RAM wrote:...Looking back this was definitely a problem with setting. I have discovered that tripping in nature is much more rewarding...
I can relate to this very well...After my very first psychedelic experience with mushrooms, I realized that all I wanted was to always be around trees & other plants, but especially trees. At that moment I knew that I should have never moved to a city & within a year from that moment, I was living in the Alaskan wilderness in a tent, never more happy & content. However, there are plenty of people that would have been stark-raving bored if they had to live in a tent in the middle of a quiet forest.
Bodhisativa wrote:Boredom is a choice, not a state of existence.
I agree with this wholeheartedly.
I can't honestly say that I've ever been bored, at least not as an adult.
There were times as a child when I would say to myself "I'm bored", but I would rarely ever express this sentiment out loud since my father would immediately put me to work.
Once I discovered psychedelics & meditation & the magic of trees at 19, I've never been bored since, even in situations where others might find that they are bored.
Freedom's so hard
When we are all bound by laws
Etched in the scheme of nature's own hand
Unseen by all those who fail
In their pursuit of fate