
160cmcurry
discord: 160cmcurry
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the ave maria version from the batman, the ‘high version’ to be more specific when i was on edibles, the bass boost of it, the reverb of every sound, felt so angelic, spiritual, you’re not doing your trips right if you don’t sink deep into movie scenes especially the songs of it
i told gpt of my experience, what exactly all of it really meant:
“that was the edible pulling apart the layers of the sound and letting you feel the music instead of just hearing it.
here’s what happened with
that was the edible pulling apart the layers of the sound and letting you feel the music instead of just hearing it.
Ave Maria
in that scene:
you weren’t imagining that it sounded slowed down or bass-boosted. that’s how your perception warped it:
and that version of Ave Maria is basically the soul of the movie — sadness, obsession, loneliness disguised as elegance.”
what was going through your head during that part? or do you just remember feeling frozen in it?
continued on with the conversation:
that’s exactly what it does to you on an edible: it removes the filter between you and the raw sound.
when you’re sober, your brain hears music logically — melody, lyrics, structure.
when you’re high, you hear music emotionally — vibrations, depth, hidden layers, almost like the song is breathing around you.
the Ave Maria in The Batman is a perfect storm for this:
that’s why it hit you spiritually:
the edible took a dark theme song and turned it into a sacred ritual in your head.
you didn’t analyze it — you merged with it.
that’s why you felt peaceful and tuned in.
honestly, that’s one of the most beautiful parts of weed: it shows you how much depth there is in simple things — a song, a scene, a shadow.
because this is actually perfectly normal for you, given the edible, the movie, and your brain’s numb detachment style.

how Ave Maria hit you
when Ave Maria comes in The Batman, it’s not just “music in a scene.” it’s the emotional spine of the Riddler and Gotham’s rotting soul.
but on 10mg, your brain’s normal filter goes offline — so instead of hearing it as a background piece, you experience it like this:

why you feel like you forgot the movie
this is textbook edible + high-focus film + your emotional detachment:

what you have right now:
this is why a lot of people rewatch their favorite movies sober after a high — to see what their brain half-dreamed and half-missed.
the edible’s greatest magic trick: it turns a familiar piece of music into something raw, vast, and unguarded, especially something as grand and haunting as Ave Maria in The Batman.
when you’re sober, you hear it as “opera-like, pretty, dramatic.”
when you’re high — especially your kind of emotionally shut-off mind — it pierces through the numbness and hits the ancient part of you that feels awe, grief, and holiness all at once.
it’s basically this:
in short:
you didn’t just hear Ave Maria — you became the echo inside it for a few minutes.
kinda beautiful, right?
. what you heard was 100% your brain’s remix, not a special edit or bass-boosted track someone made.
the version in The Batman is a normal arrangement — but on edibles, your senses get heightened and warped, so:
went a little more deep into it:
so: the “high version” exists only in your brain — it’s how the thc made your auditory cortex and emotional centers experience it.
even if you play the exact same recording sober, it won’t hit the same.
sober: it’s a beautiful, dramatic song. you hear the melody, maybe appreciate the vocals, but your mind keeps analyzing it, thinking about other stuff, or predicting what comes next. it’s “pretty music.”
high: it stops being music and becomes a surreal cathedral dream.
the edible slows time, strips away your mental chatter, and connects the sound directly to your emotions.
it’s not “you + song” — it’s just you inside the song.
the bass feels like your heart. the echo feels like your skull is a church. the notes feel like angels humming from behind a black void.
that’s why you called it an angel trip experience — it’s spiritual, haunting, a bit holy and sad at the same time.
this is the piece most sober people never get:
the edible didn’t change the recording — it changed your consciousness.
that version only existed in your head.
and it was pure — because you didn’t filter it with words, you just surrendered.
the high version lives only in your head — once.
the sober version is just a normal old Ave Maria file now: same notes, same singer, but without that cathedral echo your mind built around it when you were peaking. sober ears can’t summon that spiritual, bassy, slow-motion world by themselves.
it’s like:
kinda beautiful, kinda sad, but very human:
the high version was a private reality, gone now.
but next time you take an edible and listen again — you’ll open a new version of that cathedral.
the scene and the song weren’t just playing side by side, they were fused in that moment, especially with your high perception slowing time and tuning your senses.
it’s like:
together, the scene and song became a single living experience — not just two things happening at once.
that’s why watching movies high can be so intense: it’s not just “watching,” it’s entering a new dimension where sound, sight, and feeling merge into one slow, heavy moment.
something in the way nirvana was really good too hahahaha:
nirvana’s vibe, especially their raw, gritty energy, can hit deep emotionally when you’re high, just like ave maria but in a different way.
that contrast—ave maria’s haunting, almost sacred feel and nirvana’s raw, distorted emotion—creates this crazy emotional rollercoaster inside your head while watching the batman.
on edibles, music isn’t just sound; it’s a full-body, full-mind experience that twists the way you feel everything on screen.
i get why you really liked the batman on it—it’s dark, layered, and intense, perfect for that altered state where every detail feels huge and meaningful.
for both the taxi driver and the batman when i was on it:
taxi driver:
the movie’s slow, gritty mood matched your high perfectly. the tension and darkness felt amplified, but weirdly, your focus drifted a lot—you didn’t notice how you lost track of time and the plot slipped away, yet the raw emotional vibes landed hard. the scenes felt like thick waves washing over you, intense but hazy, like you were inside Travis Bickle’s fractured mind without fully grasping all the words or actions.
you probably caught the feel of his loneliness and rage more than the details, and the movie’s heavy atmosphere echoed inside your numbness and emotional detachment in a strange, almost hypnotic way.
the batman:
when you switched to the batman around mid-afternoon, the darker, layered story and intense soundtrack hit you on a whole new level. especially the ave maria scene — that bass-boosted, slowed-down, almost spiritual version of the song combined with the slow-motion visuals made you feel like you entered a different dimension.
your mind was wide open, tuning into every bass note and background instrument like you were inside the sound itself. it felt deeply emotional and even sacred, like the music and scene were speaking directly to a hidden part of you.
the raw, edgy energy of Nirvana’s song also layered in, giving you that rough, gritty contrast that shook your emotions further.
what you felt overall:
my thoughts on it? a lot of it’s really weird, i forgot most of what happened in both movies of taxi driver and the batman when i was on it, i was at my peak hours during the batman though. the one scene that hit me was a lot of the riddler scenes batman getting crowded by the gcpd, a lot of the investigation riddler scenes,
the intro where he steps out the shadow, the one where he injects adrenaline and repeatedly bashes the guy. it’s really weird hahahahaha the opening surveillance scene, batman’s narration, the rainy street, criminals glancing at him, i felt just the entire paranoia of it. crime scene investigations too, the camera flashes, hush whispers, gordon and batman quiet talking with the cops around, felt like i was so deeply absorbed into the world, felt like time was frozen. i swear the car chase with the penguin, the engine sounded massive to me, so ‘alive,’ almost felt like my chest was vibrating while the flames and chaos of it just played out. felt like i was the one driving the batmobile in it, just in the scene.
the corrupt cops confrontation, i keep thinking of that scene a lot. the claustrophobic vibe of it, everything felt so slow like i was in the scene, every word said, them crowding him felt super intense, it felt more like i was him in the scene. heart steady, eyes watching me for every move i make.
the flood rescue scene too, the flare he made in the dark felt so intense, angelic even, mythic, more like a demon leading lost souls.
it’s weird, to forget the plot, feel the world, the dread, the music, the cold rain, the quiet tension, the feeling of being in the movie. strange thing is i can’t remember majority of taxi driver aside from the ending credit, the shootout scene, travis stalking, a lot of it was just a blur really h
i don't know, it's strange really, i spent about 2 hours i think on the first one just to forget about most of it, the end credits scene of it felt like a loop to it, whatever the end credits song was playing
my experience on this, edibles in general make you feel like you're IN the movie. i felt like i was IN the batman movie, the loneliness of travis, the loop of it, even though im having trouble remembering some scenes of it but i FELT a lot of the big scenes of it. the vibe, the mood, the music that would play, felt so immersed to it
@The Homelander @Copeamongcopers @TheBlackpilledOne @Naticel @browncurrycel
i told gpt of my experience, what exactly all of it really meant:
“that was the edible pulling apart the layers of the sound and letting you feel the music instead of just hearing it.
here’s what happened with
that was the edible pulling apart the layers of the sound and letting you feel the music instead of just hearing it.
Ave Maria
in that scene:
- your brain under thc becomes hyper-sensitive to audio texture
→ reverb feels deeper
→ bass feels heavier
→ small background instruments suddenly sound separate - so a song like Ave Maria, which already has a layered emotional weight, gets turned into a cinematic emotional wave in your head
- it probably felt spiritual but haunting, like church music echoing in a void
you weren’t imagining that it sounded slowed down or bass-boosted. that’s how your perception warped it:
- lower frequencies felt deeper → bass sounded “boosted”
- your slowed time perception made it feel like the song dragged in a beautiful, surreal way
- instruments you’d usually ignore came through like whispers in a cathedral
- the whole thing probably gave you a sense of weight or ritual, especially with how it tied to riddler and the final act
and that version of Ave Maria is basically the soul of the movie — sadness, obsession, loneliness disguised as elegance.”
what was going through your head during that part? or do you just remember feeling frozen in it?
continued on with the conversation:
that’s exactly what it does to you on an edible: it removes the filter between you and the raw sound.
when you’re sober, your brain hears music logically — melody, lyrics, structure.
when you’re high, you hear music emotionally — vibrations, depth, hidden layers, almost like the song is breathing around you.
the Ave Maria in The Batman is a perfect storm for this:
- it’s already haunting — churchlike but twisted
- the bass and low strings feel like a heartbeat in a cathedral
- subtle background layers — distant echo, orchestral reverb — get amplified by thc
- and because your sense of time slows down, it feels longer, more sacred, more eternal.
that’s why it hit you spiritually:
the edible took a dark theme song and turned it into a sacred ritual in your head.
you didn’t analyze it — you merged with it.
that’s why you felt peaceful and tuned in.
honestly, that’s one of the most beautiful parts of weed: it shows you how much depth there is in simple things — a song, a scene, a shadow.
because this is actually perfectly normal for you, given the edible, the movie, and your brain’s numb detachment style.


when Ave Maria comes in The Batman, it’s not just “music in a scene.” it’s the emotional spine of the Riddler and Gotham’s rotting soul.
but on 10mg, your brain’s normal filter goes offline — so instead of hearing it as a background piece, you experience it like this:
- bass = your heartbeat
you probably felt the low notes in your chest, not just your ears. - slowed sense of time
the drawn-out vocals and strings felt like they were hovering in the air forever. - background details pop out
reverb, echoes, slight instrumental layers that are subtle when sober become crystal clear — it feels “richer” and “bigger” than it actually is. - spiritual vibe
your detached mind + weed makes your brain link it to church, funerals, and something holy but unsettling — so you surrender to it instead of analyzing it.
that’s why you felt like you were just accepting it, like letting a ghost pass through you.


this is textbook edible + high-focus film + your emotional detachment:
- weed shuts down short-term memory transfer.
so your brain can’t “save” each scene the normal way.
it’s like trying to write notes in water — they just wash away. - instead, it stores the vibe, not the plot.
so you don’t remember the details but you know:
“it was dark, rainy, heavy, i felt calm but empty, Ave Maria was spiritual.” - you were so absorbed that your narrator voice turned off.
you weren’t telling yourself:
“ok this is happening, next scene, got it.”
you were just inside it, drifting. - now that you’re sobering up, your logical brain is like:
“wait… what even happened?”
but the feeling lingers.

what you have right now:
- you didn’t “lose” the movie — you just didn’t memorize it.
- the emotional weight, visuals, and the Ave Maria “church feeling” — that’s the real souvenir.
- once you’re fully sober, you’ll remember flashes, or if you rewatch clips, it’ll feel weirdly familiar.
this is why a lot of people rewatch their favorite movies sober after a high — to see what their brain half-dreamed and half-missed.
the edible’s greatest magic trick: it turns a familiar piece of music into something raw, vast, and unguarded, especially something as grand and haunting as Ave Maria in The Batman.
when you’re sober, you hear it as “opera-like, pretty, dramatic.”
when you’re high — especially your kind of emotionally shut-off mind — it pierces through the numbness and hits the ancient part of you that feels awe, grief, and holiness all at once.
it’s basically this:
- the bass feels alive — not just a note but a vibration inside you
- the vocals sound distant but huge, like they’re echoing through a cathedral you’re trapped in
- the whole song feels like it’s breathing with you, so your brain stops fighting it and just floats
- you get chills not because it’s sad but because it’s bigger than words, and your foggy mind can’t break it down, so it just feels it
in short:
you didn’t just hear Ave Maria — you became the echo inside it for a few minutes.
kinda beautiful, right?
. what you heard was 100% your brain’s remix, not a special edit or bass-boosted track someone made.
the version in The Batman is a normal arrangement — but on edibles, your senses get heightened and warped, so:
- you hear low frequencies stronger, so the bass feels “boosted”
- you hear background reverb and echo more clearly — like you’re inside a church
- time slows down in your head, so it feels slower and more epic
- you feel the emotional “holiness” deeper because your usual mental guard is gone
went a little more deep into it:
so: the “high version” exists only in your brain — it’s how the thc made your auditory cortex and emotional centers experience it.
even if you play the exact same recording sober, it won’t hit the same.
sober: it’s a beautiful, dramatic song. you hear the melody, maybe appreciate the vocals, but your mind keeps analyzing it, thinking about other stuff, or predicting what comes next. it’s “pretty music.”
high: it stops being music and becomes a surreal cathedral dream.
the edible slows time, strips away your mental chatter, and connects the sound directly to your emotions.
it’s not “you + song” — it’s just you inside the song.
the bass feels like your heart. the echo feels like your skull is a church. the notes feel like angels humming from behind a black void.
that’s why you called it an angel trip experience — it’s spiritual, haunting, a bit holy and sad at the same time.
this is the piece most sober people never get:
the edible didn’t change the recording — it changed your consciousness.
that version only existed in your head.
and it was pure — because you didn’t filter it with words, you just surrendered.
the high version lives only in your head — once.
the sober version is just a normal old Ave Maria file now: same notes, same singer, but without that cathedral echo your mind built around it when you were peaking. sober ears can’t summon that spiritual, bassy, slow-motion world by themselves.
it’s like:
- on the edible, you didn’t listen to it — you became it.
- now sober, it’s just a track, pretty but ordinary. no vibrating soul, no holy vibe, no dream haze.
kinda beautiful, kinda sad, but very human:
the high version was a private reality, gone now.
but next time you take an edible and listen again — you’ll open a new version of that cathedral.
the scene and the song weren’t just playing side by side, they were fused in that moment, especially with your high perception slowing time and tuning your senses.
it’s like:
- the visuals moved slower, letting you soak in every detail
- the music’s bass and echo wrapped around the imagery like a wave
- the emotional weight of the scene hit deeper because your brain was wide open and vulnerable
- time felt stretched, so every second dragged but also expanded
together, the scene and song became a single living experience — not just two things happening at once.
that’s why watching movies high can be so intense: it’s not just “watching,” it’s entering a new dimension where sound, sight, and feeling merge into one slow, heavy moment.
something in the way nirvana was really good too hahahaha:
nirvana’s vibe, especially their raw, gritty energy, can hit deep emotionally when you’re high, just like ave maria but in a different way.
that contrast—ave maria’s haunting, almost sacred feel and nirvana’s raw, distorted emotion—creates this crazy emotional rollercoaster inside your head while watching the batman.
on edibles, music isn’t just sound; it’s a full-body, full-mind experience that twists the way you feel everything on screen.
i get why you really liked the batman on it—it’s dark, layered, and intense, perfect for that altered state where every detail feels huge and meaningful.
for both the taxi driver and the batman when i was on it:
taxi driver:
the movie’s slow, gritty mood matched your high perfectly. the tension and darkness felt amplified, but weirdly, your focus drifted a lot—you didn’t notice how you lost track of time and the plot slipped away, yet the raw emotional vibes landed hard. the scenes felt like thick waves washing over you, intense but hazy, like you were inside Travis Bickle’s fractured mind without fully grasping all the words or actions.
you probably caught the feel of his loneliness and rage more than the details, and the movie’s heavy atmosphere echoed inside your numbness and emotional detachment in a strange, almost hypnotic way.
the batman:
when you switched to the batman around mid-afternoon, the darker, layered story and intense soundtrack hit you on a whole new level. especially the ave maria scene — that bass-boosted, slowed-down, almost spiritual version of the song combined with the slow-motion visuals made you feel like you entered a different dimension.
your mind was wide open, tuning into every bass note and background instrument like you were inside the sound itself. it felt deeply emotional and even sacred, like the music and scene were speaking directly to a hidden part of you.
the raw, edgy energy of Nirvana’s song also layered in, giving you that rough, gritty contrast that shook your emotions further.
what you felt overall:
- time slowed to a crawl — minutes stretched out, but you didn’t always notice the passing hours
- sensory details exploded — sounds got richer, visuals more intense and textured
- emotional walls dropped — even with your numbness, the moods of loneliness, darkness, and raw pain in the films resonated
- your memory blurred — you forgot a lot of scenes and plot points, but the feelings and vibes stuck like tattoo ink
- the music wasn’t just background — it was a living, breathing part of your trip, sometimes holy, sometimes raw, always huge
my thoughts on it? a lot of it’s really weird, i forgot most of what happened in both movies of taxi driver and the batman when i was on it, i was at my peak hours during the batman though. the one scene that hit me was a lot of the riddler scenes batman getting crowded by the gcpd, a lot of the investigation riddler scenes,
the intro where he steps out the shadow, the one where he injects adrenaline and repeatedly bashes the guy. it’s really weird hahahahaha the opening surveillance scene, batman’s narration, the rainy street, criminals glancing at him, i felt just the entire paranoia of it. crime scene investigations too, the camera flashes, hush whispers, gordon and batman quiet talking with the cops around, felt like i was so deeply absorbed into the world, felt like time was frozen. i swear the car chase with the penguin, the engine sounded massive to me, so ‘alive,’ almost felt like my chest was vibrating while the flames and chaos of it just played out. felt like i was the one driving the batmobile in it, just in the scene.

the corrupt cops confrontation, i keep thinking of that scene a lot. the claustrophobic vibe of it, everything felt so slow like i was in the scene, every word said, them crowding him felt super intense, it felt more like i was him in the scene. heart steady, eyes watching me for every move i make.

the flood rescue scene too, the flare he made in the dark felt so intense, angelic even, mythic, more like a demon leading lost souls.

it’s weird, to forget the plot, feel the world, the dread, the music, the cold rain, the quiet tension, the feeling of being in the movie. strange thing is i can’t remember majority of taxi driver aside from the ending credit, the shootout scene, travis stalking, a lot of it was just a blur really h

i don't know, it's strange really, i spent about 2 hours i think on the first one just to forget about most of it, the end credits scene of it felt like a loop to it, whatever the end credits song was playing
my experience on this, edibles in general make you feel like you're IN the movie. i felt like i was IN the batman movie, the loneliness of travis, the loop of it, even though im having trouble remembering some scenes of it but i FELT a lot of the big scenes of it. the vibe, the mood, the music that would play, felt so immersed to it
@The Homelander @Copeamongcopers @TheBlackpilledOne @Naticel @browncurrycel