SKL
Bluelight Crew
- Joined
- Sep 15, 2007
- Messages
- 14,632
psychedelics tend to bring out thymic dysregulation in people, i.e. bipolar type mood dynamics, more often bipolar(II) type oscillation between depression and hypomania ... but this is a chicken-and-the-egg thing again, as hypomanic/manic individuals often seek high degrees of stimulation and novelty, such as can be found in the psychedelic experience
peak psychedelic expeirences, however, are totally trasncendent to these extremes of mood. mood disturbances, whether hypo/manic or depressive, tend to result after or during the comedown, i.e., as a result of difficulty integrating the experience.
i don't think the drugs are the problem per se but rather our approach, or our ability to integrate the experience. psychedelics are difficult. in the short-term, they are difficult because they are not drugs like heroin or cocaine or beer which have relatively consistent intoxicating and euphoriant effects, but rather that they can lead to the whole range of human emotion; in the long-term, they are difficult because integrating this and other niceties of the experience is exceedingly difficult.
the question is, i guess, is the difficulty of integrating the self-experience more or less difficult than the difficulty of self-actualization under sober circumstances? how about for our own brand of "broken people" who wind up choswing the latter? is it a better choice for us than the alternative? i'd like to think so. but i find the alternative virtually inconceiveable ... very difficult stuff...
peak psychedelic expeirences, however, are totally trasncendent to these extremes of mood. mood disturbances, whether hypo/manic or depressive, tend to result after or during the comedown, i.e., as a result of difficulty integrating the experience.
i don't think the drugs are the problem per se but rather our approach, or our ability to integrate the experience. psychedelics are difficult. in the short-term, they are difficult because they are not drugs like heroin or cocaine or beer which have relatively consistent intoxicating and euphoriant effects, but rather that they can lead to the whole range of human emotion; in the long-term, they are difficult because integrating this and other niceties of the experience is exceedingly difficult.
the question is, i guess, is the difficulty of integrating the self-experience more or less difficult than the difficulty of self-actualization under sober circumstances? how about for our own brand of "broken people" who wind up choswing the latter? is it a better choice for us than the alternative? i'd like to think so. but i find the alternative virtually inconceiveable ... very difficult stuff...