M_Deezy
Greenlighter
- Joined
- Jul 4, 2014
- Messages
- 6
I have an interest in DMT and how it relates to our life. Some scientific reports claim that it is inside our bodies from birth and that a small amount is released when we sleep to make us dream, and a large amount is released when we die. I haven't read much evidence to support that it does anything else but make us dream. I personally have never tried it, but I know many people that have. A lot if not all of those people reported similar or exactly the same trip reports, mainly having to do with universal entities, space, and the meaning of life and life after death. Ever since then I have been deeply interested in the subject matter.
This brings me to a blog that I came across not-so-long ago. It started with the general facts about DMT, then branched into how it affects our post-death experience. According to this blog post, it states that when the DMT is released in a surge on our brain when we die, it takes our deepest, truest beliefs of what we think about the after-life and makes it a reality. In short, whatever you believe happens after you die will happen. If you think you go to heaven to see your relatives, you will. If you think you go to pony-land, you will. If you think you just rot in the earth... well I don't know.
You can read the full post at http://wondergressive.com/death-solved-by-vestigial-gland/
So what are your thoughts about this? Naturally I'm skeptical as I am with everything, but I thought this theory was pretty interesting, and honestly would be pretty cool.
This brings me to a blog that I came across not-so-long ago. It started with the general facts about DMT, then branched into how it affects our post-death experience. According to this blog post, it states that when the DMT is released in a surge on our brain when we die, it takes our deepest, truest beliefs of what we think about the after-life and makes it a reality. In short, whatever you believe happens after you die will happen. If you think you go to heaven to see your relatives, you will. If you think you go to pony-land, you will. If you think you just rot in the earth... well I don't know.
Well, on an experiential level, shrooms distort perception, coke smacks you with raw energy, ecstasy grants superpower orgasms (ladies), and most notably, weed slows time – time distortion seems to go hand in hand with most psychedelics as well – so time passage then is totally subjective. Ask Einstein.
Meanwhile, among DMT smokers, out of the macrocosm of potential experiences, two major themes emerge nearly universally:
1) A stretching of time – they experience the hectic 6 or 7 minutes as a near eternity or lifetime. Imagine Cobb’s 50 year night in Inception.
2) They experience religious incarnations with a tilt toward whatever sect the subject is affiliated with.
Here’s the clincher: after death, while this massive psychedelic dose courses through the brain, there is this mysterious several minutes where the brain still functions. With our new perspective, however, we at last understand what these minutes are…
These few minutes after death, subjectively, are experienced as an eternity, engrossed in the DMT universe. Also, the trip itself is a highly personal experience dictated by the deepest realms of the subconscious.
Therefore, whatever at your deepest core you expect to happen when you die… Congratulations, that’s what’ll happen… Every religion was right.
Mystery solved. Peace on earth.
If you’re resourceful, you can find this stuff and try it. The bigger question now is: do you really want to know where you’ll be spending eternity?
You can read the full post at http://wondergressive.com/death-solved-by-vestigial-gland/
So what are your thoughts about this? Naturally I'm skeptical as I am with everything, but I thought this theory was pretty interesting, and honestly would be pretty cool.

The post you linked to is interesting but very light on substance. The idea of DMT being released during sleep, during birth and during death is pure conjecture; there is literally no evidence at all to support these ideas. Furthermore, it seems incredible that the author has somehow decided that they know what happens when we die given the lack of evidence for an endogenous DMT flood at death. To somehow go on to claim that "every religion was right" is incredibly arrogant and totally nonsensical. There is no evidence whatsoever that DMT has any role in humans. Even the claim that it is secreted by the pineal gland is unsubstantiated, in humans at least.