Morninggloryseed
Bluelight Crew
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That could be true for some...it hasn't been the case for me; and if you look at cultures outside of the 'civilized, enlightened' West that use psychedelics and integrate them into life in a very tangible, meaningful, and practical way...it does not seem to be true of them either. I also want to remind us all that the psychedelic experience IS completely natural and the proof is there because DMT, 5-MeO-DMT, 5-HO-DMT, and perhaps other 'psychedelics' are already in the brain. Even further, read about the Near Death Experience and read about 'The 5-MeO-DMT Void' and absorb that they are on in the same....and I think the case is well stated that psychedelics are as natural as a kiss. Finally, in the case of LSD...and I would be the case for all the psychedelics.....whatever LSD does...it is in and out of the brain in less than an hour and there are no meaningful or 'detectable' amounts of LSD in the body within a few hours....one trips off LSD long after the body eliminates it.
Fast track or not, the carefully well intentioned psychedelic experience is natural, is valid, and is every bit as much of a tool as all other forms of higher consciousness.
Lucid dreaming is a valid point, really in trully any REM state generally mimicks the brainwaves recorded when one is in a full on psychadelic state.
Ho-Chi-Minh said:Foreigner I usually respect your posts but you are dead wrong. The experience of samadhi from meditation is above and beyond any dose of any psychedelic.
Immediately after my first DMT voyage the drug was administered to the Hindu monk. This dedicated man had spent fourteen years in meditation and renunciation. He was a sannyasin, entitled to wear the sacred saffron robe. He has participated in several psychedelic drug sessions with extremely positive results and was convinced that the biochemical road to samadhi was not only valid but perhaps the most natural method for people living in a technological civilization.
His reaction to DMT was, however, confusing and unpleasant. Catapulted into a sudden ego-loss, he struggled to rationalize his experience in terms of classic Hindu techniques. He kept looking up at the group in puzzled helplessness. Promptly at twenty-five minutes he sat up, laughed, and said, "What a trip that was. I really got trapped in karmic hallucinations!"
The lesson was clear. DMT, like the other psychedelic keys, could open an infinity of possibilities. Set, setting, suggestibility, temperamental background were always there as filters through which the ecstatic experience could be distorted.
I have always loved this question. For me, although I do meditate and do some breathing exercises, I don't think the psychedelic states can be reached without a psychedelic. Now I am not saying insight, even all strung together, can happen without psychedelics. But I remember my first trips thinking "why have I not seen this before". Now life is a trip, so it is easy to see how some states can happen with or without the sacraments.
I always laugh when I think of the part of the book The "Electric Kool-aid Acid Test" where there was suppose to be an acid graduation. Kesey was telling Owsley that they were going to move on from psychedelics and get the same states without. I don't think Kesey was serious but he stated to Owsley the states were available without acid. To which Owsley says "bullshit, it's the drugs that do it".
I also find it interesting that T McKenna claims on his trip to India that he never found anything close to psychedelic states when he met with gurus and sadhus. He said it was a lot of old man wisdom but not psychedelic. And he stated most of the gurus and sadhus of India he met were fascinated by psychedelics.
For me, studying consciousness without psychedelics is like studying astronomy without a telescope. It can be done but it is richer with the correct tools.
Now saying all that I love meditation and strolling through nature sober. They are valuable tools. But so are psychedelics and I never bought the notion that they can be given up and meditation could work just as well. Trust me, I know too many people my age who claim they haven't tripped in 30 years and don't need to anymore. What I get from that is they are scared to trip, plain and simple. At least the people I am talking about. We all know the people that may have taken acid once and claimed they use to take it all the time and don't need it to get there anymore. Yeah right.
Foreigner I usually respect your posts but you are dead wrong. The experience of samadhi from meditation is above and beyond any dose of any psychedelic.
Solipsis said:There is a term that I think buddhists use: makyō, it is considered a pitfall in meditation but nevertheless a natural part of the process.