There are moments when the mind loosens its grip on the familiar—when the edges of the world soften, and memory, usually tucked into careful drawers, spills into open air. For centuries, cultures have described such states as spiritual crossings or visionary passages. Today, neuroscience approaches them with quieter language but similar wonder. Emerging research suggests that psychedelics may not merely distort perception—they may briefly quiet the brain’s sense of constructed reality, allowing deeper layers of memory and emotion to surface.
In laboratories from Baltimore to London, scientists are studying how compounds such as psilocybin and LSD influence neural circuits. At institutions like and , researchers have observed that psychedelics reduce activity in the brain’s “default mode network,” a system associated with self-reflection, identity, and our ongoing narrative about who we are. When this network quiets, the rigid boundaries of self can temporarily dissolve. The brain, in a sense, stops rehearsing its usual script.
This phenomenon has led some scientists to describe psychedelics as creating a state of “relaxed beliefs.” The brain becomes less anchored to its habitual predictions about the world. Under ordinary conditions, perception is tightly controlled—our minds filter experience through expectations built from years of memory. Psychedelics appear to loosen that filter. In doing so, they may open access to long-buried memories or repressed emotional material, not by adding something new, but by subtracting the constraints that normally hold it back.
Functional MRI studies show increased communication between brain regions that do not typically interact. Areas governing emotion, memory, and sensory processing begin exchanging signals in novel patterns. Researchers propose that this heightened connectivity may explain why individuals often report vivid autobiographical memories, emotional breakthroughs, or a renewed sense of perspective during guided psychedelic therapy sessions.
Importantly, scientists caution that the phrase “shutting down reality” is metaphorical rather than literal. The brain does not stop functioning; rather, it shifts modes. The predictive frameworks that help us navigate daily life become less dominant. In therapeutic settings—particularly for conditions such as depression, PTSD, or addiction—this temporary flexibility may allow patients to revisit painful memories without the same defensive rigidity, potentially reshaping how those memories are stored and interpreted.
Clinical trials over the past decade have reported promising outcomes. Participants receiving supervised psychedelic therapy often describe confronting difficult experiences with unexpected clarity or compassion. Researchers emphasize that such effects are highly context-dependent. Set, setting, psychological preparation, and professional guidance play crucial roles in determining outcomes.
Still, the science remains young. While early findings are compelling, long-term safety, optimal dosing, and broader applications require continued study. Regulatory frameworks are evolving cautiously, reflecting both the potential and the complexity of these substances.
What seems increasingly clear is that psychedelics may work not by inventing new realities, but by temporarily loosening the one we habitually maintain. In that softened state, memory can move more freely, and perspective can shift in ways that feel, to many, transformative.
For now, research continues in controlled clinical environments, with expanding trials and ongoing peer-reviewed publications. As scientists refine their understanding, psychedelics remain a subject of careful investigation—situated between ancient tradition and modern neuroscience, between perception and memory, between what we know and what we are just beginning to understand.
AI Image Disclaimer: Illustrations were produced with AI and serve as conceptual depictions.
Sources:
Reuters
BBC News
The New York Times
Nature
Scientific American

