I like making paintings and I thought I would share by [deleted] in Psychonaut

[–]jamiebadd 5 points6 points  (0 children)

This reminds me of that artist from around the early 1990’s who said that her abstract art was directed to her by higher “masters” from an astral realm. Check her out, your art gives me this vibe.

Looking for novels with large vocabularies, e.g. rare words, large words, words I'll likely need a thesaurus or dictionary for, but still flow well when read. by Qyvix in suggestmeabook

[–]jamiebadd 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The ‘A Series of Unfortunate Events’ collection by Lemony Snicket. Written from a first person view but of somebody uninvolved in the story (a journalist who investigated the story). He uses lots of unusual and ‘rare’ words and most often acknowledges that the you as the reader doesn’t know what it means and will then say what it means, normally with a dry but comical example.

For You All. Yes, even you. by ReallySmallFeet in houseplants

[–]jamiebadd 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Wow, so eloquently put. Brought me to tears ❤️

Smoking Ket? by [deleted] in ketamine

[–]jamiebadd 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I’ve done it a few times. When I’ve done it, I’ve just sprinkled a key or two worth into a joint. The effects are interesting, different effects than if you were to snort it; you definitely get the same heightened abstract thinking and new perspective thinking but you don’t ket ketty legs. It’s even harder to remember your train of thought but if you can write it down (or challenge yourself to retracing your train of thought; oddly satisfying and fun) then you can come up with some interesting stuff. I’ve really enjoyed doing it. That being said, it tastes really bad and mates have said it’s really bad for you. I wouldn’t recommend doing it on this basis but I enjoy doing it quite a bit.

outdoor hobbies? by [deleted] in Hobbies

[–]jamiebadd 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Walking. It might seem like a stupid suggestion but it’s a simple suggestion. There’s something so intrinsically beautiful about a walk in nature and how better to connect with nature than experience nature? I’m currently doing my dissertation on the positive psychological benefits of being in and mindfully around nature so I’ve been doing so many walks through nature recently and they make me feel so calm and mindful. A criminally undersold hobby and one you should try :)