10 Tips from a Psychonaut: How to Have an Awesome, Safe Psychedelic Experience

Psychedelics are Tools—Not Toys
Hi everyone! Psychedelics are something I'm so passionate about that I wanted to share some pointers I've discovered (sometimes the hard way) over the years of my own experiences.
I truly believe that occasional, responsible psychedelic drug use can help catalyze personal growth, and such has certainly been the case in my own life. As a consequence of the War on Drugs, scientific inquiry into the psychopharmacological mechanisms of these drugs was shut down for several decades, but research has begun to pick up again around the world, and the results so far have been promising.
Preliminary studies have indicated that MDMA can help those with PTSD learn to integrate their emotional trauma; psilocybin studies have shown reduced end-of-life anxiety; ayahuasca appears to foster neurogenesis; LSD increases network connectivity within the brain, potentially providing a cognitive window during which one can overcome entrenched patterns of behavior that reinforce depression; ibogaine may help treat addictive disorders; and marijuana greatly reduces pain, inflammation and anxiety.
That said, the beneficial aspects of drugs are best accessed through responsible drug use—not reckless partying.
So, without further introduction: 10 Tips from a Psychonaut!
1) Know Your Source
No matter where you're sourcing your drugs—whether from a close friend, a dealer, or the dark web—it's always a good idea to consider using a Reagent test kit to confirm that the drug you purchased is actually what it was sold as. Too often, drugs are intentionally or accidentally passed off as something else, and being caught unawares in a trip under the influence of some unknown drug can be frightening and uncomfortable. Potentially-fatal NBOMe series compounds are sometimes sold as LSD, or pressed pills containing amphetamines or other drugs are sold as MDMA, and numerous "research chemicals" are sold under the guise of acid, mescaline or Molly.To prevent unwanted, unpleasant drug experiences, always know your source.
Where to Purchase a Reagent Test Kit:
https://dancesafe.org/shop/
2) Know Your Dose
Once you're sure that you've successfully obtained your drug of choice, it's time to decide how powerful of an experience you're hoping to have. Knowing the dose-response curve of the drug in question is paramount to having a trip of desired intensity. Always start slow with a new batch or compound; you can always work your way up later, but you can never dose less.The best place to research your drug of interest is undoubtedly erowid.org, which is basically a free, online psychedelic encyclopedia filled with dosage information, trip reports and drug research articles.
Weighing your dose becomes especially important when dosing powders such as 2C-x, MDxx, DMT and DOxx. I strongly suggest investing in a high precision digital milligram scale for weighing powders, and also a kitchen scale for weighing bulkier materials such as dried, psychoactive cactus, poppy pods and magic mushrooms. There are countless horror stories posted online of people who ignorantly decided to snort or ingest an eyeballed dose of whatever drug, usually tripping way too hard and requiring hospitalization to ease their panic or medical crisis. Don't let that be you.
Some drugs, like ibogaine and NBOMe series can even be lethal at high enough doses, and drugs like MDMA can potentially be neurotoxic if dosed too frequently, so always do your research before dosing in order to figure out how much you should take.

Erowid.org: https://www.erowid.org/psychoactives/psychoactives.shtml
3) Set and Setting
Simply stated, your "set" is your mindset—how you feel, what you've been thinking about lately, the state of your interpersonal relationships at the moment—and your "setting" is where you are, whether that's at home, at a social gathering or out in nature.I recommend being in a positive state of mind before tripping, and having the entire day (and sometimes the next) set aside so you can delve completely into the experience without distractions in whatever your setting of choice may be. If you struggle with mental health issues, it's probably not a good idea to risk taking psychedelics, which can trigger psychosis in vulnerable users. Otherwise, if you are in a stable frame of mind and feel ready to trip after a bit of preparation, go for it! Turn off your phone, break away from social media for a few hours and allow yourself to fully experience your trip.
You know yourself best and what kind of setting is most likely to provide you with a positive experience. That said, for your first few experiences, you may want to consider tripping alone at home or with a close-knit group of friends, possibly even with a trip "sitter" if you'd like some sober support. Psychedelics make you profoundly more vulnerable to emotional and physical stimuli, so you may want to reconsider tripping in a party atmosphere until you've gotten a few trips under your belt. If applicable, make sure you fully trust your fellow trippers. Personally, I never trip at parties and instead prefer to trip alone outdoors or at home, or with a close personal friend in a comfortable setting. To each his own—the most important thing is to feel safe, relaxed and receptive in your set and setting.
A word on the great outdoors: Tripping in remote wilderness can be a powerful and transformative experience; however, unless you're extremely comfortable and well-versed in outdoor survival, I suggest holding off on overnight camping "trips" until you're a little more experienced with psychedelics, and even then I recommend holding off on a "heroic dose" outdoors unless you have a trustworthy sitter with you.

4) Be Aware of Unsafe Drug Combinations
Most psychedelics are safe to take with one another and often synergistically potentiate each other's effects. Some of my personal favorite combinations have been 2cb + ketamine; LSD + nitrous oxide; mescaline + GHB; and 4-AcO-DMT + DMT. That said, combining drugs can lead to heavy effects and is only recommended for more experienced or adventurous users.Never mix drugs which induce respiratory depression, like alcohol, benzodiazepines and opiates. Another class of drugs to be extremely cautious of experimenting with is MAOIs (monoamine oxidase inhibitors) which allow drugs to cross the blood-brain barrier and can lead to serotonin syndrome or even death. Always check contraindications of your prescribed medications and co-administered drugs—especially stimulants, painkillers or antidepressants—with whatever drug you plan on taking.
Once you know ahead of time that your drug dosage and combination is safe, you're much more likely to feel safe during the experience, even if you hit rocky psychological territory.
5) Stay Hydrated
Some drugs, like psilocybin found in magic mushrooms, are diuretic, and others like LSD and psychedelic amphetamines can increase perspiration, so it becomes vitally important to rehydrate when under the influence. While tripping it's challenging to keep track of space and time, let alone how much water you've drunk! I like to keep a bottle of water handy to encourage and remind me to stay hydrated while tripping to prevent comedown headaches. Adding a pinch of sea salt or a few drops of ionic trace minerals to your water helps keep your electrolytes balanced, which becomes increasingly important if you're tripping while doing any sort of physical exercise. There have even been accounts of panicked drug users drinking so much water to help them come down that they develop hyponatremia, or low blood sodium. This can easily be prevented by making sure you consume electrolytes with your water.6) Consume Simple Sugars
Many psychedelics reduce appetite, so it's all too easy to overlook meal times and unintentionally go hours without eating. Roughly 20% of a person's daily caloric intake goes toward brain functioning, and the brain thrives off glucose—simple sugars—so your brain needs all the fuel you can provide when traversing inner and outer cosmos. Consume simple carbohydrates to stay alert and prevent drops in blood sugar while tripping.I suggest eating a light but filling meal an hour or two before dosing, and later snacking on organic, seasonal fruit or yogurt with honey for a bit of easy-to-digest protein. If you're on a drug that induces nausea, like mescaline, it helps to have bland, salted crackers on hand to settle your stomach. I always prep my meals ahead of time and have them set aside in glass containers so I can take them with me on my outdoor adventures. Plan for a light meal and have everything ready to go; it's incredibly difficult, not to mention dangerous, to wield cutlery and cooking appliances while tripping.

I've found that eating light meals periodically during my trips has cut down on the foggy, fatigued effect of coming down. Keep it simple and have everything set up before dosing so you won't have to overthink meeting your body's basic metabolic requirements.
7) Wear Sunblock... And Sunglasses
This one definitely comes from my own personal experience! I can't count how many times I've gotten sunburned after hours of staring, enraptured, at fractalizing clouds and geometric patterns spiraling across the sky. I think after a while my boss started to get suspicious about me frequently coming to work with bad sunburns, haha.As for sunglasses, your pupils become dilated while tripping, making you more sensitive to sunlight if you're outdoors during the day. Wearing sunglasses helps make your experience more comfortable, and also gives you a little more stealth out in public. ;)
8) Have a Plan B
In a case of a difficult psychological experience while tripping, it helps to already have Plan B in place to calm you down and prevent a total freak out. It might help to have a playlist ready of your favorite, comforting songs; alternatively, you can create a "safe space" in your bedroom. Deep breathing and meditation can also help you relax, as can journaling about the experience to keep your hands moving and mind functioning linearly. Remember, if you're certain you've taken the right psychedelic without any dangerous combinations, you're going to be fine and the experience will pass in a few hours. The lethal dose of most psychedelics is so high that you wouldn't get to that point accidentally.Talk to an understanding friend if necessary (or check out https://chat.tripsit.me), and if worst comes to worst, you can even take a benzo to help abort the trip early and bring you closer to baseline. I've never had to do this, and you shouldn't have to either if you're taking responsible doses in a positive set and setting. Still, emergencies can arise, in which case it may help to ingest a pharmacological aid to help you calm down. Etizolam is an unscheduled (in most states) benzodiazapene analogue which you can legally purchase for "research" if you're unable to procure benzos from another source.
9) A Word on False Realizations
One of my psychedelic heroes, Dr. John Lilly, described a powerful approach to examining a psychedelic experience: keeping in mind the difference between "true" and "as if true." True applies to the facts of your life and reality which are undoubtedly true: your age, physical appearance, line of work, and so on. Treating something "as if true" however means keeping in mind that what you're experiencing on a psychedelic may not be true in the real world, and perhaps should only be analyzed "as if true" during the trip and comedown.
There have been countless cases of psychedelic drug users reporting feelings of becoming Jesus, talking directly with God, communicating with the dead, or experiencing other supernatural and spiritual phenomena. More commonly—and this has happened to me on many occasions—a user will "realize" that he or she is born to a certain "calling" or has a personality defect (or virtue) which, after coming down, clearly isn't rooted in reality.
Engage in the trip during the experience, but after you've come down, be prepared to turn a critical eye to the "realizations" you had, and weigh them for how much value they provide to your real life in consensus reality.
In other words: Don't believe everything you think.
10) Make Time to Integrate
After a mind-blowing psychedelic session, I often find myself asking, "What the hell do I even do with this information?" I've found it helpful to post on various forums, like the Shroomery, Bluelight or Reddit in order to share my experiences with others, gather feedback and ultimately derive insight into the meaning of my trip.I also keep a trip diary of all of my experiences (which is currently 250+ singled-spaced pages!), including dosage, dates, and details of my subjective experience while under the effects of the drugs. Journaling helps me come to terms with the insights and ideas I discovered during my trip. Talking to a friend can be equally helpful, or even going for a long walk in nature the following day and processing events. Many users report feeling a euphoric afterglow which sometimes lasts days or even weeks after a positive experience. Conversely, others report feeling rattled and anxious after a difficult experience, in which case integration becomes all the more important.
Take it easy the day or two after a trip and make sure to get enough rest to help you recuperate and reintegrate into society with your newfound insight.
Psychedelics can help you discover regions of your mind previously held inaccessible, and it's for this reason that they are powerful tools for self-discovery. If you take time to prepare for your safety and mental well-being, your session is much more likely to be an awesome, life-changing experience.

Great Resources:
https://dancesafe.orghttp://erowid.org
http://shroomery.org
http://www.bluelight.org/vb/content/
https://www.reddit.com/r/Drugs/
http://www.zendoproject.org
http://www.maps.org
https://chat.tripsit.me
What Do Visuals Look Like?
http://disregardeverythingisay.com/post/9331287956/the-visual-components-of-a-psychedelic-experienceCheck out some of my trip reports:
• The Time I Tripped on LSD at Zion National Park, Utah, and Overcame My Depression• Psychedelic Bliss: Rectal mescaline + LSD + DMT + Kava
We may not all agree with every observation here, but this sort of thing is important for the general health and welfare of psychonauts.
This is such a great and detailed post. I shared it on my Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/The-Best-of-Steemit-181874822227527/
I like number 9, though it also makes me a little uncomfortable, especially this part:
We all tend to believe that those things are true, but while on a trip, or in a dream, it can seem that those things fall pretty low down the scale when it comes to "truth". It can even seem that those things are completely false. Of course, to act in the world, we more or less behave "as if" those things are true. I guess my point is, "as if true" can apply to just about everything, and I think that can give us a broader perspective as we move throughout our lives - not becoming too attached to things or beliefs and mistake them for Self.
Thanks for the great post.
Great comment, and thanks so much for sharing my post and providing insight here! I understand and relate to what you mean about how "as if true" can go both ways, and ego loss can definitely strengthen our ability to practice non-attachment as we uncover our true Self.
Excellent point, thanks again for sharing!
@runaway-psyche So true when you write: "As a consequence of the War on Drugs, scientific inquiry into the psychopharmacological mechanisms of these drugs was shut down for several decades, but research has begun to pick up again around the world, and the results so far have been promising."
For a great article about (and more), go here: http://www.themorningnews.org/article/the-heretic
That was a great read and impressive example of how psychedelics can encourage novel thinking:
Hopefully more studies like this will be conducted soon!
To me, the last line, quoting Fadiman, sums up the relationship between the ruling elites and those they rule: the latter's enlightenment "is always a crime" because if they were allowed to enlighten themselves, they would never abide being ruled by others.
Awesome in depth write up, thank you for getting the good word out there :)
Thanks for reading, I'll keep an eye out for any "altered" states of consciousness posts you write up soon, hehe.
Great post! Thank you for sharing. Harm reduction and integration education is such an important part of the psychedelic experience. You might be interested in our project, and what we have been doing. Check us out at psychedelictoday.com
Looking forward to learning more from you!
Thanks for commenting, I checked out your website and will be following your blog here on Steemit. I noticed a few photos from the Psychedelic Science conference on your site - I went this year and it was a fantastic experience. Looking forward to your future posts as well!
Thanks for checking us out! :) And Psy Science was a wonderful experience. It is an exciting time for all of this and also cool to be part of such a historical event as it being the largest psychedelic conference yet to date! We might be looking for well-researched articles based around psychedelics, drug policy, research, etc. If you have any material that might be worth spreading, send us an email! I really enjoyed your Ketamine article -- really informative.
I'm so glad to see a young person who truly understands psychedelics and how they can LITERALLY change the world in to a better place.It's as that most people today label them as just "drugs" when they are actually medicine for the mind which in turn helps to heal the body as well.Most people today are so enslaved by the system that they always live in the pas and the present instead of living in the present where our place is. A single dose of dose of a strong psychedelic is like a slap in the face and a wake up call.
Thanks for reading and commenting. Great username, too!
@runaway-psyche Great post! Thanks for focusing on safety.
Thank YOU for encouraging me to write a post like this! I hope it helps the community here in some way.
First off these pictires are way cool. realy a[[recoated you finding those- they really "show" your post. I apperciate your honesty here, and even the care you put into it, so that those who care to experiement this way, are safe.
I have never done anything like this, and dont plan ot it. Mostly fear, and harming oneself.
we do see so much of this useage here in Hollywood, and possibly to much harm from it.
But I know everyone should have their journey. Thats why I respect you sharing so much info.
A 250 plus page diary on it. Wow. The useage and dedication is interesting. And your recouping time is about 2-3 days.
How do you support yourself as this useage would take 3-4 days to be back to feeling "normal" and you might be onto the next journal entry.
What do you think the wear is on the body in the long run. Are you seeing any- does it concern you?
You love it so much, do you think youre missing out on anything? how long do you think you'll contue this pattern.
I am just asking these questions, not to be negative. Im not. Im facinated you wrote so thouroughly, which shows your interst and knolwedge. It makes me more interested, so I ask more questions.
Do take care of yourself.
Thank you, I really appreciate the detailed feedback and your expressed interest!
To answer your questions, I haven't noticed any sort of decline in my physical or mental health as a result of tripping. Then again, my health and well-being are priorities in my life and I make sure to exercise, eat organically, sleep at least 8 hours per night, and take frequent emotional inventory, so I'd say my health is exceptional regardless of my drug use.
That said, psychedelics are among the least toxic (and in several cases, entirely non-toxic) substances one can use, and I personally limit my use of drugs like alcohol, tobacco, amphetamines, opiates, MDMA and dissociatives to further protect my brain and body. Many people can't control their use of some of the more addictive substances I listed above, so it may be wise to avoid those pitfalls altogether, especially in high-stress environments like Hollywood as you mentioned, haha.
My work schedule at my previous job allowed me to work four consecutive days, leaving me with three-day weekends during which I was able to carve out time for frequent psychedelic exploration, typically once every other week for about three years so far. I think I gained far more than I missed out on during the period of my heaviest use, and find myself feeling more integrated into society and comfortable in my own skin, so to speak, than ever before—largely thanks to what I learned on psychedelics.
Again, not everyone can or should trip as frequently as I do, or even at all, but for those with the responsibility and curiosity, it really is a journey worth trying at least once in life, in my opinion.
Great questions, and let me know if you're looking for more resources!
This is a very useful post. Whilst I can't condone the use of illegal substances for legal reasons if people are going to use them safely they must educate themselves and follow the kind of points you suggest.
The only other thing I would add is that it would be best to have a sober "sitter" to stay with you and watch you whilst you are taking a psychedelic. This would be similar to the role of the shaman or medicine man in ancient times.
Hopefully with the return of medical research into such agents it will only be a matter of time before they are provided for use as treatments under medical supervision and people will not have to turn to the black market.
Thank you! I share your hope that medical research will improve access to pharmaceutical-grade psychedelic medicines while also increasing support systems of psychologists for those looking to work through trauma in a clinical setting. As you pointed out, the black market is hardly an ideal place to source drugs, but yep, that's what's available now and I thought I may as well do a harm reduction post for people looking to trip but not knowing where to start.
I made a brief mention of seeking out a trip sitter, and you're right that some people would definitely benefit from a comforting presence and light supervision for backup.
Great points, thanks for sharing!
This is a terrific post, I have been very curious to try DMT and have been doing lots of research on it, so I found this to be very informative.
I will be checking out your other posts in a bit, because I'm betting there is lots of good stuff there.
followed and upvoted :)
DMT truly is an otherworldly experience, and there are some great trip reports on Erowid plus tips on "breaking through" with a Glass Vapor Genie on https://www.dmt-nexus.me/
Who knows, it may even further inspire your art which I just checked out and enjoyed very much. :)
Thanks for reading and good luck in your psychedelic adventures!
Thanks so much @runaway-Psyche, Ill definitely check that out, I recently watched "DMT the spirit molecule" which got me even more intrigued. I think it will definitely affect my art in some ways and I would love to paint something after the experience inspired by it :)
Ooh, that's a great documentary, there's some very interesting DMT research too. I'll be on the lookout for any upcoming art you post!
Thanks so much @runaway-Psyche I appreciate that, checking out that site you recommended now :)
Awesome, informative post! Thanks for contributing with this @runaway-psyche!
BTW, just felt like adding that Psilocybin has been known to prevent outbreaks of cluster-headaches as well.
https://www.erowid.org/plants/mushrooms/mushrooms_medical1.shtml
These natural compounds are so much more than a teenagers means of rebellion against parents, they can foster mental health.
Excellent point about cluster headaches, thanks for sharing that link here! Have you used psilocybin for headaches, or do you know someone who has?
We're living in exciting times right now with MAPS and other organizations conducting research which will help rewrite the narrative on drugs, hopefully for the ultimate benefit of those who can derive psychological or physical benefit from these magnificent compounds.
Fortunately, i have not used psilocybin mushrooms as medication.
I saw a documentary about a family father living with cluster-headaches, who had resorted to psilocybin after tons of government-approved drugs that either didn't work, or had too severe side-effects.
The fact that he could grow the mushrooms himself, although illegally, to a tenth of the price of government-medication and had next to none side-effects, except for the 4-6 hours trip he would have to endure, really made an impression on me.
That documentary sounds very familiar, I may have seen the same one or at least something similar. It was really inspiring to see the difference in his well-being after coming down from the trip, and as you pointed out, the price was practically pennies!