Well I haven't been on here in a while, but I figured I'd poke my head in to update this thread.
It's been three weeks now and the "panic attacks," as they're commonly known, have let up considerably. The things that trigger them become fewer and fewer and it takes me shorter and shorter periods of time to get a handle on them. The "attacks" themselves are pale shadows of what they were in the first week I was getting them. No comparison at all really.
What happened is actually much deeper than the surface symptom of the panic attacks. It's been a confrontation that's been coming my whole life, and it would have happened at some point anyway, if it hadn't happened now. I don't doubt that taking psychedelics had a hand in forcing me to face these things. Don't get me wrong, I'm not regretful at all. How could I be? I'm extremely thankful and humbled beyond anything that words can express.
It's been a deep, thorough questioning of literally everything I ever took for granted in my entire life. Every action I made became a momentous thing, every thought became like a weight dragging me down. I was suddenly made aware of what I've been calling "myself" my entire life, and forced to look at that very closely in a very uncomfortable manner. Probably the toughest period I've ever experienced.
I don't know if I can properly articulate exactly what's happened to my awareness, but I think "awakened" is the right word. I'm conscious of life/the world/reality as a "thing," as if from the outside. It's taken a while to get to the point where I can begin to sit in that newfound awareness without freaking out. Mostly it's just taken time to see that life keeps going on in spite of my freak-outs.
In the process of this whole ordeal I've made some powerful discoveries. First of all, I've found that I can stop my thoughts and experience life without them. Then all the garbage that's clogging my head up drifts away, and there's just life. I just live it, and that's that. The drama and the horrible weightiness of it all just vanishes.
Second of all, I've finally faced down fear and discovered what to do with it. For the first time in my life I can say with confidence that I am not afraid of death in the least. This is not because my beliefs about death have changed or any such thing, not at all. It's that I've learned deeply about fear itself. There isn't fear of this, fear of that, as language and culture lead us to suppose, there's just fear. Fear is not a quality inherent in anything; no thought, no idea, no thing is fearful in and of itself. Fear is just a feeling. When you realize that, it suddenly shrivels up like a leaf in the fire. It can hold awful power over us if we let it, that I know all too well. I wouldn't wish a life ruled by fear on my worst enemy.
Lastly, and most importantly, I've learned about something very hard for me to put into words. You might say this is the spiritual part of the whole thing. At a certain point I gave up, completely and totally, for the first time in my life. Not because a chemical made me do it, that was the key thing. My "ego" finally gave up the ghost of its own volition. I just broke down and said, alright universe, do with me what you will, I've struggled enough. And I lay down on my bed and fell into a deep, deep place that I can only call "Love." This is the thing. I know that this is what people must have been writing and singing and shouting about for so many centuries. There's a quote attributed to Jesus that says that "only as children shall we enter the Kingdom of Heaven," or something like that. I see now that when we let go of everything, absolutely everything, becoming innocent and light as children, we find ourselves floating in supreme and all-consuming Love.
For that, and that alone, I will face the "darkness" as many times as necessary, even until my dying day if it must be. I enjoy the simple things of life, the beautiful faces, smells, tastes, textures. It's all music for me to dance to.
Once again, I'm so thankful to everyone in this thread for helping me to get through a very tough time.
Yours truly,
Beelzebozo
Quote:I have come to believe that in the world there is nothing to explain the world.
―Loren Eiseley