I get what you're saying man but honestly.... you can put a tab or a drop on your tongue pretty inconspicuously, I guess it's just a cool way to eat it.
Actually some sick **** a couple of towns over here in the Netherlands, he put an LSD sticker on some unsuspecting dude's back. He went absolutely bananas and ended up having psychotic events even when the high passed because no one told him what happend and he couldn't figure out what was going on. He actually went and talked to multiple shrinks because he thought what he felt and saw during the high was part of real life.
You had fake acid bruh. Prob a research chemical, 25-i or something similar.
Real lysergic acid diethylamide can be absorbed anywhere on the body; this is why people put tabs on their foreheads and put a sweatband over it, or do thumbprints with crystals (the much more expensive alternative). Fake acid REQUIRES that you keep it in your mouth for 30 minutes without swallowing and **** like that.
but fundamentally, with real acid, you dont need to keep it in your mouth so yeah you can eat it. put drops of it on your food and eat it, trip balls later.
Here's some knowledge for y'all. Blotters will always be the way (they can also be vac sealed, mylar sealed & THEN frozen). Plus the presence of water apparently causes the LSD to 'degrade' quicker than usual:
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Would it work if i throw a lsd tab into a glass of water and then drink it? Would other beverages (such as alcohol, orange juice, or whatever) be better? Can i store lsd in this way?**
A: It most certainly will work. LSD dissolves very well in just about any liquid, including water and alcohol, hence the famous stories of electric kool-aid and so forth.
LSD can definitely be stored in solution. For longer term storage, liquid LSD is generally made by dissolving LSD in alcohol. While it will dissolve just fine in water, it will also degrade relatively quickly unless the water is ultra-pure. There are two reasons for this...LSD degrades in the presence of oxygen, and generally speaking, most water is going to contain enough oxygen to cause noticeable degredation. Second, LSD is destroyed on contact with chlorine. Almost all tap water, and even some bottled water will contain some chlorine. Distilled water is the least likely to contain chlorine, but alcohol (of the highest proof available) will cause the least amount of degredation.