say about DMT, it can be found here 
http://www.serendipity.li/dmt/nsand/ but those who are nto luckly enough to own a computer and usinga  library I'll post it here. Its written by nick sand, the link will explain mroe about him.         well folks, here is it, prob the most inspiring thing one could read befor embarking on DMT. It is written by a man who made it for eyars, and used it as a sarament in the GREATEST sense.            The world of DMT is incredibly vast. What DMT opens in  us is so profound that it is impossible to truly express. I have  been making, using, and initiating people into DMT use, for  around 40 years. I was the one who first discovered that the  free-base could be smoked. It has never ceased to amaze me,  nor have I ever felt that one could fairly arrive at any hard  and fast conclusions about what was happening during a  DMT trip. I do think that there are general rules for approaching  the DMT journey such as diet, preparation, set and setting,  and intention. But DMT is about the beyond. “Beyond  what?” you may ask. Beyond the intellect, beyond the senses,  beyond any devices and biological instruments for dealing  with the external world. When you journey through the  realms of the interior, the rules of the intellect and the values  of the material world are not only irrelevant, but using them  as yardsticks can create confusion. Tools of intellect are analytical,  and as such are divisive. The processes of expression,  communication, analysis, and intellect are tools for the ignorant.  With these tools, we work our way out of the dark;  but this ignorance is of the material world, not the spirit realm.  DMT is about unity and the healing of division, conflict, and  the sickness brought about by compartmentalization. It is  on a higher order of reality than the intellect, but it will weave  message-laden images with any mental state or environmental  input. The trick is seeing the pattern in the fabric and not  getting hung up on the colors and threads. Thus, when I see  someone trying to understand the DMT experience from a  non-mystical, intellectual viewpoint—subsuming the whole  by the parts—I am strongly motivated to share a critical viewpoint  in the hope of extending our understanding of DMT  and its use by travelling toward the beyond, which is its  proper landscape.  World consciousness is changing and expanding very rapidly.  The part that freaks everyone out is the idea that we will  have to bid a fond farewell to the absolute authority of the  intellect and the senses. These are the crutches of the material  world. In the material world we fall down without them—  we would remain as cripples. However, in the vast beyond,  they are just distractions. These tools need to be dropped  when you enter the ocean of consciousness, as they will only  drag you down when you need to float    When I read the excerpt in ER from DMT: The Spirit Molecule  by Dr. Rick Strassman, I was struck by what I feel are  a few fundamental misunderstandings that he made, and his  failure to notice the crucial effect that the presence of he and  his crew, as well as the overall environment, was having on  his subjects. I wish to point these out and to put this type of  research back into the vast perspective to which it belongs,  lest this materialistic viewpoint create decades of misunderstanding.  First off, DMT is not a re-run of the X-Files. There are no aliens  squiggling through psychospace to do experiments on us.  That idea is just plain silly. It is fine to wonder how these  perceptions occur, but it’s another matter to jump to conclusions.  Wouldn’t it make sense to first examine the environmental  design rather than look to alien origins? Over and  over, Strassman’s subjects describe being examined by numerous  strange beings in highly technical environments  during the visual phase of their DMT experience. They are  being examined, discussed, measured, probed, and observed.  They are in high-tech nurseries and alien laboratories. There  are 3–4 people moving around operating machinery according  to some design or agenda.  Now lets look at what the physical surroundings are. These  experiments are being done in a hospital room. There are a  number of people in attendance, helping the one who is in  charge, Dr. Strassman. He has an agenda and an experimental  scientific viewpoint based on intellectual assumptions.  There are people from NIDA, a government agency  overseeing these experiments. They are labelled “Mr. V.” and  “Mr. W. ” It seems clear to me that these individuals are the  “aliens” represented in many of the experimental subjects’  trips. The elements of the experimental environment seem  to be cropping up in the trip world that the subjects are experiencing.  Why haven’t other environmental designs been  considered?  One of my many memorable DMT trips (at about 0.9 mg  per kg of body weight, intramuscular of the HCl) was sitting  on a Persian carpet listening to a recording of Sharan Rani  playing a love raga on a sarod. I had my two trip buddies  with me. There were candles and incense. The room was set up as a temple space for tripping. As I arrived at my internal  trip space, I was filled with overwhelming feelings of womanly  love and sensuality. I looked down and was very surprised  to see myself dressed in filmy harem pants and no  shirt on. I had a beautiful copper-colored female body—  breasts and all. I had many bangles on my arms, and ankle  bells on my legs. I looked around and found that I was dancing  a seductive love raga to the two musicians facing me playing  sarod and tabla. We were performing in the courtyard of  a beautiful Indian temple similar to Bubhaneshwar Temple,  famed for its erotic sculpture and soaring towers. My dancing  was an exact counterpart in rhythmic motion to the melodies  and rhythms of the music. It was an exquisite act of love.  It was so beautiful that when I came down, I declared that if  I died right at that moment, I would regret nothing as I had  experienced beauty more exquisite than I could ever imagine.  Perfect love and unity. As I came down, I saw my beautiful  breasts shimmer away and the bangles slide off my arms  twinkling into nothing. There was a momentary ache in my  heart as all of this love withdrew. As the room reappeared  around me, I experienced a confusion; I could not remember  if I was a sacred temple dancer dreaming I was a man, or  if I was a man dreaming I was a female dancer. This was obviouslya very touching and profound trip that infused my  being with a new appreciation of love and harmony, something  I carry as a memory and a perspective on life to this  day. Obviously, I am not a woman, but I was so profoundly  influenced by a woman playing a love raga that I created  myself in accordance to what was entering into me from my  environment. So it is apparent that set and setting are extremely  influential in acting upon the DMT state, which is  clearly a magnifying, creative, and sensitizing medium.  Now what would have happened if I had been injected with  DMT in a clinical setting with two authorities from the National  Institute on “Drug Abuse” watching me while little  machines were beeping and orderlies and nurses were moving  about? How different is this from the early CIA experiments  with LSD? Granted that this orientation is clearly not  the evil, murderous purposes that the government was entertaining  at that time, and the “compromised assets” (subjects)  were not thrown from the windows to create an urban  myth imprinted on everyone’s mind that LSD makes you  “jump” out of windows, but there are certain elements that  are similar. [Note: We are not aware of any documented incidents  of government officials chucking dosed subjects from win dows. There was one incident where a chemical weapons specialist,  Frank Olsen, was unknowingly dosed during an Army  Chemical Corps gathering. Mr. Olsen later became depressed  (apparently related to his being dosed) and was to be committed  in a mental hospital. However, “the night before commitment, he  died after crashing through a window on the tenth floor” of a hotel  (Stafford 1992). Did he jump or was he thrown? We don’t  know. Nevertheless, we seriously doubt that this incident was orchestrated  in order to create an urban legend that LSD causes  one to jump from windows, even if it may have contributed to this  idea. Although I doubt that jumping from windows while on LSD  is common, the fact is that it can play a part in such an activity,  as I actually witnessed an individual on acid jump from my own  second-story apartment window. — David Aardvark] These  are experiments being done by government agencies examining  the use of these psychedelic substances in the pursuit  of more power, money, and success (and based on the fallacious  concepts of “drugs” and “abuse”). Remember, these are  the same folks that rub elbows with the masters of disinformation  that create absurd commercials like a frying egg  in a pan saying, “This is your brain on drugs.”  The assumptions are all wrong. Dr. Strassman’s interpretation  is about the recording of specific hallucinations, psychological  modalities, and intellectual structuring. In actuality,  the hallucinations are only visual by-products of a mystical  state. What is important are the feelings and the hidden  meanings you experience from entering into the vastness,  and the new consciousness that can result; this is the  glimpse that can open your soul to the sacred.  At the end of the excerpt, Strassman decides to “act as if  the worlds volunteers visited and the inhabitants with whom  they interacted were real,” so that he can show more “empathy.”  It is difficult for me to interpret this “acting” as allowing  true empathy. It seems more like psychological roleplaying  to me. His concern that this approach might create a  communal psychosis is valid, however.  The administration of DMT in these highly artificial and  agenda-driven environments may very well create a warped  impression of assumed importance and reality that does not  allow DMT to function as it should. Let Strassman take his  subjects into the forest or a temple, and turn on with them  after he has mastered it himself, and I think he will find that  the little alien doctors will disappear and be replaced by other  mystic beings—beings that can tell you about yourself. Or  you can go to a completely non-representative space of the  rare “level three” state, where there is no light, no design, just the voice of God using your soul as a silent tuning fork.  Alas, this is unlikely to happen, as Strassman would probably  lose his job or grant, might very well be prosecuted and  jailed, and worst of all, like Leary and Alpert, lose his  scientific “objectivity” (another great myth).  Moving from this critical mode into a more expansive mode,  I would like to address this topic from a mystical/religious  point of view. The “objective” viewpoint was adopted by science  as a more realistic way of describing reality than the  “subjective” views filled with rigid dogma espoused by various  organized religions. Actually, this understanding of objective  (standing aloof from an experiment so as not to have  one’s judgment distorted) and subjective (being so immersed  in what one is observing that meaningful observations cannot  be made) are really misnomers. Subjective consciousness  can be thought of as the personal inward journey involving  mystical experience and self-realization. Objectivity has to  do with the outward application of the mind for the realization  of materialistic goals and intellectual pursuits in the  world of practical life applications—for communication and  social survival.  I would like to consider this topic from the subjective point  of view, to share a perspective that I feel can lead to a much  richer appreciation of where one can go with the sacramental  substances, should it be decided to use them in this manner.  One of the two “commandments” we had in the religious institution  that we established in the ’60s called the League  for Spiritual Discovery was “Thou shall not change the  consciousness of another person without their consent.” On  the surface, this means don’t dose anyone without their  knowledge. Dosing someone without them knowing it is a  mean-spirited form of violence. Our consciousness, limited  as it may be, is ours. It is intensely personal. It is also our  entry and connection with Divine consciousness. So to dose  someone without their knowledge is to mess around with  their connection with God. To do this for fun or revenge is  nothing short of an abomination. It is disgusting and the  height of unconsciousness. This is sin.  Now, let’s look at changing someone’s consciousness with  their knowledge and permission. When one enters into the  field of consciousness to explore or find God, unity, healing,  inspiration, beauty, or love, one is making a commitment to  meditate or work, or to take a psychedelic in a conscious or  purposeful way to find one’s self or gain some hidden inner knowledge. This is one’s promise to one’s self. This is extremely  personal. It is between one’s own heart and mind,  and God’s. No one else’s.  When you take an inner voyage, you may be asking someone  to assist you. This someone may know more about this journey  than you do. This person has made the trip before. This  person knows, perhaps, how to navigate his or her path without  fear and stumbling. This person does not know your path.  Nevertheless, a calm, loving presence while you are passing  through the rough patches and sticky bits may be helpful to  you, if you want it. This is your trip. Your mind. Your idea.  Your freedom. You take the responsibility for your trip. This  is not really social. Even if you are in a cuddle-puddle this is  your personal connection with love. The other person is only  a mirror, a friend, a companion, a helper.  So when someone sets up an experiment—a program with  some “idea” behind it, some agenda—they are imposing a  kind of mind-trip on the psychedelic experience. The environment  may then have to accord with medical, psychological,  or even governmental rules, precepts, and regulations.  Even if the person running the program wants to demonstrate  how useful and helpful these substances are, the very  fact that there is an exterior organized program controlling  the way in which the substance is administered interferes  with the nature of the experience. Such a program in a clinical  environment may produce some interesting results, but  this is not the entheogenic or sacramental use of these substances.  This applied program (curing, drug abuse, psychotomimetic  model, or whatever) is a linear kind of thing—a control  and concept modality that does not even begin touch on  the true potential of what can be a very profound multilevelled  experience. It is but one very small window, a tiny  part of what is possible, and the part cannot subsume the  whole. Holistic, deep spiritual research cannot be authorized  by its very nature. Authority does not command God. If authority  is an organized and limited temporary utilitarian  structure, when its use is finished, it is disposable. God is  not disposable. Neither are people.  Consciousness research and exploration must always be unauthorized  to be authentic. Authorization is simply irrelevant.  This does not mean we cast psychedelics hither and  yon all over the landscape irresponsibly. It means that this is  a deeply personal, tender, passionate search for self-realization.  No one can tell you this. You must learn it for yourself.  This is your love dance with yourself. For anyone to diddle  with the controls in a gross or even subtle way, it distorts things (to put it “objectively”). To put it subjectively, it’s simply  perversion.  Let’s look at it from another angle—a scientific angle. There  is a concept sometimes referred to as the Heisenberg Uncertainty  Principle. Put simply, it means that the act of observing  something changes the nature of that which is being  observed (in subatomic particles). The very act of just observing  it. In our social life this happens all of the time.  For example, you walk into a room full of people. They look  at you. You act very differently than you would if that room  were empty. What might the fundamental effect of having  substances administered by strangers (albeit possibly  friendly strangers) who are taking notes, monitoring heart  rate, respiration, video and audio taping, talking, whispering,  or what-have you, in a technical, clinical environment?  Obviously the nature of the journey will be profoundly influenced  and changed from what it could be if the “subject”  were in a natural, private, aesthetically pleasing environment.  No one is going to be entirely comfortable in a clinical setting.  There is an agenda here. This agenda is not up to the  standard of a spiritual, friendly, and supportive environment.  Strange smells, strange sounds, and the wrong kind of lighting,  pervade. Past memories of doctor’s offices—pain, poking,  injections, etc.—can arise. This has to change the nature  of the experience. It is simply laboratory experiments with  human beings being used as experimental lab animals.  The highest use of psychedelics and the empathogens is for  finding love, beauty, joy, ecstasy, unity, and integration. This  search for our essential inner perfection and Godliness is the  spiritual search. When these substances are used this way,  they are used for the highest good. Then they are sacraments,  and we can call them entheogens. We must never forget, no  matter how much disinformation is spread, that these substances  are inert, innocent materials. It is we who interact  with them and confer the variety of qualities that we attribute  to them. It is we who have the choice to malign, terrorize, or  scandalize them. It is also we who have the choice to treat  them with the respect due to a gift from existence that can  help in our search to find ourselves. And in doing so, to find  the glory of love and illumination.  There may be some skeptics who say, “How did we get so  deeply into spiritualism and God?” Yet, we have many accounts  of elves, guardians, extra-terrestrials, and magicians  that we see on DMT. What’s going on here? If we can accept  imps, little monsters, and elves from this DMT spirit world, why cannot we accept God?  Let’s approach this topic from another neglected aspect.  What is happening when we ingest DMT and reach this level  of elves? Perhaps we are accessing the ultimate significant  spirit of life when we apprehend these animated and symbolic  representations. We may be intuiting the universal life  code—the DNA molecule—which is found by the trillions  all over the body. Perhaps the elves and imps are small subloops  of information that we are accessing, which show how  we can re-unify parts of our program that have gotten out of  kilter. It has to come from somewhere, so why not look closer,  rather than further? It seems that man’s search for knowledge  started from the stars with the Greeks, and slowly  worked its way closer and inward, until we are finally looking  at the genetic engineering that is the basis of life. It is  looking like the DNA molecule is possibly the origin of our  spirituality also.  Let’s look at the feelings that occur during these visions, by  examining them via a format for smoking DMT. I used to  have a portable temple of very simple design—a beautiful  handkerchief like a mandala, plus a candle. We’d sit around  and smoke, one person assisting the smoker with matches  and anything else he/she could do, like catching the pipe  when the smoker went beyond physical coordination. We  never passed the pipe around the circle, since that would  mean you were already coming down by the time the pipe  circulated again. The candle and mandala served as centering  devices. As the DMT came on, the edges of the cloth  would start moving, and so would the designs on the handkerchief.  2-dimensional surfaces would become 3-dimensional,  independently moving in and out, up and down, relative  to each other. The center would become a vast depth  reaching away into infinity. The feelings that accompanied  this were a sense of intense profundity, as though one had  just arrived at the edge of the Grand Canyon. There was a  sense of hidden inner meaning just about to be revealed.  Everything seemed especially precious, and the real meaning  of the word “sacred” resonated in my entire being. This  is a feeling of coming into oneness with everything. It is the  end of loneliness and emptiness, and the feeling of unity and  completeness. It doesn’t get any better than that. In this  space, anything can happen. Curing can happen. It can be  accompanied by “agents,” little doctors working on you, signifying  monsters, or even magicians teaching you lost knowledge.  Worship and prayer suddenly have a whole new depth  and meaning, because the sacred opens up the infinite. One time many years ago in the penitentiary on McNeil Island we had managed  to get a group of psychedelic prisoners living all together in one of the 8-man cells.  Every Saturday night we would sit together in a circle around a little makeshift  shrine, and take LSD, as well as smoke DMT. One of our cell mates, whom we  could not dislodge from the cell, was an exception. He was a Mafia hitman. Sick as  he was, he eventually gave it a try. The night he smoked DMT he came out of it  with a look of astonishment and awe, and he said, “That’s the first time I’ve gone to  church in 30 years.” Even this stone-cold killer could recognize the sacred. DMT  creates a well-spring into a type of infinite space. You can feel and taste it, as it  moves through your whole being like a cool refreshing breeze on a hot sticky day.  Like a mother’s soothing touch on your fevered brow, but much deeper and more  profound. You can feel the wind of the Divine blowing through your soul. Not every  time—it is a trial and error process of finding the best moment, the best preparation,  a moment when you are already in a great space. Then you can catapult  into the vastness of Godliness, and this is the highest fulfillment in life.  So much time is wasted trying to find a rational excuse for using the psychedelics.  A use that can open the door for government approval. Let’s cure some junkies of  their habit. What for? The government-backed prosecution of drug users creates  the problem. The problem is fictional. So we are going to use a sacrament to cure a  non-existent problem? It has been said that the psychedelic voyage is a trip from  wellness to even greater wellness. I agree. To use these sacraments only in a perverse  application is to bring them down to a much lower level than their potential.  What my experience indicates is that the most profound way to use psychedelics is  to create ideal, healthy, high-energy environments with people who are in top  form—then you will be able to approach the highest. Yes, the sacraments are curative  and can be used that way, but it is all about curing, on any level.  Look at it as though consciousness were a set of stairs. Each stair represents a higher  level of health, integration, and preparedness. At the bottom one can use the  psychedelics with beer, opium, and cocaine to have a wilder party. One can use  them to lose one’s self, have great sex, etc. Fine and good; nothing really wrong, if  that’s what you want to do—it beats shooting people and raping the environment!  This is, however, a low level of consciousness. Then you go up a few levels and you  think that you can do some good with these compounds. Let’s use them for studying  madness or curing addiction. Still a pretty low level of consciousness and no  real commitment to personal development. This use is directed outward, not inward.  Change comes from within—it can never be imposed from the outside. The  next step up it occurs that maybe you could use psychedelics for finding answers  to questions in your life, perhaps even for vision questing. Now we’re beginning to  start on a more consciousness-oriented trip. But how are we doing it? Are we really  arranging it so that we are creating an environment that unequivocally sets the  stage for a leap into consciousness, or are we programming the trip with interruptions  (telephone calls, visitors)? The purer our intention, the greater the possible  results become. It can be quite subtle. You cannot plan it all out beyond a certain  point or it becomes a control trip. You cannot program out spontaneity, but you  can be intelligent and sensitive, and remember not to make the same mistake too  many times in a row. Then you can use the psychedelics as an adjunct to tantra,  meditation and/or yoga, devoting your entire trip to learning to go deep in these    well shit, I'll fix later whenI have more time.