red_pill_junkie
Paranormal Adept
2: So many times I have heard of buzzing noises just prior to weird events and I can tell you from first hand experience that the most powerful of hallucinogens have the same buzzing noises announcing the arrival of the other-worldly experiences. Ibogaine for sure has that and so does DMT. And we are not talking the hallucinations that people routinely and incorrectly attribute to LSD. LSD just does not really cause the full-on technicolor I-am-living-the-Lord-of-the-Rings experience in which you are totally removed from our perception of day to day life.
So is the buzzing a coincidence or is it a symptom of the brain transiting from normal input to a vastly different experiential input?
You might find this essay interesting:
Her Sweet Murmur, by Greg Taylor
There are many exceedingly strange experiences which happen to humans, from interactions with paranormal entities and unidentified objects, to near-death encounters. These are often grouped together under the title of 'boundary experiences,' sometimes 'Forteana,' and sometimes simply as 'the paranormal.' But this grouping is generally one of convenience, and each element of this group is, for the most part, considered to be a separate area. However, this may not necessarily be the case, as a scan of the literature, and individual experiences, will attest.
In order to explore the topic with some precision, I would like to concentrate on one particular aspect of boundary experiences — the sounds heard by experiencers which accompany the phenomenon. Cross-referencing these seemingly disparate experiences via their aural aspects yields surprising results, with implications that are quite staggering for our modern conception of reality.
Continue reading.