|
Home > Archive > Drugs psychedelic > May 2005 > Fun things to do on acid?
You are viewing an archived Text-only version of the thread.
To view this thread in it's original format and/or if you want to reply to
this thread please [click here]
| Author |
Fun things to do on acid?
|
|
| inTerloper 2005-04-26, 10:57 pm |
| Hi,
I'm taking acid for the second time this friday and me and my friends
are looking for some fun stuff to do. Any and all recommendations are
welcome 
Thanx.
| |
| Randy 2005-04-27, 11:49 am |
| I had a SPECTACULAR evening once doing this:
A day ahead of time, get a fish tank, put it in a place it can stay for
a little while, and fill it with water. Do this a day early so that
the water can settle. Get a blacklight (ideally the tube kind in a
freestanding mount; we were able to lay it across the top of the tank,
so that the water was filled with blacklight). Get a florescent
marker; remove the end. Carefully extract the core (for the marker we
used, this was a tube of absorbent material -- cotton, or the like --
soaked in the florescent ink. The tube is wrapped in plastic, but open
on the ends). VERY carefully, set this on the surface of the water.
It floats, but the water will begin to leach out these fat tongues of
florescence (which the blacklight will electrify and illuminate).
Initially the pattern is simple, but as time goes on Brownian motion
and microturbulence in the water will begin to develop the pattern.
This will go on for hours. After an hour or two, you'll see the ink
slowly fall to the bottom of the tank. If you used cold water to fill
it initially, a really slow thermal engine in the water will be
revealed: the ink will follow the currents in the water, and you'll see
it fall to the bottom, move out to the edge, and then slowly crawl up
the glass (the air temperature in the room will very likely be warmer
than the water, which will promote a sort of toroidal motion). The
next morning, after you've woken up and the tank looks like a nasty
green florescent blob, do this: focus your eyes at some point in the
middle of the tank. If you've got good eyesight, what you'll see are
thin layers of dye sliding over each other, still moving with the
motion of the water. The doughnut-motion of the water, repeating
throughout the night, will have wrapped the thin layer of dye upon
itself a few hundred times (but not mixed it), so if you're observant
you can still see the layers. It's sort of like watching incense smoke
in a room with really still air, but in a more dramatic (and
longer-lasting) way.
Another idea:
Get 3 cheap, tall mirrors (maybe 3 or 4 feet tall, but perhaps a foot
or less wide). Duct tape them together into a triangle, with the
mirrored surfaces facing inward. There should be a triangular hole on
either end you can fit your face into. Look into one end; get your
friend (I certainly hope you're not going on this trip alone) to look
in the other end. What you'll both see is an infinite wall of the
other person's face. Now, here's the game: one of you pick out ONE of
the faces in the wall. The other's job is to figure out which face is
looking at them. It takes a little while (and perhaps sounds a little
insane), but it can be done. We have high attuned biological hardware
for determining where someone else's eyes are looking, and it
definitely comes into play here.
Have fun!
randy
| |
|
| Forget socializing on acid. Instead meditate and focus on the middle path.
Study "The Psychedelic Experience" Don't reimprint nonsense. Let your ego
die and maintain strict focus.
http://www.lycaeum.org/books/books/...ce/tibetan.html
dc
"inTerloper" <bvanlier@hotmail.com> wrote in message
news:77a0dd42.0504261816.60ded755@posting.google.com...
> Hi,
>
> I'm taking acid for the second time this friday and me and my friends
> are looking for some fun stuff to do. Any and all recommendations are
> welcome 
>
> Thanx.
| |
|
| All that is natural and might be "fun" but it is a waste of time.
Focus and "neither be repulsed or attracted" to anything--not thoughts,
imagery, friends or sexuality, and find out what happens then. Learn to
meditate properly, before using visionary substances or plants or you are
just like a cork on the ocean.
"Randy" <rrrandy@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:1114618897.642582.40850@z14g2000cwz.googlegroups.com...
>I had a SPECTACULAR evening once doing this:
>
> A day ahead of time, get a fish tank, put it in a place it can stay for
> a little while, and fill it with water. Do this a day early so that
> the water can settle. Get a blacklight (ideally the tube kind in a
> freestanding mount; we were able to lay it across the top of the tank,
> so that the water was filled with blacklight). Get a florescent
> marker; remove the end. Carefully extract the core (for the marker we
> used, this was a tube of absorbent material -- cotton, or the like --
> soaked in the florescent ink. The tube is wrapped in plastic, but open
> on the ends). VERY carefully, set this on the surface of the water.
> It floats, but the water will begin to leach out these fat tongues of
> florescence (which the blacklight will electrify and illuminate).
> Initially the pattern is simple, but as time goes on Brownian motion
> and microturbulence in the water will begin to develop the pattern.
> This will go on for hours. After an hour or two, you'll see the ink
> slowly fall to the bottom of the tank. If you used cold water to fill
> it initially, a really slow thermal engine in the water will be
> revealed: the ink will follow the currents in the water, and you'll see
> it fall to the bottom, move out to the edge, and then slowly crawl up
> the glass (the air temperature in the room will very likely be warmer
> than the water, which will promote a sort of toroidal motion). The
> next morning, after you've woken up and the tank looks like a nasty
> green florescent blob, do this: focus your eyes at some point in the
> middle of the tank. If you've got good eyesight, what you'll see are
> thin layers of dye sliding over each other, still moving with the
> motion of the water. The doughnut-motion of the water, repeating
> throughout the night, will have wrapped the thin layer of dye upon
> itself a few hundred times (but not mixed it), so if you're observant
> you can still see the layers. It's sort of like watching incense smoke
> in a room with really still air, but in a more dramatic (and
> longer-lasting) way.
>
> Another idea:
> Get 3 cheap, tall mirrors (maybe 3 or 4 feet tall, but perhaps a foot
> or less wide). Duct tape them together into a triangle, with the
> mirrored surfaces facing inward. There should be a triangular hole on
> either end you can fit your face into. Look into one end; get your
> friend (I certainly hope you're not going on this trip alone) to look
> in the other end. What you'll both see is an infinite wall of the
> other person's face. Now, here's the game: one of you pick out ONE of
> the faces in the wall. The other's job is to figure out which face is
> looking at them. It takes a little while (and perhaps sounds a little
> insane), but it can be done. We have high attuned biological hardware
> for determining where someone else's eyes are looking, and it
> definitely comes into play here.
>
> Have fun!
>
> randy
>
|
| |
|
|