Hello all,
LSD users, please share your stories.
A few questions for the community, 1- How quickly has your tolerance increased? (Explain your experiences)
2- What do you enjoy doing while on LSD?
3- What have been the positive/negative outcomes on your life from you using this drug?
4 -Any other Thoughts? Comments? Questions?
– Regarding experiences, when I first started dosing, my experiences were mostly recreational, exciting, and funny. Lately, I've taken slightly higher doses, and my trips have been super intense and deep. They're fun and a little frightening at the same time. This is going to be weird to explain, but my close friend, who I trip with often, has recently been having acid-induced anxiety. Therefore, he's going to stop dosing. That's not the point though. When you dose directly with someone and then separate for a period of time, it's extremely creepy because you'll go somewhere, zone out, and just have the experience away from that person. However, you know in your head that your friend is some place doing the exact same thing… so it's like an awkward silence until you meet back up later in the trip. I sent a Snapchat to my friend of the sun setting while I was in a grocery store parking lot, and when I went back to his house, he started having the anxiety, and he asked me, “Did you send me those snaps to see if I would open them?” I was like “No… I was just simply sending a snap,” and he didn't believe me. It was so weird because he was right. The connection you build with someone while on acid is so damn weird.
I enjoy listening to classic and/or psychedelic rock music, walking around outside, smoking weed or dabs, sitting on my Eno hammock, and watching trippy movies.
– Positive outcomes: I know a lot more about myself, I appreciate visual art more, I've become closer to a few people, I'm a more insightful person, I talk less and listen more, and I think it's a lot of fun to do.
– Negative outcomes: I've lost a lot of friends because they think I'm getting a little too experimental (which is probably true), some harsh life truths have surfaced, I enjoy it so much to the point where I get upset more people aren't open to trying it, and it got a little expensive at one point.
Honestly, I don't really recommend doing this if you aren't prepared for some major life changes. A lot of people say they're going to try it once and not do it for awhile, but that's usually not the case. The user typically enjoys it, keeps doing it, and it then changes them. So if you think you're going to do it, and nothing in your life will change, there's a solid 95% chance Lucy will prove you wrong. Choosing to experiment my senior year of high school was a big step because a lot already changes senior year, and acid only induced more drastic changes. On the flip side, if you think you are on the brink of some huge life changes, doing acid might help guide your mindset through those changes. A lot of people become enlightened after just one dose. Alcoholics Anonymous cofounder Bill Wilson took one dose of acid, and he gave a huge portion of credit to his experience for ending his alcohol addiction. Amazing, right?
As nice as it can be, it can be very dangerous. If your experiences are too intense, you're not going to be able to drive, not that I recommend doing that anyway. You could also be getting 25I-NBOMe — a research chemical substituted for acid when selling due to how cheap it is —, which is extremely dangerous. Two tabs of that could kill you. People do it recreationally at low doses, but it will fry your brain. Just because LSD isn't physically addictive doesn't mean it can't be mentally addictive. I have a friend who takes seven tabs at a time around two or three times a week, which is beyond stupid for reasons that I've already explained (expensive, natural tolerance, etc.). He loves it so much that he keeps taking outrageous doses just to get the experience of low doses. He doesn't even order off the DNM. Could you even begin to imagine how expensive funding that addiction would get?