• 4 Posts
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Joined 3 years ago
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Cake day: June 18th, 2023

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  • For me and my wife it’s a topic we bring up constantly throughout the year. Keep making suggestions and refining the ideas. Then October comes and of course he haven’t written anything down so we completely forget all our ideas.

    Then two weeks before Halloween we say “ok we’re need to get costumes. It’s close”. Then we’ll come up with a very elaborate idea that we both know won’t happen, but we agree anyways.

    Then 2 days before Halloween we check Amazon/spirit Halloween and do our best surprised Pikachu face when all the good costumes are gone or need more than 1 day to deliver and we end up settling on something dumb and get angry.

    Repeat next year for some reason.





  • Can’t speak to being on all of them but multiple psychedelics at once change the visuals a bit and add confusion, at least in my experience.

    Instead of the usual LSD color shift and rhythmic “breathing” of the room, the visuals were more geometric and I didn’t have the same mental clarity. I got a nonstop stream of thoughts that would interrupt my ability to follow where the thought was going.

    On top of all the other visual noise it was like my peripherals had a colored plastic overlaying what I was seeing, so it would appear more green sometimes and red other times.

    I wouldn’t recommend it. The experience may be completely different from mine because mine was LSD, NBOMe, and a synthetic psilocybin analogue, but sticking with either LSD or psilocybin is way better. Each drug has its own side effects that are manageable by themselves but make it really uncomfortable when they stack. I remember being itchy, thirsty, and kept swapping from being too hot and too cold. I had energy but was couch locked. I wanted to talk to my brother and room mates but when I tried to communicate, new thoughts just kept coming in and I’d forget what I was trying to say halfway through a thought. It was very frustrating.




  • To add on to what others have said, making sounds is heavily based on muscle memory for the position of your tongue. In English, R sounds typically have your tongue further back. In Japanese it’s kind of halfway between R and D and it flicks forward quickly so it sounds like a combination of R, D, and L to native English speakers. When they see that it’s an R sound based on the romanji they will default to the their native R tongue placement. It’s a much easier sound for people who can roll their R’s because the placement of the tongue is more similar.

    It’s possible to learn how to make the sounds by practice and’s listening but often it will take years if you don’t get coaching on how to place your tongue correctly.