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2C-B and egodeath?

Jackpothead

Greenlighter
Joined
Oct 27, 2010
Messages
47
Just want to start by saying I'm a total noob in the psych world having only tried aMT and nBOMES so far.

So I've always heard of this psych being a lighthearted one, meaning inherently makes you feel good with a somewhat close to MDMA. I did not experience this at all...

I don't really know if what I had is egodeath as I'm in doubt about it's meaning, is it to stop aknowledging yourself alltogether or just feeling extremely humble?

Mini TR:

Setting: at a friend's summer house in the middle of the country side with 8 very close friends and 2 friends, 5 don't do drugs but we're all heavy drinkers, of all my friends only one took the same dose as me and two others took 1 pill each. All of them mixed with M1 except me.

I took 1.5 pills of 18mg 2C-B, I was a bit drunk or I don't think I'd have started with that high of a dose, anyways, fast forward about 1 hour and I'm suddenly having the most powerful visuals I've ever experienced, they are similar to most reports out there so I won't get into detail.

The world looked and felt beautiful but with a daunting feel to it. Slowly my feelings of humility towards my friends (they are all looking like very strong and awsome people and I'm feeling glad I'm part of this awsome group of people) start shifting towards paranoia, suddenly I'm feeling lonely in the midst of a group of friends that I love and love me back. Everything they say has a negative conotation and feels like it has a underlying message to me concerning my own fears and perceived flaws, in my head they are all making fun of me in a extremely subtle way and it starts to freak me out. I give up trying to cope with this and go to bed to sleep it off.

I've had this mindstate while on weed several times and I dont't smoke anymore because of it.

I have no problems confronting my fears and faults, maybe too much even, I consulted a psychiatrist one time and he told me I think about mu faults too much and not enough on my virtues. But when that translates into seeing my friends as my judges, that's fucked up. For some moments there I hated them all, and that's unnaceptable for me.

Again I'm not sure this is ego-death as it was totally self focused so it could be called more of ego boost or whatever.

I know it's not the drugs fault, it's mine, but I'm looking for ideas to cope or solve this issue, help please??

Fuck that turned out a big ass post and kinda of all over the place, if you've read this far my sincere thank you!
 
I'm in doubt about it's meaning, is it to stop aknowledging yourself alltogether or just feeling extremely humble?

Ego-death doesn't really have any meaning. It's a 100 year old idea of Freud that's been discredited now but it lives on in psychdelic circles because back in the 60s Tim Leary wanted to talk to the authorities about drugs by using "respectable" language. So instead of saying "I got really stoned" he would say "I had an ego-death" or "I had a religious experience" because cops and judges prefer language like that. Then everyone for the next 40 years who wanted to sound deep would say "I had an ego-death" because it sounds heavier than saying "I tripped".

There's not really any light-hearted psychedelics - the psychedelic brings 50% and you bring the other 50%. You'll feel different things depending on your mood, the weather, your surroundings.
 
Using the 100 year old term and if we can agree on what 'ego' means there is an ego death and it does have meaning if you can suspend the 'oneness' aspect of the universe and look at your ego as the "God" that pilots the physical body. If we agree on that meaning, then I've not heard of 2C-B causing ego death but some psychedelics are particularly good at it, 5-MeO-DMT, DMT, etc.

Oh and there are light hearted psychedelics in my opinion. 30mg of DPT is on the lowish end but still pretty heavy stuff, there will be intense vibrations. 30mg of MET is a bit more potent but not much...but the trip is very light hearted, full of visual and little or no body residue. Or compare 2C-C to 2C-E. ANY dose of 2C-E is intense and even 60mg 2C-C was intense too but still very gentle.
 
Ego-death doesn't really have any meaning. It's a 100 year old idea of Freud that's been discredited now but it lives on in psychdelic circles because back in the 60s Tim Leary wanted to talk to the authorities about drugs by using "respectable" language. So instead of saying "I got really stoned" he would say "I had an ego-death" or "I had a religious experience" because cops and judges prefer language like that. Then everyone for the next 40 years who wanted to sound deep would say "I had an ego-death" because it sounds heavier than saying "I tripped".

There's not really any light-hearted psychedelics - the psychedelic brings 50% and you bring the other 50%. You'll feel different things depending on your mood, the weather, your surroundings.


I don't know man, do you have much experiance with psychedelics? Ego = sense of self; on a high dose psychedelic or a break through experiance you literally loose all sense of self, of your species, what you are, you are literally just a point of existance... that is what ego-death is, to me, at least. its not about 'wanting to sound deep', it is deep. And having one of those experiances or even one building up or close to it, shedding layers of what we identify with, normally helps people become less egotistical (which nearly all humans are) thus why I think it is a good thing.

As far as light hearted psychedelics, there most certainly are. And I think 2c-B may be one of the best examples of one (second only to 2C-C in my eyes). And There are plenty of psychedelics that may be light hearted but what I am using to class them as that is no possibilility or at least a very weak experiance of something like egodeath and more fun like cocaine but more like mdma, as I believe even purely recreational-feeling psychadelics to have profound therepeutic value.
 
do you have much experiance with psychedelics?

Just a bit.

Ego = sense of self you literally loose all sense of self

I dunno, I've taken ayahuasca in doses high enough to stun a charging gorilla. The magic of them is that you're perfectly aware of your surroundings - it's not like alcohol where you're out of your mind and have no idea who you are - you know exactly who you are, what you're doing and how wonderful it is. To me, that's the magic of psychedelics.

And having one of those experiances or even one building up or close to it, shedding layers of what we identify with

It's always sounded rather negative to me tho - this idea that you "destroy your ego" or your "ego dies". It's completely the opposite of what psychedelics are for me. I've never felt more alive than when I'm on psychedelics. There's nothing "dying", no terrifying "loss of self". just a tremendous appreciation of being alive. The ego doesn't exist and never has done - it was just something Freud pulled out of his arse 100 years ago. No brain scientist takes his ideas seriously anymore.
 
Those who say there is no 'ego death' need to smoke a higher dose of 5-MeO-DMT. There sure as fuck is ego death, LSD will usually do it but if not, you need some 5-MeO-DMT.....15mg or so...maybe your ego will not only die but your 'body' too for 15 minutes or so...happened to me recently and it was SOOO BEAUTIFUL. I welcome the death now. Take me LORD! ;)
 
This sounds more like it's a hard trip.
I had once taken 4-ACO-DMT and spent an evening with very close friends. Everything started out fine and dandy until I came up completely. Every sentence that came out of my friend's mouths seemed to be directed at me negatively in some way. It got to the point where it started to scare me a bit. I ended up changing my setting and bid my friends farewell for the evening. Everything was fine and dandy once more.
 
Those who say there is no 'ego death' need to smoke a higher dose of 5-MeO-DMT. There sure as fuck is ego death

We all respond to drugs in different ways - you might feel like you're "dying", I might feel like I'm living. Just because you felt it doesn't mean I will. We're all individuals.

LSD will usually do it but if not, you need some 5-MeO-DMT

I've taken LSD, ayahuasca and mushrooms all in doses sufficient to stun a charging rhinocerous. Never felt even remotely like I was "dying" or had any "ego-death".

maybe your ego will not only die but your 'body' too for 15 minutes or so

Why would real death have anything to do with being high on psychedelics tho?
 
^^^^

We do all respond differently. On the other hand, I seem to be the only guy in the West who shares 5meo as a first time psychedelic to whoever is looking for it....and considers it THE SACRAMENT. I've seen a lot of things, and many different ways of interpreting what people experience, but trust me on this one...in the set I provide, and the instruction I give...the experience I speak of is consistent...I've seen it every time.

See there are lots of trips and lots of 'drugs' but 5-MeO-DMT is the real deal....and again I see it every time in every person who I initiate. Trust me on this one.

Anyway, if you never tried it your previous experiences are all irrelevant. I think most who try 5-MeO-DMT agree it's not like any other one.
 
I don't think this is ego death. Ego death is when you're memory gets completely dissipated, you get to the point where you can't remember your name, and you don't even know you're under the influence of a drug. I've hit ego death in the 2mg range of 25c-NBOMe.
 
Who's to say what you experience from psychedelics isn't an ego death yet a boost of such? I've hardly met anyone with experience with psychedelics that didn't come off or wasn't a complete arrogant dick. It may feel like your ego is dissolved, but something has to fill in the blanks, if any are even created.
 
Whether ego-death is real or some made up psychology BS is beside the point. The concept was said, therefore it very well could be real. I don't think anyone can really imagine ego death without actually experiencing it. I'm not positive if I've experienced it or not, but I have been extremely far down the rabbit hole to the point of leaving the present situation behind and entering an entire realm full of hilarious and terrifying possibilities within my own head.

OP I doubt what you experienced was "ego death" or anything like it. But you were right in saying something more of an ego boost. You became hyper aware of things that you most likely have negative feelings about. Most likely, your friends were not saying anything bad about you, your whacky mind was merely interpreting it that way. Life is never perfect, and psychedelics tend to exasperate the fuck out of anything going on inside that super brain of yours. Take some time and really think about what you saw and heard before you trip again. There can be truth in what you saw, but it could also be complete delusions. Buyer beware.
 
If you're scared off by the idea of reading more than a couple of sentences you can scroll down to the section with hold text and just read that, that's where my definition of ego-loss lies in case you wish to take issue with and argue about it! ;)

Ego-death doesn't really have any meaning. It's a 100 year old idea of Freud that's been discredited now but it lives on in psychdelic circles because back in the 60s Tim Leary wanted to talk to the authorities about drugs by using "respectable" language. So instead of saying "I got really stoned" he would say "I had an ego-death" or "I had a religious experience" because cops and judges prefer language like that. Then everyone for the next 40 years who wanted to sound deep would say "I had an ego-death" because it sounds heavier than saying "I tripped".

Come on man, I respect your posts a lot, but this position is just obtuse and contrarian for the sake of being obtuse and contrary. The term 'ego death' very well does mean something, and I'm pretty sure you know it. You may not like the phrase, and that's fine, but it does very well mean something and we have to recognize that. If there were a different, specific term in use that didn't reference the nutty ideas of an incest- and dick-obsessed coke fiend I would prefer it, but we don't have a distinct term for the concept represented by ego-loss, so the less desirable term that is in common use will have to do.

First, to understand ego-loss, it is helpful to understand the concepts that it references. Basically, Freud, the aforementioned incest-dick-obsessed coke fiend, developed a now-discredited theory to create a framework within which psychotherapy could be developed as a science. This was the end of the 19th century, and the gains made by science in every aspect of the average person's life were massive, and so there was a general movement to try and apply the concept of science and the scientific method to various things that had until then either been marginalized as nonsense or had been thought of as a philosophical thing that was a thought experiment but nothing more. Psychology, the understanding of the mechanisms that underlie conscious thought, had until then been for into both of those categories to one extent or another.

So Freud developed a model for understanding psychology through the lens of repressed feelings, urges, or desires, often due to some sort of mental trauma in early life (often during the period of extreme youth that we can't really remember, before the age of four perhaps in my case). He theorized that people's repressed feelings could become exposed during their dreams. By analyzing a patient's dreams, the therapist could then untangle what the true nature of the patient's latent, repressed feelings / desires / fears etc were, and then through talking with the patient those issues could be resolved.

It happens that models of the human mind are often based on the most advanced technologies of the time. Today it's thought that quantum effects may have some role to play in consciousness, in the '70s the brain was thought of as analogous to a computer, and in Freud's day the mind was thought of as comparable to a steam engine. Repressed feelings were like pressure building up in the system: release them and proper function could be restored, but should the pressure continue to build unabated there could ultimately be a damaging explosion.

Superimposed upon this model of the mind as steam engine was a veneer of Victorian morality. Generally Freud's theories have been discredited in thus time since he published, but one enduring concept that remains in use is the trinity of ego, superego, and id. It's worth mentioning that this trinity is not actually in use in a major way by psychologists, but rather has become subsumed into pop-science instead, and I'll get to that in a moment. But first we should define those terms:

The id is the unconscious animal, a mass of needs and wants with no moderating influences. The id then was the repository for all the fears of Victorian society, of uncontrolled urges, sins such as gluttony, and sexual content.

The superego was the sum of all of the moral and societal rules that dictate our sense of right and wrong. Whether those morals are built upon religious grounds or on a tit for tat sense of what is decent and what is abhorrent or unfair or unkind isn't that important, because regardless of the source and basis for these moralistic aspects they still are all part of the superego.

And finally, the ego was the practical, conscious part of the human mind. This is the negotiator between the animal urges and the moral sense of right and wrong, it brings these opposing influences into harmony with one another. Our everyday, waking consciousness was located in the ego as well. You can think of the ego as the valve in the steam engine that permits release of pressure from the id by taking those instinctual animalistic forces and mixing in a dose of propriety and moral decency, so that hedonistic indulgences can be experienced in the amounts proper to a lady or gentleman of the Victorian era without losing your shit and going on a rape-spree (the id did supposedly contain animal urges for food and drink, but the vast majority of its content was thought to be made of highly inappropriate sexual urges and desires).

---

It happens that there has been a lot of give and take between popular culture and actual science over the course of the twentieth century. A cursory examination of the bestseller lists for nonfiction books will reveal a lot of what I would call pop-science, and pop-psychology is a sizable portion of the larger grouping of pop-science literature. What is pop-science? Well, at its best it consists of an author translating between the often highly technical world of scientific research and the level of understanding of the average American, so that even if we don't understand Lie groups or quantum chromodynamics we can still get a general picture of the state of the cutting edge of physics research.

Unfortunately, all too often pop-science doesn't meet that ideal, and instead consists of pseudoscientific material interspersed with bits and pieces of real scientific theory that has been dumbed down, misinterpreted, and generally placed into improper context. It's this type of writing that gives pop-science a bad name and leads to overly simplistic and completely unsupported conjecture, such as 'right- and left-brain thinking'. And one of the concepts that escaped its scientific confines and was transmuted into a pop-science buzzword was the idea of ego.

Instead of its original meaning as a sort of syncretic mechanism for mediating between animal impulses and moral, rational thought, the term 'ego' has come to represent in the popular imagination the whole parcel that is one's self. It has also attracted a negative connotation of narcissistic, alpha-male/female hierarchical dominance games. And this is the meaning of ego that we are referring to when we speak of ego loss.

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So what then is ego loss? Well, I would argue that psychedelics do have the potential property of diminishing the self-importance and urge to be dominant that is inherent in nearly every human being. So if we take ego to contain the connotation of negative power-playing, then psychedelics can diminish this aspect of our personalities.

If we instead take ego to simply mean 'self', then we can speak of ego-loss as a diminution or elimination of the conscious understanding of ourselves as living, breathing, sentient beings. I would also add to that definition a second meaning of ceasing to exist as an independent observer that is self-contained and separate from the greater world at large. Finally, I think a third aspect to ego-loss could be stated as the cessation of the internal dialogue – the steam of independent thoughts and ideas – that takes place inside a conscious human mind.

The distinction between humans and the vast majority of other animals is that we are not only aware of our surroundings, we are aware that we are aware of our surroundings. We are conscious of being conscious. It is true that other animals, such as cetaceans, elephants, and certain great apes also show a measure of self-awareness, but without language (and without the physiological structures like the human larynx that would enable the wide variety of phonemes necessary for language) to express abstract concepts this self-awareness hasn't been able to evolve further to the point that consciousness has reached in Homo sapiens.

I will henceforth refer to this idea of being conscious of our own consciousness as being doubly-conscious. Since we experience the world through the lens of this double-consciousness ever minute out of every day of our lives, and since we do not have memories of being in the womb or being a young infant – two possible states where we may lack double-consciousness – we literally know nothing else besides being doubly-aware. We understand the world in reference to our thinking, doubly- conscious selves. Thus it is no surprise that it can be very scary – terrifying even – to lose our double-consciousness.

Furthermore, the loss of the distinction of ourselves as independent beings when on a high dose of a powerful psychedelic is not instantaneous. And so as it begins to happen we are aware of our conscious selves dissolving, or perhaps better said as being ripped apart. This is probably at least somewhat akin to how it must feel in the moments before we die, and indeed we quite reasonably call the final state of no longer existing as a conscious being independent of the larger world 'ego-death'. This feeling is so alien to our normal state of existence that it often leads to inexperienced individuals trying to fight off this state. Sometimes they may be successful, but if they fail to prevent ego-death the experience may be more frightening still because of the obvious feelings of powerlessness in the face of our own destruction or dissolution that may arise once conscious thought returns.

---

So it is true that the terms 'ego-loss' or 'ego-death' may be misnomers, in the sense that this is a misuse of the term ego should one adhere to the original definition of the concept. And it is also true that figures that loomed large in the field of psychedelic use – recreational or purposeful – in the 1960's counterculture did try to couch the terms of their experiences in the language of 'respectable' psychiatric or medical professions, 'psychomimetic' being an excellent example.

But words and concepts are not static in our culture – or any other culture for that matter. They change and evolve, and they gain new meanings or connotations while losing older forms of meaning. So we have to accept that while there are probably better ways to refer to the concept of the loss of individuality, consciousness, and a sense of distinction from our environment and the universe at large, the widely-used phrase is in fact ego-loss/death, and we have to make do with the limitations of our ability to express ourselves verbally and in writing.

Is is incorrect to try to reason that 'ego-loss' is synonymous with 'tripping'. You can be tripping ballsacks, bags of ballsacks at that, and still have a fully-intact ego. And to go back to the original post of this thread 2C-B is a compound that I feel is actually all about an intact – yet healthy – ego. It is very much directed inwards, with the self remaining a totally distinct thing independent of the environment. As such I don't believe that ego-loss is possible in the traditional sense on 2C-B even at the very high doses to which I have taken it, though unconventional forms of ego-loss are possible (closing your eyes and laying down on a massive dose with music will cause me to merge with that music, and the music and I become on, leading to cessation of any distinction between myself and the rest of the universe, while acknowledging that the universe at that time has been reduced to the music and nothing else. This isn't the same thing as traditional ego loss though, which I have also experienced when on high doses of tryptamines). Indeed, I would generalize that with some exceptions, PEAs are much less prone – inherently less capable even – of producing ego-loss/death. If that's what you seek, best to go with tryptamines.

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In conclusion, it's a relevant point that in my opinion ego-death has become sort of a false holy-grail in certain psychedelic circles. It is indubitably true that it is an incredibly powerful experience that I wager you will not soon – if ever – forget, but I think there is too much of an emphasis on ego-death being 'the point' or 'the goal'. Psychedelic states are intrinsically valuable in and of themselves. Holding ego-loss up as some sort of state that is 'better' than just plain tripping is a red herring, and worse still is the occasional superiority-complex displayed by those of us who have experienced ego-loss, as if you're not truly experienced with psychedelics or have somehow failed to reach the 'ultimate level' of psychedelia if you've yet to experience this phenomenon.

We all need to be wary of presenting things as being the ultimate purpose of tripping, whether the thing being talked-up is ego-loss or whether it is the oft-mentioned 'therapeutic healing experience due to deep, intense introspection'. There's nothing wrong with seeking these things out, but there is much more value in psychedelic states than can be easily captured with popular ideas like these.
 
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

Yeah and the ones who won't get it will call us arrogant I guess as if we made this shit up ourselves. :) Such is life.
 
^^ Yeah I don't understand the aversion to long posts that seems to be prevalent on the Internet and to a good degree here on Bluelight itself. I see 'tl;dr' all the damn time, and I just don't get it!

If you've got the time to be wandering around an Internet forum then surely you have the time also to read something at length if there's a sincere effort to put real thought into whatever the person has said. And sure, partly my mystification with length issues is due to my own admitted propensity for writing up long-ass posts, without doubt. But beyond that there's a conceptual disconnect there that I just don't know how to process in a sensible, logical way.
 
Many thanks for the kind words!

We humans have a need it seems to categorize things in numerical order if that makes sense. A different way of putting it is that something must always be 'the best', and something else 'the worst'. Somebody always has to be the man, large and in charge, and somebody must be the omega (term for the lowest wolf in a wolf pack's pecking order).

The thing is that not everything yields so easily and neatly to our desire to have things fit into a hierarchy. Psychedelic experiences are one such example that defies easy classification and categorization.
 
In conclusion, it's a relevant point that in my opinion ego-death has become sort of a false holy-grail in certain psychedelic circles. It is indubitably true that it is an incredibly powerful experience that I wager you will not soon – if ever – forget, but I think there is too much of an emphasis on ego-death being 'the point' or 'the goal'. Psychedelic states are intrinsically valuable in and of themselves..

I agree that ego death as a goal is sort of weird. It sounds like it takes too much LSD to get there. I get enough benefit from moderate doses in that it strips away a lot of your own BS. Do I really want to go for total destruction? I have mind blowing fantastic trips, I don't know if I want life altering trips. I have done the large dose thing and probably won't again. Its just too fucked up for me personally. I am sure other people are fine with it though, to the degree that to them it's just another Friday night.
I might be a minority but I don't want to be reborn or anything, I just want to see trails and patterns. Maybe it is shallow. I certainly respect the people on a deeper path. Maybe when I am old and dying I will give it a shot.
 
I agree that ego death as a goal is sort of weird. It sounds like it takes too much LSD to get there. I get enough benefit from moderate doses in that it strips away a lot of your own BS. Do I really want to go for total destruction? I have mind blowing fantastic trips, I don't know if I want life altering trips. I have done the large dose thing and probably won't again. Its just too fucked up for me personally. I am sure other people are fine with it though, to the degree that to them it's just another Friday night.
I might be a minority but I don't want to be reborn or anything, I just want to see trails and patterns. Maybe it is shallow. I certainly respect the people on a deeper path. Maybe when I am old and dying I will give it a shot.

And this is what I mean when I say that you can't place ego-death into some form of hierarchical classification as the ideal, top-dog thing amongst the various other states that can be experienced when on psychedelics.

Every time I've experienced ego-death it's been accidental, not in the sense of being out of control but rather in the sense that I didn't go into those trips with the explicit goal of ego-death on my mind. The first time I experienced it I had taken three eighths of mushrooms with my buddy Kyle, and we went to one of the forest preserves that are somewhat near to his house (northwest side of Chicago in case anybody else has explored those woods). As it came on and the peak was imminent, I had to just sit down on a massive tree stump and cover my face with my hands to bring about a state of darkness to reduce the visual content I was receiving in order to try and experience only the internal stimuli brought about by the mushrooms.

I stayed there for a good half hour as the peak took place. I lost all sense of who I was, or that there even was an 'I' to say anything about. Instead of consciously perceiving the world and myself occupying a place within it I experienced the most intense and powerful phenomenon: the entire universe was dying and then being reborn, or better said reincarnated, and this cycle of death and rebirth of the entire universe was taking place millions of times every millisecond, maybe even an infinite number of times per second. Finally after about twenty or twenty-five minutes of this I became aware that there was a 'me', and the experience shifted from being the universe dying and being reborn millions of times per millisecond to myself dying and being reincarnated millions of times every millisecond. It seemed as if eons had gone by, as if millennia were passing in a heartbeat or a blink of the eye (or not, since my eyes were still closed and covered). Finally the speed with which I was dying and being reborn began to decrease, so that the cycle was happening only a few thousand – and then a few hundred – times per second instead of millions of times per *millisecond*. And then shortly after the number of reincarnation cycles reached only a handful in a second I came back to normal reality, albeit still massively tripping.

Anyway, this whole event, from sitting down to finally coming back to my heavily tripping self a half hour or so later, was honestly one of the most powerful experiences I have ever taken part in. It was awesome, in the literal sense of inducing a state of utter, dumbfounded awe. But while I knew that I would be tripping balls – three eighths per person in the wild beauty of the natural world will do that – I didn't know that I was going to experience ego loss, and at the time I just considered it a fascinating, brand new experience, without putting the term 'ego-death' to it until some weeks later when I recounted what had happened to some other homies if mine. Even if I had known that ego-loss was a distinct possibility, I still wouldn't have gone into the trip with the explicit purpose of reaching that state, ignoring all the other wonders that took place that trip (and oh were there wonders, it's too off-topic to get into but some incredibly interesting things did subsequently happen once my ego-returned and we became mobile enough to continue to explore the forest, with the interest stemming from examining some of the things I felt from the point of view of someone interested in the various subjective feelings that psychedelics can produce).

And so while I have experienced ego-death several times since then, I still have never gone into a trip with the idea that it was probably going to happen, and much less that I was desiring it to happen. I enjoyed the totally alien, immensely powerful experience, but just because I enjoy it doesn't mean it's everybody's cup of tea. And so as I see it there's nothing about your opinion that you'd prefer not to get into ego-loss territory that in any way makes your trips or your intentions inferior to mine, or inferior to the intentions of somebody that does actually go into some trips with the explicit purpose of killing their ego (I know there's a lot of that kind of person out there).

The wide variety of states that can be experienced on psychedelics should be held as valuable and special in and of themselves. Making value judgements and trying to categorize these possible subjective experiences in a hierarchical way is unnecessary, and almost certainly will be an awkward fit, because whatever happens to you when you're tripping holds its own merit independent of any other possible phenomena that you potentially could be feeling instead. With a few really obvious exceptions, like the archetypical naked sprint through traffic gibbering about how "ohmygodOHMYGOD the BUGS (you all can see them too right? RIGHT?!?) are HUGE they are fucking EVERYWHERE and they've been WATCHING ME SINCE BIRTH oh god they LAID EGGS IN MY TESTICLES ohgodohgod I can FEEL THEM HATCHING (but I will MAKE THEM PAY for their sinful voyeuristic inclinations and for using me as an incubator since I AM the ONE, TRUE GOD after all)", there's not really a way that you can be 'doing it wrong' with regards to your chosen method of using psychedelics. Even those of us who trip purely for recreation are no less valid in their motives. I may prefer to use psychedelics with a broader variety of intentions, but recreation is definitely among them, and taking psychedelics for that reason and that reason alone may be the most appropriate thing for that person's personality and psychological makeup.

And so in summary, there is absolutely nothing about a massive dose of ego-vanquishing mushrooms in comparison to a low-dose threshold acid experience that is either better or worse. They're both fun, they're both useful, they're both ideally suited to their own dissimilar array of set and setting. Sometimes the best things come in small packages, you know? And sometimes they show up in the form of a massive, back-breaking / hernia-inducing box that takes three people to move around. It's important for all of us that use psychedelics to follow our own feelings and ideas about what will constitute an appropriate level of experience instead of falling prey to the unfortunately popular convention that when it comes to drugs or alcohol more is always better.
 
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Ugh. I think two distinct but related experiences get confused by readers and it is because of the word "ego". Ego popularly means egotistical - self-centered, it's all me, all the time, you aren't important except what you can do for me, I will engage in social rank increasing behavior by putting others down, either subtly to their face or brazenly behind their back. This sort of behavior and mental set can be lessened through psychedelic use. Also through age and emotional maturity.

The other meaning is when a trip starts getting so intense that it starts to obliterate and overwhelm who you know to be your "self". You are no longer a person experiencing a trip - it overwhelms you and you lose your sense of self and become the trip. This is often scary because it feels like you are losing your mind and can trigger off feelings of doom and fear of death - which I believe is hardwired into our brains. We are programmed to survive. I think this state also involves severe alteration of our concept/sense of Proprioception

These two experiences are related, but get utterly confused here all the time. I hope I have helped to clarify. We need more precise terminology, ones that don't come with so many preconceptions.
 
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