sinisterbotanist
Greenlighter
No, it is similar for sure but it is not the same. My experience, at least. It's not as if I'm experiencing a "normal" psychedelic experience and I can't come to terms with it. I've felt the joy and beauty of being one with the universe on mushrooms, but this earlier negative experience still impacts my non-tripping life with panic attacks. There's no way multiple cultures would base their beliefs on a state as terrifying as this (well, that's only partially true). I understand Hinduism and Buddhism. I've read and listened to a lot of Alan Watts. And all sorts of Daoist literature. In Aldous Huxley's Heaven and Hell, he writes about the positive visionary experience which is basically like satori, and the negative visionary experience, which some psychonauts and schizophrenics encounter. In the commentary for the trip report I posted at the bottom of the first post, it is suggested there is a faulty paradigm for the way which Westerners use psychedelics. How could Huxley use mescaline and be in a state of bliss while the same material could send William Braden to a state of existential terror? They each understood eastern thought and mysticism, yet they eventually had different attitudes to psychedelics altogether. And consider the peyote tribes. They do not encounter the negative visionary state or HPPD.OP, according to much Eastern Philosophy that is more or less what they believe about the nature of the Universe.
Although they consider it a beautiful thing. Like a graceful dance. If you really want to come to terms with this experience I think perhaps you should try studying about said Eastern Philosophies starting with Hindu and Buddhism.
It's not as I'm resistant to becoming one with the universe. There's nowhere else to be!
& getting a bit into the "dancing" thing, when you're dancing, you're completely with it, you're not pondering ontological or existential issues, you're having a dandy time! What we are doing with all of these talk is (in Watts' words) putting legs on a snake.
I'm thinking that maybe the only the to do is to just step out. That place exists right alongside the place of birds and squirrels and simple pleasures, I just have to choose to be with that place. That is Alexander Shulgin's advice. If anyone has a copy of PiHKAL sitting around, I recommend you read the chapter "Crisis" to get an idea of what I experienced.
