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Spirit and Psychedelics Options
 
AlbertKLloyd
#1 Posted : 3/28/2013 3:57:03 PM

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I am fairly outspoken about psychedelics not being innately spiritual.

What might not be clear is my belief that psychedelics facilitate spiritual purposes, but I believe that one must employ spiritual techniques and technologies to make use of this properly.

Merely taking a psychedelic is not enough to facilitate this in my experience, things like meditation, prayer, invocation, ritual and mantra are all very useful in conjunction with psychedelics to achieve spiritualistic results.

I do not find DMT to be enlightening, if anything it has shown my the faults in my belief systems altogether as opposed to engendering new belief systems or ontological epiphanies. I have found DMT to be useful in terms of the study and pursuit of enlightenment, but that it can go either way, causing as much harm as it is can benefit or good.

I want to encourage members interested in the use of DMT as a spirit molecule to employ methods of their choosing to facilitate and promote spiritual experiences.

Of course, one should not be aimless, having a clear goal is very useful.

I'd love to discuss this more and have people share their own thoughts, even debate and discuss in a civil manner.

Thumbs up
 

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jamie
#2 Posted : 3/28/2013 4:50:51 PM

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I agree with you. For me the most important thing DMT(and other medicines) has taught me about my own "sprituality" is that it is every bit as much in the here and now as it is in some far off idea of trascendentalism.

I guess it made me aware of the idea that I adhere to now that there is a sort of "soul" to the world..every aspect of it..to the point where the term "spiritual" in a way looses all meaning for me becasue everything has spirit..there are just so many ways beings relate to that aspect of the world.

I dont think anyone anywhere fully knows what is going on..so being able to see the importance and the sacredness of what is already here in front of us is the best thing we got going..and that is what psychedelics have shown me.

Two of the most important things for me beyond my work with these medicines in relation to my own spirituality is gardening and surfing/skimboarding. I think one of the greatest things humans can do is come fully into the role of caretakers of this world and tend to is as eden re-realized..and riding a wave in a mannor that syncronizes me with the rest of the ocean is most in depth meditation I have experienced.

I have had spiritual experiences surfing on psychedelics. Very personal and very spiritual.

Sex on psychedelics has also produced very spiritual states of consciousness for me.
Long live the unwoke.
 
Shadowman-x
#3 Posted : 3/28/2013 5:14:55 PM

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I fully agree with you Albert. I had this discussion with my mother before, as she is a puritan vipassana meditator, who used to be against psychedelic drugs as being "impure" experiences, leading to illusion or clouding the judgement of reality.

This all ties in somewhat to my personal philosophy about reality, wherein I believe in a duality and a singularity at the same time.

I do believe that there is something objective outside of us, some form of energy, or matter, or "spirit", but since it is filtered through a subjective lense, it has the potential to behave subjectively because that is how we experience it, thus something can be a "subjective" truth, or merely a truth to one person but not for someone else. And I mean this outside of just the realms of philosophy, but even objective experience, as we can see with schizophrenics, shamans, etc, who experience VERY different objective realities, even down to physical sensation.

Since I am of the belief that our interpretations allow every second of our reality, or each unique individual experience, to "enlighten" us, psychedelics are merely a powerful tool for focusing intention and experience towards a desired goal in that sense. Literal mental reprogramming for spirituality as a tool, simply on the other end of the spectrum as pure meditation.

Even looking at the religious ends of the spectrum, in the east you have a monk with nothing but a loin cloth and a bowl of rice meditating daily saying that reality is an illusion and you can rise above it through purity.

then you go across the world and you have a jungle shaman who's snorting tobacco juice daily drinking ayahuasca daily, saying that the world is an illusion and you can only see through the illusion if you drink this nasty ass jungle brew...


I once said
"One can take LSD, and become enlightened, and stay enlightened if they allow to make for the full change of their consciousness.

The enlightened buddha could take LSD and would not become unenlightened."

(based off of the definition of enlightenment as a permanent state of awareness and unity of the senses, in my opinion...nothign metaphysical, just a pure awareness.)Drool


good thread albert. I like your posts.
They don't think it be like it is, but it do.
 
Rising Spirit
#4 Posted : 3/28/2013 7:21:40 PM

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AlbertKLloyd wrote:
I am fairly outspoken about psychedelics not being innately spiritual.

What might not be clear is my belief that psychedelics facilitate spiritual purposes, but I believe that one must employ spiritual techniques and technologies to make use of this properly.

Merely taking a psychedelic is not enough to facilitate this in my experience, things like meditation, prayer, invocation, ritual and mantra are all very useful in conjunction with psychedelics to achieve spiritualistic results.

Yes, I share your perspective. I feel that psychedelics are not always entheogens, just as meditation and prayer are not always capable of shifting one's level of conscious-awareness, to another level of being or understanding. If it were that easy, would not the millions of religious folks have already become completely one with the Light of God? Ritual practices, contemplation, meditative focus within and such, are useful tools for our spiritual development, as are Sacred Medicines.

"Enlightenment"... both as an ideal and as an experiential, direct blooming, can be compared to tending a small garden (allegorically speaking, since we all know there is no "real" gardener, there is only the Tao assuming our from for but a short span of time, before it resumes it's formless glory). But even so and all illusions aside, tools are very, very useful in tilling the soil of one's own mind.

Essentially, it is our intention which gives psychedelics the magik and the capacity to propel us into altered states of being, which are not merely conceptual, preconceived or contrived. Entheogens release tremendous power and contain in their chemistry, the juice which can explode our attention into indescribable heights, thus revealing as much as we can feasibly handle of it's potential, as a direct catalyst. So, I agree with many of your insights.

Quote:
I do not find DMT to be enlightening, if anything it has shown my the faults in my belief systems altogether as opposed to engendering new belief systems or ontological epiphanies. I have found DMT to be useful in terms of the study and pursuit of enlightenment, but that it can go either way, causing as much harm as it is can benefit or good.

Agreed. DMT seems to be, in some instances, a mirror of sorts. It shows one the nature and painfully limited parameters of one's own mind. It sheds an overwhelming light upon the good, bad and even ugly aspects of ourselves. It does, however, provide a force and energy so mind-bendingly powerful, that is shatters my ego fixations every time I embrace it's magikal essence. I am drawn, as it were, into a vacuum where Rising Spirit cannot exist, there is just room enough for One being, upon such a plane of indivisible being... and we are all That.

Yes and IMO, it cracks open the doorway into another realm if we channel it's inspiration in the direction of our full inter-phase with Spirit and deepest immersion within the shimmering fabric of the Grid. The eclipsing of the soul and God. The beatific union of Iso-self and Omniself (never truly separated, save within our own transient dreamscape).

I do believe it has a profound message for each of us, albeit a slightly different message to each of us, as unique as it is universal. But overall, it reveals the total unreality of our finite self. It pulls the proverbial rug out from underneath our cherished mental structures and personal beliefs or philosophies. This is arguably a good thing, and I feel it is paramount in our unfolding, our spiritual awakening. Cool




There is no self to which I cling, for I am one with everything.
 
obliguhl
#5 Posted : 3/28/2013 7:55:33 PM

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Quote:

Merely taking a psychedelic is not enough to facilitate this in my experience, things like meditation, prayer, invocation, ritual and mantra are all very useful in conjunction with psychedelics to achieve spiritualistic results.


Most importantly, you actually have to WANT it to happen. There must be room in your life for it. I once was a christian, because my parents were, so this kinda primed me for questions beyond what the eyes can see. I lost my faith several times just to regain it in a completly new way. I don't have to believe in a jesus whos saves me, all that matter is that i am capable of developing a belief and all, that i can acknowledge the fact, that this world is totally arbitrary and we're making our own way through symbols and symptoms.

 
β—‹
#6 Posted : 3/28/2013 10:20:43 PM
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AlbertKLloyd wrote:
I am fairly outspoken about psychedelics not being innately spiritual.

What might not be clear is my belief that psychedelics facilitate spiritual purposes, but I believe that one must employ spiritual techniques and technologies to make use of this properly.

Merely taking a psychedelic is not enough to facilitate this in my experience, things like meditation, prayer, invocation, ritual and mantra are all very useful in conjunction with psychedelics to achieve spiritualistic results.

I do not find DMT to be enlightening, if anything it has shown my the faults in my belief systems altogether as opposed to engendering new belief systems or ontological epiphanies. I have found DMT to be useful in terms of the study and pursuit of enlightenment, but that it can go either way, causing as much harm as it is can benefit or good.

I want to encourage members interested in the use of DMT as a spirit molecule to employ methods of their choosing to facilitate and promote spiritual experiences.

Of course, one should not be aimless, having a clear goal is very useful.

I'd love to discuss this more and have people share their own thoughts, even debate and discuss in a civil manner.

Thumbs up


You said that perfectly. Couldn't agree more. Psychedelics 'CAN' help facilitate within an individual a spiritual/mystical experience. They will in no way do it automatically. Plenty of people take psychedelics and never have had these specific' types of experiences. It's all on the experiencer, not the substance. They're 'aids' if you will. Many psychedelic users only experience ecstasies without insight, or just an unpleasant confusion of sensation and imagination.

States such as mystical experiences only occur within some individuals 'some' of the time, under specific circumstances. They often depend upon considerable concentration and personal effort to use this change of consciousness in certain ways.

tat
 
AlbertKLloyd
#7 Posted : 3/28/2013 11:09:25 PM

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Is there honestly no chance of a debate here?

As a counter argument to what I previously posted:

Taking a psychedelic is rarely ever purely recreational, or therapeutic, and even a recreational approach has been known to often afford positive behavioral changes and experiences to spawn them.

Of course that doesn't mean mantra and prayer don't help. Pleased
 
Rising Spirit
#8 Posted : 3/29/2013 12:19:31 AM

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AlbertKLloyd wrote:
Is there honestly no chance of a debate here?

As a counter argument to what I previously posted:

Taking a psychedelic is rarely ever purely recreational, or therapeutic, and even a recreational approach has been known to often afford positive behavioral changes and experiences to spawn them.

Of course that doesn't mean mantra and prayer don't help. Pleased

I'm not in favor of offering a counter-argument... nor any alternate, counterpoint in perspective. We might joust about with our particular styles and self-expressions, at arriving to the same symmetrical conclusions?

I am, however, most intrigued to compare and contract psychedelic plant/fungus substances, with energy frequencies and thought modalities of the raw current of conscious-awareness, as it dances freely through all manifest being and from what I have understood, transcends matter, thought, dimension nor any form of any sort.

"The Tao that can be named with words is not the Eternal Tao." Lao Tzu

"The Tao that can be compressed into rational, linguistic symbology is not the real deal or the reality behind appearances." Rising Spirit




There is no self to which I cling, for I am one with everything.
 
Mustelid
#9 Posted : 3/29/2013 12:28:54 AM

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I agree, in fact it seems to me that consciousness expansion can happen with psychedelics only if you let it happen.

Reminds me of a trip report from someone who found himself enjoying listening to polkas. In the morning he wrote how he was so far gone that he was actually grooving on crappy polka music.

So, he could have expanded his tastes in music to be more eclectic and not just what he was "supposed" to listen to, but he didn't let it.

 
embracethevoid
#10 Posted : 3/29/2013 1:16:37 AM

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Rising Spirit wrote:
AlbertKLloyd wrote:
Is there honestly no chance of a debate here?

As a counter argument to what I previously posted:

Taking a psychedelic is rarely ever purely recreational, or therapeutic, and even a recreational approach has been known to often afford positive behavioral changes and experiences to spawn them.

Of course that doesn't mean mantra and prayer don't help. Pleased

I'm not in favor of offering a counter-argument... nor any alternate, counterpoint in perspective. We might joust about with our particular styles and self-expressions, at arriving to the same symmetrical conclusions?

I am, however, most intrigued to compare and contract psychedelic plant/fungus substances, with energy frequencies and thought modalities of the raw current of conscious-awareness, as it dances freely through all manifest being and from what I have understood, transcends matter, thought, dimension nor any form of any sort.

"The Tao that can be named with words is not the Eternal Tao." Lao Tzu

"The Tao that can be compressed into rational, linguistic symbology is not the real deal or the reality behind appearances." Rising Spirit






The Tao that can be smoalked should be smoalked moar
 
Global
#11 Posted : 3/29/2013 1:16:49 AM

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I disagree in the sense that DMT works differently for different people. It has such prolific potential, of which I'm sure few to none of us are aware of its full capabilities and one doesn't necessarily have to want or even be "ready" for a mystical experience (for example) for it to be completely life changing. Many of us are constantly shown new things which we did not know existed nor wanted to see or things like that, yet all the same they are displayed to us and demonstrated in some cases, the experience of which can spur spiritual cravings not previously present.

For example, a couple years back when I was smoking DMT, I wasn't aware of the ancient Egyptian side to the experience. It wasn't a desire of mine. I wasn't really barking up that avenue at all, and yet to my earnest shock, one day I found myself in a pyramid with Pharaohs (which was just the tip of the iceberg of course as it would turn out). Following that experience, I became obsessively drawn to researching the Ancient Egyptian culture. When I had my first mystical experience on ayahuasca and smoked DMT, though I was at that point aware that such experiences were possible, I had little clue what they entailed, and it wasn't like a major goal or anyway, yet it shocked me to the core. I didn't really even fully grasp what was going on till I was in the afterglow and at that point I was inconsolably laughing and crying.

Of course you all make good point that it is still on the user to integrate the knowledge and experiences to make them beneficial in real life, but if DMT sends the you the right message with enough clues to decipher it (which it may or may not do and which some may have a propensity for) it can be quite difficult I would think to ignore or write off, but then again I may be projecting.
"Science without religion is lame. Religion without science is blind" - Albert Einstein

"The Mighty One appears, the horizon shines. Atum appears on the smell of his censing, the Sunshine- god has risen in the sky, the Mansion of the pyramidion is in joy and all its inmates are assembled, a voice calls out within the shrine, shouting reverberates around the Netherworld." - Egyptian Book of the Dead

"Man fears time, but time fears the Pyramids" - 9th century Arab proverb
 
VIII
#12 Posted : 3/29/2013 2:10:09 AM

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AlbertKLloyd wrote:
I am fairly outspoken about psychedelics not being innately spiritual.

What might not be clear is my belief that psychedelics facilitate spiritual purposes, but I believe that one must employ spiritual techniques and technologies to make use of this properly.

Merely taking a psychedelic is not enough to facilitate this in my experience, things like meditation, prayer, invocation, ritual and mantra are all very useful in conjunction with psychedelics to achieve spiritualistic results.

I do not find DMT to be enlightening, if anything it has shown my the faults in my belief systems altogether as opposed to engendering new belief systems or ontological epiphanies. I have found DMT to be useful in terms of the study and pursuit of enlightenment, but that it can go either way, causing as much harm as it is can benefit or good.


Very nice post, I certainly agree to an extent. The use of special techniques or personal rituals has definitely helped me along my journey.

I'm not one to quote much of any religious literature, but recently was eating a meal and overheard a conversation between an individual and a "lazy" individual, that ended on the note of "faith without works is dead." At the time, this struck a strong cord with me and was a message I had not heard crisply in some time. Whatever your goal may be, you must chip away at it for it to become formed. DMT without integration is insanity.

Personally however, psychedelics were a major step towards spiritual areas. Psychedelics displayed, in great fashion, what I was capable of and when I returned from that state I was dying for another taste. Psychedelics, I believe due to the induced trance state, sparked a major interest in meditation that I believe would have otherwise been absent. Before psychedelics I had very little interest in (or understanding of) meditation, religious/spiritual ideas, and many other arts.

I feel that for me, it was this spark, the variety of thoughts that branched from it, the questions formed from those, the paths found while researching these questions, the discussion of these ideas here on the DMT-Nexus, reading the ideas of others here on the DMT-Nexus, opening myself up to the variety of experiences and suggestions of others, while acknowledging my lack of understanding, but my ability to understand, that finally brought me around to the "spiritual" side of things.

This spark/passion/energy was directed into a want/need to understand. Responses to a thread (here) I started in the past gave me much insight into the energetic aspect of the experience as well as my increased interest in meditation, it may be of relevance/interest. The energetic aspect of the psychedelic experience was an aspect I had not really "noticed" or seen the connection between it and the energy of Tai-Chi and other practices.

So I suppose I feel psychedelics lit the fuse for a spirituality bomb I had not finished assembling. While I was working on building my subconscious bomb, the fuse wound nearer and with its sparks I could see the device clearer. Or perhaps there are many fuses, many bombs, much light, and many devices.

On the note of harm vs good, I entirely agree. What follows the experience is subjective interpretation and application of concepts that seem to fit best. DMT has led me down some paths that I would liken to a level of insanity, or if anything a complete change from my natural interpretation of the world around me. Luckily it was temporary and with some hard work and a loving community I was able to gently return to reality. Milder negative effects for me are misapplied concepts (resulting from post-trip work) that, if not cared for, can develop into quite a nasty beast.
On the other hand, DMT also brings these things to light to allow me to work on them.

It comes down to application of the experience. You can do with it as you wish. For me (once I've come down), it ignites a passion to get my ass in gear. Actively trying to break down any assumptions I attached to the experience has been helpful for me. Overall though, getting the visions and ideas into a physical form (drawing, writing, talking, etc) has seemed to help the most for calming down the level of insanity.

AlbertKLloyd wrote:

I want to encourage members interested in the use of DMT as a spirit molecule to employ methods of their choosing to facilitate and promote spiritual experiences.

Of course, one should not be aimless, having a clear goal is very useful.

I'd love to discuss this more and have people share their own thoughts, even debate and discuss in a civil manner.

Thumbs up

Yes, Yes, Yes!
The inner soul is full of joy. Reveal my secrets and sew me whole. With each day, "I" heeds your call.
You may not care the slightest and may not be the brightest, but from here "I" sees you're mighty for you created it all.

And the jumbling sea rose above the wall.

Through this chaos comes the order you enthrall.
 
jamie
#13 Posted : 3/29/2013 2:55:57 AM

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I guess I can also say that I have had extremely personal and spiritual experiences that influences me greatly by simply taking them without any sorf of practice other than loading a bong and hitting it. When I first got into salvia I was interested in exploring mindspace/astral realms etc..I was already really into lucid dreaming before psychs but not really concidering deep mystical experience..I was just always sort of fantacy prone anyway I guess and had OBEs and lucid dreams and wanted to exoplore it more and more.

My first deep psychedelic experience was smoking 10x salvia from a shotgun bong..I only had a few low dose mushroom trips at that point and smoked ganja all day. I was into meditation at the time, and buddhism but I never really did that stuff on salvia at the time..I just read that it is like astral projection so I was into that..and I smoked it one day while sitting with a friend in a park looking over a little hill of flowers..

I went way out of myself..out into outer space into one of the deepest breakthrough I have ever had with any substance to this day. It was a profound experience and I really did nothing to facilitate it at the time becasue I was not looking for that. I had no idea that my perception of the world was going to be shifted in the way it was. It changed me forever..and all I did was simply smoke some plant extract.
Long live the unwoke.
 
hug46
#14 Posted : 3/29/2013 11:59:40 AM

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AlbertKLloyd wrote:
Is there honestly no chance of a debate here?


Albert i"d love to offer a chilled counter debate, but to be honest, i think i agree with you.I have always thought i have the spirituality of a piece of wood ( which i guess is quite spiritual depending on your belief system). You take a drug,then it reacts with your conscious and subconscious thoughts and can run with them. So if you are into all this spiritual malarkey and practise it while under the influence it more than likely is gonna give you some profound insights that relate to your inherent belief system. It makes it possible to fathom hell or soar angelic, according to the quote.

Or perhaps you are not a spiritual person, then you take a psychedelic, then perhaps you have an experience on this psychedelic that may plant a seed that there maybe more to what"s going on around you than you thought of when you were straight. So now you have a litle idea planted by your use of psychedelics and so it is associated with your intake of said psyche. Now each time you take the psyche the connection between your new found idea is rekindled and possibly triggered by the drug. So you start thinking about it and one thing leads to another and the belief is magnified by the fact that you are trippng balls.

So if you go into a psychedelic journey while doing spiritual things like meditation etc, the effects are going accentuate your practices. A very good tool IMO for this sort of thing but i think it is not meant to be used too much and i think there is a deeply ingrained western philosophy of abuse, where you are considered to be a serious dude(ette) if you cane certain substances.

There is also the possibility that i may have misunderstood your post and i am in fact debating without realising it. If this is the case, let the debating continue. Or i could be just stating the obvious. Im still out to lunch on the whole spirituality thing, but i must admit it does sound very appealing. Wink
 
Amygdala
#15 Posted : 3/29/2013 1:42:31 PM

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Imho, it all depends on how you use the term 'spiritual'.

To me, every waking moment is the only type of spiritual experience that I know, I constantly experience the interaction of my nervous system with some mysterious environment, resulting in my lived experience.

"Everybody thinks it's very hard to be a mystic -- you gotta go through a helluva lot of effort to realize your union with everything -- but actually you're experiencing your union with everything all of the time. Otherwise, you wouldn't be experiencing anything. You make the grass green." - Robert Anton Wilson

All experiences are mystical experiences, if you choose to view it that way. You can view it anyway you want.
β€œWhat goes on inside is just too fast and huge and all interconnected for words to do more than barely sketch the outlines of at most one tiny little part of it at any given instant.” - David Foster Wallace
 
Global
#16 Posted : 3/29/2013 2:15:32 PM

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Amygdala wrote:
Imho, it all depends on how you use the term 'spiritual'.

To me, every waking moment is the only type of spiritual experience that I know, I constantly experience the interaction of my nervous system with some mysterious environment, resulting in my lived experience.

"Everybody thinks it's very hard to be a mystic -- you gotta go through a helluva lot of effort to realize your union with everything -- but actually you're experiencing your union with everything all of the time. Otherwise, you wouldn't be experiencing anything. You make the grass green." - Robert Anton Wilson

All experiences are mystical experiences, if you choose to view it that way. You can view it anyway you want.


It makes the word rather meaningless to say that all experiences are mystical experiences. Certainly a certain class of experiences (those commonly referred to as mystical experiences) carry a certain weight to them that other "mystical" experiences in the mundane moment do not. Furthermore, it's not simply about choice, at least not for many it's not. Even for mystics who are most intimate with the experience, it can be difficult to just shift that kind of perception at the drop of a hat, and doesn't carry with it the same life-changing capacities as an authentic mystical experience where there is genuinely no subject-object relation perceived.
"Science without religion is lame. Religion without science is blind" - Albert Einstein

"The Mighty One appears, the horizon shines. Atum appears on the smell of his censing, the Sunshine- god has risen in the sky, the Mansion of the pyramidion is in joy and all its inmates are assembled, a voice calls out within the shrine, shouting reverberates around the Netherworld." - Egyptian Book of the Dead

"Man fears time, but time fears the Pyramids" - 9th century Arab proverb
 
Amygdala
#17 Posted : 3/29/2013 5:13:39 PM

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Global wrote:
[quote=Amygdala]Imho, it all depends on how you use the term 'spiritual'.


It makes the word rather meaningless to say that all experiences are mystical experiences. Certainly a certain class of experiences (those commonly referred to as mystical experiences) carry a certain weight to them that other "mystical" experiences in the mundane moment do not. Furthermore, it's not simply about choice, at least not for many it's not. Even for mystics who are most intimate with the experience, it can be difficult to just shift that kind of perception at the drop of a hat, and doesn't carry with it the same life-changing capacities as an authentic mystical experience where there is genuinely no subject-object relation perceived.


I think I see what you are saying, although I still consider even the most mundane experiences to be mystical when you consider how bizarre it is to experience anything at all. Imagine if you were blind from birth and then were suddenly able to see. Even the most everyday visual experience would compared to that baseline blindness, be as extraordinary and beautiful as the DMT world is to us. Deviation from baseline adds umph to the experience, but all experience is truly incredible. We're just so used to it that we forget.

I'm not saying that there isn't something special about those rare glimpses of the infinite, just that our everyday existence is equally amazing if I take the time and/or make the choice to consider it.

Any conscious experience is so remarkable that we have yet to even explain how it happens.
β€œWhat goes on inside is just too fast and huge and all interconnected for words to do more than barely sketch the outlines of at most one tiny little part of it at any given instant.” - David Foster Wallace
 
AlbertKLloyd
#18 Posted : 3/29/2013 6:12:58 PM

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Amygdala wrote:

All experiences are mystical experiences, if you choose to view it that way. You can view it anyway you want.

I simply do not agree, no offense intended.

For me this view is human-centric and supposes that the determination of reality or even cause and effect is found in the viewpoint or opinion of those who observe and or experience.

I understand the reasons this view is maintained by many, and why it's psychological aspects are relative, after all if an opinion is changed perspective is also changed and so the individual experiences differently from a subjective standpoint. However in my own experience and case spirituality is not an opinion based experience, rather it can be considered analogous to an experience of sense, consider taste in this regard if you will.

Consider spiritual to be a flavor, in terms of how one chooses to view it, one could like it, or dislike it, or be neutral regarding it. Ones opinion or perspective of it does impact the experience, however the flavor does not change and if you do not put the flavor in your mouth you do not taste it, even if you remember the flavor of it perfectly and thus experience the memory as a sensation the determination of the flavor is not made by viewpoint. It is as with other forms of measurement, take weight for example, your opinion of your body weight can change, ergo your viewpoint regarding your weight can change, but this does not determine your weight or change it.

For me spirit is rather specific in some ways, like a flavor it is not something I experience all the time or constantly. I cannot taste salt right now, but have eaten salt in the past, spiritual is like this for me.

It makes sense from a specific point of view to say that experience is itself spiritual, however one might also observe that our taste-buds operate constantly but that does not mean we are constantly experiencing the same flavors. One can logically proclaim that life is a flavor experience, because we taste all the time, but when this is contrasted to actually easting and tasting a substance then the idea becomes rather vacuous. In this sense we can exclaim that existence and life itself is spiritual, but the experience of a spiritual event is very distinct from existence itself, much like eating a food you like is different than just having taste-buds. We hear all the time too, but music is still special, again for me this is what spirituality is like, a specific experience like flavor, or hearing.

On this note I will add something that I expect many here to disagree with:
It is my opinion that the experience and or epiphany that we are one with everything is basically worthless and not special at all.
It is kind of a massive "well duh" followed by a "so what?"
It is my belief, perhaps in ignorance, that the divisions between us and everything are more meaningful and important in terms of insight and behavior etc.

The idea that everything is connected and all is one only has meaning because of the divisions that exist. It only has utility if it affects or has an impact upon our behavior in terms of interaction, as opposed to opinion. Basically knowing we are one with everything is not very useful unless you act according to it, but the action in such accordance is only possible as an agent which is in many ways independent.

Moreover in animal studies of psychedelics the implication is that psychedelic drugs affect the brain in ways to actually cause this "one with everything" sensation, which in our species is interpreted as meaningful, but in mice the same effect occurs and they stop fearing, they stop avoiding predators and they stop hiding and being safe, this reduces their survival. What we propose is a spiritual insight obtained through the use of psychedelics strikes me as a side effect that while it having a bearing upon our psychology should not be confused with a genuine insight or a meaningful discovery, sure it makes us feel profound, but it kills mice indirectly and certainly makes sense as a chemical defense effect upon mammal nervous systems.

I find the concept that all is one, or we are one with everything to be essentially worthless outside of feeling profound, it can seem amazing, but is it really an insight? I don't think so, though this is just my opinion. I've experienced it many many times and have even been swayed by it, thinking that through experiencing it I had arrived at a meaningful truth, however I no longer believe that. I believe that saying we are one with everything is almost worthless and can even be detrimental. It is to me a lot like saying life is always spiritual, it devalues the experience of spiritual things in terms of their distinction to the mundane, and in the same way saying that all is one likewise devalues the distinctions that even allow this concept to be considered or experienced at all. It feels significant because in essence we are not one with everything, on some levels everything is connected, there is unity and singularity, but it is the fundamental division of perceptive consciousness that allows us to say "I am one with everything" but this statement is an apparent contradiction, an oxymoron, for the very concept of self-hood or I entails that self not be one with everything.

Consider this in terms of action, being one with the universe does not mean one does not need to sustain themselves with nourishment. Being one with the water does not mean that one does not need to drink. When it comes to all being one, it isn't very useful, it is essentially worthless and to label it as a truth seems dubious.

Now we can have different views, I appreciate this very much, but when it comes down to it, viewpoint isn't worth much and wrong and right still exist in terms of correct and incorrect. Consider weight, your view or opinion of what you weigh, or should way, doesn't change how much you weigh, if you want that to change you have to do something about that beyond having a distinct viewpoint or opinion. But isn't this the way of existence?

If it is possible to have a belief that is wrong, then we must be cautious about believing that a change of viewpoint results in a change of reality. While one can believe what they want, that does not mean those beliefs are correct. I have a stone in one of my hands, both are closed and hidden, what your opinion is of which hand the stone is in, what your viewpoint is regarding that doesn't mean anything in terms of what stone the hand is in.

In terms of language a lot of people like to invent and or use their own definitions and interpretations of words, it is common for people to say that a word means something other than what it is defined as, because their opinion of it is different. But aren't the definitions of words what makes them useful? If I change the words to suit my views then how am I communicating? To change ones opinion or view about what a word means is like changing your view about weight, your experience of it might be different, it may well be impacted, but that doesn't mean you are right.

No matter what people believe, there is a reality with a gravity to it, I am referring of course to real gravity, the force we all know. Your view of gravity, the definition of it you accept, your beliefs about it, not any of these things affects, alters or impacts the cause and effect relationship of gravity phenomena.

When it comes down to psychedelics it is not uncommon for people to form views that opinion is deterministic, that since a change of opinion and affect experience then it equates to a change of reality, however for me this is delusion and is the most dangerous and potentially problematic delusion associated with the use of psychedelics. In terms of memory and therapy and life experience a change in viewpoint is very useful, and can lead to behavioral changes and improvements in appreciation and quality of life. However in terms of measurable cause and effect this becomes nearly worthless and to me is nothing more than vanity and ego attachment.

To presume that our perspective is deterministic of reality is to me extremely arrogant. I consider self an artifact of the experience and believe that belief in self is very problematic and delusional. Consider that the concept that "I am one with everything" is loaded with problems, even the statement "I am" is dubious. "everything is one, I is an illusion" is more accurate, though that is not to say that the body is not real, but that what we call self is not real, it does not exist outside of the context of reference.

The impact of our use of language is what this all comes down to. By having a referential term for self we have invoked concepts of identity that are unsupported by any evidence. The concept of self is a tool, like all words, used for relating information, but self is an illusion insofar as it is an artefactual concept that doesn't exist independently.

When someone explains that they are one with everything, or that self is eternal, that we have identity; it strikes me as problematic. We mistakenly belief that we determine identity, that we choose aspects of self, that we in effect "self create" but for me nothing could be further from the truth, we "self express" but our viewpoint is not deterministic outside of conditioned responses. We can influence our preferences and condition ourselves intellectually and physically, but we do not in effect have much choice at all in terms of what we are calling self. Contrary to popular myth, one cannot reprogram ones genes, otherwise people could change their skin color, hair color and eye color just by reprogramming genes. Likewise a great deal of personality and behavior is largely innately biologically determined, like begets like, they say the apple doesn't fall far from the tree, because children are like their parents, moreover even identical twins separated at birth are remarkably similar in terms of behavior, the indication here is that much of what we consider to be self creation aspects, like choice, is largely determined far before choice is made.

What I am relating is very much like changing hair color. If you bleach and color your hair it looks different, but you have not changed the underlying basis for the color, you have only changed the appearance. Our minds are much like this, we can change our thoughts like imposing a color, but the underlying basis for color, the nature of the color itself, the nature of the mind itself is ever present. When we do this it feels like we have changed, much like when our hair is colored it too appears different, but these changes are superficial and imposed. Personality is a lot like this, ergo self is much like this. When we say we have changed, through determining or changing our views or opinions we often fail to recognize that belief is imposed, it is like a paint or dye on a surface and changing the outer quality does not change the inner quality. If this were not the case then there would be no constancy, because there would be nothing to allow different beliefs and transition between them, there must be something innate and underlying that facilitates belief and in order to do so it must itself be largely unchanging.

The import of this for me is that if I desire or want something, even in terms of an effect, I can aim my consciousness or mind at it, I can focus with intent upon it or put that energy out there, to use the common vernacular. However it is irrelevant if I believe or do not believe in terms of this, and likewise it is the unchanging underlying aspect of mind function that directs the energy, not beliefs per say. In terms of spiritual work then, belief is not particularly important, it is more important to understand the nature of belief itself than to maintain a particular belief. In effect, the way one thinks is more important, in terms of general content, structure and patterning than what one thinks specifically. The method of thinking is more important than the thoughts themselves. Consequentially most spiritual work and meditative work is geared not towards changing specific beliefs, but focuses upon changing thought patterns. In terms of psychedelics when positive effects and personality changes are noted this is not due to a change in beliefs or due to a particular insight or "truth" rather this is due to a change in approach and or thinking patterns, in effect behavioral change in this manner arises from changes to the structure of the thought patterns themselves, which is largely a matter of conditioning and often irrespective of belief. In terms of behavior changing ones opinion does not amount to changing ones behavior, changing how one considers something is more consequential than changing the conclusion. Moreover changes in conclusion or belief or opinion that are associated with behavioral changes seem largely based in changes in thought structure and approach, as opposed to a mere adoption of a new belief.

This impacts our discussions severely, because we often employ the conversational form of arguments, where premises are supported and lead to conclusions, but this is largely ineffective to convince, if you want someone to change an opinion, changing how they think about something is more important than a good argument or evidence or anything like that. In this regard nothing I have written will be effective in terms of argument in changing opinions that are in contrast to my own. A glance at the function of social structure and language reveals that the use of language can influence thought patterns, relating to this is neuro-linguistic programming.

http://en.wikipedia.org/...o-linguistic_programming

How we think is more important than what we think.
What we believe is trivial, almost definitively, but how we think is consequential.
When someone speaks to us what they say is not as important as how they say it, the patterns affect us more than the definitions, ergo we are programmed, not by the meanings of words, but by how they are linked together.

Again in terms of conditioning, perception and spiritual enterprises spiritualistic approaches, experiences and methodologies are largely concerned with the pattern of thought and less so with the content. Consider the sacred Icaro songs, these change the thought pattern and focus the mind in a specific way, their effect is not based upon language content specifically.

When I affirm that psychedelics can facilitate spiritual methodologies I am stating specifically that one can employ psychedelics to affect thought patterns and alter the energetic focus of mental effort and this is how results are had, as opposed to being had through a change in belief or through having a specific thought, insight or truth. This is just what I think about this though and I am an ignorant person after all.
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Agave
#19 Posted : 3/29/2013 6:34:58 PM

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I have to agree with Amygdala. Washing the dishes can be a spiritual experience if you choose for it to be. The thing is, the physical and the spiritual are undeniably connected. one can and does affect the other. I agree with Jamie also that sensual experience can have a direct affect on the spiritual. On the other hand, there is no guarantee of a spiritual experience just by ingesting a psychedelic and for many people it is simply for entertainment purposes only. I believe it really depends on the intent, altho I know there have been times when I was expecting spiritual experience and got nothing of the sort, but still believe that I was spiritually affected on at least some unconscious level.

Most people look at meditation as a spiritual endeavor but actually the purpose is to allow the mind to come to a point of stillness with no expectations of spiritual experience at all, yet it frequently occurs so I kind of put psychs in that same catagory. I guess it would be a good idea to define spiritual experience. My first assumption is that it it comes from a divine spark in the way of love, unity, compassion, etc. but then I got to thinking of the work shamans or other "spirit" practitioners do and began to rethink that definition. Anyhow, good thread and I'm sorry I can't seem to stir up any controversy but I have enjoyed reading everyone's varied perspectives Smile .
As Within, So Without.
 
Amygdala
#20 Posted : 3/29/2013 6:53:02 PM

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I like the differences in opinion here, and how great it is that people spend time thinking about these matters... It's very rare for me to find people at work to have these conversations with Smile

I guess what I meant I convey is an appreciation of everyday consciousness, the state that I spend most of my life in. If its anywhere near true that my nervous system takes the trillions of signals from the environment and creates this simulation that I live in, then every moment is a type of hallucination, every moment is a mystical experience that I am the co-creator of. It blows my mind for example that color does not exist in objects themselves, it is a sensation that I create based on how fast photons are vibrating. We 'paint' the universe more or less. It just blows me away how much of my everyday existence is occurring 'in my head'.
β€œWhat goes on inside is just too fast and huge and all interconnected for words to do more than barely sketch the outlines of at most one tiny little part of it at any given instant.” - David Foster Wallace
 
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