"Open your eye."
"They are open Can't you see?"
"Two are open." Jojen pointed. "One, two."
"I only have two."
"You have three. The crow gave you the third, but you will not open it." He had a slow soft way of speaking. "With two eyes you see my face. With three you could see my heart. With two you can see that oak tree there. With three you could see the acorn the oak grew from and the stump that it will one day become. With two you see no farther than your own walls. With three you would gaze south to the Summer Sea and north beyond the icy Wall."
Many notable fantasy authors seem to be quite familiar with the psychadelic state and have made references to it in their writing. I have noticed heavy influences in Gene Wolfe's The Book of the New Sun and even in the works of Tolkien."Take and drink," urged Pyat Pree.
"Will it turn my lips blue?"
"One flute will serve only to unstop your ears and dissolve the caul from off your eyes, so that you may hear and see the truths that will be laid before you."
Dany raised the glass to her lips. The first sip tasted like ink and spoiled meat, foul, but when she swallowed it seemed to come to life within her. She could feel tendrils spreading through her chest, like fingers of fire coiling around her heart, and on her tongue was a taste like honey and anise and cream, like mother's milk, like red meat and hot blood and molten gold. It was all the tastes she had ever known, and none of them . . . and then the glass was empty.
"Now you may enter," said the warlock.
Morphane said:Currently reading Denial of Death by Ernest Becker. It's giving me an understanding on what 'breaking through' might be about, and how psychedelics can be a tool for deconstructing personality to get a glimpse of the raw universe.
From what I understand so far, our personalities are constructs to help us survive in an utterly astonishing and terrifying universe. The price for the psychic fortress is we feel less alive. Escaping our personality leads to psychosis - we just cannot accept the wonder and terror of existence without going insane.
So, psychedelics can act as a temporary escape from the personality with all its repressions, and one inevitably comes face to face with psychosis. But with the safety of coming back to the self.
Ac30f5pade5 said:
soulfood said:Left in the Dark by Graham Gynn + Tony Wright is a must read.