Andrew Callaghan
👤 PersonAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
No, I have pretty bad memory. Conversationally, I can remember a lot of stuff, but I've just experienced so much. I don't really remember anything unless someone's talking about an event and I have a thousand stories. But if you were to ask me straight up, what's a crazy ass interview you've done? I would say like, I don't know.
If you were to say like, what's your favorite interview you've ever done in Tulsa, Oklahoma or Las Vegas at night? Or like with a cop.
If you were to say like, what's your favorite interview you've ever done in Tulsa, Oklahoma or Las Vegas at night? Or like with a cop.
If you were to say like, what's your favorite interview you've ever done in Tulsa, Oklahoma or Las Vegas at night? Or like with a cop.
I can drive, but my night vision is kind of bad. It's called hallucinogen persisting perception disorder. Researchers are not that sure about what causes it. If you want to get ocular real quick, it's caused from psychedelics like LSD, MDMA, peyote, all that. MDMA is a- Ecstasy.
I can drive, but my night vision is kind of bad. It's called hallucinogen persisting perception disorder. Researchers are not that sure about what causes it. If you want to get ocular real quick, it's caused from psychedelics like LSD, MDMA, peyote, all that. MDMA is a- Ecstasy.
I can drive, but my night vision is kind of bad. It's called hallucinogen persisting perception disorder. Researchers are not that sure about what causes it. If you want to get ocular real quick, it's caused from psychedelics like LSD, MDMA, peyote, all that. MDMA is a- Ecstasy.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
No, it's very specific. It happens between 4% to 4.5% of psychedelic users, so something like 1 in 30. That is a lot. Check this out. If you have HPPD at home and you have visual snow, palynopsia, and all of the things that we have, it's not an eye problem. It's a brain problem.
No, it's very specific. It happens between 4% to 4.5% of psychedelic users, so something like 1 in 30. That is a lot. Check this out. If you have HPPD at home and you have visual snow, palynopsia, and all of the things that we have, it's not an eye problem. It's a brain problem.
No, it's very specific. It happens between 4% to 4.5% of psychedelic users, so something like 1 in 30. That is a lot. Check this out. If you have HPPD at home and you have visual snow, palynopsia, and all of the things that we have, it's not an eye problem. It's a brain problem.
It has to do with the visual processing system. So it's a little bit of ocular science here. There's 130 milliseconds between your eyes seeing something and sending that information to your frontal lobe to be processed. Before it goes there, it goes through four steps.
It has to do with the visual processing system. So it's a little bit of ocular science here. There's 130 milliseconds between your eyes seeing something and sending that information to your frontal lobe to be processed. Before it goes there, it goes through four steps.
It has to do with the visual processing system. So it's a little bit of ocular science here. There's 130 milliseconds between your eyes seeing something and sending that information to your frontal lobe to be processed. Before it goes there, it goes through four steps.
So it goes into the eye, through some sort of stem to the back of the brain, to the occidental lobe, and then from there to the front where it's registered in the mind. So there's like, we're actually living in the past in a very micro way at all times. So they think that HPPD is something similar to epilepsy, where, you know, when epileptics, when they see strobe lights, they can have a seizure.
So it goes into the eye, through some sort of stem to the back of the brain, to the occidental lobe, and then from there to the front where it's registered in the mind. So there's like, we're actually living in the past in a very micro way at all times. So they think that HPPD is something similar to epilepsy, where, you know, when epileptics, when they see strobe lights, they can have a seizure.
So it goes into the eye, through some sort of stem to the back of the brain, to the occidental lobe, and then from there to the front where it's registered in the mind. So there's like, we're actually living in the past in a very micro way at all times. So they think that HPPD is something similar to epilepsy, where, you know, when epileptics, when they see strobe lights, they can have a seizure.
I remember the Nintendo issue. So this is something like that where they don't know quite yet because nobody wants to put up the money to help people with this condition. But it's something about the occidental lobe and the visual processing center being basically disinhibited by psychedelics.