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    Buy LSD Blotter

    $200.00$2,900.00

    Lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD) is a hallucinogenic drug that produces powerful sensory distortions, intensifies mood and alters thought processes.

    LSD is usually prepared in liquid form, which is then dropped onto small pieces of blotting paper known as ‘tabs’. LSD is usually taken orally, either through swallowing or sublingual (under the tongue) administration. In rare cases, LSD is inhaled, injected or applied to the skin

    Description

    Description

    Buy LSD Blotter Online

    Buy LSD Blotter is sold under more than 80 street names including acid, blotter, cid, doses, dots and trips. It’s also well known as names that reflect the designs on the sheets of blotter paper (for example “purple dragon”)

    What is LSD?

    LSD first synthesized in 1938, is an extremely potent hallucinogen. It is manufactured from lysergic acid, which is found in ergot, a fungus that grows on rye and other grains.

    LSD is produced in crystalline form and then mixed with excipients or diluted as a liquid for production in ingestible forms. It is odorless, colorless and has a slightly bitter taste.

    LSD is sold in tablet form on Sugar Cubes, in thin squares of gelatin and most commonly as blotter paper.

    What are the effects?

    The effects of LSD are usually experienced 20-60 minutes after administration. People typically report effects for six to 11 hours, but this period can be longer depending on the dose.

    The effects of LSD depend on the quantity consumed, the person’s height and weight, their general health, their mood, their past experience with LSD, whether they use LSD on its own or with other drugs and the composition of the drug. 

    Acute effects may include:

    • Euphoria and sense of wellbeing
    • Vivid perceptual distortions (hallucinations)
    • Distorted sense of time and place
    • Rapidly changing emotions
    • Altered state of thinking and depersonalisation
    • Increased body temperature, heart rate and blood pressure
    • Insomnia, dizziness and nausea
    • Poor coordination
    • Paranoia, panic, anxiety

    Long term effects may include:

    • Flashbacks
    • Hallucinogen persisting perception disorder (HPPD)
    • Personality disruption, depression, and poorer memory (Quick Guide to Drugs and Alcohol, 2017)

    What are the risks?

    People who use LSD can sometimes experience a ‘bad trip’, involving a disturbing hallucination. This can lead to panic and risky behaviour (ADF, 2020).

    Overdose, psychological dependence, and ‘flashbacks’ are also risks when using LSD.

    Mixing LSD with other drugs

    The effects of taking LSD with other drugs − including over-the-counter or prescribed medications − can be unpredictable and dangerous, and could cause:

    • LSD and methamphetamine or MDMA can increase the chances of a bad trip and can also lead to panic 
    • LSD and alcohol may increase nausea and vomiting (ADF, 2020).

    Toxicity and overdose

    LSD is not a particularly toxic drug and deaths that have been linked to LSD are usually unintended consequences of perceptual distortion (like falls). Despite this, taking a larger than intended dose can result in extremely distorted perception, unstable or depressed mood, or intense fear (Quick Guide to Drugs and Alcohol, 2017).

    Dependence and withdrawal

    LSD is not thought to cause physical dependence, however people may develop psychological dependence although this is not common (Quick Guide to Drugs and Alcohol, 2017).

    Mental health

    Hallucinogens have the potential to give rise to psychotic symptoms, sometimes known as a ‘bad trip’. It’s been found that following a single dose healthy volunteers can experience both positive and negative psychotic symptoms (Darke, Lappin & Farrell, 2019).

    How many people use LSD?

    According to the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare, use of hallucinogens may be increasing. Between 2016 and 2019, lifetime use of hallucinogens increased from 9.4 percent to 10.4 percent and recent use increased from 1.0 percent to 1.6 percent. Most people who used hallucinogens had used LSD/acid/tabs (73 percent) and magic mushrooms/psilocybin (61 percent) in the previous 12 months (AIHW, 2020).

    Treatment

    People who use LSD do not generally seek treatment from health professionals and there are few treatment options that can be recommended, apart from those found to be generally effective for drug dependence like motivational enhancement, cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT), contingency management, and social support services (Quick Guide to Drugs and Alcohol, 2017).

    Emergency info

    If you, or someone around you, is experiencing undesired or distressing psychological or physical symptoms from the intake of alcohol or other drugs please seek immediate medical attention.

    If you need urgent help from ambulance services call Triple Zero (000). If a person has been mixing drugs with alcohol or other drugs, tell the paramedic exactly what has been taken.

    Healthy people who use LSD occasionally may also have flashbacks. Bad trips and flashbacks are only part of the risks of LSD use. LSD users may also manifest relatively long-lasting psychoses such as schizophrenia or severe depression.

    Additional information

    Units

    25 hits, 50 hits, 75 hits, 100 hits, 2 blotter sheet, 5 blotter sheet

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