martinyves,
Welcome to the Nexus.
DMT is endlessly fascinating, but for all the questions it may or may not answer, it almost universally opens up new questions and mysteries for us users. I as a 55 year old woman really like that. I came to DMT almost 15 years ago and wow there was NO mystery in my life at that point. Reality these days is even more balls to the wall without any mystery at all.
And then there is DMT . . . .
Oh my, what a GIFT the molecule is. What, why, how, who, where? These are DMT questions. Science is slowly whittling away at the edges and we psychonauts do our best to "map hyperspace" with trip reports and sharing our experiences. As far as I can tell hyperspace is infinite and full of familiar and excessively alien flaura and fauna.
I have done a LOT of DMT. Every single time I dose the molecule I have a unique and singular experience. I have never had the same trip. And yet . . . once I get above a certain dose and wind up in a landscape or breakthrough or whatever, I get a very strong and palpable sense of deja vu.
DMT mysteries! Is the deja vu simply a section of my brain getting flooded with the molecule OR is it due to state specific memory - had I been there before and forgotten it until I returned intoxicated on DMT? Talk about twisting the mental noodle. Oh my, do I LOVE DMT.
Yeah a stiff dose of DMT makes skin more tanslucent. I have looked through my skin to the veins, muscles and bones underneath. I have watched my arm age, decay and turn to bone on DMT.
For sure, I would recommend trying music. For me music drives my trip synaesthetically. It's a fantastic effect. I strongly recommend Shpongle as a starting point.
I look forward to seeing you around and again warmly welcome you to our little family,
.
"But even if nothing lasts and everything is lost, there is still the intrinsic value of the moment. The present moment, ultimately, is more than enough, a gift of grace and unfathomable value, which our friend and lover death paints in stark relief."-Rick Doblin, Ph.D. MAPS President, MAPS Bulletin Vol. XX, No. 1, pg. 2Hyperspace LOVES YOU