Two months ago, both she and Laurent ate an ounce of psilocybin mushrooms, because a friend of Sister’s happened to acquire a hefty enough amount to distribute to persons of interest. Sister presented the shrooms in a Chinese take-out box to the cook whose instinct was to then sauté them in a butter sauce to go with the aged steaks for later that evening. Sister stopped the cook from ruining the psychedelic compounds by suggesting, instead, that she shave the mushrooms on top of a lighter snack, like toasted baguettes with bruschetta, or avocado halves filled with some feta, mint, and peas, but nothing too heavy. Unless the cook didn’t mind making a fondue for the siblings? Melted cheese would cover the foul bitterness well. The cook was confused as to why Charlotte and Laurent would want so much of the mushrooms shaved on any dish. They did not produce a pleasant aroma and their look suggested that they would spoil any food, but the cook nodded and insisted that she’d take care of it—“not to worry.” No steak that night. Brother and Sister sat for the first forty minutes after ingestion hugging their stomachs. Every now and then Laurent would curl on the floor and rock back and forth, grinning, trying to mask the discomfort. Sister took long breaths and kept saying aloud, “just got to pace ourselves,” to reassure both of them during the anxious climb up to their trip. “Don’t throw up, whatever you do, Laurent. Keep it in as best you can.” Then, both of them to one another throughout the next thirty minutes, “I think I feel it. Yeah, I definitely feel it.”
It was four hours into this trip that Charlotte had a psychotic episode prompting extreme, crippling anxiety. Trying to conceal the escalating panic, Charlotte left her brother who was in thrall to a display of colorful lights on his laptop’s screen in the living room, as gracefully as possible into her own room. Believing she was finally out of reach from his ears, she then quickly closed the door and sunk to the ground. The feeling was foreign to her, even with her having had previous trips with shrooms and acid. She knew that she needed to conduct breathing exercises, but she only knew what she did from film, such as taking in a big breath and holding it in before letting it out in a steady, sustained exhalation through her lips and then repeating this act enough times until she could feel the ground and take some comfort in being bound to and present in the room. This would work for a few minutes, but then the ground would start swirling in various viscous patterns. Her vision would keep turning up to a particular corner where the walls and and ceiling met, tuning in to its heavy music, its volume controlled by a remote device she could not grasp with her sweaty hands. Strands of hair stuck to the back of her dry mouth and each time she spat out what she felt, the ground would cough, outline her body and during these fits the clamor from the corner which held her eyes locked would synchronize its beats into loud percussive shocks. It was during this tumultuous scene that she became convinced that she had to be the worst person in the world—that she should call her parents to confess her crimes and failures as a human being and that they should immediately have her committed, either to prison or a hospital. It didn’t matter which. Would they have believe her? Could they apprehend the meaning of all of this? Of course moments would break this episode when she would remember that (most) all of this was induced by the shrooms and was not, indeed, factual.
Luckily Laurent finally stepped in to see what was happening. Charlotte looked up and him, grinned wryly and grunted out, “I’m sorry, I really needed this. I’m just not feeling well is all.” Laurent walked up slowly with a smile that he thought would be most soothing, the type of smile that is both soft and sad. Sister was pissed at herself, because this was not how she reacted to all of the past times she shroomed.
Laurent attempted cheerfulness, “You’re missing all the fun out here!” Charlotte still didn’t want to let on how utterly miserable and hopeless she had been feeling, so she just responded that she had been a little overwhelmed. Brother told her about how entertaining it was just now, looking at his reflection in the bathroom mirror while flicking the light switch off and on. “It was so wild. Your face looks crazy when you do it. You wanna try?” Sister said perhaps in a little bit—that she was still catching her breath, but that she was doing fine and there was no need to worry, then “I’m sorry, man. I’m sorry.” Brother did not understand why she was apologizing. She was apologizing for her own life, for what she was and could not be. Laurent decided to leave her alone for a few minutes and she eventually coaxed herself out of the nasty trapping to join Brother in the bathroom.
“Look, Charlotte.” Brother demonstrated to her what he had meant earlier in her bedroom. “Look at your face.” The way the highlights and shadows shifted with each switch was strange and bewitching. At times her face lost dimension and was only a flat series of alien features, beautiful, disorderly, and then oafish with the way her body’s silhouette slowly caught up to its maker under the light. She looked at Brother’s face in the mirror and observed the same effect, but he seemed more pleasantly amused. Hours later Charlotte couldn’t help wondering still if she was a total disappointment to everyone in her life. Perhaps she really was hideous, after all. The next day things connected organically, yet also nonsensically. She was alright, but to where had the terror dissipated? Her heart had been swollen and now everything was resolved, but how? There was a new determination that she would make something of herself. I’m going to be a successful person. No, I am successful. The glowing aftermath and, as she had put it herself, the “cosmic awareness” was real and it was kind. The cliche manifested; the next day after the trip was the remedy she needed. In no time at all Charlotte was back in love with herself, with Laurent, who had not stopped loving himself the night before. “I feel very zen,” she said to Laurent. Brother nodded to her and affirmed this new emotional swing, “Exactly, everything just makes sense now. Everything is so beautiful and grand.” Charlotte sighed deeply, “I kept apologizing to you, last night.” Brother said yes and that he couldn’t figure out why she was so sorry.
Charlotte couldn’t articulate the reason, either, but apparently she had labored through her anxiety attack under the belief that she was spilling out all of her darkest secrets to her brother, everything terrible that even he had not known about her. When Charlotte admitted she was operating under this gut-wrenching feeling of having been exposed, of being shamed, he replied that she had barely said a word once she left to her room to find relief. Sister couldn’t believe it. She had to have spilled out everything, whatever that meant. Brother, again, said no. Charlotte seemed to lighten up a bit, “I thought you knew I was the worst person ever, that I was really evil.” Laurent laughed and taunted her playfully, “well, aren’t you?”