Wow. I do not intend to poke fun at this dilemma in any way, but this is by far the most interesting thread I've ever read on Bluelight. You should start a YouTube vlog channel. "I Have Time Traveled: Part 1"
A nice idea, even though attention isn't my reason for expressing this information, however I don't think there's enough content for a vlog.
I would like to experiment with this; perhaps hold controlled experiments in mixed environments, gauge the cause and affect, and the effects of repeated use of the drug.
I know there are several investigations into the time distortion effects of ketamine: the most prominent of which found that it not only alters brainwave patterns, but creates minor gravitational anomalies (a vortex) around patients. This, however, has not been peer reviewed.
I'm sorry to tell you that you are suffering from a fixed bizzare delusion. I don't know if you have a psychiatric illness, but you should be evaluated. It might not be schizophrenia but rather a persisting reaction to ketamine. But it is good for your long term prognosis that you have insight into your delusion.
I'm sorry, what exactly is your PhD in?
I'm sorry to tell you I'm not suffering from any form of fixation. I can accept that any of the information here could have been incorrectly perceived either at the time of interpretation, or at the time of recollection. As has already been mentioned.
One could argue several people in this thread have certain fixated beliefs in thinking I'm delusional.
Beliefs that due to cognitive dissonance, they cannot adjust.
They believe that there is no "other dimension", as they have already decided that they, as humans, are the dominant entity of the universe, the idea there is anything bigger than themselves is scary and foreign to them, and so they rationalise with the simplest possible solution: I am crazy, and they do not have to bother considering any alternatives to their current belief system.
I may be crazy, I may be correct. As I have already mentioned several times: this requires more experimentation to truely understand the pharmacokinetic process and its possible spiritual implications.
I'd also be interested in studying the pharmacokinetic similarities between PCP and Ketamine, as the hallucinations and experience seem slightly similar: One inside the mind, one out.
And if you'd read the information correctly, you'd have seen that the ketamine was administered once a day over a period of two months in 2010, and not taken since, so "persisting reaction to ketamine" does not fit.
Apart from that, though: very thorough work. Thank you.