Can you give tips on how to prevent a bad trip?
Tips to prevent bad trips include:
- Ensure a safe and familiar environment.
- Hire a professional tripsitter for guidance.
- Increase GABA levels in the brain prior to the trip through diet, supplements, or other activities.
- Prepare yourself well by gathering information about the structure of the trip session.
- Be aware of your intentions and expectations for the trip.
- Avoid the use of psychedelics if you suffer from certain mental conditions such as borderline personality disorder, psychosis susceptibility, or severe anxiety disorders.
- Use positive music or turn the music off if necessary.
- Be prepared for intense hallucinations and ensure there is sufficient light in the room.
- If you are anxious, know that it is just information and that there is life after the trip.
See also:
The prevention of a bad trip It begins long before the psychedelic session itself. The combination of preparation, physical and mental health, and a safe environment largely determines whether an experience unfolds positively, challenging, or problematic. Here are the most important tips to prevent a bad trip, backed by the science behind it:
Read more about the importance of these factors in What is set and setting?
For a stable, calm trip, it is important that your brain is in balance:
At Triptherapie, we use a neurotransmitter test and supplement advice beforehand to optimize this balance. You can find more about this in Bad or good trip? Glutamate is the deciding factor..
At Triptherapie, bad trips are rare thanks to our preparation and guidance. We utilize psychologists, psychiatric nurses, and holistically trained therapists. View the options for a here. psilocybin session or a truffle session under professional guidance.
People with borderline, psychosis susceptibility, schizophrenia or severe anxiety disorders run an increased risk of bad trips and worsening of their symptoms. An intake helps to assess this in advance: Trip therapy intake form
You read it everywhere. Good guidance prevents a bad trip! But does this always have to be provided by a therapist, or is a friend or good neighbor sufficient? This seems to vary from person to person, and if in doubt, just hire a good tripsitter!