Scenarios and plots
Scenarios and plots are the narrative structures that emerge within hallucinatory states — coherent or surreal storylines involving autonomous characters, unfolding events, and immersive settings that can feel as real and consequential as waking life.
Description
Scenarios and plots represent the narrative dimension of hallucination — the point at which isolated visual, auditory, and tactile hallucinations coalesce into structured experiences with characters, events, settings, and storylines. Rather than passively observing geometric patterns or disconnected imagery, the person finds themselves immersed in experiences that unfold with the coherence (or deliberate incoherence) of dreams, films, or lived reality. You are not just seeing things; you are in a story, and that story is happening to you.
The range of possible content is essentially unlimited, much like the range of possible dreams. People report scenarios spanning the mundane to the cosmic: reliving childhood birthday parties with uncanny fidelity, attending alien council meetings, wandering through cities that don't exist on any map, being tried before cosmic judges, meeting deceased relatives who deliver messages, participating in creation myths, or simply having extended conversations with hallucinatory people who behave with convincing autonomy and personality. The scenarios may follow logical narrative progression — one event causes the next in comprehensible sequence — or they may be utterly surreal, with scenes shifting abruptly, settings morphing mid-sentence, and story logic operating by dream rules where contradiction goes unnoticed.
A critical feature of scenarios and plots is the degree of belief the person holds in them. At lower intensities, the person maintains some awareness that what they're experiencing is hallucinatory — an interesting movie playing behind their eyelids. At higher intensities, the line between hallucination and reality dissolves entirely. The person accepts the scenario as genuinely occurring, forgets they've taken a substance, and responds emotionally and sometimes physically to hallucinatory events. This is the state that produces the most vivid and transformative experiences, but also the most potentially distressing ones, as the person has no psychological buffer between themselves and whatever the hallucination presents.
Time perception within scenarios and plots can become radically distorted. Twenty seconds of clock time may encompass what feels like hours of hallucinatory narrative. Some people report living entire lifetimes within minutes — growing up, having children, growing old — only to "wake up" and find that their real life is still where they left it. These time-dilated scenarios are among the most psychologically impactful hallucinatory experiences reported.
Scenarios and plots are most commonly produced at high doses of psychedelics, dissociatives, and deliriants. They are a hallmark of DMT breakthroughs, high-dose psilocybin journeys, ketamine holes, and deliriant delirium. They can also occur during extended sleep deprivation, lucid dreaming, and as a feature of certain hypnagogic and hypnopompic states at the boundary of sleep.