Tadakisen August 30, 2019 Share August 30, 2019 Yo. Tad on the track. Well, I am an experienced anti-psychotic user. My favorite? Seroquel (brand name). Chemical? Quetiapine. I have noticed the following. Mixing seroquel with alcohol weed an SSRI's (anti-depressants). Like zoloft. Makes the person "tweak", I would say it dependes on genetics and how the brain chemicals are organized. Well? My point? That mix (really dangerous), opens spiritual doors and gives you LSD like visuals. I wouldn't recommend it to anyone. This is secret knowledge that me and a friend have been studying and testing on ourselves. I don't want anyone here to try this without a trip sitter. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
theholodoc August 31, 2019 Share August 31, 2019 Yo. Tad on the track. Well, I am an experienced anti-psychotic user. My favorite? Seroquel (brand name). Chemical? Quetiapine. I have noticed the following. Mixing seroquel with alcohol weed an SSRI's (anti-depressants). Like zoloft. Makes the person "tweak", I would say it dependes on genetics and how the brain chemicals are organized. Well? My point? That mix (really dangerous), opens spiritual doors and gives you LSD like visuals. I wouldn't recommend it to anyone. This is secret knowledge that me and a friend have been studying and testing on ourselves. I don't want anyone here to try this without a trip sitter. Zoloft by itself has given patients hallucinations. Your mix is dangerous and nobody should try it even with a sitter. what's wrong with using the tools of tulpamancy to create very real tulpas? and failing that LSD itself is a lot safer than the mix you have concocted. P.S. I am a retired psychiatrist. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Tadakisen August 31, 2019 Share August 31, 2019 Zoloft by itself has given patients hallucinations. Your mix is dangerous and nobody should try it even with a sitter. what's wrong with using the tools of tulpamancy to create very real tulpas? and failing that LSD itself is a lot safer than the mix you have concocted. P.S. I am a retired psychiatrist. I appreciate your etiquette, sir. What's wrong with tulpamancing? Nothing. You can do it all sober. At least I can. Also, I am gonna die soon so astalavista, baby. Appreciate your reply. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
not_taylor_swift August 31, 2020 Share August 31, 2020 I took an antipsychotic when my tulpa was very young (~1 month) for a few weeks. It suppressed her completely and I got no response while I was on the drug. The effect took a couple of days to ramp up. When I came off it, she was weaker than when we started. I felt suppressed as well. I had been taking an SSRI since before I made Mary, and when I stopped that nothing special happened. I don't think harsh drugs go well with extremely young tulpas, but I can't say anything about mature ones. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
theholodoc September 7, 2020 Share September 7, 2020 The whole purpose, of 'antipsychotic drugs' is to suppress hallucinations (that and suppress the entire personality). No doubt they would interfere with Tulpa creation. Dr. Bob Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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