonder if this could be because lucid dreaming is what occurs when we are simultaneously in the state of mind induced by being in a winning, advantageous gameplay situation and behaving as if we are awake and actively playing games. I would compare it to playing a single-player video game, which I think is a similar situation that occurs during waking states because the thing about a single-player video game is that it's not actually possible for you to lose, only for you to give up and stop trying; single-player video games are explicitly made with the notion in mind that anyone who plays them will eventually win if they keep trying, and the only way the game ends without winning is simply giving up. To me, this seems very much like lucid dreaming, in which we inhabit a dream world which has characters in it who aren't actually other players, and while lucid we behave as if we are all-powerful and it's assumed that we will win eventually at everything we do if we keep trying, and the only way the dream ends otherwise is if we just stop doing anything (or lose lucidity, which is a real, but conceptually separate issue I think to what I'm talking about here).

A few months ago, I finally had my first salvia experience that was completely dream-like, which is to say, not just trippy in a realistic and extreme way, not just out-of-body in an abstract way, but legitimately entirely like a dream, where I completely left both the environment and body I inhabited while awake and entered a completely separate and structurally complete hallucinatory environment in a hallucinatory body and lived through a narrative plot with clear structure that resolved itself by ending like a dream that I then suddenly woke back up from in the original environment that it was as if I had fallen asleep in and in my normal body again. What happened was, I suddenly found myself at some sort of bullet train station waving goodbye to a train speeding away from me, which I perceived (not visually, but like I sort of just already knew what was going on somehow) to be full of children that were waving goodbye to me too as they sped away. Then, I suddenly jumped up in the air in some sort of weird gymnastic movement where I felt like I was using some kind of witch magical powers to teleport quickly to a completely different bullet train station, which I then landed at, and then the same bullet train I had just seen leaving the first station arrived at the new station, with me waving hello to welcome it. When the train stopped, the doors opened and all the children from before ran out of it, shocked and amazed at how I had managed to get there before them as just myself, quickly deducing that it must have been some sort of magic and asking me to display it to them again. I agreed, but when I tried, I suddenly felt a feeling of clear realization that the powers were, for some reason, not going to work, and just as I thought, the powers I tried to activate failed to do anything, making me look like I couldn't really use magic after all. Upon seeing that, all the children starting laughing at me, to which I felt embarrassed, standing there unsure of what to actually do about the situation from that point on, and in my moment of uncertainty, the experience ended and dissipated, and I was returned to my body on the couch in my living room.

At the time, I fundamentally compared this to a lucid dream I had also had very recently before having this trip. In the dream, rather that being children, there were adults all around me - which seems typical of my regular dreams (both lucid and not) from what I can recall - and I was in some sort of grocery store I believe, although the setting wasn't really important to the plot that unfolded. When I become lucid, I usually immediately jump into trying to use magical powers just because they're fun and I know that if I don't act quickly I'll miss my chance to make use of the lucid dream, and I don't hold back being weird or crazy or dark because I know there are no consequences to anything, and this time was no different. I walked up to a woman and tried to magically swap bodies with her, placing my hand on her shoulder and then sort of instinctively just trying to activate the power (lucid dreaming is kind of strange if you haven't experienced it and used a lot of powers before, it's not the easiest to explain, but it all feels very instinctive and easy to me most of the time) and it worked, I felt that we were switching bodies, and there was a sort of "warping" feeling similar to when I did the sudden teleportation in the salvia breakthrough described above, where it literally felt like I leapt through the air except as my body but then came down on the other side in her body instead, and then when I landed on the ground I instinctively did a pose that felt like it was giving off the message sort of like, "Look what I did! I'm so powerful!" And immediately, all the other adults in the store (who I believe were all women at this point, another common thing for me in lucid dreams specifically) turned to me and started cheering it loudly and posing as if to be like, "Wow, that was incredible!!" And it all felt very rewarding, but just standing there taking the feeling in sort of seemed to evaporate the rest of the dream narrative that might have kept going otherwise, and the dream ended at that point and I woke up.

So personally, when I think about that lucid dream, I see a situation in which it was like I was the one playing the game, like playing a single-player video game, where I truly have all the power as long as I put in the work (which I already have with lucid dreaming, which I've worked at actively for a long time) and consequently was rewarded with a win where all the other characters in the game just blindly celebrated my win with me and I felt like I was in complete control throughout, and by contrast, when I thought about that salvia breakthrough, I see a situation in which it was like a game was being played on me, where I was placed into a strange situation where I got to use magic with no one watching, and then when they all came out to ask me to reproduce the magic with them watching, I attempted and immediately realized I had no control and would fail, which I did, and then I became the butt of the joke and felt a sense of aversion, but to a degree that just made me freeze up unsure of what to do. To put it more plainly, I saw what to me seemed like something that worked exactly like my dreams do, in terms of being a fully-embodied realistic hallucinatory experience with a narrative taking place outside of my actual environment in the real world with other figures involved in the plot and everything and having a plot that seemed to be very specifically related to the sort of game-playing mechanics that dominate my waking state consciousness, except simultaneously was functionally in a fundamentally opposite way to how my dreams usually go, particularly the lucid ones which to me seem like the most directly comparable states since I was also lucid during the salvia breakthrough, where I felt powerless instead of powerful, felt that a game was being played on me instead of like I was playing a game with control over others, and felt averse instead of rewarded, like I was the butt of the joke instead of an object of admiration so to speak, and there were even some noticeable superficial differences that are also in other ways similar, like the other people in the salvia breakthrough being children as opposed to how they're usually adults in my dreams. In other words, I felt that they seemed to be fundamentally the same kind of thing but also working in opposite ways to one another, much alike a mirror reflection.

So, that's kind of my opinion and view on salvia and its relation to dreaming so far. I hope I explained it well enough and that you don't mind me having gotten into it, it seemed relevant.

A common theme of my two strongest salvia trips involved infinite copies or versions of reality arranged into a kind of hyperdimensional array or matrix. On my first real breakthrough with some 6X, I was lying on the couch, feeling strange twisting sensations in my body and then a *snap*. Then everything kind of went crooked, like I'd fallen out of position within some dimension I didn't know existed, and now my crooked self was suddenly aware of this seemingly infinite matrix of realities. In each such reality I was lying on a sofa, but the room was completely gone. The sofa was essentially floating and all I could see was this matrix of sofas with a body like mine lying in it. I'm not sure if these were merely copies or my reality or if each was a unique alternate reality. I did seem to occupy one of these, which I had momentarily "fell out of", allowing me to look out over the others. Shortly after, I felt a reorientation. My sense of gravity returned, and all I had left were the lingering body sensations.

In a later stronger experience (10X I think), I went through a similar *snap*, this time in what seemed to be a downward motion, but again a motion within an alternate dimension I was not normally aware of. When I went "down below", I saw an infinite array of conveyors belts, stretching out forever. One of these belonged to me. It seemed like my conveyor In this "underworld" was what was responsible for animating everything in my more familiar overworld. Something was wrong though. There was a silence. The conveyors were powered down. They had all just stopped for some reason, like someone had hit the "emergency stop" switch. There was a sense of confusion and concern about what had gone wrong along with murmurs of speech about how important it was to getting the machine running again and keep it going. And then my belt lurched back into motion again and I snapped back into my body.

I should say that I never felt at all threatened during these experiences, but the memory of the last one did kind of creep me out. It seemed to suggest not only a lack of free world but that my entire life experience might just be some amusement park ride. Of course, there's no particular reason why I am obligated to accept a salvia experience as somehow being "revealing of the true nature of reality", and anyway, given how difficult it is to bring these experiences back, I realized there was consider danger of me over-thinking the whole thing. I never had a breakthrough after that and haven't tried very hard. I found true psychedelic experiences to be far more consequential to my life, in a good way, even if the experiences themselves were extremely difficult.

For what it's worth, I would not personally refer to this kind of salvia experience as a breakthrough. I want to be clear that I think this is an abstract subject and I don't think there's anything inherently wrong with other people using the word 'breakthrough' with respect to drugs in the way they see as being the most valid; I've recently had a discussion with @JackARoe about the fact that we are using this word differently. However, I personally reserve that word for the kind of experience I described above, where it is 100% like a dream except in the ways that I proposed where it's more like a mirror reflection, but that it is to say, it's the kind of experience where you completely leave the place you started and completely reappear somewhere else in a fully-embodied, dream-like narrative way. While I have only had one experience like this, the one I specifically described above, I have had many trips like you described here, but I just consider them to sub-breakthrough based on the way I've come to understand and apply the word. I think if I was to try to relate it to the dream concepts I was getting into above, although I can't say I've thought much about it before this moment, I think I might try to compare it to hypnagogic imagery, the kind of in-between state you get when you're starting to hallucinate like a dream while still falling asleep in bed, but you haven't actually completely entered the dream yet. A way that instinctively occurs to me to phrase it is that... perhaps it's sort of like, you're losing the game, but you haven't actually fully lost yet.

What drugs you choose to use is entirely up to you, and I don't think people are inherently missing out on life by not going what I consider to be "all the way" with salvia or anything, at least not anymore than we're all always missing out on the things we haven't decided to make time for, which we all have more of than the things we do decide to make time for, so it's whatever. But, if you do decide to use salvia again at some point, if you're open to recommendations, I might recommend trying to see if you can push a little further and achieve this "all the way" point as I personally see and conceptualize it. When I had only had plenty of these experiences that I would refer to as 'sub-breakthrough' before, they were enough to get me interested in the drug, but I still felt like I hadn't quite cracked the code and seen what really made salvia have the reputation it has for being as crazy and special as it is (even to those who think of it as too freaky to return to), but after the experience I described above, my perspective on it has changed radically, and I look forward to having more mind-blowing experiences on it like that, but also simultaneously am starting to even enjoy weaker trips more now too I think, which I feel compelled to say relates to me starting to gain a fuller appreciation for what salvia actually is and does. But, that's just my opinion and unsolicited advice.

Also, right after that experience, my sitter took his turn and had a very strong experience that caused him to get up and walk around while completely *gone*. What was eerie is that he talked to me in a way that seemed completely sober, even though I had no clue what he was talking about. I wish I could recall the details. As I understand it, he awoke in the jungle surrounded by amazons, who he presumed had kidnapped him but for reasons he could not understand. For some reason they let him stand up, and I guess he thought I was his partner or something there with him, and we had to escape together. He was very insistent about it. When he came down, he was quite amazed at how thoroughly convincing and realistic the vision had been, but his reaction kind of spooked both of us in retrospect. I'm not sure he took it again after that.

Sounds like he lost the game. Amazons can be pretty tricky.

So I had my 6 mg 2C-I yesterday. It was not at all what I expected. it's interesting how dramatically experiences can vary even with similar set, setting, and substance. In this case, I would have assumed the 6 mg would give me what the 3 mg did except more, but instead the experience was totally different. I had almost zero body euphoria. I didn't feel bad either, it just felt very neutral. My mood was also very neutral. I felt little stimulation. I did some raking early on, and did not feel fatigued by it, but I felt no urgency and moved quite langourously. At many points in the experience, I actually felt a bit sedated. At about T+7 when I was definitely still feeling effects, I managed to nod off a bit. I actually just closed my eyes and watched the show, and after a few minutes, that show became part of my dream. And then I woke myself up because I didn't want to actually sleep then even though I was feeling the urge. (Yes, I have a lot of catnapping experience and can do this.)

I think there's a lot to be said about anticipation with respect to the effects of serotonergic drugs, and other drugs too, but I do think serotonergic drugs might be especially relevant here. In my experience, serotonergic drugs tend to feel a lot stronger and more satisfying when you feel like you don't know what to expect going into them than when you feel like you already had some idea of what to expect now. This has been the case for me with a very large number of psychedelic drugs I've ever taken and was even, for instance, the way I felt about the kanna recently: the first time I took one capsule it was very stimulating and fun and even notably trippy when combined with cannabis, and the next couple times after that have been much more just like sedated and kind of nice in the tactile sensation and emotions and stuff, still not bad, but nothing nearly as notable as the first time.

Just my opinion for what it's worth.

Another thing is I experienced significant visuals---nothing strong, but not threshold either. While outdoors, everything was rather fascinating to look at. I experienced considerable color enhancement. The most remarkable visual was at T+5 or so when I had a good hit of cannabis and for a minute or two I had some rather intense visual impressions. I was in a dim room looking at the ceiling when these ribbons of color appeared in the vision which were followed by an incredibly detailed moving tapestry. What really stood out were THE COLORS and the detail. The colors were extremely bright and saturated from the whole spectrum and were part of what seemed to be extremely fine and intricate designs, but the whole experience was very fleeting. Still, the vividness of the colors really stands out as something I don't recall in my earlier life trips. Yeah, I'd had many visual trips with a variety of substances and doses. I saw rainbows, geometric pattern, facial morphing, breathing, shadow movement, etc. I took 2C-I up to 25 mg, which tended to produce some serious open eye melting but otherwise seemed a bit superficial. My high dose cactus trip also produced strong open eye melting but with perhaps a bit more depth. On ayahuasca (with DMT) I saw some mind blowing intricate designs, but they were more monochromatic in character. This vision had close to that kind of intricacy but in stunningly brilliant colors that I just can't recall seeing, except perhaps imitated (inadequately) in certain works of art. Now I wonder where 10 mg will take me.

2C-I visuals are great. I find them to be pretty pleasant to look at and relatively unique as far as serotonergic psychedelic visuals go. They do have some similarities to 2C-B and 2C-C visuals to me, but not as much as those have to one another so far. The colors of 2C-I I find to be particularly unique, but also the geometric designs that seem to have very different priorities compared to the visuals of other psychedelics for me, with things like unusually clear floral patterns, tessellated imagery like spade heads, and flag waving-like visual distortions standing out as some particularly memorable visual effects I've had on it that distinguished it from other psychedelics for me. Good stuff, I wish I had some still.

I'm not sure I'll be tripping next weekend. Probably not. I need to better understand the condition of my body and get some idea of whether my the consequences of my semi-regular use (low doses, spread out reasonably to avoid tolerance) is having a net positive or negative effect on my health. I am experiencing substantial remission of chronic symptoms for days after each experience, but is this helping me heal in the long run? Or am I merely suppressing symptoms and accumulating a health debt I will be forced to repay after a longer period (more than a week or so) of sobriety? I hope to better understand this soon, and certainly hope this regular tripping is in fact doing my body good.

I wish you the best of luck in figuring this out.
 
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Thinking back to my old days of tripping and combos.

One of the most reality bending trips I had was not even on a psychedelic.

It was ketamine, mdma and weed. The visuals were fucking insane. Was tripping with a friend on my bday.

I am outside man jamming music talking about deep shit, when my friend suddenly goes into this trance and I swear on my life. God spoke straight through her.

as she went into the trance she was moving in total symmetrical movements, total ego death. and the voice that was channeled through was not even human or women. It was fucking something ALIEN, in that point her eyes had light beams coming out of them and GOD SPOKE straight through her. Was some spooky shit lol,

as that was happening the visuals out in this forest was Insane it was like 3 am under the clear night. The forest pretty much shattered in two and was having visuals like it was something out of inception when the world inverts. Shit was crazy. She turned blue and looked like avatar lol, Can't fully remeber what god was saying, but it was some shit like my generation is a sacrifice to build a better world, shits going be tough for the coming years, but its all part of the master plan of consciouness and the typical non-dual insights. Then she snapped out of the trance and i was like what the fuck was that lol.

Went back to keep smoking the j and thats when my chewing gum that I had left in my cupboard at home literally teleported into her hands when i mentioned i wish i brought it with me, And boom like fucking magic reality breaking ++++ shulgin experince denfying the very laws of physics and nature Acutal fucking magic. The one and only time I have ever seen something acutally teleport and break all the knows laws of science and the universe. It confirmed that god was present, and had a important message for me. We were both like WTF.

Never did that combo ever again.

shit still bewilders me.

After the gum teleported i took a piece and started chewing it. Pure fucking magic. Has never happened before or since. it was the shit I have only heard legends of in aya circles and shulgins plus fours.

that night confirmed to me i GOD really wanted to intervene in the world god could. but that sort of power is dangerous thats why we can't tap into it.

If only i could remeber what god was tryna tell me but i was so fucking high i forgot half of it.
 
Thinking back to my old days of tripping and combos.

One of the most reality bending trips I had was not even on a psychedelic.

It was ketamine, mdma and weed. The visuals were fucking insane. Was tripping with a friend on my bday.

I am outside man jamming music talking about deep shit, when my friend suddenly goes into this trance and I swear on my life. God spoke straight through her.

as she went into the trance she was moving in total symmetrical movements, total ego death. and the voice that was channeled through was not even human or women. It was fucking something ALIEN, in that point her eyes had light beams coming out of them and GOD SPOKE straight through her. Was some spooky shit lol,

as that was happening the visuals out in this forest was Insane it was like 3 am under the clear night. The forest pretty much shattered in two and was having visuals like it was something out of inception when the world inverts. Shit was crazy. She turned blue and looked like avatar lol, Can't fully remeber what god was saying, but it was some shit like my generation is a sacrifice to build a better world, shits going be tough for the coming years, but its all part of the master plan of consciouness and the typical non-dual insights. Then she snapped out of the trance and i was like what the fuck was that lol.

I did this during my episode that followed my tryptamine smoking binge a few years ago. I bet it was the ketamine + cannabis that really contributed the most to it in this case. It seems like dissociatives often seem the most similar to the things I experienced during my episodes.

To be clear I didn't have my eyes shoot out beams or my skin turn blue, I think that was you getting visuals lol. But the rest happened. The world didn't split apart and become like Inception either, I think that was the MDMA in this case (I'll get to that in a moment). It was all internal, but I was still seeing shit pretty vividly in my mind's eye.

I wasn't saying the same shit you describe her saying here, just the same kind of shit where the movements I was making and words I was saying make you feel exactly the way you were describing feeling while seeing her doing this here, and still like about cosmic truths and shit like that. If I was to try to explain everything I've gone through and what it means to me here it would be far too long for this post (even considering that I write posts like my last one here).... However, I'll tell you that even if I 100% trusted every single thing I experienced in this state as being absolutely (I assume you're aware that I am a skeptic) the explanation that I was given internally would still be one that would lead me to recommend apprehension about simply trusting any one individual person's expression of this state of mind and internal experiences, mine included, but obviously I'm saying it to also say her's included. I have my own biological theories about these things, but even the cosmic version of the explanation that I got specifically argues against the idea that there is a single unified mind of an almighty being that our universe was birthed from that is actually speaking through the mouth of a living creature in this world at the time you are hearing them speak it, but rather that that almighty mind itself has still been dissociated into one part per every consciousness that exists in this world and cannot possibly be viewed as a unified self except if from outside of the classical physics-stuck primary mode of consciousness of the conscious minds that exist in this universe. The impression I am given from the cosmic explanation is essentially that we all contain a reflection of the almighty self's mind within us, but that that almighty self is still learning from being within each of us as well, and even if they each (the reflections of said almighty mind) try to guide us in specific directions that they may profess as being a part of their plan for the advancements of consciousness in this universe and the multiverse at large, they can't actually know for sure what the most current and up-to-date version of the plan is going to be from that perspective outside of that of the conscious minds in this universe while actually communicating through the bodies attached those minds, basically saying that we can each only express our version of the almighty self's dissociated minds which is always only a tiny fraction of the perspective that that almighty mind would have that only exists outside of ours, like a scientist looking down on to our universe as a quantum experiment where we conscious minds within this universe are the observers collapsing reality into space and time and only they are capable of seeing us from the outside, spaceless, timeless expression of our universe as a whole.

Just some food for thought.

Went back to keep smoking the j and thats when my chewing gum that I had left in my cupboard at home literally teleported into her hands when i mentioned i wish i brought it with me, And boom like fucking magic reality breaking ++++ shulgin experince denfying the very laws of physics and nature Acutal fucking magic. The one and only time I have ever seen something acutally teleport and break all the knows laws of science and the universe. It confirmed that god was present, and had a important message for me. We were both like WTF.

Never did that combo ever again.

shit still bewilders me.

After the gum teleported i took a piece and started chewing it. Pure fucking magic. Has never happened before or since. it was the shit I have only heard legends of in aya circles and shulgins plus fours.

I'll believe it when I see it in person while sober. Until then, I have to say that I think the MDMA + cannabis really contributed the most to this. I would go as far as to say that this is actually very much along the lines of what I would expect from a powerful combination of MDMA, ketamine, and cannabis.

In my early years of using drugs, two of my favorites were MDMA and diphenhydramine. I think because most people are scared off of the very idea of using deliriants without ever giving them a shot (and I'm NOT trying to convince them to do otherwise), a lot of people don't realize that MDMA hallucinations and diphenhydramine hallucinations are very similar; they are actually so much so that even as far back as then, I frequently and eventually just generally suspected that MDMA might have some kind of anticholergic effect, whether direct or indirect, which made it truly a deliriant in the same sort of way as diphenhydramine, and that probably the reason it's such a superior drug compared to diphenhydramine in general on top of that was probably just due to the other effects like monoamine release, serotonin receptor agonism, and so on. For what it's worth, in the past decade multiple scientific sources have in fact shown that MDMA binds to muscarinic acetylcholine receptors within the same range of binding affinity as should still be relevant to its recreational effects based on its binding affinity for other sites as well such as serotonin transporters.

A few months after I first got really into rolling, I finally had a powerful enough MDMA experience (particularly with cannabis smoked in the later hours I think, which I quickly came to consider crucial to really making the most of this) to experience this sort of delirium, and it completely blew me away. Delirium was the kind of thing I was truly looking for at the time (which is also why I liked diphenhydramine, of course) because I was wanting to experience things that were, like you say, like magic, as opposed to just seeing abstract patterns and distortions of the outside world or mind's eye visions and such. MDMA was easily the most enjoyable option I had in that respect at the time, and a truly satisfying scratch to my delirium itch too, as I particularly discovered after I once took 800-900 mg of MDMA in a very short matter of time and had incredible hallucinations like this for around seven hours straight, and also had a friend there with me going through about the same thing. We were stuck where we were outside because we had driven there to a nearby parking lot before starting to hallucinate and not expecting to at all, and then of course got stuck there unable to drive away after the tripping suddenly started. One silly example of what I was experiencing that always sticks out in my memory is that at one point I had to pee so I went to find a spot in the forest to do it, and I was walking through the parking lot on the way there when my shadow suddenly morphed into a black cat and ran in front of me and I tripped over it, somehow, and also didn't have any shadow left afterward (until I forgot and moved on and didn't question it when it eventually was back again).

In my experience, shared hallucinations between two people on similarly delirious dosages of MDMA are common, or relatively common anyway. For example, in the aforementioned 800-900 mg trip, a sober friend of ours who lived nearby went for a walk back home to get some water bottles to bring back to us, and then on the way back as he was approaching, my friend and I had a shared hallucination where as he walked back he was morphing through tons of different completely realistic people, kind of freaking us out until he got close enough for us to both realize that it actually was our friend again. Another time that stands out to me on a probably lower amount of MDMA from some tabs that still provided a really good trip was when another friend and I were walking around a forest late at night and (it's been too long for me to remember the actual conversation now, but I remember it as being a shared hallucination experience or at least seeming like it) we looked up at a tree that had taken the form of a ribcage with a beating heart inside made of leaves.

On the other hand, I've also introduced a lot of people to using MDMA in this way, and I've been sober enough during a lot of these kinds of experiences had by others to watch them very clearly hallucinating and acting insane during it, with no apparent magic to be enjoyed from my sober perspective. One that I always remember is watching a friend who was tripping very hard in this way for the first time while hanging out at my house, and suddenly he started pantomiming playing Xbox holding an imaginary controller in his hands and everything, and began talking to friends who weren't there and enjoying playing his imaginary game while doing nothing other than seeming completely bonkers delirious from my perspective. He also held an imaginary tray in his hand I believe trying load some imaginary cannabis at one point, and asked me to hand him something he normally had in his garage at home, prompting me to say, "We're at my house." to I think not much reaction from him, I don't think he really figured out what was going on until the next morning and had forgotten a lot of it by then too.

For what it's worth, shared hallucinations are a well-documented aspect of anticholinergic delirium, even having been documented by the military. There was a military project in the fifties to the seventies called the Edgewood Arsenal project I believe where they tested lots of different psychoactive drugs as potential chemical warfare agents, including LSD, THC and several cannabinoid derivatives, and tropane alkaloid anticholinergics and several synthetic derivatives of them as well. These drugs were tested on soldiers who volunteered to be the guinea pigs, and their experiences were extensively documented so that each deliriant could be fully understood, and those documents these days are available online. These are the experiments that lead to the never-used chemical warfare agent deliriant BZ, which was the basis for the movie Jacob's Ladder. In these documents, immersive, interactive shared deliriant hallucination experiences are described, including things like soldiers playing imaginary table tennis together, or sharing imaginary cigarettes with one another. The imaginary cigarette experience is also often described in the trip reports I used to read on Erowid when I was new to using drugs, and a friend of mine who had experience with MDA described someone he had been hanging out with who was in real life actually asleep being hallucinated by him as being awake and handing him an imaginary cigarette.

Nutmeg is a drug that contains allylbenzene molecules that are highly similar instructure to mescaline, MDMA, MDA, and MMDA, which is said to produce even more of these realistic hallucinations than MDMA and MDA in the commonly available reports, and which is also often claimed to display anticholinergic effects in the medical literature. To my knowledge there are no scientific studies proving (or disproving) that these allylbenzenes or any of their metabolites bind to muscarinic acetylcholine receptors, but given that we at least know that MDMA does, it wouldn't be at all surprising to me. Anecdotally, I have also taking nutmeg essential oil, which contains a high concentration of these allylbenzenes and supposedly most frequently specifically the one that is most similar to MMDA, and I did personally find it to feel like it had deliriant effects similar to both MDMA and diphenhydramine, although still feeling much more like the former overall (thankfully). In the trip report I published about it here, I had this to say (some minor [edits] that don't change the actual report):

[I am] dancing to "Starfish" by Savant, and as [I do I start] seeing again transparent but interactive and stable realistic 3D hallucination of different food flying by around [my] body as feelings of movement send abstract patterns (simple compared to many psychedelics though) rushing by [me] in [my] mind's eye. [I see] an apple, then a banana, then a brownie, then pizza, and maybe more, and grab each one of them in order as they go by and take a big bite out of them, not completely realistically but genuinely starting to taste each of them as [I do]. [I am] thoroughly amazed and amused by this and lie down on the couch again to relax for a moment.

This is all to say, shared hallucinations, being handed things by others that aren't real, and being able to eat and taste hallucinations are all phenomena that I don't personally find to be unusual for MDMA at hallucinogenic dosages, and I find those hallucinations to be notably intensified by cannabis, and while I never got to mix that kind of trip with ketamine before, I wouldn't be surprised in the slightest if it just makes those kinds of hallucinations even stronger still, while of course also mixing in its own effects. And that all being said, as I said, I've also seen this exact kind of hallucination occur from the outside perspective of being sober and watching someone else trip this way too, and seeing that it was all clearly still just hallucination, no matter how convincing.

So, I had to share my perspective on that. It sounds like a great trip to me, but it wouldn't convince me of any magic personally. I am still fascinated by that kind of trip nonetheless.

As I said, show it to me from a sober perspective and I might start to come around.

that night confirmed to me i GOD really wanted to intervene in the world god could. but that sort of power is dangerous thats why we can't tap into it.

If only i could remeber what god was tryna tell me but i was so fucking high i forgot half of it.

fry.jpg
 
When I first tried it I described it as tryptamine MDMA. I have a much wider range of experiences to compare it to now, but I still think it's a good one. I've known multiple people who think it's good for recalling childhood memories and feelings, the latter of which definitely feels like it relates somewhat to my own comparisons of it to MDMA as well (because MDMA was part of my younger life I mean, not because MDMA also does that for me).



4-HO-DET and 4-HO-DPT are pretty different from 4-HO-MiPT in my experience, for what it's worth. Like more so than comparing it to other 4-substituted tryptamines I'd say, at least in some important ways.

I actually tried to figure this out many years ago. This is the logic I came up with:

5-Substituted Tryptamine = +0
Base Tryptamine = +1
4-Substituted Tryptamine = +2

Methyl Tail = +0
Ethyl Tail = +1
Propyl Tail = +2
Isopropyl Tail = +3
N,N-Diethyllysergamide Backbone = +4

Ergo...

Bufotenine or 5-MeO-DMT = 0 (5-Substituted + Methyl + Methyl)
DMT = 1 (Base + Methyl + Methyl)
Psilocin = 2 (4-Substituted + Methyl + Methyl)
LSD = 4 (Lysergamide + Methyl)

So...

0: Bufotenine, 5-MeO-DMT
1: 5-MeO-MET, DMT
2: 5-MeO-MPT, 5-MeO-DET, MET, Psilocin
3: 5-MeO-MiPT, 5-MeO-EPT, MPT, DET, 4-HO-MET
4: 5-MeO-EiPT, 5-MeO-DPT, MiPT, EPT, 4-HO-MPT, 4-HO-DET, LSD
5: 5-MeO-PiPT, EiPT, DPT, 4-HO-MiPT, 4-HO-EPT, ETH-LAD
6: 5-MeO-DiPT, PiPT, 4-HO-EiPT, 4-HO-DPT, PRO-LAD
7: DiPT, 4-HO-PiPT, iP-LAD
8: 4-HO-DiPT

And my descriptions:

0: Colorful, Emotional
...
8: Colorless, Cognitive

Bufotenine is almost all color and emotion for me. DMT is mostly the same but slightly reduced in color and slightly more cognitive. Psilocin is pretty similar to DMT for me but with a notable step towards being more like LSD. LSD is a pretty good mix for me, being a good blend of both the traditional tryptamine colors and emotions and stuff and the darker, more dissociative, edgy, and cognitive style of the bulkier synthetic indoles. DPT, 4-HO-MiPT, and ETH-LAD are all good examples for me of psychedelics that are still colorful and emotional enough to feel similar to LSD and the natural tryptamines, but still feel like they're still another step further away from them than even LSD is for me, being even more visionary and in my head and less bright and flashy. 4-HO-DiPT at the extreme end is a drug I have a hard time getting anything but colorless visuals, dissociative visions, and sexy or self-reflective thoughts on, with none of the flashy colors or orgasmic emotions or anything I associate with something like mushrooms.

4-HO-DET has a higher degree of colorful and emotional effects for me than 4-HO-MiPT and a lower degree of colorless and cognitive effects, a lot like LSD, although I also find it to feel the most superficially distinct from LSD of all of the tryptamines I've tried in the 4 category I assume because nothing about the molecule is superficially similar (two ethyls is pretty different from a methyl and a lysergamide backbone and the ring is subtituted on the tryptamine but not on lysergamides). A notably defining quality of ethyl indoles for me is that they are weird in opposition to how methyl indoles feel more familiar and inviting, and 4-HO-DET is no exception for me. It's like a super weird 4-substituted tryptamine that is still pretty similar to mushrooms overall but definitely also a couple steps forward toward being alike LSD and I would say even very alike it, and not as distinct in effect as something like 4-HO-MiPT or 4-HO-DPT. I liked it a lot but more so as a curiosity than because it was fun. I never really felt compelled to keep using it.

4-HO-DPT for me is on the part of the scale where it's so close to the "Colorless, Cognitive" side and far away from the "Colorful, Emotional" side that it starts to become difficult for me to actually get much of the latter kind of effects at all. If I don't take a significantly high dosage of 4-HO-DPT, it will mostly be shadowy auras with vague but dark colors like purple and soft pink, and it doesn't have much emotional or energetic engagement at all, instead being more like a trip where I just lie down and reflect while visions play behind my eyes, should I choose to close them. A lot of people like it but it was difficult for me to reach a place that I actually felt satisfied with with it. It seems like some of the people I've encountered who like it like it because it's so easy and euphoric if dosed high enough to the point that it's been compared to being opioid-like, I could see that. I've also described 4-HO-EPT and EPT as narcotic and see some connection between the EPTs and the DPTs.

I've tried some of the allyls too for the record.... I think the best way to think of allyls is like analogues of propyls. Similar but slightly different overall if you ask me.

For what it's worth I feel like 4-HO-MiPT occupies a special spot being the furthest methyl indole down on the list (the only one in row 5 or higher). Based on my proposed theories that would make it the most colorless and cognitive of all the methyl indoles, meaning that it's the most colorless and cognitive of all the ones that it still the most superficially similar to things like DMT, psilocin, and LSD, which I would say is something I think I agree with. When the methyl is dropped for things like 4-HO-DET and 4-HO-DPT, things seem to get a bit wonkier for me. Not that that makes them bad, just different.

I just wanted to share that based on some of what you were saying there.... I don't hold myself to these theories which are all they are, and I haven't actually reevaluated them in years now, but to be honest I still think the chart is fairly reflective of my own experiences. Make of that what you will.
That is a goddamn beautiful effort to quantify what is often considered unquantifiable I must say, thank you for sharing that.

I had tried to come up with my own crude measurement system for gauging the effects of just the 4-x-Ts based on far less chemical knowledge, and a lot less experience, by the sounds of it. Actually I can't remember the exact specifics of that now but it was based on 3 axes of thinking, feeling, and something else. Actually I used the MBTI-originating human personality scales of Feeling, Sensing and Thinking (left out intuition coz, 1, simplicity and 2, not sure exactly where it would even go when it comes to psychedelics). With 4-HO-MET for example being a highly "Sense" oriented molecule, *MiPT being "Feeling" or emotionally oriented, and psilocin itself being a little unclear but possibly thinking-leaning but generally quite balanced and possibly only with respect to metocin and miprocin.

Actually I did suspect that using this 3-space of graphed conscious experience that if these molecules can be traced as 2D planes intersecting the 3 axes, using 3 coordinates representing the magnitude of their effects, and metocin and miprocin being angled most sharply towards the Sense and Feeling axes, then there was another orientation of the 4-x-xT psychofunction with the peak coordinate on the thinking axis - and I wondered vaguely if this would be found in the 4-HO-DxT regions... and actually it sounds like this model is not entirely dissimilar to your own, even if it is perhaps needlessly complex, not actually quantified except in the more or less sense, and uses less chemicals, compared to yours.. but my thoughts about the diisopropyl and diethyl versions were also perhaps surprisingly not too dissimilar to where they fit on your own effects scale.
 
That is a goddamn beautiful effort to quantify what is often considered unquantifiable I must say, thank you for sharing that.

I'm glad you like it. :) I spent a lot of time thinking about that back in the day. And I appreciate the compliment.

To be clear, I padded out the table in that post with just all of the most directly applicable and easy to understand molecules (like including methyl, ethyl, propyl, but not allyl for instance) so it'd be easy to understand by seeing it all uniform. This is the table of drugs that I have actually done, and where I would place them either directly based on what I said or approximately for more complex derivatives.

0: Bufotenine
1: DMT
2: MET, Psilocin, 4-AcO-DMT
3: 5-MeO-MiPT, MPT, ~MALT, 4-HO-MET, 4-AcO-MET
4: 5-MeO-EiPT, MiPT, EPT, 4-HO-MPT, ~4-AcO-MALT, 4-HO-DET, 4-AcO-DET, LSD, 1P-LSD
5: DPT, ~DALT, 4-HO-MiPT, 4-HO-EPT, ETH-LAD
6: 5-MeO-DiPT, 4-HO-DPT, ~4-AcO-DALT, ~AL-LAD
7: DiPT
8: 4-HO-DiPT

I've also used 4-HO-McPT.... I feel like it's kind of a little too reduced in effect and/or potency to me able to place well on this list based on the experiences I've had up to now. It was a lot like some of the barebones, less trippy aspects of a good methyl 4-substituted tryptamine experience, although I still liked it (they're just that good).

And also you're welcome, I'm glad to contribute my findings. I used to eagerly discuss this a lot with anyone else who I knew to be using indole psychedelics at the time.

I had tried to come up with my own crude measurement system for gauging the effects of just the 4-x-Ts based on far less chemical knowledge, and a lot less experience, by the sounds of it. Actually I can't remember the exact specifics of that now but it was based on 3 axes of thinking, feeling, and something else. Actually I used the MBTI-originating human personality scales of Feeling, Sensing and Thinking (left out intuition coz, 1, simplicity and 2, not sure exactly where it would even go when it comes to psychedelics). With 4-HO-MET for example being a highly "Sense" oriented molecule, *MiPT being "Feeling" or emotionally oriented, and psilocin itself being a little unclear but possibly thinking-leaning but generally quite balanced and possibly only with respect to metocin and miprocin.

Actually I did suspect that using this 3-space of graphed conscious experience that if these molecules can be traced as 2D planes intersecting the 3 axes, using 3 coordinates representing the magnitude of their effects, and metocin and miprocin being angled most sharply towards the Sense and Feeling axes, then there was another orientation of the 4-x-xT psychofunction with the peak coordinate on the thinking axis - and I wondered vaguely if this would be found in the 4-HO-DxT regions... and actually it sounds like this model is not entirely dissimilar to your own, even if it is perhaps needlessly complex, not actually quantified except in the more or less sense, and uses less chemicals, compared to yours.. but my thoughts about the diisopropyl and diethyl versions were also perhaps surprisingly not too dissimilar to where they fit on your own effects scale.

I have to say, my head was spinning at first when reading all that lol. But I think I'm starting to get it.

(I've also eaten some edibles and been smoking and watching a movie today, so excuse me if I don't catch something right too please.)

I could definitely understand 4-HO-MiPT feeling more like a "feeling" trip, and I do think it makes sense with my observations too. I suspect that a lot of that would be attributed to what I've historically referred to affectionately as "methyl mania" in my (of course) specifically methyl indole psychedelic experiences. Something I picked up on when I first started thinking about all of this myself years ago was that a lot of people seemed to kind of just default to the opinion that the structure-activity relationships between the different indole psychedelics can't really be that simple, and my response was to kind of be like, but what if it is, though? At least sometimes? The reason I bring it up now is because in general, I think there really are a lot of simple patterns that I've noticed across the different tryptamine and lysergamide molecules, and this is one that really seems to stand out often the most consistently to me.... Specifically, I find that dimethyltryptamine-derived molecules (including DMT itself) seem to have a lot of grandeur to their effects, and of at least nearly all of the monomethyltryptamine-derived psychedelic experiences I've had so far, in general I wouldn't say they have quite as much grandeur as the dimethyls, but the monomethyls still tend to have a similar sort of feeling at least partially which often at least rises to the level of what I often referred to as a "burlesque" effect, and I said that most often about 4-HO-MiPT of anything actually. It's sort of like... life in a fun, happy, exuberant party, the kind where you dress like you're throwing a trippy parade, or putting on a show. This is a staple of methyl mania. It's probably in part to blame for why I still post so much electro swing music here.

4-HO-MiPT, because it is the furthest methyl tryptamine down the ranking scale that I have taken, I do find it to be the furthest away from the more recognizable tryptamine trips like psilocin in basically I think the still closest possible way I could easily imagine it being, like I still think similarities to psilocin are obvious, but it's more digital, more like an artistic tapestry, more sexy if perhaps a bit less romantic, and it's stimulating both mentally and physically, but it's not like a completely-lose-your-shit-and-your-mind smack in the face like mushrooms can easily be, at least not usually (an extremely high safe dosage ceiling does allow for all kinds of further developments, of course). The fact that 4-HO-MiPT scoots down from what I described as "colorful, emotional" to what I described as "colorless, cognitive" while still holding on to the methyl mania tightly is I think part of what makes the "feeling" aspect of it stand out so much, because even when you make it become more modern- and subtle-feeling than mushrooms in a way I would compare more to LSD and phenethylamines, it still clearly has some of that same quality that DMT has that it pulls its incredible grandeur from, and which, in my opinion, very much helps fuel the manic exuberance of 4-HO-MiPT.

Another meaningful example of this, I think, is the 4-HO-McPT I mentioned above. While it kind of feels like something about its structure reduces its potency a little too much for me to easily rank it alongside the other psychedelics, at least at the levels I've taken so far, I can definitely still detect some of that "methyl" signature in there, and I think it's part of why I still enjoyed the experience so much despite the weakness otherwise, because that "methyl mania" really is just such a treat for me, regardless of whatever else is going on for me at the same time. I would think it might actually make a particularly good choice for someone who is experimenting to find a potential option that is literally almost only a "feeling" psychedelic, in that way as I described here at least, although I'm not sure I can in good conscience recommend that someone spend their money on it if they're the type of person who pretty much always prioritizes tripping hard even when they have other motivations as well, for what it's worth.

I can understand seeing psilocin as a good balance too since I think psilocin exists on the level that is closest to things like DMT and bufotenine while still being noticeably more alike what makes the prototypical psychedelic experience produced by things like LSD and, of course, psilocin itself to feel the way that it does. I don't mean to suggest that there's anything inherently better or special about the prototypical psychedelic experience, but I think it's worth considering that a lot of us probably have some idea of what tripping "is" so to speak based on the things we used earlier on which most often are the molecules which are either LSD and psilocin or things highly similar to them as far as indoles are concerned, and, at least as far as psychedelics go, they can actually still get pretty different from that depending on which direction you go with things. I also think it's likely that part of what made us all fall in love with that prototypical trip in the first place is the fact that it's so balanced in that way, giving us a full-bodied psychedelic experience that takes on a trip through our thoughts, feelings, and sensations with similar intensity, while things that stand out a bit more on the extreme end of things like DMT on one end or DPT on the other it seems like most of seem to agree are, at least, not exactly the same as what we call the "classic" psychedelics, or at least as similar to them as they are to one another. Personally, I do find that I'm a big fan most often of the psychedelics that fall nearer the middle of the chart with a good blend of effects, I think for the same reason as I at least personally fell in love with the classic psychedelics in the first place.

In a similar vein, I think I can understand rating 4-HO-MET as more sensory, and perhaps especially with psilocin and 4-HO-MiPT being the other two tryptamines that are being used for comparison. Of course everyone knows that 4-HO-MET is supposedly "one of the most visual psychedelics" and stuff because I think we've all seen the countless Reddit threads asking for visual comparisons and stuff like that, and just superficially I found it easy to agree without much thought based on my experiences with. But, how I actually think about it with respect to all this I think still fits with that interpretation as well. The way I'm conceiving of it is, as just one step lower than psilocin, and probably also especially from otherwise being highly superficially similar to psilocin in molecular shape, it holds a position of being one of the most recognizably classical-feeling psychedelics in a way that is highly similar to one of the most blatantly visual and emotional psychedelics of all, while simultaneously just being a weird step away from the familiar into a territory that is very novel and fascinating to those of us who began on the so-called classics, and that weird step away does reduce some visual effect if you ask me, but not enough that it doesn't still feel like a very visual drug on a level comparable to psilocin, and simultaneously, at least in my experience, it also tones down the emotionality of psilocin just and adds in a bit more of an LSD-like cognitive and cartoony visionary style, so yeah, particularly when you're just comparing it to psilocin and 4-HO-MiPT, I think it's quite easy for me to understand how it would stand out as the "sensing" psychedelic. Seriously, when I take it I feel like I'm in a virtual reality game where everything is super sharp and it's like I can feel the whole 3D map of my mind at once and sometimes even clearly see wireframes over the objects and people around me....

That all being said, I also think it's reasonable to suggest, based on my understanding of the model you proposed, that the bulkier dialkyltryptamines might be more on the "thinking" side of the graph. Basically, I'm thinking of it in a similar way to 4-HO-MiPT except without the methyl mania, making them feel even more dissociative and visionary overall, which has generally been my experience with them. They do still often have stimulating effects for me, but I would describe it as more, like... pure. Like, it might make me want to pace around and feel horny and stuff, but it's not like I'm shivering orgasmically and feeling like I can feel myself as the love spreading across the universe or anything like that. As I said before, if there is a stronger high on the bulkier indoles for me, it's often more like what I would describe as more "narcotic" compared to the less bulky indoles, but I've also had ones that just felt even cleaner and more purely stimulating than that, like 4-HO-DiPT.

If you're interested in my recommendation, they're all pretty interesting if you have time, money, and a desire to understand the connection between their different effects firsthand. There aren't any that I regret taking, and I'd still be willing to take more new ones to understand them even further if they came before me. But if and/or when you're working on a budget and/or just interested in tripping as hard as possible in still novel ways, my suggestion is to prioritize the indole psychedelics that have an ethyl as their smallest tail substitution (so no methyls, but everything else in tandem with at least one ethyl is okay). 4-HO-DET, EPT, 5-MeO-EiPT, ETH-LAD; these were all easily some of the most fascinating research chemical psychedelics to me, providing experiences that were still recognizable enough to have potency and value similar to what we consider the classic psychedelics while also being some of the most unique trips I think I could easily imagine them being while still being that otherwise close to the classics, and generally being defined by what I referred to as the "ethyl weirdness" rather than the "methyl mania" from the methyls. (For what it's worth, I feel like the METs take after the methyls more than the ethyls, but I still feel like some comparison to the weirdness is there too.) 4-HO-EPT is the only one that was kind of hit-or-miss for me, but I feel like there's just something about its pharmacology preventing it from really taking off that easily or something, it has this kind of frustrating ceiling effect to some of what it tries to do, but what it does is still sometimes interesting and occasionally extremely blissful (and sometimes annoyingly heavy, don't blame me if you don't get the bliss lol).

I'll just give one simple warning about the ethyl weirdness, treat it carefully. The weirdness is... strange. Sometimes you'll think it'd just a kind of edgy and weirdly colored methyl vibe, and then it will explode into something savage that feels like it should be terrifying, but is often still enticing, and can feel almost animalistic or nightmarish, but in a way that still doesn't frighten you much (or me, at least). For example, I once saw someone on Reddit saying they enjoyed taking ETH-LAD for the sake of seeing Lovecraftian horrors. Personally, I once smoked 4-AcO-DET and had 100% opaque and clear visions of something like a demon-filled netherworld animated in Renaissance painting-like style with naked angels with flaming wings walking on water with flowers instantly sprouting and dying in the wake of each of their steps, dark religious temples made of skulls with demons standing around watching, and skull tattoos forming on my own body as thoughts flew through my head of how I was a death shaman there to conquer the netherworld by uniting the forces of light and darkness with my love. On that trip, I was still so lucid that that happened while I was taking a shower and brushing my teeth afterward. That being said, a few years ago I also smoked 15 mg of 5-MeO-EiPT at the top of a smoked tryptamine binge because I thought that it might be the strongest psychedelic trip ever based on the combination of ethyl weirdness, the intensity and complexity I often find isopropyl tails to give to a tryptamine experience, and the 5-MeO part imparting whatever similarity it could to 5-MeO-DMT, and it ended up instigating what you could basically call multiple psychotic episodes that came and went in waves for over year and took closer to two or three years before I felt like I had been completely debriefed from the trip and managed to integrate, and what happened in the trip and the episodes after it was completely beyond anything I had ever even remotely expected to experience from a drug or aftereffects of a drug and literally involved things like me spending eternity traveling the multiverse as an infinity witch in a flash and remembering nothing of it but unraveling the narrative one piece at a time for months afterward and also I think might have literally almost killed me at first because in the first few days after the trip I was so out of it that I forgot to eat or poop or sleep much until my body started literally failing on me and I moved back in with my parents so that someone would be watching over me, so... something to keep in mind.

I don't regret it. I think it was one of the best things I ever did and I'm extremely grateful to the ethyl indoles for coming into my life. But it gave me a lot of trouble in my life, and that's considering that my life was uncommonly set up to handle it relatively easy compared to the situation that lots of other people probably find themselves living in. So I just want to put out there, when you chase the weirdness, things get weird.

It's not entirely unique to the ethyls, DPT got really weird in a spooky way very comparable to this for me too, although not as actively involved I think. Still, it was the ethyls that really blew my mind apart. Again, that's meant to be conveyed in a good way like a recommendation, in the way that I think someone probably has to be into things like tripping hard on psychedelics to understand how it's not just a warning.

I hope your own journeys are fruitful regardless. :)
 
that would probably explain it. I was high as fuck lol.

I had taken 150 mg of very pure mdma shit was strong after a year and a half break, was on alot of ketamine and smoking very strong weed and a shit load of it.

I probably blazed through 7 grams of weed in joints in a space of 3 hours.

the visuals were pretty amazing.

I was using dextro amphetamine most days during that time period and microdosing every day on a combonation of LSD + mushrooms on top of dextro amp pills.

while k holing shit loads of nights per week, and usually even tripping 2-3 times a week. I consumed insane amounts of mushrooms during that part of my life in lockdown. Lead to a a mental breakdown and going crazy on bluelight me vs the world.

took a while to heal from all the things that happened during that time period.

gonna do acid next weekend. Might be the last chance I get to do it for many years and maybe decades just no time now and SO who doesn't approve.

Have a few things to go over, a few unresolved traumas. Also want creative inspirtation. Been developing my art skills it helps calm my mind.
 
that would probably explain it. I was high as fuck lol.

I had taken 150 mg of very pure mdma shit was strong after a year and a half break, was on alot of ketamine and smoking very strong weed and a shit load of it.

I probably blazed through 7 grams of weed in joints in a space of 3 hours.

the visuals were pretty amazing.

That sounds about right lol. One of my favorite things about the MDMA + cannabis combo actually is that the MDMA makes smoking the cannabis easier, both physically ("iron lungs" as they say) and psychologically (no anxiety or anything, same as I've been talking about using kanna for here recently). That combined with the fact that the cannabis really brings out the hallucinogenic aspect of MDMA makes them in an incredible synergy in my mind. And like I'm said I'm sure the ketamine helped a lot with that too even though I can't speak to it directly.

It's been a long time since I had a good MDMA trip like that, I miss those days (but they certainly still stick with me to this day).

I was using dextro amphetamine most days during that time period and microdosing every day on a combonation of LSD + mushrooms on top of dextro amp pills.

while k holing shit loads of nights per week, and usually even tripping 2-3 times a week. I consumed insane amounts of mushrooms during that part of my life in lockdown. Lead to a a mental breakdown and going crazy on bluelight me vs the world.

took a while to heal from all the things that happened during that time period.

I've been there, brother. Not from that exact schedule, but the same destination and also including tripping multiple times a week along the way. Sometimes we just need to work out things in a bit heavier of a way than others, I think.

I hope things are going well for you these days.

gonna do acid next weekend. Might be the last chance I get to do it for many years and maybe decades just no time now and SO who doesn't approve.

Have a few things to go over, a few unresolved traumas. Also want creative inspirtation. Been developing my art skills it helps calm my mind.

I hope you have a great trip. :) It sounds like you've got a good headspace to go into it with.
 
Wow! You gave me a lot to read and respond to.

I also find salvia to be comfortable and not really disturbing, and I don't think it's just because it's short in my case. I just like it, and even when I don't like it that much, it just doesn't really feel like an aggravating anxiety like cannabis or an extreme fear like from a bad serotonergic psychedelic trip or something.

Yes, when I used salvia, I found cannabis to be much more challenging, and I tended to prefer smoking some dry leaf (i.e. low dose) to "mellow out" versus cannabis. I am an extreme cannabis lightweight until I develop sufficient tolerance. To use cannabis casually the way most people do, I pretty much have to use it daily. I also had to learn how to enjoy the intoxication. Once I learned to enjoy it and started smoking it daily, I lost interest in salvia. It's clear I have nowhere near the experience with it as you do.

I don't know if you saw the posts I was making a few months ago, but I currently have a theory that salvia is, in a sense, kind of like a "mirror reflection" of dreaming, which is also to say: I think it's kind of like the same thing and simultaneously the exact opposite. Humor me while I attempt to succinctly explain it....

I don't think I read those earlier posts, no.

Here, you propose an interesting model of dreaming and drug intoxication. I can't say I agree with your take, for a few reasons, but it does inspire plenty of contemplation.

First off, let me suggest that your idea of "game playing" could also be called "goal-seeking". Winning a video game is attaining a goal. So is finding food. Or a suitable mate. I make this distinction because many games aren't meant to be won or lost, are they?

Second, I believe goal-seeking is but one possible cognitive model, one might describe very well certain human (and animal behaviors) but which is nowhere near complete.

Third, I am not a pharmacologist, but I have studied a fair bit casually and have also studied other scientific subjects a lot more rigorously. It is a huge understatement to say that "our understandings of the dopamine system and human consciousness in general are obviously incomplete". First, there's no dopamine system. Dopamine is a neutrotransmitter and hormone that plays a part in many of the body's subsystems. Second what is known about the role of dopamine and other neurotransmitter is much more useful for the purpose of drug development than it is for understanding what's going on. That's to say, that probes we have available are very crude, and so they lead to an extremely shallow understanding of things, but that understanding at least helps us design drugs more efficiently than we could with non-educated guessing. Does that make sense?

To go a bit deeper. Imagine I show you a picture of the fluctuating voltage along a computer network cable. After careful study, you might notice a pattern, that the voltage spends most of its time at either a "high" level or a "low" level and that the timing of changes between "high" and "low" and visaversa occur at a time that is evenly divisible by a particular time interval. But suppose you are naive and have no idea what this network cable is for, except that it somehow makes the Internet work. You understand nothing about the coding scheme for the data that's transmitted along the cable. In fact, you might not realize at all that there is a high level coding. You might assume the "highs" and "lows" represent a single continuously fluctuating level. This would seem very reasonably given the tools you have to "probe" it: You can disconnect the cable or connect it to a static "low" source for some long duration; You can connect the cable to a static "high" source for some long duration; Or you can randomly but quickly switch the cable between the "high", "low", and "through" state, where in the "through" state the cable just functions as if you weren't probing it, and you can control the probability of it going "high", going "low" or staying "through". So you do experiments with these probing techniques and observe the outcomes.

I think the thought experiment I give above is illustrative of our level of ignorance of neurotransmission. The probes we have and the drugs we seek to design based upon our insight are extremely crude in their action but not necessarily consistent. Like suppose the cable states vary randomly but when it goes "high" it tends to get stuck there for a while. Then you might ask what if instead of merely "high" and "low", the cable can also be connected to some voltage in between. You might check the engineering specs to see how the system should be expected to behave with that intermediate voltage, but imagine you're dealing with many different kinds of cables that each have different engineering specs and may respond in very different ways depending on the particular voltage applied.

I can keep building on these analogies which I think relate quite well to what drug/receptor interactions probably look like in reality and why so many different 5HT2A partial agonists might feel so dramatically different from one another, even ignoring possible interactions at other receptors (which may be counter-intuitively more important than is assumed).

Personally, I would propose that it's plausible that REM sleep dreams, again the more narrative and vivid kind, reflect essentially what I would refer to as the human brain playing simulated games with itself. ...

To my second point above, I do not find my own dreams to be dominated by goal-seeking behavior. Rather they tend to be movies in which I'm the star: the hero or the gag. I can't count how many dreams I've had in which I've realized at far too late a moment that I'm naked in public---probably about as many dreams in which I've tended to get around in a way that defies gravity. I just love how, if I jump just right and concentrate, I can move through the air as if I were on the moon. I've had fewer flying dreams, including one the night after my first strong cactus trip (supplemented with some N2O late).

I can see how lucid dreams could become much more goal-seeking in nature for the experiencer. After all, lucid dreamers often achieve lucid dreams with active concentration; therefore, the achievement of the lucid dreaming state is itself an accomplished goal. I am troubled by the definition of lucid dreaming myself. I have had perhaps one dream in which I felt like my awake consciousness was fully present and. It was frustratingly brief, not even long enough to "do anything cool". It happened one night after having smoked a bunch of dream herb. (What was that stuff called?) Unfortunately, I could never reproduce it, with or without the herb. The herb also was quite nasty to smoke and seemed to leave me feeling under-rested in the mornings.

With that said, being that my dreams are like movies I often feel like there is an "observer" present, i.e., I'm watching the movie of myself, even as I am not seeing it on a screen but actually experiencing it like virtual reality. At times, I find that that observer will sometimes intervene with "power moves" that can radically change the character of the dream, usually helping my hero to overcome some kind of otherwise impossible obstable, but despite my hero's apparent access to divine intervention, I don't feel my observer is a conscious version of myself making decisions on my behalf.

On the flip-side, I also have horror dreams which are not nightmares, just as watching a horror movie doesn't cause me to fear for my life. Here again, reality bending things happen. For example, at the moment of death, I might instead simply teleport to another horror-themed reality or perhaps something just plain scifi, bizarre, or psychedelic. My observer is there to reassure me that death is merely a painless transition to another place and transformation into another form. That's to say, I'm immortal in my dreams and I know it.

I don't know if what I describe above qualifies as lucid dreaming. Probably not, but it has many similar qualities to lucid dreaming and I think they offer similar possiblities but with the extra flare of surprise and spontaneity. I don't think I've heard other people describe the observer aspect, so I don't know if this is unique to my experience.

Oh, I do sometimes awaken while in the middle of a dream and am able to maintain the dream state for a short while before it fades away, but I find that this condition is fragile. If I attempt to control a dream while in this state, I end up engaging my "day dreaming" facilities which causes me to wake much faster. I prefer to prolong the sleep-dreaming state until it fades, and then I immediately indulge in day dreaming to explore possible continuations of the dream as I drift into fully awake consciousness.

While talking about my dreams, I should mention a few other things. I've heard many people say they dream in black and white but I almost never do. I do sometimes have non-visual dreams, hyper-dimensional dreams, and dreams with tremendous synaesthesia. I've taken drugs in dreams before, and the drugs I take are usually drugs that don't exist in real life. The drugs also don't just alter my mind in the dream but can alter *me* as well, like Alice and Wonderland style. Dream trips are the trippiest of them all, and the possiblities are endless.

And lastly, I have never been able to have sex in my dreams. At the moment of initiation, I immediately wake up. I have had dreams of seemingly hours of courting and hot foreplay though, and these can incorporate any of the aforementioned elements---hyper-dimensionality, rich synaesthesia (in which the senses may overlap with the emotional sphere as well), and so on. Sometimes I fall in love so hard with my dream partner that I get an after glow that lasts for days. Rarely is this dream partner anyone I know in my awake life. They may not even be corporeal (in which case *I'm* not exactly corporeal in my dream either).

So, that's kind of my opinion and view on salvia and its relation to dreaming so far. I hope I explained it well enough and that you don't mind me having gotten into it, it seemed relevant.

It was very interesting to read, even as it differs from my experience. I offered my extended response above as kind of my rebuttal, at least based on my own experience. I believe everyone dreams very differently. Maybe everyone salvia trips differently too.

For what it's worth, I would not personally refer to this kind of salvia experience as a breakthrough. I want to be clear that I think this is an abstract subject and I don't think there's anything inherently wrong with other people using the word 'breakthrough' with respect to drugs in the way they see as being the most valid; I've recently had a discussion with @JackARoe about the fact that we are using this word differently.

With the grand caveat that I'm not aware of the details of your conversation with @JackARoe, I beg to differ here. Just because my experienced of matrixed reality contained strong reflections of that reality doesn't mean it was in any way connected to it. I think rather, by entering the dream state so rapidly from waking reality, my dream context was derived from waking reality. Unless I managed to enter hyperspace (like for real!) there was nothing at all real about what I was experiencing. I believe my experience was much like a dream whose context and content were directly from what I last was aware of in waking reality.

I call it a breakthrough because there seems to be a fine line or threshold between the state in which I am lying down on the couch, seeing blobs and feeling a weird pulsing sensation (seemingly in rhythm with the moving blobs), and this dream state in which I had managed to access a hyperspatial hallucination of the real thing. I found these transitions to be nighwell instantaneous.

In the second experience I described, the breakthrough definitely took me to a new place, even though I had the experience of hyper-dimensional translation as the means of getting there.

Now I suppose that if I took a big enough dose, perhaps the transition would be so sudden that it would somehow obliterate all memory of where I'd come from such that I would not experience any connection between the two. I really don't know though. When I dream, it typically starts after a period of unconsciousness, and it seems like the dream that arises inherits a context from my unconscious mind as well. With salvia, there is no period of unconsciousness between the waking state and the dream state, is there? Yet, I know my friend had a trip whose content was fully disconnected from waking reality, except for one crucial detail (see below).

While falling asleep, I do sometimes transition directly from being awake to dreaming. When this happens, I do maintain some lucidity for a while while, but only enough to abort the sleep process. This is very useful when I am trying to "cat nap" as a drug-free short-acting restorative. In my 6 mg 2C-I trip, my hypnogogic imagery started to expand into something more "tangible", and then I felt myself briefly pulled into the imaginary reality. At least as often (and without necessarily any drugs), I experience auditory effects as I approach the transition which eventually transform into the auditory content of the dream.

There is one very special kind of dream, initiated from waking consciousness, that I've only experienced maybe 2 or 3 times. This is a kind of out-of-body experience. I have on a few occasions literally floated up out of my body and out of my bedroom into other parts of my house. The experience tends to be extremely convincing and realistic. It actually feels like I'm awake but a disembodied spirit. After a short while, I tend to suddenly jerk back into my body, back to the awake (but relaxed) state, but on one particularly bizarre occasion, I jerked back into my body and woke up somewhere other than where I went to bed---the OOBE had been a dream within a dream. Now, by your definitions, perhaps I shouldn't call these experiences "breakthrough" dreams because I didn't go somewhere else---I dreamed I was still in reality, just in an disembodied state, which isn't terribly disimmilar to the disembodiedness of my "matrix reality" salvia experience.

But, if you do decide to use salvia again at some point, if you're open to recommendations, I might recommend trying to see if you can push a little further and achieve this "all the way" point as I personally see and conceptualize it.

Thanks for your suggestion, and if I try salvia again, I will definitely see if I can go "further". Though admittedly, I don't have much motivation. Indeed, my motivations for exploring psychedelics again are quite different compared to when I was young. When I was young, I was very eager to push the boundaries, to look for hidden or extra-natural realities. Now that I am older, I am much more interested in exploring applications and focusing on specific results be they therapeutic, social, creative, etc.

Sounds like he lost the game. Amazons can be pretty tricky.

It does seem to fit your model, doesn't it? Except, I don't know if it was a total "breakthrough" because apparently *I* (who was sitting for him) was there with him as his partner, and he spoke to me in real life as plainly as any sober person but in his experience, we were in the jungle trying to escape the amazons. That's to say that even though he went to a completely separate world, he still retained some context from waking reality.

I think there's a lot to be said about anticipation with respect to the effects of serotonergic drugs, and other drugs too, but I do think serotonergic drugs might be especially relevant here. In my experience, serotonergic drugs tend to feel a lot stronger and more satisfying when you feel like you don't know what to expect going into them than when you feel like you already had some idea of what to expect now. This has been the case for me with a very large number of psychedelic drugs I've ever taken and was even, for instance, the way I felt about the kanna recently: the first time I took one capsule it was very stimulating and fun and even notably trippy when combined with cannabis, and the next couple times after that have been much more just like sedated and kind of nice in the tactile sensation and emotions and stuff, still not bad, but nothing nearly as notable as the first time.

I agree that anticipation can have a big impact on what effects are experienced with serotonergic drugs, but the rest of what you say here is not really consistent with my experience. I have no problem continuing to have novel, strong, and satisfying experiences on psychedelics that I've tried before. There are exceptions to this, most notable is the one time I tripped 4 times in 6 days.

I should also say that all of my experiences since my 11 year abstience have been remarkably unpredictable, regardless of dose. Some of this may have to do with my physiological condition varying from day-to-day. Another possibility is that as a matter of habit I may be less prone to letter prior expectations influence my trips. This change in habit may be something I've cultivated through activities other than tripping over the years.

2C-I visuals are great. I find them to be pretty pleasant to look at and relatively unique as far as serotonergic psychedelic visuals go. They do have some similarities to 2C-B and 2C-C visuals to me, but not as much as those have to one another so far. The colors of 2C-I I find to be particularly unique, but also the geometric designs that seem to have very different priorities compared to the visuals of other psychedelics for me, with things like unusually clear floral patterns, tessellated imagery like spade heads, and flag waving-like visual distortions standing out as some particularly memorable visual effects I've had on it that distinguished it from other psychedelics for me. Good stuff, I wish I had some still.

I must confess, I don't feel I can say much with confidence about how the visuals of various drugs compare. I can at least pretend, and in the old days, I certainly had some certain opinions on this matter. My first opinion was that mushroom visuals were inferior to those of ayahuasca/DMT. My first serotonergic trip was with ayahuasca/DMT, and some of the visuals I got from that were simply mind blowing. Mushrooms seemed to share some characteristics with the aya but just seemed way more mundane and dumbed down.

Later on I got into phens, and I tended to find most phen visuals to be more interesting than mushrooms visuals but still not as profound as the aya/DMT visuals. In general, I regarded the 2C-halogens as providing a high quantity of rather simplistic visuals. With 2C-E, the visuals seemed much much more rich and intricate, and once I started using 2C-E, I felt it was superior to 2C-I except in more casual settings. Cactus was in its own category. The visuals tended to be quite subtle until a sufficiently high dose was reached at which point it would completely transform the outer world into something like a fairy tale. I only had one cactus trip that really pushed into heavy visuals territory and its profundity rivaled the aya/DMT at times while the mind remained essentially lucid.

But that was then. Everything is different for me now, after 11 years abstinence. What surprised me about the visuals I got on the 6 mg 2C-I is that they were way more complicated than anything I'd seen on 2C-I before at up to 25 mg. Yes, the 25 mg turned my whole vision into a swirling mass, but it was just a heavier version of the usual 2C-I effects. By contrast, the visuals I saw in my recent trip were incredibly intricate---like something I'd expect only on high dose mescaline maybe. Indeed, the thing I saw almost seemed like an entity, like mescalito. It was stunningly beautiful.

Something else I can say about my "visuals" since 11 years of abstinence is that I seem to be experiencing them differently somehow. In the old days, they were kind of explicit. I either saw them or I didn't. The visuals I'm seeing now seem to be at a different perceptual layer or something. It's almost like I'm seeing them with a hidden third eye or something. I have a hunch that as I push dosages up higher, I'm going to start getting visuals that are way different from anything I used to see. It's very apparent to me that my brain is very different from how it used to be.

I wish you the best of luck in figuring this out.

Thank you so much! I am definitely taking this weekend off. Over the week, I helped a family member move, which involved flying and then driving back something like 1800 miles in the span of 40 hours or so. This was done totally sober, albeit with whatever 2C-I after-effects were in play plus some weed withdrawl. I utterly failed to get decent sleep all week, averaging like 5 hours per night. My body felt pretty wrecked at times during the trip, especially the morning after a pathetic 4 hours sleep in the hotel. I looked in the mirror and look liked I'd died my skin was so white. With sleep deprivation, I felt more off-base than when I'm high at home. I'm very good at zen driving though.

Yesterday, the day after driving, I had conjunctivits in both eyes. Perhaps eye strain caught up with me? Or maybe it was an opportunistic infection versus my weakened immune system? Also on the airplane, I sat next to someone sniffling and wearing a "blue baggy". I wore my Vader mask, but no eye protection. I hope to hell it wasn't SARS2 again, but so far it doesn't feel like it. I actually felt surprisingly good today, but I suspect I'm gonna feel like trash after a night or two of proper 8 hours rest. We'll see.

Once I find a "baseline" after getting proper sleep again, I can assess whether my various inflammatory symptoms (including long COVID) are still in remission. My hope is that if I take psychedelics frequently enough that inflammation is kept at bay for an extended period of time, then my body will progressively heal, my overall health will improve, and I won't need to take the psychedelics as frequently to maintain symptomatic remission. My fear is that the psychedelic after glow may be suppressing my immune system in a way that allows residual SARS2 to propagate and make me sicker in the long run. I don't know (a) whether I have residual SARS2 in me---some patient do but for others long COVID may be mostly auto-immune; assuming I do have residual SARS2 in me (b) whether the psychedelics are harming my immune system's ability to fight the virus or whether they may be facilitating my immune system's ability.
 
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Wow! You gave me a lot to read and respond to.

Thank you for taking the time to respond to my very long post. :) I am very interested in learning more about salvia and understanding how it works, and getting perspectives outside my own is very helpful for that especially.

Yes, when I used salvia, I found cannabis to be much more challenging, and I tended to prefer smoking some dry leaf (i.e. low dose) to "mellow out" versus cannabis. I am an extreme cannabis lightweight until I develop sufficient tolerance. To use cannabis casually the way most people do, I pretty much have to use it daily. I also had to learn how to enjoy the intoxication. Once I learned to enjoy it and started smoking it daily, I lost interest in salvia. It's clear I have nowhere near the experience with it as you do.

That might be the case, but this is mostly so accurate to me too that I could’ve written it myself! Pretty much just minus the part about moving on from salvia, and it’s worth noting that I don’t feel I’ve even had the luxury of seeing if I’ll reach that point yet, which might make the critical difference here.

What it comes down to is that this year I moved to a new state, and in my old state salvia was made illegal a decade ago, after I’d only gotten to use it for a handful of years, and now where I am it’s legal, so I’ve been going a little crazy experimenting with it. I really like it, and really missed it all those long years. It doesn’t help that I also parted way with my old drug stash before leaving my old state because I didn’t want to take the risk of traveling across multiple state lines with it, so currently, basically all I have is salvia, legal cannabis (also new to me here), and then the things like kratom and kanna I’ve been talking about again, and I’m trying to make the most of it.

As to what you said, I actually back in the day got into cannabis quite easily at first, but it wasn’t ultimately that long before I started having panic attacks with it that completely and utterly killed my ability to enjoy it at any level, eventually forcing me to take a half year break and reintroduce it slowly so that I could learn to truly understand and appreciate and enjoy the high. During the period that I was dealing with cannabis anxiety, and having a lot of difficulty with most drugs at the time actually, salvia was always one of my lifelines because, weirdly as potent and unsettling as it can be, it just didn’t make me feel bad the way that anxiety did, and I really loved that about it. I wasn’t able to use it much back then because of the law changes which happened around the same time period or slightly after at least I think, and I didn’t know too much about it back then and was mostly just buying extract at the stores, but this time around a bought a bunch of plain leaf and have very much been enjoying smoking it for use in what could be considered a cannabis-like way where I just smoke low dosages to relax, and to me it’s been a revelation because I had no idea how much I would enjoy it but I really do like having it as a novel kind of getaway in my life so far. That being said, I still feel that I could easily see that one day I’ll be like, “Alright, that was cool…. Don’t know if I’ll really still need it but it’s been interesting.” It’s just kind of not… perfect, for relaxation, I think. Like I think once the fun of the novelty and stuff runs out, I could see cannabis seeming like the much easier choice to mostly just stick with again. But I’m trying to get the most out of my experimentation along the way.

Extracts may be a different story. I have a lot more interest in tripping hard on salvia, but I don’t actually have enough experience getting to the level I want to get to to say with much confidence whether it’ll keep up in the long-term or not. I’m optimistic about it, though.

I don't think I read those earlier posts, no.

A caveat should probably be added that I was often literally on salvia while trying to figure out how it works, heh. Sometimes I would think something and then stop and go, “Wait, does that make sense? Where did that idea come from?”

Here, you propose an interesting model of dreaming and drug intoxication. I can't say I agree with your take, for a few reasons, but it does inspire plenty of contemplation.

First off, let me suggest that your idea of "game playing" could also be called "goal-seeking". Winning a video game is attaining a goal. So is finding food. Or a suitable mate. I make this distinction because many games aren't meant to be won or lost, are they?

I suppose you’re right about that. For what it’s worth I have a tendency to use casual language a lot when speaking about these things, I think that may be relevant to multiple parts of what you had to say. I think the “gaming” model does help me think through some things in novel ways too, but I also don’t want to restrict myself to that view, and I hadn’t considered more open-ended games when saying that, so I’ll take that into consideration particularly when trying to create that model for others to consider as well, as I want to be as clear as possible, and I thank you for that.

That being said, for the record, I am aware of the “goal-seeking” label and specifically derived my gaming metaphor from understanding that that’s what it was. To me, gaming seems like an easier way to describe it to people who might not necessarily think in those terms, or seemed so anyway. But like I said above, I do also try to prioritize true accuracy.

Second, I believe goal-seeking is but one possible cognitive model, one might describe very well certain human (and animal behaviors) but which is nowhere near complete.

Are you suggesting that it’s not accurate (theoretically I mean of course) even as a partial explanation for human behavior, though? I didn’t mean to suggest that that was the entirety of what’s going on with us, although I can certainly understand how it seems that I’ve honed into it, and perhaps given myself blind spots with respect to contemplating the entire range of potential dream and salvia trip scenarios that can develop too.

I might be misinterpreting what you said here, but I personally find it hard to believe that goal-seeking is not at least a part of our behavior, if you’re suggesting it may be some other model entirely that should take its place instead. As much as I try not to speak certainties about human behaviors and keep my mind open to other explanations about things, I feel that the fact that humans and animals do run on goal-seeking behavior is fairly obvious at a superficial level, or seems so anyway.

Third, I am not a pharmacologist, but I have studied a fair bit casually and have also studied other scientific subjects a lot more rigorously. It is a huge understatement to say that "our understandings of the dopamine system and human consciousness in general are obviously incomplete". First, there's no dopamine system. Dopamine is a neutrotransmitter and hormone that plays a part in many of the body's subsystems.

I fear that I may have again been speaking too casually for what you were expecting. Frankly, I don’t expect most people to have a detailed understanding and interpretation of these aspects of the brain, I usually assume people know about dopamine from blogs talking about why we like the things we like and stuff like that, or at the very least, I kind of took to talking that way in case. That being said, I’m well aware of the extent of what we’re aware of dopamine being and doing, and I don’t think “the dopamine system” was a bad way to describe what I was getting at in a casual manner. I’m just talking specifically about the role dopamine is hypothesized to play in the widely scientifically popularized model of reward and aversion, which I feel is what most people most likely know it from, and of course what relates to the theories I was putting forward here.

Second what is known about the role of dopamine and other neurotransmitter is much more useful for the purpose of drug development than it is for understanding what's going on. That's to say, that probes we have available are very crude, and so they lead to an extremely shallow understanding of things, but that understanding at least helps us design drugs more efficiently than we could with non-educated guessing. Does that make sense?

I understand what you are saying, but I respectfully disagree about the use of using our understanding of this neurochemistry to understand what’s going on too, or at least try to.

In my case, I’ve pretty much always actively tried to do both. I based the drugs I sought out the most readily based on my understanding of drug structure-activity relationships and how they affect these neurotransmitters and such in scientific studies specifically so that when I took those drugs I could try to relate what I understood about that science to what differences they were subjectively producing in me specifically and try to build an understanding of how those things correlated to what’s actually going on with us in general. I’m not saying I did a perfect job, but I wasn’t anticipating that either. My goal when I first got into using drugs was essentially to hack my brain like a computer and change my reality like a video game, a loftier way of putting it than I would now as I was just young and optimistic, but still, I think there’s validity to viewing it in that kind of way.

For what it’s worth, it’s my opinion that people chronically overestimate the complexity of these systems. I’m not saying that I’m the one viewing it the right way, but I feel like I’ve encountered a lot of people who will avoid trying to make theories because they assume it must be more complex than they would equate the theories they would want to make to, or something like that anyway (I’m not a mind reader but I get impressions along those lines). Whereas my personality is more like, I’ll happily be wrong tons of times as long as I feel like I continue to learn from it and hopefully increase toward something increasingly right, and I feel like being that way gives me perspective that people who are more reserved simply won’t have because they’re not coming up with ideas as readily as I am. And I’m not trying to say one way is definitely better than the other, but there definitely have been times when I thought things like, “Huh, that’s not so complex.”

I hope I expressed that correctly…. I don’t think this is something that’s unique to this situation; I think in all cases, people who try stuff more even at greater risk of failing end up picking up things that people who try less don’t simply because of their lived experience of that trying, but simultaneously people who try less (are more hesitant I mean, not less willing) are probably more likely to say something that actually does make sense when they do speak based on the things that they actually have experienced themselves at least. I just tend to try shit, at least in cases like this.

To go a bit deeper. Imagine I show you a picture of the fluctuating voltage along a computer network cable. After careful study, you might notice a pattern, that the voltage spends most of its time at either a "high" level or a "low" level and that the timing of changes between "high" and "low" and visaversa occur at a time that is evenly divisible by a particular time interval. But suppose you are naive and have no idea what this network cable is for, except that it somehow makes the Internet work. You understand nothing about the coding scheme for the data that's transmitted along the cable. In fact, you might not realize at all that there is a high level coding. You might assume the "highs" and "lows" represent a single continuously fluctuating level. This would seem very reasonably given the tools you have to "probe" it: You can disconnect the cable or connect it to a static "low" source for some long duration; You can connect the cable to a static "high" source for some long duration; Or you can randomly but quickly switch the cable between the "high", "low", and "through" state, where in the "through" state the cable just functions as if you weren't probing it, and you can control the probability of it going "high", going "low" or staying "through". So you do experiments with these probing techniques and observe the outcomes.

I think the thought experiment I give above is illustrative of our level of ignorance of neurotransmission. The probes we have and the drugs we seek to design based upon our insight are extremely crude in their action but not necessarily consistent. Like suppose the cable states vary randomly but when it goes "high" it tends to get stuck there for a while. Then you might ask what if instead of merely "high" and "low", the cable can also be connected to some voltage in between. You might check the engineering specs to see how the system should be expected to behave with that intermediate voltage, but imagine you're dealing with many different kinds of cables that each have different engineering specs and may respond in very different ways depending on the particular voltage applied.

This is exactly what I like trying to figure out. Not as something that I’ll feel unfulfilled for if I don’t get it down to a science in the end, it’s more like a hobby, but a hobby I chose specifically because it seems to help me make my life better in the end.

For what it’s worth, I feel like I actually understand of lot of different things about the brain relatively well, all things considered. I also have casually researched this area of drug science and neurochemistry in general quite a lot, arguably a bit less “casually” and more “obsessively” (but still not like professionally) for multiple several-year blocks of doing little else with my time. And if it means anything at all, I feel like I got a whole lot out of it in the end, like enough that I feel like I’m far happier now than I would have been otherwise based on the decisions I made in my life based on the understandings I felt I had about the workings of my own brain at the time. But, I’m also open to possibility that I also just got very lucky. Arguably, just using drugs at all is what really got me started down that road, but I did make a lot of very deliberate decisions about which drugs to experiment with next along the way.

I just don’t think our understanding is quite as crude as what you’re getting at. Although, I still feel like I could relate it to my above idea, where if you’re more reserved about judging something as well-enough understood to be worthy of experimentation and such than I am, it might seem more crude to you than it does to me, whereas my rambunctiousness might just give me some added perspective compared to a more reserved person, even if it also increases my chance for producing errors. That’s my feeling about it so far, anyway.

I can keep building on these analogies which I think relate quite well to what drug/receptor interactions probably look like in reality and why so many different 5HT2A partial agonists might feel so dramatically different from one another, even ignoring possible interactions at other receptors (which may be counter-intuitively more important than is assumed).

Just to state this plainly, I have used I believe around fifty different 5-HT2A receptor agonists and was absolutely obsessed with understanding their functional selectivity and other structure-activity relationships at the time, so I do get it. I do, for what it’s worth, consider myself to have a lot of experience in this area compared to the average person.

To my second point above, I do not find my own dreams to be dominated by goal-seeking behavior. Rather they tend to be movies in which I'm the star: the hero or the gag. I can't count how many dreams I've had in which I've realized at far too late a moment that I'm naked in public---probably about as many dreams in which I've tended to get around in a way that defies gravity. I just love how, if I jump just right and concentrate, I can move through the air as if I were on the moon. I've had fewer flying dreams, including one the night after my first strong cactus trip (supplemented with some N2O late).

Flying dreams are great. I got to the point where I just suddenly zoom off into the sky like a jet plane going instantly from zero to whatever. It’s a lot of fun, but also has a high risk of waking me up from the stimulation of it lol.

I was starting to think after my post about how in non-lucid dreams, it’s not uncommon to be in a situation that seems like a loss. Frankly, I literally only just had this thought this very second as I type this, but I might have a blind spot there because of how I already recognize cannabis to affect me and purposefully use it for; I have a problem where when I’m sober for extended periods of time I have frequent chronic nightmares that can reach the point of being relatively horrific, but when I smoke cannabis chronically, I suddenly stop having them and my dreams basically become all either very pleasant at best or neutral at worst. As you might imagine, I smoke it all the time.

I think it’s worth saying that the salvia breakthrough I described and the specific lucid dream I described specifically stood out to me as so oppositely parallel I think in part because they happened so close together in time and just felt so fundamentally similar anyway. But, it’s not like I haven’t had lucid dreams of a completely different nature and plot too; I need to consider this more for the sake of expanding my theoretical model for sure. I also need to have more than one salvia trip of that nature of course, as only the one to work with so far is no doubt giving me completely unavoidable blind spots that can only be fixed with more trials.

At the same time, I’ll point out that I feel like saying that you’re the “star” of your dreams is not actually seemingly as far away from the idea of dreams being “game-like” to me as it is from the idea of dreams being “goal-oriented” instead. Since the main character of a video game with characters is the star, I mean, regardless of how the game goes. Just a thought that just occurred to me.

I can see how lucid dreams could become much more goal-seeking in nature for the experiencer. After all, lucid dreamers often achieve lucid dreams with active concentration; therefore, the achievement of the lucid dreaming state is itself an accomplished goal. I am troubled by the definition of lucid dreaming myself. I have had perhaps one dream in which I felt like my awake consciousness was fully present and. It was frustratingly brief, not even long enough to "do anything cool". It happened one night after having smoked a bunch of dream herb. (What was that stuff called?) Unfortunately, I could never reproduce it, with or without the herb. The herb also was quite nasty to smoke and seemed to leave me feeling under-rested in the mornings.

With that said, being that my dreams are like movies I often feel like there is an "observer" present, i.e., I'm watching the movie of myself, even as I am not seeing it on a screen but actually experiencing it like virtual reality. At times, I find that that observer will sometimes intervene with "power moves" that can radically change the character of the dream, usually helping my hero to overcome some kind of otherwise impossible obstable, but despite my hero's apparent access to divine intervention, I don't feel my observer is a conscious version of myself making decisions on my behalf.

On the flip-side, I also have horror dreams which are not nightmares, just as watching a horror movie doesn't cause me to fear for my life. Here again, reality bending things happen. For example, at the moment of death, I might instead simply teleport to another horror-themed reality or perhaps something just plain scifi, bizarre, or psychedelic. My observer is there to reassure me that death is merely a painless transition to another place and transformation into another form. That's to say, I'm immortal in my dreams and I know it.

I don't know if what I describe above qualifies as lucid dreaming. Probably not, but it has many similar qualities to lucid dreaming and I think they offer similar possiblities but with the extra flare of surprise and spontaneity. I don't think I've heard other people describe the observer aspect, so I don't know if this is unique to my experience.

I have encountered many people along this spectrum before, which is an interesting difference from my own experience. For me, lucidity and magical powers that come with it are like turning a light switch on or off: I’m either completely aware that it’s a dream or completely unaware that it isn’t entirely real, and if I’m lucid magical things will happen but I’m not they generally won’t, other than things like weird scene transitions and stuff which don’t feel in any way connected to my own volition. However, I have encountered people who say they always behave in their dreams as if they were lucid even when they’re not, and also people who say they’re literally always vividly lucid, and stuff like that. Like you said, we all definitely do dream differently.

Personally, when I become lucid it’s basically like whatever was happening in the dream stops and I’m like, “Oh, I’m dreaming. Time to do whatever the fuck I want.” It’s kind of like coming out of a more dissociating or delirious trip to the point that I mostly forget what was going on in the earlier dream and don’t react as if it happened at all, and instead just explore what of the dream world remains around me with new goals. That to me draws a truly stark contrast between what I personally consider a truly lucid dream and a dream where I may act like I know what’s going on to some extent even if I don’t feel truly lucid, but that’s just based on my own experiences. That being said, based on my experiences, I do find lucid dreaming to seem like a truly unique state of mind, compared to non-lucid dreams in particular I mean.

It’s called Calea zacatechichi or sometimes Calea ternifolia these days, by the way, although a lot of people do literally call it dream herb, which I always find to be a frustratingly unspecific name lol. I’ve had some cool experiences with it too, also particularly the first time. I mostly don’t use dream-enhancing drugs though just because lucid dreaming already works well enough for me without drugs, and I feel like if you can manage it without taking any drugs, that kind of seems like one of the key benefits of it. For what it’s worth, I practiced and got really good at lucid dreaming during the half a year in which I was abstaining from cannabis because of my panic attacks, heh. It’s probably because I took advantage of it at that exact time period that it worked out so well and stuck with me ever since. At the time I was getting lucid a lot, I think the highest record was like six lucid dreams in one night…. It’s nowhere near like that now, now they just come once in a blue moon, but without any required effort or focus about them whatsoever, so that’s nice. And I still retain all the skills I have related to lucid dreaming in them that I ever had before.

It’s fun, but it’s not like… that life-changing. It’s just really cool to be that vividly in a realistically hallucinated world with that much control for free and without taking drugs, obviously. It also helps me form ideas about my own mind of course as you can see.

Oh, I do sometimes awaken while in the middle of a dream and am able to maintain the dream state for a short while before it fades away, but I find that this condition is fragile. If I attempt to control a dream while in this state, I end up engaging my "day dreaming" facilities which causes me to wake much faster. I prefer to prolong the sleep-dreaming state until it fades, and then I immediately indulge in day dreaming to explore possible continuations of the dream as I drift into fully awake consciousness.

I think you are describing genuine lucid dreams here actually, but it sounds like they’re affecting you in the way they generally affect most people who haven’t actually actively practiced at it, and even some who have because it’s just a common problem. “Waking up” in a dream is pretty much what it is, like I was trying to get at it with it being like coming out of a dissociative or delirious trip.

There’s just kind of a different logic to the dream world that you have to learn to employ properly if you really want to make use of your lucid dreams rather than just accidentally end them. I actually joined a lucid dreaming community online when I was getting into it, so I got a lot of tips and tricks about that kind of stuff when I was starting out, and like I said I was lucid dreaming very frequently, so I got a whole lot of practice in at the time. It’s certainly not something that just came effortlessly to me at all, even though it often feels that way now.

My recommendation is actually pretty much just readily following from how you already described your own problem: instead of daydreaming, try interacting with the dream like you would normal external stimuli instead. Not actually interacting with the dream is pretty much the number one way to make it end. If you want to try to do something cool with it, try to work it into your behavior instead of trying to bring it out through imagination. I find that expectation goes an incredibly long way in the dreamscape.

Here’s the example I usually return to…. I once had a friend in that lucid dreaming community who was having a lot of trouble with walking through walls in dreams, something that I also started out having difficulties with but eventually completely mastered. His problem was that whenever he approached a wall, he hesitated as he was walking towards it, and subsequently ended up walking face-first into it, as a stable wall. I told him to remember the line from The Matrix:

“Do not try and bend the spoon—that's impossible. Instead, only try to realize the truth. There is no spoon.”

I told him that the reason he failed is because he hesitated, because the only reason to hesitate is if you’re worried about hitting the wall because you believe the wall might actually be there. But there is no wall. There isn’t anything in the dream space other than what you give power to at any given moment. If you just walk forward confidently because you truly have no expectation that you’re going to hit the wall, you’ll just walk right through it. At least, that’s how I learned to do it, and in the end he claimed to master it that way and thank me for the advice.

For what it’s worth, I also think that’s why you can’t just… not interact. If you treat the dream like it’s not there, it won’t be. In my experience at least.

While talking about my dreams, I should mention a few other things. I've heard many people say they dream in black and white but I almost never do.

I’ve heard people say this too and I literally can’t relate in the slightest but it’s so interesting to me. It seems like it’d be an incredibly interesting piece of perspective to me because - not saying I don’t believe it but - it’s so foreign to me as to seem nearly unbelievable, like when I first heard it I was like, “Wait, what? Really? Huuhhh?”

That being said, I am glad I dream in color. 🤷🏻‍♀️ My lucid dream colors in particular are super vibrant and I love it.

I do sometimes have non-visual dreams, hyper-dimensional dreams, and dreams with tremendous synaesthesia. I've taken drugs in dreams before, and the drugs I take are usually drugs that don't exist in real life. The drugs also don't just alter my mind in the dream but can alter *me* as well, like Alice and Wonderland style. Dream trips are the trippiest of them all, and the possiblities are endless.

My dreams are usually not that crazy but I can relate. I haven’t had a dream I can recall where I took drugs in a really long time, years probably, but I used to have them when I was first into drugs and trying everything. I don’t miss them too much mostly because they were filled with the anxiety I have about actually taking drugs and would sometimes involve things like me accidentally overdosing, heh. But I do missing tripping in dreams, that was fun.

I’ve still never taken mescaline despite once having a cool trip on it in a dream so many years ago. One day I’ll learn how horribly off my dream’s predictions were.

And lastly, I have never been able to have sex in my dreams. At the moment of initiation, I immediately wake up. I have had dreams of seemingly hours of courting and hot foreplay though, and these can incorporate any of the aforementioned elements---hyper-dimensionality, rich synaesthesia (in which the senses may overlap with the emotional sphere as well), and so on. Sometimes I fall in love so hard with my dream partner that I get an after glow that lasts for days. Rarely is this dream partner anyone I know in my awake life. They may not even be corporeal (in which case *I'm* not exactly corporeal in my dream either).

Try eating a bunch of menthol cough drops before bed lol. I convinced a bunch of people to do this once and most of them either had sex dreams or at least sexy dreams, except this one woman who was really into BDSM and really looking forward to the sexy dreams and it just made her have a dream about sitting happily on a hill. It gave me dreams of lying in bed naked with someone but no actual sex.

I never have sex dreams either but I also never have sex while awake either, so, you know. Not that you asked but I’m too much of a self-centered nut to have given it the focus it requires. Sometimes I try working on that.

Weirdly, in my lucid dreams, I seem to be pretty much exclusively a lesbian and very expressively so. Like you said, it doesn’t get to sexy stuff all the way, but interactions do happen. The reason I point this out is because I’ve been thinking a lot about this because I’ve been trying to relate it to what happens in my salvia trips by comparison or contrast. While awake, by stark contrast, I seem to be pretty much exclusively straight. This isn’t for lack of trying, as I’ll truly try just about anything as long as I think it’s not hurting anyone else, but it’s not for me, that’s totally clear when I try to imagine it, having homosexual experiences while awake I mean. I still felt strong enough feelings to date a woman briefly once but we never got there, except for kissing. But if you only paid attention to my lucid dream self, you’d have absolutely no idea this was the case. Intriguingly to me, I’m not the only example I know of this; I once knew an ex-opera singer who was into lucid dreaming who told me that she just liked men while awake, but in her lucid dreams one of her favorite things to do was literally grow a penis and use it to have sex with not only women but pretty much anything else that moved…. Mine aren’t that crazy, but I always remember her stories when thinking about this.

Anyway, here’s the interesting thing: when I smoke a very definitely by all definitions sub-breakthrough dosage of salvia plain leaf, like just enough for a high with some sparkly visions and possibly auras and such, it makes me (I mean, not necessarily always, but multiple times so far) have homosexual fantasies, completely different from when I’m not using it while awake, and in a seemingly kind of mirror reflected way to how most recreational drugs give me heterosexual fantasies instead, and especially cannabis edibles which I was comparing it to at the time - and for the record, this is where my “mirror reflection” ideas actually started, comparing salvia to cannabis and other highs, and it only grew to be more focused on dreams from there. I actually do find salvia to be “backwards-feeling” “like a mirror reflection” in multiple ways that extend beyond just my comparisons between a breakthrough and lucid dreaming, and that’s why I’m so interested in the concept and likely will continue to be, even if I come to feel that some of my current ideas about it are actually wrong or misguided.

This all being said, I was thinking back on that salvia breakthrough I had, and I realized that the way I felt about myself and my motivations in that experience, in a way that I can relate to rather abstractly but clearly because the whole thing was abstract but still very vivid and fully detailed and still easy to recall for me, didn’t feel the way I do in lucid dreams when I have those homosexual desires, or when I’m in sub-breakthrough salvia territory, but rather reminded me quite clearly of the way I normally feel and associate with my heterosexual desires, and that other more generally rewarding or addictive recreational drugs make me feel, like cannabis edibles. In retrospect, it even seems interesting to me that my salvia breakthrough entities were children while my dreams usually only contain adults and the lucid ones specifically women in this respect, because my homosexual fantasies also contain just other adult women while my heterosexual fantasies contain men but I also think about things like having children seemingly just inherently (like that’s just part of the fantasies already without me having to consciously insert it).

I don’t mean to go on a detour, but you made me think of this because it’s already been on my mind in the time since I made my last post in response to you. And I think this is a good example of my general personality and frame of mind that I was trying to get at before…. I know that there’s a lot of assumption and supposition in these ideas, and they’re about things that are already inherently abstract on top of us having a relatively low level of actually comprehensive understanding about them, but to me, seeing connections like this is still interesting enough that it’s able to cross my threshold that makes me feel like I just have to try to figure it out and experiment with them, even if my tools are limited. I’m okay with taking the ideas science suggests to me about these things so far and running a pretty good amount of distance with them, because that’s just the kind of relatively detached attachment stance I take towards these kinds of ideas of mine. I’m interested enough in this stuff that I’d rather be thinking about it and being wrong a lot than not trying to work it out at all, although I will say that part of that is because I’m pretty confident that I am actually right at least sometimes, and I feel satisfied to the degree that it occurs. But again, this is like a hobby to me too, so as big as my ideas seem to get, to me what I’m still saying is something along the lines of, “Wouldn’t this be cool? Maybe we should give it a shot.” as opposed to me trying to set forth a dogmatic view of the way things confidently seem to be.

My question, in this case for example, is: why does salvia give me homosexual fantasies at sub-breakthrough but seem to relate to my heterosexual imagination at breakthrough, and why does typical recreational drug stimulation give me heterosexual fantasies while lucid dreams which feel similar and are theorized to involve similar or identical neurotransmitters and feel more breakthrough-y seem to relate to my homosexual imagination? Could it be because dreams are related to dopamine and salvia is related to kappa-opioid receptors which a lot of scientists believe have opposite effects on behavior? And if so are there are other opposite signs between the two states that seem like they could fit that model to me? (There are, but I’m just explaining my mindset.) And then I just kind of run with my ideas from there. It’s just fun to me. That being said, I wouldn’t share ideas that I don’t think have at least some level of scientific evidence, as long as such a thing is possible at all. It is absolutely the case that many professionals believe that dopamine is involved in reward and dreaming and that kappa-opioid receptors have an opposite effect to dopamine and are involved in aversion and dissociation, so I feel that it’s a plausible model to start with.

It was very interesting to read, even as it differs from my experience. I offered my extended response above as kind of my rebuttal, at least based on my own experience. I believe everyone dreams very differently. Maybe everyone salvia trips differently too.

I think you are right, and I should make a note of the fact that as much as I want to talk about salvia, I usually have almost no one to talk about it to. @JackARoe likes salvia, but aside from him, it’s so rare that I come across other people who do, and frequently even when I do find people who are interested, they just haven’t used it enough to have much to say, like all they’ve had is that one freak-out trip most people have their first time with an extract or something. That being said, it’s probably not uncommon that when I say “Salvia seems like this!” and think I mean it more generally, what I’m probably actually expressing is more along the lines of “The specific salvia trips I’ve had personally seem like this!”

I hope I get more opportunities to change that as time goes by.

I’m glad you enjoyed reading my ideas too nonetheless, and am grateful for your responses as well.

With the grand caveat that I'm not aware of the details of your conversation with @JackARoe, I beg to differ here. Just because my experienced of matrixed reality contained strong reflections of that reality doesn't mean it was in any way connected to it. I think rather, by entering the dream state so rapidly from waking reality, my dream context was derived from waking reality. Unless I managed to enter hyperspace (like for real!) there was nothing at all real about what I was experiencing. I believe my experience was much like a dream whose context and content were directly from what I last was aware of in waking reality.

I call it a breakthrough because there seems to be a fine line or threshold between the state in which I am lying down on the couch, seeing blobs and feeling a weird pulsing sensation (seemingly in rhythm with the moving blobs), and this dream state in which I had managed to access a hyperspatial hallucination of the real thing. I found these transitions to be nighwell instantaneous.

In the second experience I described, the breakthrough definitely took me to a new place, even though I had the experience of hyper-dimensional translation as the means of getting there.

Now I suppose that if I took a big enough dose, perhaps the transition would be so sudden that it would somehow obliterate all memory of where I'd come from such that I would not experience any connection between the two. I really don't know though. When I dream, it typically starts after a period of unconsciousness, and it seems like the dream that arises inherits a context from my unconscious mind as well. With salvia, there is no period of unconsciousness between the waking state and the dream state, is there? Yet, I know my friend had a trip whose content was fully disconnected from waking reality, except for one crucial detail (see below).

Let me say first that the thing about dreams is that they are not disconnected from your outside senses entirely. Even beyond just borrowing input from your state of mind prior to the dream, it’s common for people to have experiences of, like, hearing people in the room you’re asleep in and having that worked into your dream somehow. That being said, I think this is splitting hairs. I still find there to be a clear difference between being in a dream or a truly dream-like experience and being in a dramatically altered perception of reality that isn’t fully dream-like despite being so extreme and hallucinogenic. The whole “matrixed reality” thing is what I was getting at by saying it can’t be too abstract to meet my definition of a breakthrough, even if it’s like a complete dissociative experience or something; I’ve had lots of salvia experiences where I completely and utterly lost awareness of my body, space, and time that were still nothing like any dream I’ve ever had, where I am actually clearly present with a body and hallucinatory world around that body and there is a coherent narrative playing out in that hallucinatory world. I realize that you said you have very abstract dreams too, but for what it’s worth, I don’t really consider it a full dream unless it has this structure; I think of those kinds of things as more just like sleep mentation if they don’t have clear form like this. The “matrixed reality” thing does not seem like a dream to me no matter how I cut it. That may just be my opinion, but that is what it is.

For what it’s worth, the reason I define ‘breakthrough’ the way I do is in very big part because I’ve specifically had the kind of salvia trip you described plenty of times, and after having the one single experience that I’ve had so far that I refer to as a ‘breakthrough’ now, I realized that all those other experiences I’ve had just took me to a point that I’m now just starting to conceive of as the build-up to that point instead. Like, the “matrixed reality” and the shutting down factory, that stuff’s not unusual to me at all, I’ve been there. On the strongest salvia experience I’d ever had before getting to reunite with it recently, I saw reality zoom in to a microscopic level to where I could see each individual pixel of reality, all just identical and copied in all directions around me at that level, and I could sense that each of the pixels was starting to shut off one at a time, and it freaked me the hell out because I thought my entire life was unwinding as I approached my death, and I ended up literally almost killing myself as I tried to run away from the trip while blinded by visuals completely with no view of reality behind them (that’s a different story). That all being said, I now look back on it and think that I should have just let it happen without worrying at all, because in the experience that I call my only ‘breakthrough’ now, I finally figured out how to not run away and just let that kind of stuff happen again but fully this time, and that’s when I entered the completely dream-like world that completely restructured the way I see salvia in relation to my own experiences. And that’s the important bit for me, because the word ‘breakthrough’ is arbitrary, which is what I was trying to express by bringing that up; the experience just is whatever it is, but in my experience, the kind of experiences you described were where I spent most of my time with salvia until, I feel, I was finally able to push past it enough to reach what I currently feel to be by far the most special aspect of the salvia experience to me so far and that has really made it a true favorite of mine and not just an interest, and so I won’t keep pushing the point because I know that’s just my opinion, but that is also why I bring it up because also in my opinion, it seems to me like you’re in a similar place to where I used to be.

While falling asleep, I do sometimes transition directly from being awake to dreaming. When this happens, I do maintain some lucidity for a while while, but only enough to abort the sleep process. This is very useful when I am trying to "cat nap" as a drug-free short-acting restorative. In my 6 mg 2C-I trip, my hypnogogic imagery started to expand into something more "tangible", and then I felt myself briefly pulled into the imaginary reality. At least as often (and without necessarily any drugs), I experience auditory effects as I approach the transition which eventually transform into the auditory content of the dream.

In the lucid dreaming community, they call this a wake-induced lucid dream, or WILD. One of the only times I ever had one was after eating those menthol cough drops, lol. But yeah, that’s what I was talking about with the way we transition into dreaming. I’m personally of the opinion - just based on experience, not like science or something - that the same process is probably happening in our brains when we go to sleep normally too, and we just normally don’t have the awareness to experience it as this lucid, awake-like transition, we just pass out instead, and like you said the dream may not even start right away in that case too so you definitely won’t experience it starting when it does. But I assume we would experience it like this any time we entered one while awake, or an approximation of this anyway, and that’s what I was comparing what I see now as that in-between stage of salvia to.

There is one very special kind of dream, initiated from waking consciousness, that I've only experienced maybe 2 or 3 times. This is a kind of out-of-body experience. I have on a few occasions literally floated up out of my body and out of my bedroom into other parts of my house. The experience tends to be extremely convincing and realistic. It actually feels like I'm awake but a disembodied spirit. After a short while, I tend to suddenly jerk back into my body, back to the awake (but relaxed) state, but on one particularly bizarre occasion, I jerked back into my body and woke up somewhere other than where I went to bed---the OOBE had been a dream within a dream. Now, by your definitions, perhaps I shouldn't call these experiences "breakthrough" dreams because I didn't go somewhere else---I dreamed I was still in reality, just in an disembodied state, which isn't terribly disimmilar to the disembodiedness of my "matrix reality" salvia experience.

I get what you’re saying, and I think I generally agree. I will say there is a recognized phenomenon in the lucid dreaming community called “false awakening” where you basically have a dream of getting up out of bed and you dream that you’re in your real house, and it’s often extremely convincing until you suddenly wake up for real. Things like that can occur, and I don’t think that’s what you’re talking about here, but I also just wanted to point out quickly that I do think it’s possible to dream that you’re in the place you went to bed and have it still count as a dream completely like you’re not really there at all, you’re just dreaming you are. Again I don’t think this is what you’re talking about, I’m just trying to cover my bases here.

The way I think of the phenomenon I think you’re referring to it is indeed what I would compare to the “matrix reality” salvia experience you had. Not trying to claim I have an expert opinion of it or something, but I conceptualize it as seeming like it’s most likely what happens when your brain is in the process of shifting you from the mental map it has of your waking reality to one that instead contains what we would call a dream environment, and again I think this is probably a normal thing that happens whenever we start dreaming but we’re just usually not aware of that because we’re already unconscious for it, but when we do manage to experience it while conscious, our awareness might also do funky things to the experience like getting us caught in this in-between space, or alternatively our awareness being focused in an unusual way might be what is causing the dream state to begin while conscious in the first place, thus forcing us to consciously push further beyond this in-between state if we really want to, or just staying there if we choose. I could see this being an explanation for accounts of medical out-of-body experiences and stuff like that that seem like they match up to what doctors and nurses said really was occurring in real life somehow, because even though we’re leaving our body’s perspective, we haven’t actually left the mental map in our brain that specifically corresponds to our sensation of the outside world, unlike when we’re fully in a dream (again minus the minor things like hearing people speak in the room around you and incorporating that into your dreams in nonsensical ways as opposed to the logical ways of the out-of-body example). With salvia, I would basically suggest that the reason we sometimes end up in the “matrix reality” place rather than all the way to a complete dream is just because there is a scale to how this works where there is an in-between state, so you won’t go all the way unless you have the requisite amount of kappa-opioid receptor activation to induce it.

Personally, one way I attempt to conceptualize it is that maybe a way to think of it is, a dream is like heaven and a salvia breakthrough is like hell. Bear with me here for just a second…. I know that nightmares and stress dreams and stuff exist. But I’m not trying to say it’s literally heaven, just what we think of as that, and I’m suggesting that the real picture is more complex than we think, generally speaking that is. Essentially, when it comes to dreaming, I would suggest that dreaming in and of itself creates the hallucinatory state of mind we think of as being in heaven, but the state of typical, non-lucid dreaming also induces an additional form of natural, endogenous delirium that prevents us from actually experiencing it as heaven by basically adding an additional altered state on top of “heaven” that makes us confused and concerned, and that’s still probably just a healthy part of whatever the hell dreaming is actually supposed to be doing for us, but nonetheless, that would also theoretically be why when you remove that delirium for lucid dreaming, it is genuinely heavenly as long as you can manage to keep it going, like you’re a god of your own mind who can do anything without consequences. On the other hand, dream-like experiences on salvia seem like they feel specifically consequential and like there’s often a feeling that you specifically can’t escape them, like you’re in a hell of your own making, and again, where things may often go wrong for you, or you may specifically feel like you’re being tricked. While again I’m not trying to say it’s literally exactly what religious people call hell, I think I could see it as activating the part of the brain that naturally is responsible for where the traditional ideas of hell were derived from in the first place. To be clear, this is all why, or at least related to why, I came up with the “winning” and “losing” ideas too, but I’m not trying to say those must be perfect interpretations all the time either, because like I said, I think the brain is abstract and works with what it has and I’m just trying to work with what I’ve got perfectly to figure it out, but in an even more fundamental although hard to express or scientifically back up way, I think there may genuinely be something to the “heaven” vs “hell” interpretation of lucid dreaming vs dream-like experiences on salvia. At the very least, it’s at least enough to keep me interested in thinking about it in that way.

Also, as I almost completely forgot to even get back to, I have a suspicion that this might be related to the stereotypical “near-death experience” where someone is hit by a car and sees themselves from floating above their body and then goes into the white light and explores the afterlife and stuff like that…. I could definitely see that being very, very, very related to all this.

Thanks for your suggestion, and if I try salvia again, I will definitely see if I can go "further". Though admittedly, I don't have much motivation. Indeed, my motivations for exploring psychedelics again are quite different compared to when I was young. When I was young, I was very eager to push the boundaries, to look for hidden or extra-natural realities. Now that I am older, I am much more interested in exploring applications and focusing on specific results be they therapeutic, social, creative, etc.

I’ll look forward to hearing how it goes if you do try it, but I completely understand that too.

I’ve pretty much gone in the opposite direction as you, but more so out of limited choice than actual desire or anything. (I don’t know what I would have done if I had the choice, I just didn’t.) Like I said, I wasn’t able to get salvia for a really long time, and most other options for truly pushing into mysterious other realms also usually elude me. Since for a long time all I really had to work with was research chemical psychedelics, that was what I used, and I tried to use them to their fullest. I truly do see drugs as tools in a completely actualized, no judgment of any kind sort of way, which was one of my goals for myself when I started to understand just how much unfair shit and criticism drug users and drugs themselves get thrown at them. I think drugs are truly some of the best things in the world and that it’s a shame how blind some people are to that reality. I even want all the more dangerous ones fully legalized and everything because I just think everything will be better when we provide resources for people who are struggling rather than persecute them for it. So I totally get that. Everything I do with drugs is in the pursuit of making something about my life better or more fulfilling in some way.

It does seem to fit your model, doesn't it? Except, I don't know if it was a total "breakthrough" because apparently *I* (who was sitting for him) was there with him as his partner, and he spoke to me in real life as plainly as any sober person but in his experience, we were in the jungle trying to escape the amazons. That's to say that even though he went to a completely separate world, he still retained some context from waking reality.

Perhaps the reason my theories seem potentially correct here is simply because I’ve become honed in on trying to describe one specific type of salvia experience that your friend’s happened to also be rather than actually considering salvia as a whole correctly. Like I said, I’ll try to expand my horizons beyond just what I’ve put forward so far, and your responses and input are very much appreciated as tools to help me further my own understanding.

I already covered it but like I said, I do think it’s fair to suggest that even a “complete dream” can incorporate things from your external senses into them. It’s more so just that it clearly seems like a dream still that matters to me, even if a little bit of reality is still poking through, and I do mean just a little bit, like just you being there, but the environment itself still being totally different and such. I know it’s not an exact science but I do feel that to at least some meaningful extent it’s kind of still a “you can probably recognize it when you see it” kind of thing, or that’s how I feel anyway.

For what it’s worth, I was lying down on the couch eyes closed for my dream-like breakthrough. That’d probably generally be my preference but I could imagine doing it eyes wide open could still cause at least some reality blending. Even regular REM sleep dreaming itself isn’t always a complete transportation to another reality if your eyes open when you’re still asleep, that’s happened to me sometimes in the early morning and it makes my dream structure super sloppy and confusing and usually ends up in me waking up from stress and realizing that I was seeing part of my real life room all blurry and weird and that’s why things got so strange.

I agree that anticipation can have a big impact on what effects are experienced with serotonergic drugs, but the rest of what you say here is not really consistent with my experience. I have no problem continuing to have novel, strong, and satisfying experiences on psychedelics that I've tried before. There are exceptions to this, most notable is the one time I tripped 4 times in 6 days.

I do too, there’s just a noticeable drop in intensity in some ways after I’ve gotten used to it. Psychedelics have never stopped being interesting for me except like you said when short-term tolerance gets too high.

The dosages you’re taking would be extremely small for me, which is the main reason I bring it up. I think if I was taking like threshold dosages, this difference from familiarity would be huge for me. It doesn’t make much difference at higher dosages that are always strong though anyway, which is where I usually go. It’s been a long time since I took 2C-I but I don’t think I ever went below 25 mg. Or somewhere around there I think…. It has been like over a decade.

Just my thoughts, not saying I must be right.

I should also say that all of my experiences since my 11 year abstience have been remarkably unpredictable, regardless of dose. Some of this may have to do with my physiological condition varying from day-to-day. Another possibility is that as a matter of habit I may be less prone to letter prior expectations influence my trips. This change in habit may be something I've cultivated through activities other than tripping over the years.

I can’t speak to how long COVID would affect it, but that does sound like a hassle.

I’ve become the same way too over time. When you’re new to drugs it’s so easy to think that they’re relatively predictable when you’ve had only a few trips, not realizing that you’re pigeonholing them at the same time. Now I try to go in just like, “What’s going to happen this time?”

I must confess, I don't feel I can say much with confidence about how the visuals of various drugs compare. I can at least pretend, and in the old days, I certainly had some certain opinions on this matter. My first opinion was that mushroom visuals were inferior to those of ayahuasca/DMT. My first serotonergic trip was with ayahuasca/DMT, and some of the visuals I got from that were simply mind blowing. Mushrooms seemed to share some characteristics with the aya but just seemed way more mundane and dumbed down.

Later on I got into phens, and I tended to find most phen visuals to be more interesting than mushrooms visuals but still not as profound as the aya/DMT visuals. In general, I regarded the 2C-halogens as providing a high quantity of rather simplistic visuals. With 2C-E, the visuals seemed much much more rich and intricate, and once I started using 2C-E, I felt it was superior to 2C-I except in more casual settings. Cactus was in its own category. The visuals tended to be quite subtle until a sufficiently high dose was reached at which point it would completely transform the outer world into something like a fairy tale. I only had one cactus trip that really pushed into heavy visuals territory and its profundity rivaled the aya/DMT at times while the mind remained essentially lucid.

I definitely have lots of opinions about it. I obsessed about it a lot when using all the different research chemical psychedelics. I just base it off of the experiences I’ve had, I don’t think too deeply about speaking in absolutes in this way, but that was part of my decision to get increasingly more casual about the way I talk about this stuff, like just seeing it as a hobby.

Your first heavy trip is definitely going to stand out. I’ve almost never had visuals that were as strong again as some of my first ever heaviest trips. Also of course though everyone is different in this way, both how they adapt to trips over time and how they react to different drugs. Personally, I find DMT and mushrooms visuals pretty similar, and prefer the mushroom ones so far, but I think I can understand seeing DMT’s as a bit more objectively impressive still. It doesn’t do as much for me as a psychedelic as mushrooms have though. But I also haven’t taken ayahuasca yet, just smoked DMT. I’d like to change that some day.

The cactus visuals sound phenomenal. I’ve heard a lot of good things about mescaline like that and it is something I’m looking forward to hopefully experiencing eventually. Luckily I know mescaline is of course still something I can get if I put in the work, I just have to get around to actually doing it. I’m not really seeking out serotonergic psychedelics right now anyway though, but when I do I think there’s a good chance that’s where I’ll want to aim first. I’m kind of at a point right now where as far as hallucinations go, things that seem like fairy tales like that, or like dreams like my salvia breakthrough, those are basically the only things I really have a lot of interest in currently. Abstract art-type visuals are beautiful and cool and all but I’ve seen so many of them in so many different varieties for so long, I’m really hoping to see more concrete and structured stuff for now going forward.

I agree that 2C-E visuals are awesome for visuals more like that too though. 2C-E is a psychedelic I really like in general, although I’ve only gotten to take it one time. I also wouldn’t use it over 2C-I in casual settings. I’d actually go as far as to say it’s one of the most intimate psychedelics for me that I’d have one of the lowest possible levels of desire to do that with. I feel like I’d be afraid of preventing from really working its full magic on me. Although, maybe in the right settings with the right partner(s) though too, hmmm….

But that was then. Everything is different for me now, after 11 years abstinence. What surprised me about the visuals I got on the 6 mg 2C-I is that they were way more complicated than anything I'd seen on 2C-I before at up to 25 mg. Yes, the 25 mg turned my whole vision into a swirling mass, but it was just a heavier version of the usual 2C-I effects. By contrast, the visuals I saw in my recent trip were incredibly intricate---like something I'd expect only on high dose mescaline maybe. Indeed, the thing I saw almost seemed like an entity, like mescalito. It was stunningly beautiful.

That does sound like a shockingly huge difference. I’m not sure it would go that far for me yet, like I still don’t think 6 mg of 2C-I would blow me away, but I have gotten far more sensitive over time to psychedelic visuals and know many others who have too. I personally think it’s a natural part of either exploring these experiences or maybe just aging, one of the two probably, or maybe both I guess…. It’s one of the many things I love about them, I get much more bang for my buck now than I used to. Salvia very much in that way as well.

Something else I can say about my "visuals" since 11 years of abstinence is that I seem to be experiencing them differently somehow. In the old days, they were kind of explicit. I either saw them or I didn't. The visuals I'm seeing now seem to be at a different perceptual layer or something. It's almost like I'm seeing them with a hidden third eye or something. I have a hunch that as I push dosages up higher, I'm going to start getting visuals that are way different from anything I used to see. It's very apparent to me that my brain is very different from how it used to be.

I’m very much the same way. This has radically altered how I view most drugs over time. I think it’s actually a big part of why I find it easier to enjoy and get things out of salvia now than I used to, for whatever that’s worth. Also cannabis edibles, which are very psychedelic to me as well and a big part of how I’m still enjoying the drugs I have access to currently.

Thank you so much! I am definitely taking this weekend off. Over the week, I helped a family member move, which involved flying and then driving back something like 1800 miles in the span of 40 hours or so. This was done totally sober, albeit with whatever 2C-I after-effects were in play plus some weed withdrawl. I utterly failed to get decent sleep all week, averaging like 5 hours per night. My body felt pretty wrecked at times during the trip, especially the morning after a pathetic 4 hours sleep in the hotel. I looked in the mirror and look liked I'd died my skin was so white. With sleep deprivation, I felt more off-base than when I'm high at home. I'm very good at zen driving though.

Sounds miserable lol. I hope you enjoy your weekend recovery.

Yesterday, the day after driving, I had conjunctivits in both eyes. Perhaps eye strain caught up with me? Or maybe it was an opportunistic infection versus my weakened immune system? Also on the airplane, I sat next to someone sniffling and wearing a "blue baggy". I wore my Vader mask, but no eye protection. I hope to hell it wasn't SARS2 again, but so far it doesn't feel like it. I actually felt surprisingly good today, but I suspect I'm gonna feel like trash after a night or two of proper 8 hours rest. We'll see.

I can’t even imagine the fear of getting infected again when you’ve already got that going on. I finally caught it for my first time of the entire pandemic a few months ago and it sucked ass. Obviously I worried about having lasting symptoms the whole time, but it seems I’ve fortunately escaped that fate so far. I’m still absolutely terrified of getting it again though.

Good luck with that and with everything. That really does suck to a degree it’s hard to express my sympathy for. I really hope medicine gets treatments and stuff figured out well soon, for all of our sakes.

Once I find a "baseline" after getting proper sleep again, I can assess whether my various inflammatory symptoms (including long COVID) are still in remission. My hope is that if I take psychedelics frequently enough that inflammation is kept at bay for an extended period of time, then my body will progressively heal, my overall health will improve, and I won't need to take the psychedelics as frequently to maintain symptomatic remission. My fear is that the psychedelic after glow may be suppressing my immune system in a way that allows residual SARS2 to propagate and make me sicker in the long run. I don't know (a) whether I have residual SARS2 in me---some patient do but for others long COVID may be mostly auto-immune; assuming I do have residual SARS2 in me (b) whether the psychedelics are harming my immune system's ability to fight the virus or whether they may be facilitating my immune system's ability.

I certainly can’t tell you the answer and understand how much it must suck having to figure it out while dealing with it, and again I just wish you the best. I can tell you for what it’s worth that I have met and discussed with people before who were treating their inflammatory conditions with 5-HT2A receptor agonists to seemingly significant success, supposedly surprising even the doctors who were treating them; that’s the information I was given, anyway. I hope you are able to find success with it as well, and just wanted to say that I think it’s at the very least an acceptable idea to try, particularly in the face of such mysteries about what’s really going on and a pressing desire to improve.

Thanks again for your very thorough and respectful response, I will be taking the things you said into consideration as I build my ideas forward. :) And I again hope you start feeling as much better as you can as soon as humanly possible.
 
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@iom

I hope that post doesn’t seem too scatterbrained by the way. Looking back on it I feel that I was rushing myself to respond this morning as I didn’t want to take too long getting that all out but also had a lot I wanted to say. I usually try to take time to let a long post sink in and consider it as a whole but I was kind of just responding to what you said one chunk at a time on the first go-around this time. I’m still trying to fully digest everything you said too so as to properly integrate it into my own conceptualization of things.
 
No worries. I actually enjoyed reading your response a lot. It might take me a while to respond though. :)
 
No worries. I actually enjoyed reading your response a lot. It might take me a while to respond though. :)

I’m glad to hear it, and take all the time you need. :) I’ll be around as usual.
 
Hey what's going on

I used to post here 20 years ago imagine that on another screen name

I got stories haa..

I just took 400 ug 1cplsd hoping to meet some aliens.. nah I think we are

Lol anyway hope everyone has a great day

I'm watching g a sick YouTube video I get machineescapes it's some trance sbit with mandel brot.fractals

I dropped like 40 min ago starting to feel body tingles
 
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