Thank you for posting!
This is exactly what I needed in my life at this point.
I love this article so much that I'm printing it out and tacking it up on the wall.
On Mckenna -
There are some folks here who seem ambivalent about this wizard of words.
Well here are two things I've learned from this giant, and they actually fit right into the advice of the article.
First, McKenna (as one poster pointed out already) did not take himself seriously. (Neither did Alan W Watts).
I remember hearing him rave just the other day about his severe scorn for the idea of the relativity of ideas - that somehow all ideas have equal worth. He said this is nonsense. And so he raised the question: how to know what to believe?
Well, he in a nutshell said that the way to protect ourselves from becoming fools is to always choose the simplest explanation when trying to understand something - it's the so-called principle of parsimony called Occam's razor.
You all know what I'm talking about so I won't belabor that.
Second, McKenna always insisted on the primacy of immediate experience. His main message (from his mouth) was two fold: the message of self-empowerment, and the message of self-trust.
"Just deal with the raw data and trust yourself - nobody is smarter than you are, and so what if they are?
Inform yourself. Mistrust and transcend ideology."
I mention these two points quickly only to show that although he had his own ideas, AT LEAST HE HAD IDEAS. And, as far I can tell, he lived by what he preached - that is - trusting his own intuition and encouraging others to do the same.
If Terence Mckenna wasn't a Bodhisattva of sorts, I don't know who else is. (Don't get me started on Alan Watts. Both were giants.)
In conclusion, I see no discrepancy with this article and Mckenna's own views.
Kudos to the author of that article.
And kudos to ND for posting it!
Peace.
Genesis is Now, the Mind is Incarnate.