Listening
Bluelighter
- Joined
- Aug 17, 2009
- Messages
- 821
I appreciate that I would not be saying anything new to suggest that your (mind)set going into a trip will affect said trip. However, during my most recent trip, during the come-up, I had the intuition that there is more to this than just what is commonly understood and repeated.
I assert that an open mental posture, grounded in unconditional welcoming and acceptance, will not just affect the the trip qualitatively, but will also have a direct effect on the intensity of every aspect of the trip. I am not, of course, suggesting that this is the only thing that affects the strength of the trip effects, but it's one factor.
Since a large part of a psychedelic come-up is necessarily uncomfortable (at least for me), a mental posture of unconditional welcoming typically requires a stance infused with steadfast bravery and unwavering conviction. In the past I've tended to vacillate between accepting the effects of the come-up, or else trying to distract myself from them until they passed. For example, I would do physical activity (ride a spin bike, move around and tidy the house, or whatever), or just try to wait it out, or else I would get lost in thoughts about life the universe and everything. The latter, while seemingly appropriate for a trip, is nonetheless a defensive posture: Another clever distraction from being here right now; another way of ignoring what we don't like and reinforcing our unexamined belief that we are not able to handle reality as it is, when said reality does not match our preference.
I'm sure the required posture comes automatically and intuitively to some people (maybe even to most psychonauts) even if not thought about explicitly. Certainly my first trips were like this: I accepted and opened some, not because I wanted to experience the discomfort (I didn't), but because I felt like there was little choice. Still, there was always an element of resistance to what I don't like, and a desire for what I like. I believe that this has (at best) a muting effect on the whole trip.
I've written before about the first trip for my partner and I, which was about 15 years ago. We each took the same dose of mushrooms. I tripped balls. She had exactly zero effects. She might as well have eaten a tic tac. This happened a second time when we tried again. In later years she tripped just fine (we have had a bunch of great trips together) and these two original experiences of complete impotence remained entirely unexplained. My partner is an amazing and shockingly intelligent person, but know this: she is (or was) the most heavily defended and neurotic individual I've ever encountered. She has a shield of armor in her psyche. I now believe that she was unable to open up that little bit that would have been required to "trip over the edge" and let go into all that is.
Of course I could be wrong. I'm biased in my assertion of the non-bias of all that is. This is, as of late, part of my unconditional practice, whether tripping or not. Every moment is one of feeling and seeing everything that's there. Nothing is ignored. If I love it, I will feel it fully. If I hate it, I will feel it fully. If I'm indifferent to it, still I will feel it fully. There is nothing to defend against, because nothing outside of me is about me. Perhaps nothing inside of me is about me either. Perhaps me isn't even about me. It's all quite interesting.
I assert that an open mental posture, grounded in unconditional welcoming and acceptance, will not just affect the the trip qualitatively, but will also have a direct effect on the intensity of every aspect of the trip. I am not, of course, suggesting that this is the only thing that affects the strength of the trip effects, but it's one factor.
Since a large part of a psychedelic come-up is necessarily uncomfortable (at least for me), a mental posture of unconditional welcoming typically requires a stance infused with steadfast bravery and unwavering conviction. In the past I've tended to vacillate between accepting the effects of the come-up, or else trying to distract myself from them until they passed. For example, I would do physical activity (ride a spin bike, move around and tidy the house, or whatever), or just try to wait it out, or else I would get lost in thoughts about life the universe and everything. The latter, while seemingly appropriate for a trip, is nonetheless a defensive posture: Another clever distraction from being here right now; another way of ignoring what we don't like and reinforcing our unexamined belief that we are not able to handle reality as it is, when said reality does not match our preference.
I'm sure the required posture comes automatically and intuitively to some people (maybe even to most psychonauts) even if not thought about explicitly. Certainly my first trips were like this: I accepted and opened some, not because I wanted to experience the discomfort (I didn't), but because I felt like there was little choice. Still, there was always an element of resistance to what I don't like, and a desire for what I like. I believe that this has (at best) a muting effect on the whole trip.
I've written before about the first trip for my partner and I, which was about 15 years ago. We each took the same dose of mushrooms. I tripped balls. She had exactly zero effects. She might as well have eaten a tic tac. This happened a second time when we tried again. In later years she tripped just fine (we have had a bunch of great trips together) and these two original experiences of complete impotence remained entirely unexplained. My partner is an amazing and shockingly intelligent person, but know this: she is (or was) the most heavily defended and neurotic individual I've ever encountered. She has a shield of armor in her psyche. I now believe that she was unable to open up that little bit that would have been required to "trip over the edge" and let go into all that is.
Of course I could be wrong. I'm biased in my assertion of the non-bias of all that is. This is, as of late, part of my unconditional practice, whether tripping or not. Every moment is one of feeling and seeing everything that's there. Nothing is ignored. If I love it, I will feel it fully. If I hate it, I will feel it fully. If I'm indifferent to it, still I will feel it fully. There is nothing to defend against, because nothing outside of me is about me. Perhaps nothing inside of me is about me either. Perhaps me isn't even about me. It's all quite interesting.