NotTwo wrote:One thing that occurs to me when reading this is how someone is feeling physically and emotionally when they approach death. I know Aldous Huxley took LSD when he was about to die and I've heard of others too.
I've thought about this a fair bit and have seriously considered this as an option when I know I'm on my way out. However I know that at the moment I generally avoid taking psychedelics if I have any kind of illness or slight complaint such as headache, sore throat, cold. Who knows what my physical condition will be when it comes to my own death. For people like Aldous Huxley, did it not matter that they were probably in pain not to mention the enormity of knowing that they were about to lose their body?
Wow. I have not thought about Aldous Huxley in a while. It is remarkable how serene and lucid he was at the end of his life. That rarely happens. Most folks don't have such lucidity at the end nor the option to get intravenous LSD administered nor the capacity to make serene use of it.
Current Mood: dying. I suppose one could say that if you are open to your life or your death experience as it is, then it is okay to take a journey, whatever your current mood!
One check in or phrase that Allen Ginsberg used may be apt here:
"Because it is not necessary, it is okay to do it". So the adage one might take from that could be, "when I don't feel a need or that it is necessary for me to do so, it is okay for me to "journey"."
Allen suffered many horrible trips and he went to ask a Lama about it. The advice he got was "Whatever you see, horrible or beautiful, don't cling to it."
And here the "journey" word starts to drop out. Where can you go? Who is journeying to where?
Oh my. I've just pulled the rug out from under myself. I'll have to let go of that as well. Oh my.