Speaking of degenerate, I am currently on some DiPT and this is the single most weirdest drug I have ever taken. Holy shit this so freaky. I love it.
Wow, 16 years is a long time, and as I remember you particularly liked that trip. It'd be interesting to get your updated take on it.
DiPT is one of the few I regret not getting when I had the opportunity. It has always intrigued me so much.
They were gone after 16 hours, but it was a bit weird waking up and still hearing everything in reverse helium.Haha! Yeah the audio distortions last far longer than the mental effects, but they'll fade. I was worried the first time that they wouldn't after it was 24 hours later and it still sounded weird. How much did you take?
Did you feel a physical movement in your inner ear? Did human voices sound like frog robots? Did you go ouside and listen to the sounds of the world? That was my favorite part by far.
They were gone after 16 hours, but it was a bit weird waking up and still hearing everything in reverse helium.
I had a 35mg capsule laying around and I took it impulsively after studying because I was bored. I wasn’t looking to trip hard but to have a little fun and I got exactly that. It was a really unique experience, glad that I took it.
Yeah, the feeling in my ears was a bit unpleasant at times. Felt a little like when your at high altitude and want your ears to pop. Also I had tinnitus when I didn’t listen to any music, which was quite annoying when I went to bed 5 hours later.
And no, I only stayed inside and listened to music. I can see the frog robot comparison, but I was mostly amused by my own voice. I sat there for like 30 minutes reading shit out loud and doing voices and different accents like a lunatic. It was hilarious.
I think I have exactly 70mg left, so maybe that's what I'm gonna do with my last dose.Ah yeah, you didn't full dose. If it's fumarate, a full dose is probably around 70mg. I took 50mg of the freebase many years ago and had a profoundly psychedelic experience and the audio distortions were just something else, far beyond amusing to amazing. And music was only enjoyable at the beginning, once the distortions kicked in fully, it was just sound, the relationships between notes had fallen apart and it didn't even sound like music anymore, and was just annoying and chaotic to listen to. But going outside, the sounds of the world were mind blowing. I felt like some communication was pulsing from space that I could hear... birds were wire tension sounds. I felt deafened to some sounds, and I heard a whole host of sounds I couldn't normally hear. Like the small sounds of the engines of existence became audible. It's hard to explain.
Yay nerdy tunes.
I'm not proud of it, but watching people play video games online got me through the worst of the tinnitus. It's visually distracting and hypnotizing, provides consistent audio masking with chirpy sounds rich in colour spanning the frequency spectrum, and the melancholia to better times plugs right into the depressed state sonic torture leaves one in.
And there's something trippy about having people on live video feed react to whatever you type. It breaks the dissociative spell of the screen, in the McLuhan sense. And the video game content kills the dead air, so everything is relaxed and zero pressure.
Upping the mania I see.. it's gonna end up in babymetal at this rate, ha!
Yeah, video game music gets often looped, so it does provide for a mental space like any repetitive electronic music does. But unlike something abstract like techno the melodies get stuck in my head and keep interfering long after, and it has to be a really really good tune not to get annoying, which didn't use to be worth it for this sucker for squeaky clean headspaces.