A bad habit is the worst thing about medicine. The general bad habits of drugs are some common practices caused by faults, no work, no payment, drugs. When you skip many schools, you will be kicked out, so school refusal will not let you down first. If you are kicked out, you may go to college. If the university is excluded, you have a very shy opportunity to get a good job. Your records will look bad when you go to other jobs. In addition, you will not be able to afford rent, insurance, bills, foodstuffs, medicines themselves, and the fees you have to pay. When this happens, you will lose and pay all the fees you pay.
I am a psychedelic medicine myself, so I have never had a bad experience. The idea of 'bad travel' is a little myth - in this case you are a variable. Some people are afraid of LSD as they are afraid of experiencing 'bad trip'. But in fact, they are afraid of themselves. LSD allows you to look into the bonnet of the brain, and some people are afraid to do so. Even if you are having a stressful period of your life and experiencing intense or traumatic traveling you feel that you will keep this feeling away from your mind when you fall down I guess. For those trying LSD, one suggestion I give is to turn off your phone - you do not know what kind of phone you get when you stumble
I did some bad drug travels at Ativan, and I know exactly what Chris Cornell is experiencing. When Ativan opens you, it is actually a bad drug travel lasting 2-4 hours of pure drug-induced craziness you want to die. I did not exaggerate, I never abused Ativan, and I did not exceed my prescription. I rarely drink high-dose medications and cut the smallest 5 mg tablet into micropills. I took 3-4 mg, and I met people who regularly use 7-10 mg. I do not know the amount of Cornell, but it is not so important for benzene, as trace dosing may cause side effects.