Hi dear one, our thoughts ok this is truly we would be extremely cautious with even very low doses of Lucy or mushies in someone who has bipolar disorder and is currently dealing with tardive dyskinesia from antipsychotics.
While some people report benefits from microdosing, bipolar disorder is one of the conditions where the risk profile changes significantly. The concern isn’t really the dose itself, but that psychs can sometimes destabilize mood and trigger hypomania, mania, or psychosis in susceptible people. There are low documented cases where this has happened even at relatively low doses.
If I were exploring alternatives, I would personally look first at things with a lower psychiatric risk profile such as CBD-dominant products, reviewing medication options with a movement-disorder specialist, optimizing sleep and nervous system regulation, and possibly functional mushrooms such as Lion’s Mane or Reishi. We have a beautiful CBD only oil.
High-THC products and RSO would concern me more than CBD because THC can be activating and may worsen mood instability in some people with bipolar disorder.
The fact that you’re experiencing tardive dyskinesia is absolutely something to take seriously, but I wouldn’t assume that psychs are a safer substitute for antipsychotics. In someone with bipolar disorder, the goal is usually to improve the movement symptoms without accidentally triggering a manic episode that could be even more disruptive.
If you are interested in our psychs, I’d suggest discussing it with your psychologist/psychiatrist who understands both your severity of bipolar disorder and psych medicine before experimenting, even with microdoses. Much Love xx
While some people report benefits from microdosing, bipolar disorder is one of the conditions where the risk profile changes significantly. The concern isn’t really the dose itself, but that psychs can sometimes destabilize mood and trigger hypomania, mania, or psychosis in susceptible people. There are low documented cases where this has happened even at relatively low doses.
If I were exploring alternatives, I would personally look first at things with a lower psychiatric risk profile such as CBD-dominant products, reviewing medication options with a movement-disorder specialist, optimizing sleep and nervous system regulation, and possibly functional mushrooms such as Lion’s Mane or Reishi. We have a beautiful CBD only oil.
High-THC products and RSO would concern me more than CBD because THC can be activating and may worsen mood instability in some people with bipolar disorder.
The fact that you’re experiencing tardive dyskinesia is absolutely something to take seriously, but I wouldn’t assume that psychs are a safer substitute for antipsychotics. In someone with bipolar disorder, the goal is usually to improve the movement symptoms without accidentally triggering a manic episode that could be even more disruptive.
If you are interested in our psychs, I’d suggest discussing it with your psychologist/psychiatrist who understands both your severity of bipolar disorder and psych medicine before experimenting, even with microdoses. Much Love xx

