nameless
Paranormal Adept
u need to change ur profile image big time.I've never done 'shrooms. I'm quite the nerd.
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u need to change ur profile image big time.I've never done 'shrooms. I'm quite the nerd.
I guess you never did LSD in the 60's or early 70's. I can verify hallucinogenic visions and other altered senses are very real and you could not even imagine what it is like...not in your wildest dreams.I have and their hallucinogenic effects are greatly exaggerated, as are LSD's. Mostly you just see the ground or the walls wavering or you see patterns in things, I never had full blown visual hallucinations like I've heard some people claim to have, and I was always an experimenter never someone who abused them so you would think that I'd be more likely than someone who does them all the time to hallucinate. I do have to state however that drugs are definitely known to effect different people in different ways so who knows maybe I just had a naturally high tolerance or something. Keep in mind this was also around 14 years ago so maybe the stuff is stronger these days, I have no intentions of finding out. I would like to try DMT once, but I honestly think I'd be too scared of having a bad experience to really enjoy it.
I guess you never did LSD in the 60's or early 70's. I can verify hallucinogenic visions and other altered senses are very real and you could not even imagine what it is like...not in your wildest dreams.
By the way, I've watched the documentary also on DMT, and while it is good, it tends to be a bit lightweight compared to the book. But the book is not tedious at all, it really holds you.
So, I don't know now if I would actually try it, even under controlled conditions with a doctor, and certainly not in any other way. But its effects on people were really stunning, during the period after Dr. Strassman's injection, and afterwards both short term and long term. Kim
Your experience is similiar to my own. Not so much a hallucination, but more of a feeling and sense of things. An example, looking at a bottle of whiskey. Images of the prohibition era may occupy your thoughts for hours, as you begin to realize the impact organized crime played in our nations history. A heightened sense of awarness- and you may write these things down for later reference- only to scratch your head the next day reading it, making little sense to a sober you.I have and their hallucinogenic effects are greatly exaggerated, as are LSD's. Mostly you just see the ground or the walls wavering or you see patterns in things, I never had full blown visual hallucinations like I've heard some people claim to have, and I was always an experimenter never someone who abused them so you would think that I'd be more likely than someone who does them all the time to hallucinate. I do have to state however that drugs are definitely known to effect different people in different ways so who knows maybe I just had a naturally high tolerance or something. Keep in mind this was also around 14 years ago so maybe the stuff is stronger these days, I have no intentions of finding out. I would like to try DMT once, but I honestly think I'd be too scared of having a bad experience to really enjoy it.
Agreed. I have seen a couple guys have a bad trip(too much too fast) and from my point of view, they were living out their worst nightmare. I think the trick is, to let go of your ego- see yourself for what you are and what you have done in your past. LSD ingested is pure truth, in the way that you will examine your past behaviour- the self is scrutinized.You cannot really have a bad trip on DMT as it is just way, way too powerful to consciously even think about being scared or not. It will run it's course, you will have your jaw round your ankles once you come out and you will be trying to process what you saw for the remainder of your life.
So that's DMT.
Ibogaine is like DMT for several days.....
And I also agree that LSD is very unlikely to cause anything like outright hallucinations, not the eyes open kind anyway. People so often wrongly liken a bad trip to some kind of horror-show of unpleasant visual hallucinations but it is far more insidious than that. Acid knows every single part of your brain and being and if it wants too it can hit you where it hurts - psychologically and the resulting negative thought patterns are way more disturbing than any visual monsters.
You cannot really have a bad trip on DMT as it is just way, way too powerful to consciously even think about being scared or not. It will run it's course, you will have your jaw round your ankles once you come out and you will be trying to process what you saw for the remainder of your life.
So that's DMT.
Ibogaine is like DMT for several days.....
And I also agree that LSD is very unlikely to cause anything like outright hallucinations, not the eyes open kind anyway. People so often wrongly liken a bad trip to some kind of horror-show of unpleasant visual hallucinations but it is far more insidious than that. Acid knows every single part of your brain and being and if it wants too it can hit you where it hurts - psychologically and the resulting negative thought patterns are way more disturbing than any visual monsters.
... I don't think we have the least idea what or who we really are.
Yep. The last time I ever did LSD was my first bad trip. Matter of fact, that was the last time I took any type of hallucinogen period. I'll never forget how freaked out I was for no discernible reason. No visuals or anything like that involved, I just felt that I couldn't process what was going on around me and what was going on in my head, and for some reason it scared the living shit out of me. I'll never forget that experience.
I think a key realization is that the "observer" the bit of our minds that we identify with as our "true selves" is actually just a tiny bit of ourselves, an emergent quality (an event and not a thing) in fact, performing a necessary function in concert with other "bits" of us to make the greater whole. I think the confusion of "who we really are" stems from an incorrect identification with an ongoing event (the observer) as both a "thing" and as "ourselves."