The intensifying effect of psychedelics can sometimes overwhelm the nervous system, leading to a kind of shutdown that dulls emotions.
The fight-flight-freeze response is a widely accepted model in psychology that describes how the nervous system responds to stress. When the body perceives mild danger, it prepares for action, fighting, or fleeing. Yet, when it feels in greater danger, it can go into complete shutdown – a mechanism of playing dead, lingering from an evolutionary past.
Psychedelics can overload the senses and make users feel out of control. Some also trigger the release of hormones like cortisol and adrenaline, which signal the body that it might be under threat. Together, these factors can provoke a freeze response, resulting in numbness or dissociation.
“It was like a freeze – I was frozen,” said Hannah, a Science Tutor, recalling an LSD trip. “I envisioned myself as Beatrix Potter’s rabbit in the headlights.”
Relatively new to psychedelics, Hannah felt overwhelmed, a feeling intensified by discomfort around her tripping companion. “With this disparity between me and him, I felt lost, empty, and void,” she said.
In some cases, psychedelics not only dull emotions but can also shut down experience entirely. People have reported smoking DMT, a particularly potent psychedelic, and losing all consciousness, or at least any memory of what happened.
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