Then I look at stats and Im supponed to be glad for living in europe, as if I dont have to slave myself away just to be alive

Dont take this too seriously, im high

    • AlpineSteakHouse [any]
      ·
      10 months ago

      It's good for mood boosts and shows promise in treating depression and anxiety. Fewer side effects than anti-depression and I felt it kept me more "me" for lack of a better way.

      The problem is that in higher doses you can break your mind. People with a family history of psychosis should also avoid it. It's extremely unlikely to happen but that's always a risk. I had to stop because while it did give me meaning and relief from my symptoms, I was using it as a bottled "meaning of life." It helped me cope but you're also kinda aware that its not real and all the love and happiness is just chemically induced.

      It's like an AI friend in many ways. It does what its supposed to do and makes you feel better but the artificiality just makes it feel off. That said, it legitimately improved every single aspect of my life. I think it should be used to get through something rather than a long-term solution.

    • WhatDoYouMeanPodcast [comrade/them]
      ·
      edit-2
      10 months ago

      So I did my fair share of psychedelics in college, so when a dose, which has an inconsistent amount of psylocibin in it, effects me stronger than I anticipated, I can make an educated guess about what's happening and respond calmly. If you have little experience, it can be kind of spooky and your intuition might make it worse.

      In essence, what happens is inextricable from the living experience. No more will you taste an orange by studying accounts of eating them for 3 hours than you will what it's like to be high on mushrooms. It leaves me with the fascinating question "why do these little guys from a different kingdom of life have molecules that look like neurotransmitters?" As I've had it explained to me, if your consciousness is like a piece of meat that is super saiyan, then mushrooms is like going super saiyan 2 - you have a little bit more awareness which is separate from the thoughts and sensations that swim around in it. As such, when you go through your habitual loops of thought and routine, you have the space to question why you're doing it. As such, it's a useful tool for breaking addictions and negative thought loops. If your thoughts and actions are simply harmful, you can find it easier to just not do it. There's a neurochemical explanation that's like if your neurological pathways have a bunch of footprints in the direction you normally go, mushrooms are like snow that cover up the tracks so you can make new ones.

      At higher doses, it's probably harder to keep control of the pathways that are usually pretty good. You could also lose the agency to stop questioning bad loops and just be stuck witnessing them. You could also not know about the pathways and nature of consciousness and just go "what the fuck, this [bad pathway] fucking hurts!" and clench up really hard without realizing that you're just feeling what you normally feel because of the way that you are. You might also just get overwhelmed with the sensation of observing the world and not really do much of anything.

      It's also euphoric, so some people just go "woah visuals, melty walls, and people sound weird!"

    • anonochronomus [comrade/them, she/her]
      ·
      10 months ago

      Psychedelics help. Dip you toes in if you haven't done so before. Just be careful and do some research first. I'm a psychedelic therapy patient for whatever it's worth.

    • Lurkerino [comrade/them]
      hexagon
      ·
      10 months ago

      Im dont know much about medicine, many people have told me mushrooms have worsened their mental condition so be careful, for me, mushrooms have helped me a lot with depresion, like a lot and quite fast, a 50% mood improvement in a week or so