Scintillating scotoma — a visual aura phenomenon Wikimedia Commons
Scintillating scotoma — a visual aura phenomenon Wikimedia Commons
Scintillating scotoma — a visual aura phenomenon Wikimedia Commons
Halos or glowing fields of light appear to surround objects, people, and light sources. These luminous borders shimmer with color and pulsate, giving everything a radiant quality.
Visual auras manifest as visible fields or halos of colored light that appear to emanate from the boundaries of objects, particularly from people and organic forms. They typically present as a soft, diffuse glow extending several inches to a foot outward from the edges of an object or person, with colors that may be vivid and saturated or soft and ethereal. Auras around people often appear in shifting, dynamic colors, while those around objects tend to be more static. The experience is characteristically described as seeing a luminous "energy field" surrounding things, and it can feel deeply significant — many users interpret the colors and qualities of auras as carrying emotional or spiritual meaning.
At threshold levels, visual auras appear as a subtle brightening or color tinge at the edges of objects — a faint glow that is easy to dismiss as an artifact of lighting or afterimage. At moderate intensities, distinct colored halos become visible around people and prominent objects: clear outlines of blue, gold, purple, or green light surrounding forms like a painted glow. At high intensities, auras become vivid, multi-layered, and dynamic — they may shift colors, pulse with apparent energy, and extend significantly outward from objects. Everything in the visual field may appear to be surrounded by luminous color.
Auras vary in their qualities and can be characterized along several dimensions. Color ranges from single, uniform hues to complex, shifting spectra.Extent varies from a thin outline barely wider than an edge highlight to a broad, expansive field extending well beyond the object.Dynamics range from static, steady glows to pulsing, flowing, or shifting patterns of luminosity.Opacity varies from barely perceptible, transparent overlays to vivid, opaque fields of light. The specific colors perceived may be influenced by the emotional state of the user, the lighting conditions, and the particular substance. Some users report a consistent mapping of colors to specific emotions or qualities.
The mechanism likely involves a combination of optical and neural effects. At the optical level, pupil dilation can cause increased chromatic aberration, creating genuine colored fringes around high-contrast edges. At the neural level, psychedelics enhance the activity of edge-detection neurons in V1 and V2, causing exaggerated edge responses that manifest as perceived halos. Cross-activation between color-processing areas (V4) and edge-detection circuits may assign colors to these enhanced edge signals. The phenomenon may also relate to after-image effects — when fixating on an object, the complementary color afterimage can create a glowing halo around its edges.
Visual auras are commonly reported with serotonergic psychedelics, particularly LSD, psilocybin, and mescaline. They are also frequently associated with MDMA, where they often take on warm, golden hues that complement the empathogenic emotional state. The 2C-x family, particularly 2C-B, is known for producing vivid auras. Cannabis can produce subtle auras, especially in combination with psychedelics. Aura-like phenomena are also reported during meditation, intense emotional states, and migraine episodes (where they have a distinct neurological mechanism). Some dissociatives produce aura effects at lower doses.
Visual auras are entirely benign from a safety perspective. They are generally experienced as beautiful and meaningful. However, the spiritual or mystical significance that users sometimes attribute to auras can reinforce magical thinking or lead to unfounded beliefs about perceiving others' "energy fields" or emotional states. It is worth noting that visual auras can also occur as a symptom of migraine with aura, epileptic aura, or other neurological conditions — if aura-like visual phenomena occur outside the context of substance use, medical evaluation is recommended to rule out underlying conditions.
Faint brightening or color tinge at object edges. A subtle glow around people or objects that could be attributed to lighting conditions.
Distinct colored outlines visible around people and prominent objects. Soft halos of blue, gold, or purple that are clearly perceptible.
Vivid, colored auras surrounding people and objects. Multiple colors may be visible, and the glow extends noticeably outward from edges.
Brilliant, dynamic auras with shifting colors that extend significantly from objects. Everything appears surrounded by vivid luminous fields. Deeply beautiful.
Intensely vivid, multi-layered auras around everything in the visual field. Colors pulse, shift, and flow. The environment appears bathed in radiant, meaningful light.