PowerfulMedicine wrote:I've read many trip reports using LSA that sounded like delirium. LSA can be very uncomfortable and scary for some people. A lot of people don't like it at all. If you imagine a strong and scary LSA trip with a lot of body load, then you almost have a deliriant trip.
I have a lot of experience with diphenhydramine (a deliriant), datura, morning glory, and HBWR. LSA is nothing like a deliriant in my opinion, but I can see how someone who has a bad experience with it might think of it as a deliriant.
This brings me back to the idea of personal experience and bias. The description of psychoactive effects will vary based on person's experiences and biases. If you find a person who's never used psychedelics and give them a high dose of mushrooms (or any psychedelic), they will likely have a hellish experience that they might describe as delirium.
Then there is cultural bias, which has already been discussed. The Catholic church has always been opposed to the use of hallucinogenic drugs, and at the time of the subjugation of the New World they saw it as a sacrilege. Hallucinogens were the work of the devil. So you have to consider this in any description of their effects from this time.
There is going to be a cultural bias toward describing hallucinogenic experiences in a negative and deliriant way when the description comes from a 16th century priest during the Inquisition.
Yes, LSA can be very unpleasant for the person experiencing the effects.
The effects are typically sedating both physically and mentally.
The vasoconstriction causes physical weakness and soemtimes even fainting.
I am actually experience some pure LSA right now with a good friend. (Not that it really matters)
https://www.dmt-nexus.me...aspx?g=posts&t=106341571-1578 - Franisco Hernández - Court physician to the King of Spain, he was trained in botany and medicine, and embarked on the first scientific expedition to the New World from 1571 to 1578 to explore the native plants and medicine. Portions of his work were published in 1615 in Mexico by Francisco Ximénez (who had translated the manuscripts from Latin to Spanish) and in 1651 in Rome by Federico Cesi (in the original Latin) as Rerum medicarum Novae Hispaniae thesaurus. Ximénez took a dim view of the indigenous divinatory plants, commenting in the 1615 publication that "it matters little that this plant be here described or that Spaniards be made acquainted with it." In addition to recording information about the uses of ololiuqui, Hernández also provided an illustration of the plant (see below).
Quote:
Ololiuhqui, which some call coaxihuitl, or snakeplant, is a twining herb with thin, green cordate leaves; slender, green, terete stems; and long, white flowers. The seed is round and very much like coriander whence the name (in Nahuatl, the term 'ololiuhqui' means 'round thing'Pleased of the plant. The roots are fibrous and slender. The plant is hot in the fourth degree [Note: this refers to the humoral theory of medicine] . . . . The seed has some medicinal use. If pulverized or taken in a decoction or used as a poultice on the head or forehead, with milk and chili, it is said to cure eye troubles. When drunk, it acts as an aphrodisiac. It has a sharp taste and is very hot. Formerly when the priests wanted to commune with their gods and to receive a message from them, they ate this plant to induce a delirium. A thousand visions and satanic hallucinations appeared to them. In its manner of action, this plant can be compared with Solanum Maniacum of Dioscorides.
His account of the experiences are slightly more reliable because he is trained in botany and medicine.
"If pulverized or taken in a decoction or used as a poultice on the head or forehead, with milk and chili, it is said to cure eye troubles"
It says it can be used to cure eye troubles.
I cannot find any evidence that LSA or related alkaloids cure eye troubles.
Atropine, which is present in Datura and similar plants, is actually still used medically today to treat various eye conditions.
http://www.netdoctor.co..../atropine-eye-drops.htmlIt also acts as an Aphrodisiac.
LSA is a potent vasoconstrictor.
This is very contradicting. How can a man have sexual intercourse when he cannot maintain an erection?
Datura and Brugmansia are well known for being potent aphrodisiacs, due to their chemical components.
http://psychotropicon.in...atura-stechapfel/2872-2/"Formerly when the priests wanted to commune with their gods and to receive a message from them, they ate this plant to induce a delirium. A thousand visions and satanic hallucinations appeared to them. In its manner of action, this plant can be compared with Solanum Maniacum of Dioscorides."
He states that it induces delerium.
He doesn't state that it "feels like delerium".
It is described as being very visual and frightening in that sense.
Also he directly compares its actions to "Solanum Maniacum of Dioscorides".
I cannot find much information on this plant, but here is an interesting page.
It seems it is Belladonna or Deadly Nightshade.
http://homeoresearch.blo...m-maniacum-furiosum.htmlHeaven existing here between Hell
We surf the transient wave, balancing on our breath, building and destroying until death.
We are the divine creators and destroyers.
We are the portals & black holes.
We choose what we manifest at the present moment in whatever dimension we inhabit.
"We are the ones we've been waiting for" - Hopi Proverb