Recommended? And if so do we got any teachers?
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Nope, in fact I don't follow McKenna at all. I disagree with the common sentiment that he's some kind of psychedelic Messiah and I don't like how exalted he is by the community. He was just as baffled by the experiences as we all are, all he had was a peculiar way with words to describe them.
I started with microdosing for a few years and then became curious. I started to dabble with higher doses and thought I could handle the warped reality and the thought loops. Kept raising the dose from time to time and one fateful evening I totally fucked up. I went from zero to hero real quick. When you're snorting psychedelics, a tiny bit goes a long way and I made a big mistake in weighing it. The experience was taking hold as I was frantically trying to google if it will kill me, imagine that being your last thought as you completely break through to the other side. It was absolutely terrifying and I thought I died but the experience made me SO CURIOUS that I just had to do it again. This led into various attempts at monster doses, usually by combining drugs (especially ketamine so I would be immobilized, but nitrous takes tripping to a whole different level).
Most of my high doses ended up being done in silent darkness, because any stimulus was too much to handle. All I could do was lie down and be hypnotized by the experience. Funny enough he also advocated that but I ended up doing these things out of necessity. Then came my first contact with otherworldly beings, which at first I dismissed as just being "high". It eventually led to DMT and full face to face interactions. I realized it's not just just brain chemicals and drugs and there's more to it when the trips started to alter this reality we live in. Took me a while to figure it out because I refused to believe it at first.
they don't call it hippy crack for nothing!
lol
I'd like to share this quote with you.
...
TM: Thank you for taking your turn, you're next. Vitamin K, let me just say, and I say this because there's something I want to say. The word 'drug' has been tremendously misappropriated and corrupted by the movers and shakers of society. I mean we all, I believe it's safe to say, are repelled by obsessive self-destructive, unexamined behaviour and that's what is laid at the feet of drugs. However, chasing dollars or pounds, worrying about making a fashion statement, owning a Ferrari, all of these things are obsessive self-destructive habits, so I have a rule, a three-step test if you're thinking of availing yourself of a substance as part of your programme of self-growth and advancement. The first question you should ask yourself is 'Is it ...
Q: ?? afford it.
TM: 'How can I afford it', yes, well, that's zero -- moving on to one. Question one is 'Does it occur in nature?', and question two is 'Does it have a history of shamanic usage?' You see, if it has a history of Shamanic usage, then issues like 'Does it cause tumours, miscarriages, blindness, palsy?' -- this has all been answered, we have our human data, we have five thousand years of use by the Mazatecan Indians or somebody else, we have our human data sample. Then the third test is 'Does it occur naturally or do its near relatives occur naturally in the human brain?', because we don't want to insult the human brain, we don't want to toxify it, we don't want to poison it. Well, the happy conclusion of applying these rules is that the most terrifyingly powerful of the psychedelics pass all tests with flying colours -- DMT being the perfect example. DMT is a megatonnage hallucinogen -- it occurs naturally in the metabolism of every single one of us at this moment. If you were an American audience I would tell you you're holding a schedule 1 drug and are subject to immediate arrest and trial. Every human being on earth falls into this category. This is the Catch 22 that they hold in reserve if they ever have to come after us -- you are holding, and you can't stop yourself. The fact that DMT, that we return to a normal state in only a few minutes from DMT, argues that the non-invasive quality is very important. If you take a drug and feel wobbly 48 or 72 hours later or are having body aches or blurred vision or something like that, this is a drug to stay away from, this is not something you want to get mixed up in. You judge the non-toxicity of the drug by how fast your body is able to return you to normal. MK, which inspired the question, which is ketamine, doesn't pass any of these tests and I did it and I found the state very interesting, but when I saw the data on how it depressed the immune system and there's some concern that it may trigger epileptic kindling, I didn't think it was a good idea. Also the fact that you have to bang it, that's a bad habit. I don't think we should get into that because then it's a vector for disease and then pushes all kinds of the wrong buttons. Yes.