I'm doing a bit of research into harmalas at the moment - I may or may not be able to produce something useful from it at the end
There's one thing that I'm hoping people can help me with. In my experiments vaping incremental doses of harmalas (different kinds) I can see that harmalas have their own specific onset time and duration. These are much slower than vaped DMT and last much longer. I'm hoping I can produce a table of these when I've finished btw.
Now with changa, the harmala constituent - whether you're using b. caapi or extracted harmalas - is there for two reasons:
1. as a MAOI it stops the DMT being metabolised so quickly thus prolonging the effect of the DMT and potentially giving you a bit more "manoeverability" with processing what happens
2. it adds its own particular flavour to the experience which many people claim makes it closer to a shortened ayahuasca experience
However I'm wondering how this actually works with changa considering the different onset times of these two ingredients. My own experience of smoalking pure DMT is that 30 seconds in I'm being projected through fractal patterns on my way to hyperspace and 5 minutes later I'm already on my way down. OK, so with the harmala added maybe this isn't 5 minutes, maybe it's 10 or 15 minutes later. But this time span misses out on a lot of what the harmalas have to offer.
I'm just wondering whether it isn't more logical to divide the changa up into part A and part B. So basically smoalk the harmala enriched leaf first, wait maybe 20 minutes, smoalk the DMT enriched leaf. I know a lot of people do use some variation on this but doesn't this make the all-in-one concept of changa a bit incongruous?
In all of reality there are not two. There is just the one thing. And I am that.