elucidator
Bluelighter
- Joined
- Jun 5, 2013
- Messages
- 213
Hi everyone,
I have a question to put out there. Do you think that having a more than average amount of experience in some forms of psychedelic drugs would somehow alter the effects, (or interpretation of effects), of another drugs experience.
I ask this as I have just started dipping into the realms of salvia divinorum and I find it completely different, yet slightly similar, to the trip reports I have read on the net.
A bit of background info - I am a male in my mid 20s and I have used psychedelics for a bit over 8 years now, and I have smoked weed for over 12
I found DXM at 16 and thoroughly enjoyed it, using it weekly for far too long. Got a bit carried away with DXM and I am still working through some dp;dr stuff that arose. Got into XTC a little bit after and loved it till I double dropped an inconsistently mixed batch and chewed holes in my cheek and tongue from my teeth uncontrollably chattering. Good time tho.
I finally found LSD at 19 and to date it is my favourite compound, with Mescaline in very close 2nd.
I am not half as experienced as some of you awesome people here, though I do have several hundered trips under my belt and I have experimented with psychedelics such as LSD, LSA, DXM, DMT/changa, 25i-nbome, Syrian rue, Mescaline, Psilocybin, Salvia, Amanita, NOS and others. I also have some Ayahuasca and a Belladonna leaf for sometime soon.
Anyway, the point I was getting to was that the effects from the salvia is vastly different from what I have been led to believe. A large proportion of the reports I've read have described the user becoming completely detached from reality for a while and then sort of "coming to" after the bulk of the peak is over. My experiences with salvia (5 so far, the first 2 were underwhelming) have been incredibly interesting to say the least, yet I have had an almost opposite effect.
After exhaling I felt like I was more and more attached and more "in" reality as I felt these strange layers being dragged back. I felt no fear, only curiosity as to how.
I closed my eyes to see if I could notice any CEVs and after a bit more than a few seconds I slowly realized what I was actually seeing. It was far deeper and far more sinister than any psychedelic visual I had ever seen or felt before.
I think during the entire thing I could have gotten up and been relatively functional, and it was just the relaxing into it that made it go deeper.
I didn't have a clue what on earth (or otherwise) I had just experienced and I was drenched in sweat, and fairly exhilarated.
So I had a shower, waited 20 mins, and did it again.
I have a strange feeling that my previous experiences on various drugs have either altered the way my brain reacts to things, or has altered the way I perceive the subjective reality I am experiencing.
This is across a lot of drugs and not restricted to just salvia.
If any of you have noticed some form of connection between psychedelic knowledge and how it may somehow influence the feel of any drug experience, please do not hesitate to share.
Thanks for reading,
elucidator
I have a question to put out there. Do you think that having a more than average amount of experience in some forms of psychedelic drugs would somehow alter the effects, (or interpretation of effects), of another drugs experience.
I ask this as I have just started dipping into the realms of salvia divinorum and I find it completely different, yet slightly similar, to the trip reports I have read on the net.
A bit of background info - I am a male in my mid 20s and I have used psychedelics for a bit over 8 years now, and I have smoked weed for over 12
I found DXM at 16 and thoroughly enjoyed it, using it weekly for far too long. Got a bit carried away with DXM and I am still working through some dp;dr stuff that arose. Got into XTC a little bit after and loved it till I double dropped an inconsistently mixed batch and chewed holes in my cheek and tongue from my teeth uncontrollably chattering. Good time tho.
I finally found LSD at 19 and to date it is my favourite compound, with Mescaline in very close 2nd.
I am not half as experienced as some of you awesome people here, though I do have several hundered trips under my belt and I have experimented with psychedelics such as LSD, LSA, DXM, DMT/changa, 25i-nbome, Syrian rue, Mescaline, Psilocybin, Salvia, Amanita, NOS and others. I also have some Ayahuasca and a Belladonna leaf for sometime soon.
Anyway, the point I was getting to was that the effects from the salvia is vastly different from what I have been led to believe. A large proportion of the reports I've read have described the user becoming completely detached from reality for a while and then sort of "coming to" after the bulk of the peak is over. My experiences with salvia (5 so far, the first 2 were underwhelming) have been incredibly interesting to say the least, yet I have had an almost opposite effect.
After exhaling I felt like I was more and more attached and more "in" reality as I felt these strange layers being dragged back. I felt no fear, only curiosity as to how.
I closed my eyes to see if I could notice any CEVs and after a bit more than a few seconds I slowly realized what I was actually seeing. It was far deeper and far more sinister than any psychedelic visual I had ever seen or felt before.
I think during the entire thing I could have gotten up and been relatively functional, and it was just the relaxing into it that made it go deeper.
I didn't have a clue what on earth (or otherwise) I had just experienced and I was drenched in sweat, and fairly exhilarated.
So I had a shower, waited 20 mins, and did it again.
I have a strange feeling that my previous experiences on various drugs have either altered the way my brain reacts to things, or has altered the way I perceive the subjective reality I am experiencing.
This is across a lot of drugs and not restricted to just salvia.
If any of you have noticed some form of connection between psychedelic knowledge and how it may somehow influence the feel of any drug experience, please do not hesitate to share.
Thanks for reading,
elucidator
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