Opiates by nature are not hallucinogenic agents so the question is a bit awkward. Opiates are depressents. True hallucinogens would include LSD, mescaline and psilocybin.
^the above person doesn't know what they're talking about. you want an opiate that has hi kappa and sigma receptor agonist activity if you want to hallucinate but also make sure it has full mu receptor agonism too so you get that euphoric rush. honesty when i was doing way too much heroin every day i started to see things people claimed didn't really happen after about half a year but for you id recomend straight up opium which many people say is mildly hallucinogenic- try smoking some on top of marijuana ;-)
Though ecstasy can sometimes cause hallucinogenic effects, it is most properly referred to as an entactogen/enpathogen.
It's the most potent hallucinogenic around, or so they say.
The Hallucinogenic Toreador was created in 1970.
Any mushrooms containing psilocybin or psylocin are hallucinogenic. P. Cubensis is one of the most popular.
The most famous sentence using this word is from Karl Marx who said "Religion is the opiate of the people."
mushrooms, lsa, lsd, marijuana all can be considered hallucinogenic
mushrooms, lsa, lsd, marijuana all can be considered hallucinogenic
Yes. It is an opiate medication -- a synthetic opiate, but an opiate nonetheless -- and all opiate medications are tightly controlled substances.
Inhalants are not hallucinogenic. One exception could be nitrous oxide but it is different from what most people refer to as inhalants (computer duster, butane etc) as it doesn't inherently cause damage where as other inhalants do.
The hallucinogenic compound found in liberty cap mushrooms is psilocybin. Psilocybin is converted into psilocin in the body, which interacts with serotonin receptors in the brain to produce its hallucinogenic effects.
balls
cake