I'm still interested in this concept. If the OP or any of the OG Jurema Way people are not still active here, perhaps some of us who are interested can take up the mantle and move forward on our own.
If anyone knows the people who were part of this in the beginning, please direct them to this thread so we can open up a dialogue about this specific project. While I find the general debate on whether a new DMT centered religion will have any effect, policy wise, in the US, EU or other nation-states where DMT users are considered outlaws, I think that there are enough people out there who would be willing to give it a shot
regardless.
Despite the permission that Santo Daime and UDV churches have achieved to use the ayahuasca sacrament in the US and Brazil, SWIM couldn't bring himself to join either group because he doesn't agree with their over-all philosophy. He finds the syncretic mixing of Christianity with Candomblé and its incongruous weldeding to Amazonian Shamanic practices to be off-putting. He has attended some Daime ceremonies, and always found them to be stifling and completely out of character with his own experience of the brew. The whole hierarchy and forced community thing is also odd for something that seems extremely personal and individual.
Anyhow, it seems to me that the wonder of the Spirit Molecule should not be tied to any existing dogmas or forced into the boxes of any existing religuous framework. Spice and Huasca ARE inherently religious, in the sense that they evoke
unabashed awe & wonder. They take you by the balls and show you, in
un-ignorable fashion, things that other religions can only
hint at in vague and roundabout ways. If ever there was an authentic sacrament, it would be entheogens... with DMT and its various preparations topping the list
in spades.
I don't like to tred in weighted terminology and make the common mistake of talking about spice revelations in old school religious terminology, but there are scant few words for these things... and we need to talk about them somehow. SWIM finds that while many people claim to journey in hyperspace and never have a truly spiritual experience or even an authentic encounter with "entities," the
vast majority of people
he knows DO have such experiences, and in a foolproof & repeatable way, no less. Furthermore, the information retrieved from Hyperspace is often uniquely verifiable.
While the scientific/chemistry geek conceptions and methodologies should not be discarded... on the contrary, they must be stepped up and intensified as much as possible... and the political, anti-prohibition wing of spice lovers should move forward in clear and focused legal avenues... there IS room in this tent for people who find spice to be a genuinely
sacred and
holy sacrament.
I, personally, have no problem with the word GOD. It doesn't offend me, and it is as good a word as any for the obviously intelligent and infinite consciousness of the Multiverse. I tend to use different terms for this concept depending on who I am talking to, but terms don't matter. People who can not see intelligence in nature perplex me.
The entities encountered in Hyperspace are
not this intelligence directly, IMO... but rather beings that have progressed closer to, or emanated from, this original fountainhead of novelty. They can instruct you in how to flow with and move closer to this cosmic Tao or Great Spirit by virtue of being closer to it and not having as thick blinders on as most of us hominids seem to. Even without assistance, the force of creative and living manifestation is preceivable in
every aspect of
everything we see. Everywhere, this intelligence and majesty is exhibited. In the finest designs of Hyperspace, and equally well in the smallest seed or drop of water.
Spice experiences seem to be uniquely capable of increasing one's ability to perceive and connect with this. Everything we perceive begins to appear as the various sock puppets for the hand of primal creativity. Feel free to disagree, but nothing anyone can say will disuade me at this point. Not that I am closed minded. It would just be like trying to tell me that computers are impossible. I have owned and used them almost daily since I was a child. I would look pityingly on someone who was convinced that they don't exist.
I will wrap this up by saying that anyone who feels even remotely similar about this should chime in. We can start a new thread and discuss the logistics of possibly setting up a new religion. Why people have the idea that a religion must be
X amount of years old (fill in the blank) in order to be authentic, puzzles me.
All religions were new at some point. And I
challenge any religion on the planet to come up with a more direct and effective means of demonstrating their spiritual beliefs than 25mg of spice or a good puff of changa.
"Curiouser and curiouser..." ~ Alice
"Do not believe in anything simply because you have heard it. Do not believe in anything simply because it is spoken and rumored by many. Do not believe in anything simply because it is found written in your religious books. Do not believe in anything merely on the authority of your teachers and elders. Do not believe in traditions because they have been handed down for many generations. But after observation and analysis, when you find that anything agrees with reason and is conducive to the good and benefit of one and all, then accept it and live up to it." ~ Buddha