TheAppleCore
Bluelighter
- Joined
- Jul 14, 2007
- Messages
- 5,510
Here is a conjecture attempting to account for the apparently magical or impossible nature of some psychedelic effects on consciousness.
We approach the psychedelic experience as if it were something constructed by the interaction of the drug with our biology. Then, because the trip is so incredibly complex, refined, delicate, and seemingly "intelligent", we cannot possibly believe that the phenomenon is entirely a product of chemicals somewhat randomly binding to serotonin receptors and mucking with our brain function. We would expect the effect of blind stimulation of the brain to be akin to vigorously stirring clear water on a bed of sand: the sand gets kicked up into the water and muddies everything. However, when we chemically prod a healthy brain with psychedelics, what we get is a very counterintuitive and delightful effect of clarifying, sharpening, and expanding perception.
This is because the "psychedelic experience" is not created by psychedelics at all. It is the way that the cosmos naturally experiences itself: as one single, unbroken unity. It is the natural flow of consciousness. It's just that the human ego, very artfully, manages to create the elaborate illusion that it is somehow separate from everything else. Psychedelics allow the abundant, pre-existing conscious energy of the universe to once again flow freely, by simply breaking down the ego, which is the peculiar barrier against this energy, and is responsible for damming up the natural flow of consciousness.
So, in essence, the seeming impossibility of the psychedelic experience comes from the idea that the drugs and human biology themselves bear the burden of having to organize and direct this complex and wondrous phenomenon. Rather, the job of psychedelic drugs is a simple destructive one, which is to simply dissolve the blindfold which prevents us from seeing what was there all along: not a product of your feeble drug-addled mind, but a product of the fundamental laws of nature themselves.
We approach the psychedelic experience as if it were something constructed by the interaction of the drug with our biology. Then, because the trip is so incredibly complex, refined, delicate, and seemingly "intelligent", we cannot possibly believe that the phenomenon is entirely a product of chemicals somewhat randomly binding to serotonin receptors and mucking with our brain function. We would expect the effect of blind stimulation of the brain to be akin to vigorously stirring clear water on a bed of sand: the sand gets kicked up into the water and muddies everything. However, when we chemically prod a healthy brain with psychedelics, what we get is a very counterintuitive and delightful effect of clarifying, sharpening, and expanding perception.
This is because the "psychedelic experience" is not created by psychedelics at all. It is the way that the cosmos naturally experiences itself: as one single, unbroken unity. It is the natural flow of consciousness. It's just that the human ego, very artfully, manages to create the elaborate illusion that it is somehow separate from everything else. Psychedelics allow the abundant, pre-existing conscious energy of the universe to once again flow freely, by simply breaking down the ego, which is the peculiar barrier against this energy, and is responsible for damming up the natural flow of consciousness.
So, in essence, the seeming impossibility of the psychedelic experience comes from the idea that the drugs and human biology themselves bear the burden of having to organize and direct this complex and wondrous phenomenon. Rather, the job of psychedelic drugs is a simple destructive one, which is to simply dissolve the blindfold which prevents us from seeing what was there all along: not a product of your feeble drug-addled mind, but a product of the fundamental laws of nature themselves.
