Does Psilocybin Awaken the Right Side of the Brain? What Science (and Experience) Suggests
Imagine this: you’re halfway through a magic mushroom trip, sitting quietly outside, and suddenly the world feels different. Words seem unnecessary. The sky vibrates with color. Music isnāt just something you hear ā it becomes everything. The usual mental chatter quiets, and a deep sense of presence settles in. Youāre not thinking about the moment. Youāre in it.
For many people, this kind of experience feels like the brain has shifted gears. The logical, planning mind steps aside, and something more intuitive, emotional, and symbolic takes over. Itās a sensation often described as the right-side of the brain “waking up” while the left side takes a step back from running the show. But is that just poetic language? Or is there real neuroscience behind it?
Letās explore whatās really going on in the brain during a psilocybin experience, and why it might feel like a whole new way of thinking comes alive.

Left Brain vs. Right Brain: Whatās Actually True?
First, letās tackle a popular myth: the idea that people are either āleft-brainedā (logical and analytical) or āright-brainedā (creative and emotional). While it sounds compelling, this idea oversimplifies how the brain actually works.
Yes, the two hemispheres of the brain process information in different ways. The left tends to focus on language, logic, and structure. The right leans into big-picture thinking, emotion, and visual-spatial awareness. But rather than working in isolation, these hemispheres constantly collaborate. Most tasks, whether itās solving a problem or writing a poem, involve both sides.
This myth stems from early research in the 1960s and ā70s on split-brain patients (people who’d had surgical procedures to separate their brain hemispheres to treat epilepsy) , which showed significant difference in how each side functioned. Those findings sparked the cultural idea that logic ālivesā on the left, while creativity ālivesā on the right. In reality, the story is far more nuanced.
Rather than a battle between hemispheres, modern neuroscience views the brain as a dynamic system of networks. The left and right sides donāt compete, they contribute different perspectives. What psychedelics seem to do isnāt about turning one side off and the other on. Itās about shifting how those perspectives interact.
What Happens in the Brain on Psilocybin?
Thanks to functional MRI (fMRI) scans and brain imaging, we now have a clearer picture of what happens under psilocybin , and it looks almost as cool as it feels.
One key player is the Default Mode Network (DMN) ā a network of brain regions associated with self-reflection, planning, and the mental narrative we all carry (āme, my thoughts, my past, my futureā). Itās often dominant in everyday consciousness and is heavily associated with left-brain style thinking: organized, linear, and self-referential.
Na spletnem mestu landmark studies led by Dr. Robin Carhart-Harris in 2012 and 2014, researchers found that psilocybin suppresses activity in the DMN. When this internal ānarratorā quiets down, the brainās usual hierarchy loosens, and a remarkable thing happens: areas of the brain that rarely ātalkā to each other begin to form new connections.

This increase in neural entropy (meaning greater randomness and flexibility in communication between regions) is associated with emotional openness, creativity, and novel thinking. And notably, many of the newly engaged areas relate to sensory perception, intuition, and emotional processing. In short, classic “right-brain” territory.
These shifts align closely with what users describe: music feels alive, nature seems to pulse with significance, and emotions flow freely without explanation. The experience isnāt about losing the logical mind ā itās about expanding beyond it.
What a Right-Brain Shift Feels Like
During a psilocybin experience, itās common to notice a new way of experiencing the world. Instead of focusing on goals or verbal thoughts, attention turns inward, or outward, in more fluid and symbolic ways.
You might find yourself moved by beauty, overcome by emotion, or deeply tuned in to your surroundings. Time may feel irrelevant. Sensory details, the sound of wind, the pattern of clouds, take on powerful meaning. This is the āright brainā in action: intuitive, emotional, and present.
These shifts can feel healing, even without logical explanation. They offer a break from the analytical (and often critical!) mindset and invite a sense of connection ā to nature, to others, and to yourself. Many users describe this as a return to something deeply human: a way of feeling and being that modern life tends to suppress.

What Experts Say About This Shift
Not all neuroscientists agree on the āleft vs. right brainā explanation. Many emphasize that itās more accurate to think in terms of networks rather than hemispheres. The brain is a complex, integrated system, and psychedelics tend to impact it globally (all over), not just one half at a time.
Still, some thinkers, like psychiatrist and author Iain McGilchrist, argue that our culture has become dominated by the left hemisphereās way of knowing: analytical, controlling, and abstract. In his book The Master and His Emissary, McGilchrist suggests that psychedelics may help rebalance this dominance, allowing the right hemisphereās relational, intuitive perspective to re-emerge.
Under psychedelics, this shift becomes more than a theory. It becomes an experience. One that many describe as a reawakening of emotion, imagination, and deep inner truth.
The Takeaway: Not Left or Right ā But Whole
So, does psilocybin really āwake upā the right brain?
Sort of…
…but not in the simplistic way itās often portrayed.

More accurately, psychedelics seem to soften the usual dominance of analytical thinking (often associated with the left-brain) and allow other networks (especially those tied to creativity, emotion, and perception) to take center stage.
Tudi mikrodoziranje can spark subtle versions of this shift. Many users report increased creativity, emotional clarity, and a quieting of the mind ā often without intense visuals or disorientation. These gentle changes may reflect the same underlying brain shifts seen in higher doses, just at a lower intensity.
Itās not about one side turning off. Itās about integration. The inner critic quiets. Sensory processing ramps up. The brain becomes more flexible, equal, more connected, and many users come away feeling more alive, more empathetic, and more in tune with themselves.