The spice is really life, never a narcotic, always a teacher. The more I consider the teaching part the more I understand it's really a unique state in which to learn things about myself and my reality/unreality, Jill Bolte Taylors stroke of insight was a brain hemorrhage that disabled one side of her mind and left her feeling in a state very similar to the DMT experience, there's a link
here, where she talks about being bigger than her body, being expansive and loved and seeing the universe with clarity, none of the baggage from her life, work or stress all removed and positivity given in turn with the understanding of life's fragility.
I've read James Kent's
argument against the DMT elves and in the experience itself, i agree with parts and i disagree with others. Considering that he himself has used spice plenty of times his argument is compelling and outraging at times to my sensibilities but in the end I feel he puts too much focus on attempting to seek "scientific plausability" of one's experience and as the erowid experience vaults testify "One cannot deny the experiences of others"
Psiloxyn is a fictional character of deranged substance and biased opinion. Do not believe a word it says, it only lies because it has to in order to keep the truth intact.