Visual twisting
A visual distortion in which portions of the visual field appear to curl, spiral, or rotate around a central axis, ranging from subtle warping at the edges of vision to an all-encompassing vortex that can completely impair the ability to resolve objects.
Description
Visual twisting is a spatial distortion of the visual field in which regions of perceived space appear to be curling, spiraling, or rotating about a central axis or point. Unlike drifting (which involves flowing motion across surfaces) or breathing (which involves rhythmic expansion and contraction), twisting introduces a rotational component — portions of the visual environment seem to be wringing or corkscrew-like in their movement, as though the fabric of visual space itself is being twisted like a towel.
At lower intensities, visual twisting manifests as a subtle warping that may be noticeable primarily in the peripheral vision or when staring at a fixed point. Straight lines may appear to gently curve or bow, and surfaces may seem to ripple in a circular pattern. The distortion is mild enough that objects remain recognizable and depth perception, while slightly impaired, is still largely functional. Many users describe this level as a gentle "swirling" quality that gives the environment a slightly liquid appearance.
At moderate to high intensities, the twisting becomes dramatically more pronounced. Large regions of the visual field may spiral visibly, with objects within those regions stretching and distorting as they are pulled along the rotational flow. At its most extreme, the effect can create the impression of looking into the center of a vortex or whirlpool — the entire visual field rotating inward or outward around the point of focus. This level of intensity can completely obliterate the ability to resolve individual objects or judge spatial relationships, effectively rendering the person visually incapacitated despite their eyes being open and technically functional.
Visual twisting frequently co-occurs with drifting,visual stretching, and geometric hallucinations, as all of these effects involve the same underlying disruption of spatial processing in the visual cortex. It is most commonly induced by high doses ofpsychedelics,dissociatives, anddeliriants, and its intensity scales reliably with dose. While the effect itself is not dangerous, the spatial disorientation it produces can make physical navigation hazardous, and affected individuals should remain seated or lying down in a safe environment.