pupnik
Bluelighter
- Joined
- Dec 24, 2013
- Messages
- 2,905
@Neuroprotection
sorry I have been off the board for a few days, but I think I get where you are at, and why you feel strongly about "seeing" that psychedelics are being "promoted" for ptsd and depression.
My views are based upon what I have learned about associative memory formation and how our perceptive reflexes emerge in the changing context like a tuningfork chiming familiarity out of our aggregate memory of experiences.
Your appreciation of coffee and nicotine which are stimulants help you in your familiarity with spaces and situations, to the degree that you are equal with all people situations you encounter. These substances permit rapid confirmation of familiar vibrations and other sensory cues. Psychedelics, however make things more strange. Not so strange that they are unnatural, for while waking from a dream, for a minute or so you are in a profound psychedelic state, and while the space around you may not seem familiar, the state of coming out of a dream is familiar to you.
Many of the terms used such as ego loss, entities, and the mumbo jumbo that some frequent trippers keep muttering about feeling vibes or going with the flow etc. are cultural artifacts, people attempting to join in with the familiar cadres of other stoned people who may actually struggle to relax and stay open to the moment while being distracted by dream like changes in their stream of consciousness. For a tripper, the effort to be a better tripper, can actually change their personality. For a non-tripper the effort to avoid unfamiliar mental experiences can change their personality as well, especially if they have become frightened by an unfortunate combination of situations and dosage.
For a person such as yourself, a friend or guide for 8 hours will provide enough of a grounding so that you can explore something strange and fulfilling (at least as fulfilling as dreams are) or you could try a short duration psychedelic to experience something strange for 10 minutes and no more (eg smoked dmt)
sorry I have been off the board for a few days, but I think I get where you are at, and why you feel strongly about "seeing" that psychedelics are being "promoted" for ptsd and depression.
My views are based upon what I have learned about associative memory formation and how our perceptive reflexes emerge in the changing context like a tuningfork chiming familiarity out of our aggregate memory of experiences.
Your appreciation of coffee and nicotine which are stimulants help you in your familiarity with spaces and situations, to the degree that you are equal with all people situations you encounter. These substances permit rapid confirmation of familiar vibrations and other sensory cues. Psychedelics, however make things more strange. Not so strange that they are unnatural, for while waking from a dream, for a minute or so you are in a profound psychedelic state, and while the space around you may not seem familiar, the state of coming out of a dream is familiar to you.
Many of the terms used such as ego loss, entities, and the mumbo jumbo that some frequent trippers keep muttering about feeling vibes or going with the flow etc. are cultural artifacts, people attempting to join in with the familiar cadres of other stoned people who may actually struggle to relax and stay open to the moment while being distracted by dream like changes in their stream of consciousness. For a tripper, the effort to be a better tripper, can actually change their personality. For a non-tripper the effort to avoid unfamiliar mental experiences can change their personality as well, especially if they have become frightened by an unfortunate combination of situations and dosage.
For a person such as yourself, a friend or guide for 8 hours will provide enough of a grounding so that you can explore something strange and fulfilling (at least as fulfilling as dreams are) or you could try a short duration psychedelic to experience something strange for 10 minutes and no more (eg smoked dmt)