104 mgs HCl harmalas down the hatch at 2:00 p.m. 100 mgs had worked well for me in the past and 104 just happened to fall on the scale. I was not sure if DMT was going to happen or not but I decided to at least eat the harmala dose.
3:10 p.m. I talked myself into it. 11 mgs loaded into GVG.
15 mins later and unfortunately I have to report something went wrong or perhaps several somethings. According to Nemo the place smelled of DMT so I must have burned some.
The comeup was SUPER FAST as if I was not MAO inhibited at all. This was beyond unexpected and more into a feeling of deep shock.
This was one of those ones that brings back the Voidmatrix quote that with these levels of sensitivities there really is no safe dose.
I was in trouble right away. Things were very intense and very dark. The dark palette did not bother me, as things usually start that way. It was gorgeous, geometric and folding in. But mostly it was about the feeling of being way too intense and very wrong. Sadly this became a hardcore resistance trip. I am not proud. I don’t recall many visuals.
The panic and dread were building, in particular knowing I had not yet peaked. I felt like a cornered animal. I could hear the dog whistle carrier wave sound. I didn’t want to resist but I didn’t want to lay there and take it as everything continued to amp up. I knew if I opened my eyes the visuals would damp down a bit.
I lifted the blindfold and looked around the darkened room. Some of the closed eye contents had come with me. Very dark visuals. Uninviting. Everything was darkly vibrating and my body was shaking in time to the vibrations. It did not feel good.
I was suddenly aware of being RADICALLY overheated. Normally on DMT trips I am quite literally corpse cold but I was suddenly having a terrible hot flash. So, I ripped off a few layers and got down to tank tops.
I told Nemo, “Something went wrong. I’m overheated.” then I got hit with a bunch of weird, tickling, brushing tactile hallucinations along my legs that I interpreted as unpleasant. I believe I said, “I’m getting hit with tactile now. I’d better shut up,” and as soon as I did the sensations ceased.
Then I lay back and tried to let go. It was really hard.
I was in a wide open gigantic white room with weird filigree on the walls and a crystalline, changing happy small blue entity of light trying to encourage me to let go, telling me it was okay to let go, to die, to just let things happen.
I also recall pulling up in a room with a strange blue anthropomorphic entity in a kind of beach chair, just lounging.
Also there was an odd olive green spiral city where pastel and primary colored anthropomorphic entities were living on the platforms of the spiral and they kept settling in and sitting down as the spiral continued to twist. I felt they were communicating a similar message to me - just sit down and settle in for awhile.
Throughout this trip I felt pins and needles in my extremities.
Other than that I do not remember much. It’s like this trip was about a reminder that I have no real control and things very often go nowhere in the direction I would hope or plan. The value of letting go CANNOT be underestimated by any rational entity given this reality.
THE AFTERMATH:
I’m pretty sure I was not fully inhibited. I think for sure next time do 125 mg harmalas and 8 mgs DMT.
In the hours of the aftermath I have felt basically okay, though kind of shaky and shaken. I am trying not to let sadness creep up on me. There’s nothing wrong with a humbling reminder.
Couple hours later and Nemo is in bed. We spent a couple hours talking about death and dying as well as confessing about dead animals we had come across, bugs we had tortured as kids, an animal that was accidentally killed, the loss of our beloved cats and the impending loss of our 18 year old cat, the loss of family and old friends. Apparently I needed to cry a bit, and this conversation certainly provided an appropriate release valve.
I wound up feeling significantly better afterwards.
"But even if nothing lasts and everything is lost, there is still the intrinsic value of the moment. The present moment, ultimately, is more than enough, a gift of grace and unfathomable value, which our friend and lover death paints in stark relief."-Rick Doblin, Ph.D. MAPS President, MAPS Bulletin Vol. XX, No. 1, pg. 2Hyperspace LOVES YOU