
Die Einnahme psychedelischer Substanzen mit einem romantischen Partner ist mit einem tieferen Gefühl des gegenseitigen Verständnisses und einer verbesserten Beziehungsqualität verbunden. Im Gegensatz dazu kann der alleinige Konsum dieser Substanzen dazu führen, dass die Partner nicht mehr miteinander harmonieren, was möglicherweise später zur Auflösung der Beziehung führt.
How sharing a psychedelic experience changes romantic relationships
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-The new research highlighting these relational dynamics was recently published in the [*Journal of Psychoactive Drugs*](https://doi.org/10.1080/02791072.2025.2607729).
In psychology, people are believed to make sense of themselves and the broader world through their relationships with others. Romantic partners are particularly motivated to develop a joint perspective on life, actively aligning their views to create a stable social environment. Researchers refer to this psychological phenomenon as shared reality. When a couple possesses a high degree of this mutual perspective, they understand external events in a very similar way.
This mutual understanding builds trust and reinforces the underlying bond between the two individuals. A strong shared reality often develops simply by experiencing mundane life events together over a long period of time, such as eating meals, dealing with hardships, or taking a walk.
A psychedelic experience, however, is an entirely different type of event. It is a powerfully transformative state that alters a person’s sensory perception, emotional regulation, and cognitive processing. Because these profound neurological shifts are entirely internal, they are completely invisible to an outside observer.
When only one member of a couple takes a substance like psilocybin or LSD, the experience cannot be directly observed or felt by their sober partner. Following the drug’s effects, the two individuals might emerge with contrasting perceptions of reality. Having mismatched perceptions of reality is known to damage relationship quality and breed emotional distance over time.
There are times I think the findings of these psychedelic studies are obvious and get annoyed, and then I have to remind myself that most people haven’t taken psychedelics, so this can be really helpful to show
Once I took shrooms with my bestie and her narcissistic boyfriend called to scream at her. They def felt out of sync in that moment
So interesting that solo drug use can dissolute a relationship, I wonder if that’s due to lifestyle differences
That would make sense for me…
I also keep hearing it can help with depression, I would love to try it
the first sentence of this headline was a testable hypothesis. the second is insane hippie fluff.
Let’s not forget the caveats of self-assessment here, especially in context of drug use and abuse. The best estimation is that that’s what the users think and not what really happens.
Or if yall have a bad trip it’s weird etc.
As a scientist, I’m very weary of all these sociological studies that try to really just summarize the intangible. Not even concluding anything really, just like “we talked to some people and if you do this we find this with whatever the hell method we chose”. Yeah, we kind of figured this and many of us have done psychedelics with a partner and yeah, sure. It could also go way the other way if both people take these substances, and seen that happen too. Need to write a paper I guess.
What’s the freaking point of these types of sociological studies really? Weakly fortifying things we already kinda of know, but would never declare any certainty over? We’re going to recommend therapists take this study and give couples drugs in couples therapy? In my state they are trying to do that but it’s WAY more complicated and dangerous to have a state licensed system do this. This is like, gossip therapy advice we all heard from a friend in college, high school, or later and just tried for fun, and that maybe all it should be. A casual suggestion, not a pseudo-scientific recommendation considering the dangers and consequences it could endure in the population as a mass imo.
I think people that have used psychedelics in their life tend to put themselves into a different category from those that never did. Not better, not worse, just different. So, sometimes it is indeed a sort of distancing one from the rest. Like those with kids are certainly in a different state of being than those without.
> Researchers refer to this psychological phenomenon as shared reality.
That’s the point of having a trip buddy. Doesn’t matter if you’re in a relationship with them or not.
Acid is fun to do with a friend or a small group. It’s a trip, consider it like going on an adventure like a D&D quest or something.
One of my friends and I used to drop at the club then spend all night wandering downtown until dawn. Acid makes mundane things interesting. We were sitting outside a 7-11 watching a dragonfly bounce off the windows. Some guy opened the door and let it in and we shouted at him like he’d just let in a trojan horse.
Sex and acid is horrible. Seriously, it’s difficult and unpleasant. If you’re going to do hallucinogens with a partner, go out into nature and go wander around for the day instead.
I’ll be honest. In my last relationship my ex and i had a more deep unique relationship and I think I was due to doing shrooms together. My current girlfriend hates any of this stuff and I definitely feel a little more disconnected to her in ways
Breaking: partaking in activities with your partner and sharing similar values leads to a better relationship than doing drugs behind their back
If you’re taking drugs alone you probably aren’t in a great relationship. If you’re doing it together than you probably are in a good one.
I’m sure this is the same reason that going to couples therapy promotes longevity whereas being in individual therapy in a relationship can often lead to a split.
I’ve taken psychs twice now with my partner, and each time was a great experience. Despite some stimulation discomfort on my end, we both felt much more connected to each other.
Can attest to this; highly recommend dosing with loved ones and keeping a ready stock for vacation time.
Keeps you in touch with who you are; it’s far out to be fully you, veil pulled back, with your life partner. Acid is also one of the most potent aphrodisiacs known to man, so there’s that.
Anecdotally had a really lovely moment with my wife while on shrooms together at a some kind of synth show in the city. We went outside to get some air and we were holding each other, looking into each others eyes while swaying and laughing and singing “Butch 4 Butch” to each other. Just smiling ear to ear like we were the only two people in the universe together. Definitely a core relationship memory, albeit we’ve been together 12 years this July and this happened sometime last spring.
I bet sharing anything with your partner is ‚associated with a deeper sense of mutual understanding and enhanced relationship quality‘.
i’m an advocate of psychedelics generally speaking, even if i’ve stepped away from it. i do think in many circumstances it’s a positive development for people – i’ve also watched some fold like a lawn chair because of an underlying condition they were previously unaware of which has been socially harmful for them.
all im seeing from the title though is “better not do cool stuff outside of your relationship, it’s harmful to have self and community development without them and they’ll be super jelly”.
the truth is a lot of important psychological development for young people happens outside of romantic relationships. also i dated a guy for 2 years in college and we did a TON of lsd together, none were bad experiences. we broke up on good terms eventually for compatibility reasons. i neither credit lsd for good times or bad with him. we were just young and still learning who we were.