You know when you come across someone that has gone a little bit too far with LSD or MDMA? They're still connected to reality, but they're thinking is on a much more "spiritual" plane--lots of magical, poetic thinking takes the place of pragmatic, grounded thought.
I have noticed that this pragmatism and grounding increases when I do Salvia. Could Salvia be a good antidote to crazy, out-there psychedelic rambling that could be perceived as weird or schizophrenic by more conformist people? I'm talking gentle Salvia experiences, like quidding or tea, not blowing someone out of the water with a smoked extract.
EDIT: I posted this on an Iboga forum as well, as I believe Salvia and Iboga share grounding, pragmatic qualities, possibly via their kappa-opioid agonism. See below:
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I also posted this in the Salvia forum on the DMT Nexus, but I think it also could apply to Iboga, as another kappa-opioid agonist.
In my experience, these substances take ones consciousness *down* into self-knowledge, rootedness, bare pragmatism, and physicality. As opposed to tryptamines, MDMA and other psychedelics, which *elevates* one into more ethereal, energetic realms of boundless love and perception.
The Yin and Yang analogy could work here; classical psychedelics are expansive and elevating, whereas Salvia and Iboga are contractive and grounding.
Anyway, my point is that I feel that these substances could help someone who has been feeling ungrounded from a psychedelic experience--someone who wishes to reconnect with their pragmatism and not be thinking in terms of spirituality all the time.
Why do I think this?
a) I once read a report of someone coming down instantly from meth-induced psychosis (or was it cocaine-induced?) after smoking a bowl of Salvia.
b) My personal experience is that I feel more grounded, perceptive, and serene after taking Salvia. During the experience, I am able to analyze my own spiritual-type thinking. It's as if these thoughts reach a climax and I see how they play out in my mind, usually in silly or weird ways. In the aftermath of the experience, I am able to see that those thought patterns were getting in the way of me living my life happily. They gradually slip away, like knots that have been untied.
c) Kappa-opioid agonism is correlated with reduction in OCD-like symptoms. And I believe that obsession with spiritual ideals (gratitude, unconditional love, being in-the-moment) could be a form of OCD. Of course these things are important, but sometimes people obsess.
Your thoughts?
From the unspoken
Grows the once broken