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The Ayahausca experience

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General interest discussions, not necessarily related to depletion.

Re: The Ayahausca experience

Postby Sixstrings » Mon 03 Nov 2014, 21:18:04

You can't say "all positive" -- there have been deaths.

It is dangerous to take ayahuasca if you're on anti-depressents, it's the MAOI thing.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '[')img]http://assets-s3.mensjournal.com/img/article/the-dark-side-of-ayahuasca/298_298_the-dark-side-of-ayahuasca.jpg[/img]

The Dark Side of Ayahuasca

Last August, 18-year-old Nolan left his California home and boarded a plane to the Amazon for a 10-day, $1,200 stay at Shimbre in Peru's Amazon basin with Mancoluto – who is pitched in Shimbre's promotional materials as a man to help ayahuasca recruits "open their minds to deeper realities, develop their intuitive capabilities, and unlock untapped potential." But when Nolan – who was neither "flaky" nor "unreliable," says his father, Sean – didn't show up on his return flight home, his mother, Ingeborg Oswald, and his triplet sister, Marion, went to Peru to find him. Initially, Mancoluto, whose real name is José Pineda Vargas, told them Kyle had packed his bags and walked off without a word.

The shaman even joined Oswald on television pleading for help in finding her son, but the police in Peru remained suspicious. Under pressure, Mancoluto admitted that Nolan had died after an ayahuasca session and that his body had been buried at the edge of the property. The official cause of death has not yet been determined.

Pilgrims like Nolan are flocking to the Amazon in search of ayahuasca, either to expand their spiritual horizons or to cure alcoholism, depression, and even cancer, but what many of them find is a nightmare. Still, the airport in Iquitos is buzzing with ayahuasca tourism. Vans from shamanic lodges pick up psychedelic pilgrims from around the world, while taxi drivers peddle access to Indian medicine men. "It reminds me of how they sell cocaine and marijuana in Amsterdam," one local said. "Here, it's shamans and ayahuasca."

Few experts blame the concoction itself. Alan Shoemaker, who organizes an annual shamanism conference in Iquitos, says, "Ayahuasca is one of the sacred power plants and is completely nonaddictive, has been used for literally thousands of years for healing and divination purposes . . . and dying from overdose is virtually impossible."

Still, no one monitors the medicine men, their claims, or their credentials. No one is making sure they screen patients for, say, heart problems, although ayahuasca is known to boost pulse rates and blood pressure. (When French citizen Celine René Margarite Briset died from a heart attack after taking ayahuasca in the Amazonian city of Yurimaguas in 2011, it was reported she had a preexisting heart condition.)

And though many prospective ayahuasca-takers – people likely to have been prescribed antidepressants – struggle with addiction and depression, few shamans know or care to ask about antidepressants like Prozac, which can be deadly when mixed with ayahuasca. Reports suggested that a clash of meds killed 39-year-old Frenchman Fabrice Champion, who died a few months after Briset in an Iquitos-based lodge called Espiritu de Anaconda (which had already experienced one death and has since changed its name to Anaconda Cosmica). No one has been charged in either case.
http://www.mensjournal.com/magazine/the-dark-side-of-ayahuasca-20130215


Ayahuasca can be deadly if someone is on any psych drugs and the MAOI thing clashes.

If one's system is clear of anything, then the ayahuasca seems okay by itself. Yet has this been really studied.. do we really know.. the fact is, nobody does know. And if one has a heart condition, there's some risk there, with ayahuasca taking you on an all day high blood pressure and high pulse trip.

Turns out there are some long term effects from prozac etc., that nobody knew about, until enough time had passed, how do we know ayahuasca isn't the same.

I'm not looking for an argument by the way I'm just sayin', is all. You're a cool dude Repent for taking this journey, and your courage. :)

EDIT: I'm watching your video, and at one point the speaker says "I don't like this anymore and I want to get off, but of course you can't."

Now see, that's the part I wouldn't like. I like a nice pino grigio and that's enough for me, I really don't want to be taken over by a drug and lose all control. Would feel like being "trapped" to me.

As I posted earlier in the thread, I tried LSD once years ago -- younger and a little foolish -- glad it worked out okay for me but that's about the same thing. Once you're on a trip, there's no "getting off." Personally I just have no desire to do that again.

OTOH.. I am admittedly uptight and phobic about drugs, in general. I really didn't like taking this one drug the dentist gave me for a serious root canal procedure. I forget the name of it. But it's far out stuff. Puts you in a bit of a zombie state. It was definitely a "trip," and felt very much like a recreational drug.

So.. what do you do.. you pop the pill and it's too late then, you're along for the ride..

In retrospect maybe it's healthy to relax and give some control over to a drug and just have an altered state. Otherwise, I couldn't have sat in that darn chair for five frickin' hours unless I was doped up on something (long story, why it took so long). I don't have "bad trips," I can go with it and roll with it, I just really prefer not to "trip" at all.
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Re: The Ayahausca experience

Postby SeaGypsy » Wed 05 Nov 2014, 18:18:58

Anyone studying the chemistry & effect of various psychedelics would soon learn that Ayahuasca type drugs (DMT, NMT etc.) are a lot less dangerous than LSD, particularly because the former exist naturally in our bodies & our bodies know how to process them, also because LSD leaves crystals in the synapses which can take many years to break down (flashback syndrome, ongoing drug induced psychosis).
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Re: The Ayahausca experience

Postby Sixstrings » Wed 05 Nov 2014, 18:34:39

Right, right, I didn't mean to make LSD sound cool by the way.

It was a very long time ago, did it once, glad I'm okay. *knock on wood!*

Or maybe I'm not and that's why I'm so OCD, now I need the ayahuasca for that problem. :lol: (joke, I'm not touching that stuff nor any other drug for "recreation" or "mind expansion" that's just my choice others can make their choice)
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Re: The Ayahausca experience

Postby SeaGypsy » Wed 05 Nov 2014, 20:09:02

Me, LSD x 30, MDMA x 10, psilocybin mushrooms x 100, DMT types x 40, datura x 30, heavy opiates x 100, cocaine x 2, amphetamine x 40, Ganga x 30,000. Days in prison x 0. Hospitalisation based on above x twice on Datura, both times until meeting the shrink in Monday morning.
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Re: The Ayahausca experience

Postby Rod_Cloutier » Sun 16 Nov 2014, 21:40:37

I took Ayahausca again this weekend. I got to experience the joy and awesomeness of existing again. It was awesomeness to the power of infinity, plus joy to the power of infinity, plus happiness to the power of infinity, plus a sacred sadness to the power of infinity, also evil to the power of infinity (This was scary), and each and every emotion to the power of infinity.

When I awoke the awesomeness of living seemed apparent to me. Life is sacred and it is a miracle that it exists at all. Consciousness is also a miracle, the divine self-awareness of your own glory of being. The God of my understanding is now magnificent beyond anything any religion in the world is selling. All of human knowledge and experience is but the tiniest drop in the bucket compared to the magnificence of what God is, yet it is all still special, sacred, beautiful and wondrous to the power of infinity.

Still as wonderful as all of this was, it seemed incomplete. God was present there with me, but I couldn't connect to the all. I couldn't connect to anyone else in existence. I was lonely to the power of infinity. I wanted to share the joy, and the ecstasy of being with everyone else in the world. With my wife, my kids, my co-workers, people that I only know online such as you folk, and strangers that I don't know. I felt sadness to the power of infinity that what I was experiencing in those moments could not be shared?

At some level I concluded the whole thing must just be a hallucination because I could not interact with and become other people. If I am like God, as I felt, then why couldn't I become someone else? Why couldn't I become you? Why couldn't I become my wife lying in bed right beside me? So I felt the mystery of life to the power of infinity.

These events and experiences seem so profound I feel compelled to share what I have gained. What I have gained seems complementary to waking reality, it doesn't take away from the day to day experience of conscious life; it adds the specialness of what I already had. Life seems so much more precious to me since I have been taking Ayahausca, it has literally saved my life.

I feel God led me to Ayahausca, it is wonderful.
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Re: The Ayahausca experience

Postby Sixstrings » Sun 16 Nov 2014, 22:06:05

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Repent', 'I') took Ayahausca again this weekend. I got to experience the joy and awesomeness of existing again. It was awesomeness to the power of infinity, plus joy to the power of infinity, plus happiness to the power of infinity, plus a sacred sadness to the power of infinity, also evil to the power of infinity (This was scary), and each and every emotion to the power of infinity.

When I awoke the awesomeness of living seemed apparent to me. Life is sacred and it is a miracle that it exists at all. Consciousness is also a miracle, the divine self-awareness of your own glory of being. The God of my understanding is now magnificent beyond anything any religion in the world is selling. All of human knowledge and experience is but the tiniest drop in the bucket compared to the magnificence of what God is, yet it is all still special, sacred, beautiful and wondrous to the power of infinity.


I used to smoke cannibis back in the day, and I know that's no ayahuasca, but I used to get that feeling a little bit like you're talking about.

Good memories -- I can remember just looking a tree in the moonlight and suddenly the leaves were just so amazing, and I'm like connected to the cosmos or something. Drugs certainly do this, they're like putting on a different set of eyes and suddenly seeing another spectrum of light that was blind to you, before.

And then there's the dark side of drugs. A raver that mixes her MAOI anti-depressent with ayahuasca and maybe on ecstasy too and dehydrates and dies on dancefloor.

And how big pharma in the US got so many addicted to Oxy, and then after doctors yanked it they have nowhere to turn now except heroin and now we've got a heroin explosion going on.

Substance use can be a mind opener -- and we all love alcohol too and partying and junk food and everything bad for us -- but you gotta have MODERATION. And a lot of folks can't moderate.

I've got some neighbors with young adults and I'm pretty sure they're really high on something good, because they just stand on the air conditioners and dance around and act foolish. And I see the wreckage of drugs all over my community.. it is HORRIBLE.. omg it's so horrible.. drug addicts are just bad bad bad. All they do is take, and defraud, and scam, and steal, it's just horrible.

Just saying there are two sides to all this -- we are talking about drugs, here. It's not all good times.

Thanks for sharing Repent, how are you doing though. These are intense experiences. Are they changing you in your day-to-day life?

Don't we need to be crumudgeons sometimes?

Don't we all need our pain, and baggage too?

What kind of world is it if everyone is just blissfully in an altered state and just HAPPY all the darn time? :|

We can't have that, can we? :lol:

What would happen to doomerism. Who would worry about peak oil anymore. And, who would go to these jobs they hate, the daily grind, if there's some bliss awaiting in an opium den and everyone is just blissffully high.

(I love your posts, I'm just doing counterpoint hope you understand. :razz: And I hope you are okay and stay okay!)

P.S. Just to note, I saw in a documentary about this that the actual native tradition is that it's the SHAMAN that takes the ayahuasca, not the tribe. So then the person sees the shaman, he goes on the spirit journey, and helps the person understand the root of their pain etc.

What Westerners have done though, is to take the cup from the shaman to drink of it themselves. So doesn't that have to be noted here, that the Westerners doing this are doing something different from native tradition. In Peru, the whole tribe is never taking ayahuasca, the shaman is.
Last edited by Sixstrings on Sun 16 Nov 2014, 22:25:19, edited 2 times in total.
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Re: The Ayahausca experience

Postby Rod_Cloutier » Sun 16 Nov 2014, 22:19:00

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'w')e are talking about drugs, here. It's not all good times


No, Ayahausca is the sacred spiritual medicine of the Amazon. I would not call this a drug in the conventional sense of that word.

As I've said, I have felt evil to the power of infinity, hate to the power of infinity, misery to the power of infinity, they all have a role with 'WHAT IS'. Everything that exists and that can be known is a part of what God is. Bigotry, violence, catastrophe, it all exists, it is all real.

I've learned in these experiences that you can not know joy if you don't know pain and misery, Joy is only possible if you know it's opposite. Love is only possible if you have fear, ect. The dark side's purpose is to allow us to experience the light side, if all was light, if all was joy, you wouldn't be able to appreciate the contrast. It would seem less joyful, less loving, less awesome and less magnificent without the pain, hardship, misery and fear in life.

Everything has it's place. From my favorite human book Ecclesiastes, 'For everything their is a season, and a time to every purpose under heaven'
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Re: The Ayahausca experience

Postby Sixstrings » Sun 16 Nov 2014, 22:44:22

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Repent', 'A')s I've said, I have felt evil to the power of infinity, hate to the power of infinity, misery to the power of infinity, they all have a role with 'WHAT IS'. Everything that exists and that can be known is a part of what God is. Bigotry, violence, catastrophe, it all exists, it is all real.

I've learned in these experiences that you can not know joy if you don't know pain and misery, Joy is only possible if you know it's opposite. Love is only possible if you have fear, ect. The dark side's purpose is to allow us to experience the light side, if all was light, if all was joy, you wouldn't be able to appreciate the contrast. It would seem less joyful, less loving, less awesome and less magnificent without the pain, hardship, misery and fear in life.


Well, okay. Sounds similar to buddhism. There are many paths to enlightenment, I suppose, and I don't begrudge you yours. :)

If your experience is transformative and positive, then I suppose that is different than drugs which are "escaping."

Didn't you say in one of the other posts though that you wonder about possible habit-forming? (I think you said that if I'm wrong I apologize)

Do you still feel that way, do you have any kind of line figured out about how much use is too much?
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Re: The Ayahausca experience

Postby Rod_Cloutier » Mon 17 Nov 2014, 01:48:24

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'D')idn't you say in one of the other posts though that you wonder about possible habit-forming?


You are correct.

I've experimented with it at home. It is a mixture of two teas both originating in the Amazon; Mimosa hostilis and Banisteriopsis caapi. I have taken both individually, and neither produces any effect by themselves. (Caapi can produce a headache which will persist for up to six weeks, and may be resistant to pain medications) To prepare the tea you have to cook them both, and use an acid to extract the active properties.

I've taken too much, and too little, you want to experiment with dosage to get the Goldilocks 'just right' dosage. My recipe:

"Two tablespoons of powdered Banisteriopsis Caapi mixed in 1 liter of water in a steel pot. Add two tablespoons of vinegar. (The acid) Bring to a boil and then reduce the heat and simmer until it boils down to about 100 ML. The same with Mimosa Hostilis, this is a root bark so it doesn't come in tablespoons, but a similar proportional mass, with the two tablespoons of vinegar should be brought to a boil in 1 liter of water then let simmer until it is reduced to 100 ML of volume.

When both teas have been reduced, (Usually takes about an hour), mix both teas together in a steel pot, add two more tablespoons of vinegar and another 1 liter of water. Bring the mixture to a boil, then reduce the heat and simmer until it is reduced to about 100 ML. (Takes another hour) Repeat the process again, two more tablespoons of vinegar, another 1 liter of water and again bring to a boil, then simmer until reduced to 100 ML. (Another hour)

After this 3 hour process, (Traditional Amazonian practice takes three days to prepare this), fully strain the liquid removing any large clumps of root bark, which can then be discarded. The remaining liquid should then be cooled in a refrigerator for about 20 minutes.

The finished Ayahausca tastes awful. Eating a flower pot full of dirt would taste better, Ayahausca is the most disgusting thing you will ever taste. Prepare 1 cup of water, and a tooth brush with a non-fluoride toothpaste. Quickly ingest the Ayahausca, then wash it down with water. Brush your teeth immediately to get the taste out of your mouth- this reduces the urge to vomit.

Ayahausca may cause vomiting, and you will have an urge to vomit. Try to hold the liquid in your stomach for at least an hour before vomiting. Ayahausca, unlike other psychedelics, is an enema. Expect vomiting, diarrhea, and your entire gastrointestinal track to be cleared over the coming days. (This is usually after the first session only) The gastrointestinal effects are also one of the reasons this would not be taken as a recreational drug, people who want to get high don't usually want to get sick.

The effect takes about an hour to manifest, it will then will last about 5-6 hours. Best to have a comfortable setting with no distractions, example you'd want to take this at home in your bed; this is a spiritual experience, not a party drug. Do not drive or operate equipment. Take it alone or with a trusted partner. Taking it at night in darkness adds to the experience, especially the visuals."


http://disregardeverythingisay.com/post ... experience
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Re: The Ayahausca experience

Postby Narz » Mon 17 Nov 2014, 20:00:12

I've thought of trying it. I kind of dislike externally imposed structure though & mushrooms are much cheaper (someone told me about an ayahausca ceremony somewhere in the NY area that ran $400 for food, overnight accommodations & supervision).
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Re: The Ayahausca experience

Postby yeahbut » Wed 19 Nov 2014, 08:32:55

Hi Repent, what an interesting series of posts! Your descriptions of the revelations you have been experiencing are vivid and compelling. You appear to have gained many valuable insights and had extraordinary experiences.

Can I offer some advice? Take a break. Take the time to process what you have already been thru. These are major voyages you have been on, and they deserve contemplation and integration. If you keep charging off on the next adventure before processing the last one, you can forget where you've been, and even get a bit lost. Such huge experiences need a lot of time to be assimilated, at least a year IMO.

As someone who has done a fair bit of voyaging myself in years gone by, I wholeheartedly recommend this approach. Revelation is worthless without integration. I have seen a few people keep seeking the revelation, it's a form of addiction in a way and can be harmful. There's an awful irony when truth seeking turns into self-deception. Let me gently remind you of your heart-felt words of only a month ago: "I feel no compulsion to ever take Ayahausca again. If I am still alive in 30 years maybe I would take it again".

I mean no offence with this post, only an insight from personal experience. All the best, fellow voyager :)
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Re: The Ayahausca experience

Postby roccman » Wed 19 Nov 2014, 20:04:43

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('SeaGypsy', 'P')ure DMT is available with a wide variety of sub sets of psycho actives, with none, or almost none of the above described side effects.


a couple of years ago I made dmt from root bark.

had a couple dozen great trips...until the last...will never do crystal dmt again.

would have been fine to have come back after 7 minutes or so and say, "hey-it was only a bad trip"...unfortunately I brought something back with me.

to mitigate whatever it was that came through the portal - took off to peru last spring - drank the tea several times...learned a lot about myself and this thing we call reality...didn't exactly shake the monkey off, but I have a different perspective.

if one looks around - one will find aya circles in the US - closed groups by invite only.

I will continue to drink the tea - whenever she calls.
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Re: The Ayahausca experience

Postby Rod_Cloutier » Wed 19 Nov 2014, 22:05:20

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'C')an I offer some advice? Take a break.


Good advise- I've run out anyways.

Thank you,
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Re: The Ayahausca experience

Postby Narz » Thu 20 Nov 2014, 05:55:34

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('yeahbut', 'R')evelation is worthless without integration.

Good advice IMO. I'm working on the integration bit myself (I suspect it will be a lifelong journey). I'm very analytical person, have read a ton & had a variety of experiences but trying to piece them together to make a coherent, structured life is quite a challenge.
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Re: The Ayahausca experience

Postby aldente » Fri 21 Nov 2014, 15:39:53

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Repent', ' ')It was beyond my wildest dreams and expectations. Pure joy, exploding rainbows of love and joy. The joy was so intense it felt like a thousand orgasms per second for a hour, then it diminished very gradually over a period of about six hours. It made me feel alive again. The experience was the best thing that has ever happened to me since childhood. Anyone looking for serious personal spiritual growth- this is highly recommended!


This experience indicates that you are (still) "human". Since there are non-human entities around (you yourself included- so far at least my latest indication)- you might not POSSIBLY comprehend that such an experience can be robbed ?! - or can you - caution would be my advice

This not to spoil the trip - simply indicating that I conclude that you NEVER had access to Ayahuasca and simply act as a disinformation agent.

It is that simple.

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Re: The Ayahausca experience

Postby copious.abundance » Tue 25 Nov 2014, 01:58:51

This thread has me thinking of videos like this:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rENWV5pqWSA

And this:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dPjVlkcai78

And this:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=euJxxKOBcz8

All best viewed in full-screen mode. :)
Stuff for doomers to contemplate:
http://peakoil.com/forums/post1190117.html#p1190117
http://peakoil.com/forums/post1193930.html#p1193930
http://peakoil.com/forums/post1206767.html#p1206767
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Re: The Ayahausca experience

Postby SeaGypsy » Tue 25 Nov 2014, 02:09:34

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('aldente', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Repent', ' ')It was beyond my wildest dreams and expectations. Pure joy, exploding rainbows of love and joy. The joy was so intense it felt like a thousand orgasms per second for a hour, then it diminished very gradually over a period of about six hours. It made me feel alive again. The experience was the best thing that has ever happened to me since childhood. Anyone looking for serious personal spiritual growth- this is highly recommended!


This experience indicates that you are (still) "human". Since there are non-human entities around (you yourself included- so far at least my latest indication)- you might not POSSIBLY comprehend that such an experience can be robbed ?! - or can you - caution would be my advice

This not to spoil the trip - simply indicating that I conclude that you NEVER had access to Ayahuasca and simply act as a disinformation agent.

It is that simple.

Image


Pretty arrogant statement. As one who has had multiple access & met many others who have, I would say the impersonal experience is an important part but not the whole of the experience. People on psychedelics tend to experience what they are ready for, sometimes more or less, but to an impersonalist the experience is likely to be impersonal, while the inverse applies to the personalist.
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Re: The Ayahausca experience

Postby Rod_Cloutier » Thu 25 Jun 2015, 19:28:15

My final Ayahuasca experience. I mean this in a literal sense, I took and overdosed on this substance today, I found myself sitting on my toilet, and realized that I was dying in a very literal sense. I had a full fledged near-death experience and it wasn't pretty.

I saw the unconditional love of God, and how God had allowed and permitted me to have experiential knowledge of having it all and wasting my life, spitting into the face of opportunities, to have it all in life in my own selfish egotistical way and yet throwing it all away. How I was allowed to fail, and flail around so that I could benefit from the insights of what happens when a person literally flushes their life down the toilet. This was tough love for someone who wanted from the very beginning to separate himself from God.

I was with God and told essentially what I had done, and made me aware of how I had ruined my own life, how most of the choices I made were totally, epically stupid, and this was it, my time was up, dead... naked on my toilet from a self induced drug overdose.

I begged God to give me another chance at life and I would make changes. I was then shown that I had already been given multiple second, third, forth, fifth, sixth, and seventh chances to change my life and I had done nothing to change it. This time, the game was up. This is it you are dead.

I pleaded, and God showed me how I totally screwed myself with nearly all of my major life choices from dropping out of University, culminating in this final inevitable moment, as natural consequences from the choices that I had so arrogantly made. I pleaded, begged, and sobbed, and begged some more for it not to end like this. For my wife and kids not to find me dead naked on the toilet from a drug overdose. I was shown that the police were/ are actively tracing my ayahuasca drug purchases though the mail and that even if I was to stay alive, I will potentially be going to jail.

Did I still want to stay? I told God that I can't handle jail, it would kill me, but I still wanted to go on with my life. I asked for the impossible, an eighth, final chance to reform my ways and life, starting immediately, today. Now. Right now.

I'm still here- it was granted. A wake up call that I should have seen coming. I've decided that whatever happens, jail whatever, I'm starting over and doing nearly everything differently. Change of attitude, change of predisposition, hanging up on all of the bad, epically stupid, egotistical choices I have made over decades. End of the psychedelic drug habit. Authentic living. I'm going to change my handle here from Repent to my actual name, going to get on the bus for the changes coming down the line due to limits to growth, peak oil and, AGW. Changing starting right now.

I was also given the specific memory of dying on the toilet to hang on to as a near permanent reminder of what had occurred. So whenever I was in doubt, I could refer back to the moment in crystal clarity. It was the single most 'real' moment of my entire life.

(Happy to still be here)

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(Formerly Repent- who died on a toilet seat this afternoon)
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Re: The Ayahausca experience

Postby SeaGypsy » Thu 25 Jun 2015, 20:07:39

So sure it was God? Sounds much more like a classic experience of the id vs super consciousness, in other words, shallow self vs deeper self. Whether the deeper self is 'God' or just a personal experience or an aspect of both are all remaining questions.

Do some homework on this 'God' bloke & you will find Martin Luther all over it. Patriarchal & monotheistic old German word he used to replace polytheistic & matriarchal spiritual causative entities.

I don't want to undermine your experience, just to suggest there is a strong likelihood in the language you have used, that what has happened is a fear based reversion to subliminal childhood programming.

My 'God', I would never look for in a toilet, or even in a house. It is in nature, life, to be found in the unadulterated natural world, wilderness, not in man's constructs, even one of the greatest linguists of all time (Luther).
SeaGypsy
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Re: The Ayahausca experience

Postby Tanada » Thu 25 Jun 2015, 20:25:13

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Rod_Cloutier', '[')b]My final Ayahuasca experience. I mean this in a literal sense, I took and overdosed on this substance today, I found myself sitting on my toilet, and realized that I was dying in a very literal sense. I had a full fledged near-death experience and it wasn't pretty.


(Happy to still be here)

Rod Cloutier
(Formerly Repent- who died on a toilet seat this afternoon)


You have a new password as well as new ID, click on your PM inbox before you log out.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Alfred Tennyson', 'W')e are not now that strength which in old days
Moved earth and heaven, that which we are, we are;
One equal temper of heroic hearts,
Made weak by time and fate, but strong in will
To strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield.
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