• Members of the previous forum can retrieve their temporary password here, (login and check your PM).

Reply to thread

Interesting views expressed here. However broad the spectrum of spirituality may be, how it relates to the DMT sensorium,though facinating it wasn't my main question, which was more along the lines of a fully fledged Christian ( or Muslim for that matter) having his/her entrenched beliefs/ perceptions of said religion altered, or turned upside down after some deep hyperspace experiences.


In my own case, being at the core a spiritual person and a die hard adherent to the Christian faith, the spice has thrown a "spanner in the works" so to speak. Perhaps best illustrated that prior to DMT use I perceived the power of a God in my life as a force acting on my physical surroundings, notably through real life events that spoke to me in a very subtle way, I could litteraly "feel guidance, reassurance, the promise of better things to come.

Not that I've been a good Christian, I've acted more like a satanist these last few years!


The DMT experiences have internalised the whole dialogue into a fairly convincing scenario of " a cruel sublime beauty" that is totaly devoid of that linear logic that I'd previously been accustomed too.


I'm not unduly worried about this, "Que sera sera" If there is such a thing as a benevolent God, then any psychedelic effect is just a side show, brain candy, usefull for introspection/ creativity and self discovery, available to a small minority of individuals brave enough to navigate the laberinth of the mind.


Back
Top Bottom