Microdosing can crack open a door you didn't know was closed. Suddenly, you notice the tension in a colleague's jaw, the sadness behind a friend's laugh, the unspoken weight your …
Microdosing can crack open a door you didn't know was closed. Suddenly, you notice the tension in a colleague's jaw, the sadness behind a friend's laugh, the unspoken weight your …
You started microdosing to feel calmer, more grounded, maybe a little less stuck in your own head. So it can feel deeply confusing when, instead of quiet clarity, you find …
Something strange can happen when you start microdosing. You feel a little lighter, a little more patient, a little more connected to the world around you. And because those shifts …
The idea of microdosing a psychedelic substance and then getting behind the wheel probably makes you pause, and it should. Even at sub-perceptual doses, you're introducing a compound into your …
A racing heart after a microdose can feel unsettling, especially when you expected something subtle and barely noticeable. You took a tiny amount, maybe a tenth of a gram of …
Emotional exhaustion has a way of making everything feel heavier. The morning alarm sounds more abrasive. Conversations feel like they require twice the energy. Even rest doesn't seem to restore …
Arguments leave a residue. Even after voices return to normal volume and the surface tension dissolves, something lingers: a tightness in the chest, a loop of replayed words, a quiet …
Most people who try microdosing expect the shift to happen in their heads: a new thought pattern, a brighter mood, a creative spark. And sometimes it does start there. But …
Something strange happens when you take a tiny, sub-perceptual dose of psilocybin and sit quietly with yourself: the walls you built as a child start to thin. Not dramatically, not …