Thought this may be of interest to some perhaps, this link has a few testimonials from people with a fair bit of experience with ayahuasca, comparing their experiences to those with iboga.
The most interesting thing to me, is that uchu sanago seems to be used in the amazon to basically flood the system just like the bwiti do with iboga..they dont always do it this way, but when you do a uchu sanango diet you drink the stuff for days, often eating little to nothing. You just sit in your tambo off away from everyone else and you are served this every day. There are not too many reports out there about this but there are some and the effects of a sanango diet are said to build up within a day or 2 and some people experience a deep hypnogogic state that can last for days where they experience all kinds of insights into their life etc..it does sound alot like an iboga trip, except with uchu sanango they ingest it in smaller ammounts building up slowly as it can last a long time.
I have also read of sanango ceremonies where large doses are taken all at once but this is something lacking in information. The head spirit of uchu sanango is said to be an old man with a beard and it apparently is a very powerful medicine that opens the heart chakra.
I really haven't other than in SWIM's Aya Brews and making super potent Ibogahuasca...Have you worked with uchu sanango at all yet kambo? If so how is it?
Well, as i said: it doesn´t make sense to take comparisons too far. The only point i wanted to make is that, like classic hallucinogens are all simmilar in some sense, even though they may differ hugely...like LSD and DMT are very different but yet very simmilar in some way because they fall into the same category of experience...i think that iboga and harmala´s are in the same way different but simmilar.Bancopuma said:Hey peeps, apologies if I seemed to have ignited an "Iboga Vs. Ayahuasca...ENDGAME!!!" vibe, so not my intention or desire at all! Was hoping for a little dialogue maybe but not really in this vein. I'm also not setting out to pimp out iboga.
One thing to remember is that we are all individuals and react differently to things, so to a lesser of greater extent, such perceptions are going to be subjective. I have tried many, many things, but it was among the organic psychedelics that I knew I'd found the true treasures. I first encountered ayahuasca in the Peruvian Amazon, and knew I'd found something very special. I have a very special affinity with mushrooms. Only two weeks ago now I had my first true and earth shattering breakthrough with DMT that has opened me up to possibilities and vistas I could never have imagined or conceived of before. But my first encounter with iboga still rates as one of my most profound and incredible life experiences...and it's not like I've experienced a void of amazing life experiences!
I must remark though that for me, iboga is totally unique, in my experience at least. Yes there are similarities between it and harmalas, but iboga took me far beyond harmalas have ever taken me by a pretty profound margin. And yes the different preparations do vary, root bark, TA, ibogaine, but they still all very much share that unique and distinctive signature. Also mr polytrip while I did find some common terrain in jamie's "in clinic" high dose caapi experience, it still sounded like a pretty different beast to me... I think this may be down to our own subjective experiences with iboga. A while back when you were describing the experience of a flood, you described what to me sounded like a delirium like state where you found it hard to tell the difference between what was real and what were the hallucinations. Iboga is nothing like this for me. It is more anti-delirium for me if anything. Even during the peak of my first encounter, very powerful visions were taking place behind closed eye lids, my third eye was open, I could see without the use of my eyes, furniture in the room was levitating and then flying out of the window and there were amazing and bizarre distortions of things in the room I could perceive with my eyes shut...at all times I knew that I had consumed iboga and could talk rationally to the guy sitting for me at anytime, and I never felt any fear or anxiety...far from it, I was numb to these feelings and all desires. I think the iboga was doing this so it can work on me, distraction free. Iboga is consumed as a root bark; some people consider it to work on the root of problems being a root. Make of that what you may.
However, I think in some ways I may be more hard headed than some. jamie it sounds like you have a very profound and deep relationship with ayahuasca, that's great! I can't say my relationship is anything near as deep with it, but I still have a serious respect for it and count myself very lucky I got to experience it. I never believed in third eyes before iboga...I'm afraid I kinda felt it was kinda new agey, esoteric twoddle. Perhaps some are more hard headed than others, and need a harder knock to open them up! One's initiation with iboga by one tribe is known as "breaking open the head". This is what iboga did for me in that way, and experiencing vividly my third eye opening and being able to see without the use of my eyes. I would have never ever thought this was possible...but it happened. This might sound I'm a bit crazy to some; I guess I can only say I trust my judgement in these matters.
The bias tone of that iboga webpage is regrettable, I don't like the way they've set out the lists the way they have. It wasn't these I thought were of value or interest though, more the testimonials of those people who are experienced with ayahuasca, making comparisons with iboga. I thought these may perhaps be of interest to some, as people with experience of both aren't exactly ten a penny! I guess this website has used ayahuasca as a comparison as there is much more awareness of it, and this awarness is ever spreading, while iboga remains very much more on the periphery, despite its potential. Also people aware of ayahuasca in the first place may be more open to iboga perhaps. They are both powerful healing plants for sure, and I think they have a lot more parallels than differences, but that these differences should be embraced and celebrated.