AlbertKLloyd wrote:
What I am saying though is not that entheogens use correlates to an organized religion, but that DMT specifically is at the center of a new religion that is being codified. I will make a new post about it shortly.
And this is what I find to be particularly distasteful.
The following is all my opinion
This construction of yours, "the DMT religion" is what you are using to negate, or at the absolute minimum, subvert, numerous subjective experiences that
you feel meet the tenets of your manufactured religion.
It is worth noting at the outset, that while numerous people have questioned your experiences, because they seem at odds with their own, this is a far cry from being
Quote:...increasingly intolerant of alternative views, such as the perception that DMT experiences and conclusions can vary.
In fact, many, if not most, here on the Nexus would probably assert that the DMT experience is one of the most variable experiences (psychedelic or otherwise) that can be induced in a human being.
As you further assert
Quote:that experiences vary contradicts the claims inherent to the religion that DMT causes a specific reliable effect that is spiritual, extra-dimensional and real.
I can't help but view this as a straw man. Again, pointing to my belief that most would agree that the DMT experience is insanely variable. Furthermore, digging into the oodles of threads that attempt to dissect and reconstruct what "reality", "real", "illusion", etc. even mean, the notion that there is a large segment of folks claiming that the DMT experience is "real" beyond being a subjective experience, to the degree of dogmatism that you suggest strikes me as absurd.
I would go through and select the various sentences about your constructed religion that rub me the wrong way and address each one, but honestly, I find the whole thing rather exhausting. Instead, I will attempt to summarize my issue with your claims/approach.
You have taken the experiences, beliefs, assertions, emotions and other subjective components from a myriad of people's DMT experiences. People you have never met...people you may know an inkling of...people you may know "well" and have, from this cacophony of experiences, extracted memes and archetypes that you see to be coherent across their experiences. You then tie them up in a neat little bow and claim that these experiences are the result of various spokespeople as well as indoctrinations of varying degrees. Furthermore, you assert a dogma exists among these people...that they are actively vested in shutting down the opinions of people who don't conform to this "DMT religion" that you've constructed and ascribed to them.
From my perspective, you have created a category to house the experiences of people whose perspectives don't jive with your own by highlighting the ontological similarities they share and that are at odds with your own view, claiming these similarities evidence a dogmatic fundamentalism that refuses to acknowledge variability in the DMT experience (among other things), branding them as your constructed "DMT religion," and then summarily dismissing them.
Do you see why this strikes me as negating their experiences and views?
As I understand it:
- You present a body of people that you make uniform by ascribing them all to your constructed religion, because you feel that they have a certain set of beliefs regarding the DMT experience, which you feel qualifies them as belonging to your constructed "DMT religion"
- You allow no room for examining how/why they arrived at their beliefs/hypothesis/ worldviews.
- You essentially say that they cannot have created these hypotheses/outlooks of their experiences independently.
- Instead, you assert that their understandings of the experience are the result of them listening to "sanctified personages" (or their "disciples"
) and thereby predetermining
ALL of their experiences, hypotheses, conclusions, etc. relating to DMT.
- You accuse them of being dogmatic, despite the fact that the only "explicit" code is the one that you have stitched together from the similarities
you find among them.
- You claim that they believe in a uniform nature of effects, despite the evidence that many, if not most, would claim that DMT is one of the most variable experiences you can have.
- You conflate questioning an experience (or an explanation/understanding of an experience) that seems at odds with what many people report to experience (or feel/understand they have experienced) as labeling that experience as "invalid."
The statements that you made earlier in this thread along these lines were precisely the reason I accused you of negating other people's experiences. I was literally flabbergasted when I saw your post that further detailed your constructed DMT religion, on the heels of you stating that you were not at all looking to negate anyone's experience.
I hope, if I'm misunderstanding you, that my attempt to lay out my discomfort with your constructed "DMT religion" will help evidence where precisely my misunderstanding is.
Wiki โข
Attitude โข
FAQThe Nexian โข
Nexus Research โข
The OHTIn New York, we wrote the legal number on our arms in marker...To call a lawyer if we were arrested.
In Istanbul, People wrote their blood types on their arms. I hear in Egypt, They just write Their names.
ืื ืื ืืขืืืจ