Broken circle

Most people don't know this, but nearly every psychiatric medication contains within it, the side effects of what it is said to stop. For instance, even the legally prescribed psychiatric medications can cause hallucinations. And even beyond this, the point has to be drawn, as to the very definition of what a hallucination is. I could give my data based on experience, but I also believe that there is a certain aspect of things, which is reliant upon having to take a drug, to really understand how it works. One definition of a hallucination is to see or hear something that doesn't really exist, except in one's thoughts, sight, and or mind. I did mention sight with that definition, though it may sound contradictory to do so, because whenever we merely even look through glasses, our eyes, and not just our mind, are seeing things that could be classified as a hallucination. It is this wisdom that must be applied to the mind, from the eyes- not just the mind to the eyes, but the eyes to the mind- to be able to understand what a hallucination is, and not just be someone who is presuming things and making judgments they know nothing about. And it is this wisdom that should also be present, in any kind of judgment regarding drugs or medication. LSD does not work, by just merely giving someone what is wrong, so that they can right it. The LSD is actually in it's relationship with the amino acids in our body, coming into the blood stream from the Lymphatic system, which is a part of our immune system; and so the LSD is already effecting parts in a person, in their DNA and body, which are sick, or upside down. LSD is not just a vain or broken circle, in which the validity of the drug is taken away because someone says that the LSD is only able to accomplish what it does, because it is giving the body false representations, whether good or bad, which is an argument that would say that if LSD really worked, a person wouldn't have had to take it.