Irish Murdoch
Critical Thinker
- Joined
- Sep 3, 2003
- Messages
- 372
Good Lord! After watching "Trust Me I'm a Healer" with "shaman" Peter Aziz last week, I did a little Internet-based poking around on the subject of ayahuasca, the drug that Aziz supplies to people who attend certain of his workshops. That research revealed that ayahuasca contains DMT, so I went on to read up on that.
Now, in my youth, folks, I was an enthusiastic recreational drug user. However, my corner of the Industrial North, with its chip shops and whippets, never saw anything as exotic as DMT, so I never tried it. Reading the descriptions of its effects on various websites, I wouldn't have cared to either: it sounds pretty hellish. It seems that just about everyone who takes it has the impression of intensely realistic meetings with "alien" consciousnesses, which users seem to refer to as "elves". The sites where people maintain this are too numerous to list: a simple search on DMT will find them for you.
What amazes me is this, though: in the many, many accounts of DMT experiences online, just about everybody seems to claim that these elves have objective existence: that they really exist, in the same way as shoes, cabbages, and computers do. Why do they all seem to think this? Why does their reasoning not run as follows: "Hmmm ... I ingested a powerful hallucinogen. Maybe, then, those creatures I was talking to weren't real". I mean, they've taken something that has a huge effect on brain chemistry, and they know that they have, but still they insist that they have actually visited another dimension. I don't get it. Perhaps somebody willing to admit that they've taken DMT could enlighten us ....
Now, in my youth, folks, I was an enthusiastic recreational drug user. However, my corner of the Industrial North, with its chip shops and whippets, never saw anything as exotic as DMT, so I never tried it. Reading the descriptions of its effects on various websites, I wouldn't have cared to either: it sounds pretty hellish. It seems that just about everyone who takes it has the impression of intensely realistic meetings with "alien" consciousnesses, which users seem to refer to as "elves". The sites where people maintain this are too numerous to list: a simple search on DMT will find them for you.
What amazes me is this, though: in the many, many accounts of DMT experiences online, just about everybody seems to claim that these elves have objective existence: that they really exist, in the same way as shoes, cabbages, and computers do. Why do they all seem to think this? Why does their reasoning not run as follows: "Hmmm ... I ingested a powerful hallucinogen. Maybe, then, those creatures I was talking to weren't real". I mean, they've taken something that has a huge effect on brain chemistry, and they know that they have, but still they insist that they have actually visited another dimension. I don't get it. Perhaps somebody willing to admit that they've taken DMT could enlighten us ....