Visual disconnection: Difference between revisions
>Melancholicwinter added gabapentinoids to the visual disconnection page due to theyre weak dissocative like effects |
>Graham m updating to reflect nomenclature changes |
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*A [[Double vision]] which, at higher levels, forces the user to close one eye if they need to read or perceive fine visual details | *A [[Double vision]] which, at higher levels, forces the user to close one eye if they need to read or perceive fine visual details | ||
Visual disconnection is often accompanied by other coinciding effects such as [[consciousness disconnection|cognitive disconnection]] and [[physical disconnection]] in a manner which results in the sensation that one is partially or entirely detaching from both their sensory input and their cognitive faculties. This effect is most commonly induced under the influence of [[dosage#common|moderate]] [[dosage|dosages]] of [[depressant]] and [[dissociative]] compounds, such as, [[ketamine]], [[PCP]], and [[DXM]] | Visual disconnection is often accompanied by other coinciding effects such as [[consciousness disconnection|cognitive disconnection]] and [[physical disconnection]] in a manner which results in the sensation that one is partially or entirely detaching from both their sensory input and their cognitive faculties. This effect is most commonly induced under the influence of [[dosage#common|moderate]] [[dosage|dosages]] of [[depressant]] and [[dissociative]] compounds, such as, [[ketamine]], [[PCP]], and [[DXM]]. | ||
At its higher levels, visual disconnection can become all-encompassing in its effects. This results in a complete perceptual disconnection from one's sense of sight which can be described as the experience of being blinded and unable to tell whether the eyes are open or closed due to a total lack of sensory input. During this state, the effect often leads one into the experience of finding themselves floating through a dark and mostly empty hallucinatory void. | At its higher levels, visual disconnection can become all-encompassing in its effects. This results in a complete perceptual disconnection from one's sense of sight which can be described as the experience of being blinded and unable to tell whether the eyes are open or closed due to a total lack of sensory input. During this state, the effect often leads one into the experience of finding themselves floating through a dark and mostly empty hallucinatory void. |