Foreigner
Bluelighter
I'm posting this in P&S because I think, at its core, this is a philosophical/spiritual issue and I'd like our resident philosophers (and psychedelic users) to weight in on it.
I look at the research on PDs in anthropology and it seems like humans have always used them, all over the world. There are even theories that human evolution is tied PD use. But then there is the modern conflicting views that they can be harmful, there shouldn't be long term use, and we of course hear stories from the dark side about abuse.
I find that psychedelics really open my world and allow me to engage in a different kind of learning that wouldn't be otherwise possible without that perspective shift. I go through periods where I don't use them, and then periods when I am using them regularly. I feel that, in general, my life is better with PDs than without. In the complete and prolonged absence of them, I feel that I become more concrete and less imaginative. When I do use them, life seems magical and other kinds of integration can happen.
The honest overview of my life at this point is that PDs will always be in my life, in some form of another, weaving in and out in varying intervals.
My question is: in greater arc of my life, would you define this as a dependency, or simply using a mind expanding tool to learn and grow? If it is a dependency, is there such a thing as a healthy dependency? Can we call someone dependent if the end result is generally good?
Then I think of this at another level. We often label addiction as an illness - and perhaps it is in one respect - but is there the possibility that some part of a person becomes addicted because it contains a dilemma that is necessary for their personal growth?
An even more controversial question might be, can there be people for whom addiction itself is needed, to exercise something inside themselves. In other words, is there a dependency or addiction that seems negative at that time, but whose net effect is highly beneficial to the person? (This question applies to all drugs.)
Whether positive or negative, could dependency be something we throw ourselves into for a greater learning curve?
I look at the research on PDs in anthropology and it seems like humans have always used them, all over the world. There are even theories that human evolution is tied PD use. But then there is the modern conflicting views that they can be harmful, there shouldn't be long term use, and we of course hear stories from the dark side about abuse.
I find that psychedelics really open my world and allow me to engage in a different kind of learning that wouldn't be otherwise possible without that perspective shift. I go through periods where I don't use them, and then periods when I am using them regularly. I feel that, in general, my life is better with PDs than without. In the complete and prolonged absence of them, I feel that I become more concrete and less imaginative. When I do use them, life seems magical and other kinds of integration can happen.
The honest overview of my life at this point is that PDs will always be in my life, in some form of another, weaving in and out in varying intervals.
My question is: in greater arc of my life, would you define this as a dependency, or simply using a mind expanding tool to learn and grow? If it is a dependency, is there such a thing as a healthy dependency? Can we call someone dependent if the end result is generally good?
Then I think of this at another level. We often label addiction as an illness - and perhaps it is in one respect - but is there the possibility that some part of a person becomes addicted because it contains a dilemma that is necessary for their personal growth?
An even more controversial question might be, can there be people for whom addiction itself is needed, to exercise something inside themselves. In other words, is there a dependency or addiction that seems negative at that time, but whose net effect is highly beneficial to the person? (This question applies to all drugs.)
Whether positive or negative, could dependency be something we throw ourselves into for a greater learning curve?