Ragabr I must say that when I started reading your last post I took a breath in and I don't remember taking it out until I finished
You really got me thinking into stuff. I read your post a couple of times more because there are still gaps in my understanding of your views.
ragabr wrote: Okay, how about a few fundamental drugs, like lactose, insulin and testosterone. We actually have wildly varied actions in individuals for each of these substances.
I cannot comment on lactose, but insulin and testosterone are not "any" molecules. They are involved in very complex biochemical systems. Taking these 2 molecules as an example of varied actions and trying to generalize that chemicals have varied actions is risky . What about caffeine?? How people react on this chemical?? My guess (it's a guess
) is pretty much the same. What about most of the pharmaceuticals sold in drugstores?? They have been studied extensively and there is a mechanism of action in the body. That is why they can sell them with such a great certainty. Of course there will be exceptions and people that will react differently. It can be seen under the title "side-effects". They can also be classified as "rare" or "very rare". And there can also be an explanation on a molecular level as to why these people react the way they do.
As for the social expectation on the effects of alcohol, you just reminded me an article I read once about a guy who thought of re-examining the fact that opiates are addictive. He made the hypothesis that mice held in a cage and becoming addicted to heroin don't have a reason to quit. So he designed a super-lux A class cage with everything a mouse could wish for as a life, and he noticed that already addicted mice slowly lost their addiction and desire to get opioids although they had free access to it. Unfortunately, although published, his work never received attention for an unknown reason.
Ragabr wrote: It seems to me that you're thinking about this in terms of discrete nodes, instead of networks of meaning.
Yes please!! help me connect them
ragabr wrote: They arise within a social system of understandings, both his expectations and those of his patients have been primed by the dispersion of psychoanalytic concepts through culture.
1) How can I learn how to use language like you do??
2) What you are saying makes great sense and is really interesting but there is something that doesn't quite fit. Did the chicken make the egg or the egg the chicken?? Grof himself has said numerous times that he was trained as a psychoanalyst by concepts and methods taught to him by mainstream psychiatry. So we assume that he was filling the minds of his patients-clients-friends with the concepts of the unconscious, with childhood memories and all the relevant stuff and as you say, pre-programming their expectations. Good. He continues by saying that soon he had to get rid of that model, because that model was far too limited to account for the experiences of the people. Nobody had programmed them to have these experiences. This new "map" was constructed "from" the experiences. So what happens here is quite the opposite than what you are proposing.
The experiences created the necessity for the construction of the perinatal model which I now read to pre-program myself for these experiences. What am I missing??
ragabr wrote: So, large dose is not the primary, or even a particularly interesting difference between Grof and Leary's thought.
It is a very big difference indeed. It had me thinking about it alot. Grof has very little to say about the high dose LSD sessions. He says though that on a high dose, people tend to experience all elements of the perinatal realm in one sessions, before the ego death comes, and childhood memories are there in the very beginning or the end of the trip. He also says that therapeutically, both processes bring about the same result because it is transcendence what cleans everything away. But apart from that, there is nothing in the "Psychedelic Experience" experiential territory that is not included in the transpersonal map of Grof.
Another very interesting observation he makes is that after the final ego-death and when the perinatal material has all been worked through, all the subsequent sessions are of a transpersonal nature. Even if the dose is medium. He argues that this is not the case on a high dose experience. If the person reaches transcendence forced through by the drug, doesn't mean that his subsequent sessions will lack the perinatal elements. I always thought
though that there is a catch here. By his way, the person reaches transcendence in let's say 40 sessions. What if someone undertakes 40 high dose LSD sessions?? What is the comparison that can be made here??
ragabr wrote: I'm sorry that you thought I was criticizing your explorations of these territories.
I never thought of that. The whole thing is to try to understand your views on a model that seems logical and well established. But not by the grounds of the phrase "on my experience". And I have seen again someone saying that Grof is not their cup of tea but without giving any further details.There are people who take LSD to see the walls breathing and giggle with their friends. Not that there is anything bad with it, I 've done it also. But obviously Grof wouldn't ring a bell to them. And you have managed to get me thinking alot. I personally do not even care at all about these territories. If they do not exist this is far better for me. Do you think I want to get through pain?? Physical or mental?? Of course not. I started reading and pursuing the psychedelic experience driven by desire to have a first hand experience of oneness, spiritual ecstacy, and God. Things that were and are unknown to me. When I started reading I couldn't believe that there are things like that under my nose. After so many years still I haven't had the honor to experience them yet. I was led to Grof by a series of events happening to me.
First time I read Grof was many years ago. I found him a very interesting read. Inside his book he mentions that two of his patients were unexpectedly cured of a condition called pseudomyopia after they reached the ego-death. Well, I have pseudomyopia as well so I found it really interesting. Later on in time, I wanted to have the experience myself. But most of all I lacked an experienced person to act as a sitter. And while I could find plenty to trip together on a Saturday night, it was much more difficult to get an inexperienced person prepared enough to facilitate a high dose LSD session with all the complications that might arise. This led me to leave my country for the first time, alone, in a young age, and go to the UK where I found a 3 day Ayahuasca workshop with only a few people knowing what I was really going to do to the UK. As you can imagine, the Ayahuasca was very strong but I never broke through. I was "holding" to reality with all the powers I had. I felt that if I let go, I am going to explode into something that is sooo grand that I had a great uncertainty of my ability to come back. And the setting was far from ideal. After that though, my desire for the experience grew bigger. Back to the UK for studies this time. DMT was my next destination. If I could smoke a breakthrough dose, in my mind, I would eliminate the need of a sitter. I thought that 5 minutes could be walked through like that and that could be used to eliminate my fears for a longer lasting trip with Ayahuasca. DMT worked wonders. It has given me the most amazing experiences. But there was a huge problem. My lungs were awfully sensitive and any attempts to deposit more than 10 mgs on my lungs were a failure. And I have tried all methods. Is just my lungs not cooperating with me
Trip to the Amazon, same thing. Back in the UK and I got LSD. Enough to work with. And because of my circumstances and of my solitary experimentation, I said to go slowly and build up the dose slowly. When I reached a certain point, something bizzare happened. I started having flu symptoms. Like real flu symptoms. Feeling shivery, blocked nose etc. When this happened to me I thought that I was so unlucky that it was a real flu hitting me while coming up on acid. After a few hours, there were no flu symptoms whatsoever. Next time, same thing. Very bizzare. So I opened Grof again to see if I can find something useful. And I found. First I experienced, and then I read it. Of course I had read it years ago but in that book there are sooo many details that the last thing I would remember would be the flu symptoms. Since then I have some progress but I have doubled the dose and I am not far away from where I started. Sometimes I have questioned myself why am I doing that. With Grof's method I am not gonna get rid of the ego-death fear. I would have to go through it no matter what. Maybe I am just winning time or finding a side-way to ease my resistance. Sometimes I think that too much reading and increasing the dose little by little, has done more bad than good for me. So when I said that if you have something else to propose to do it, I meant it. I am not holding Grof as THE gospel, it is just the only gospel I have found that stands for the sub-breakthrough doses and makes perfect sense for a very popular model of the psyche of the 21st cetury.
Ufff I finished it...difficult stuff to write on forums eh?? I am reading for years but I rarely write!!