yougene
Bluelighter
- Joined
- May 19, 2003
- Messages
- 3,336
radiohead said:So what makes you guys believe in stuff like E and buddhism?
Experiences I've had on psychedelics, as well as off and some background information.
radiohead said:So what makes you guys believe in stuff like E and buddhism?
radiohead said:I've had some experiences with psychedelics which have opened my mind as well (or maby closed it), but I don't necessarily believe in E.
I wouldn't like to reach "enlightenment". It seems as if it would be boring.
I rather live life and learn as I grow.
I feel like there is always something new to learn and there is no possible way to be absolutely be contempt with everything.
asmodeus256 said:^ I disagree. Mdma has helped me find the path of beauty in everyday, mundane life. It has allowed me to feel things that are above and beyond my physical body.
killarava2day said:Well, if that's your idea of enlightenemnt then I'm afraid we aren't reading from the same book... Which is cool, it's not exactly something one can quantify, but my idea of "enlightenment" is much deeper than finding beauty in mundanity. It's more like seeing the illusiory nature of reality, of which both mundanity and beauty are a part of, for what it is; a figment of our minds. That's sort of thing takes eons of lifetimes to cultivate, it's not the sort of thing you can get by popping an e. Although, regarding psychedelic experiences I read an interesting thing by a western guy who spent years studying mahayana and was blown away the first time he took acid because everything he'd learnt he suddenly understood at a deeper level than just intellectual. He likened the experience to a traveller looking for a lost city, the psychedelic experience was like a photo of the city, the traveller is heartened because he knows the city really does exist and isn't just a myth. But a photo can never compensate for actually finding the city, the psychedelic experience can orient one in the right direction but it is only a guide and should never be mistaken for true enlightenmnet
yougene said:It may be true that not everyone was meant to be a Buddhist Monk. After all where would future generations of humans come from. But I think you are wrong if you believe that the average person cannot alter their state of mind through various practices such as meditation and benefit from it.
Originally posted by onetwothreefour
the way people describe enlightenment here; i'm not so sure if it's really where i want to get. i understand that it might be an amazing mindset, or state of being, but it seems far too close to "content" for me to stand.
and i don't like "content". for me, that has always been emblematic of a stage in my life where i have achieved all that i want, and have no driving force to push my life forward. i understand (and empathise, as much as is possible) that for some (most?) people, this is the ultimate goal, but i just don't feel that. if i have nothing to strive for, my life is over.