I second this.What I mean is that the death experience could be really convincing, and that kind of journey does not leave you optimistic, but broken
Thread 'Why DMT Scares Me' Why DMT Scares Me
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I second this.What I mean is that the death experience could be really convincing, and that kind of journey does not leave you optimistic, but broken
As far as I know the scariest thing someone could experience is their own identity dissolving but if there's something else I'm all ears.
The only other thing I can think of is being trapped in some kind of thought cascade or loop.
I'll give a little comment on it because it hits close to home. My take is that you've never met a real Death if you're looking forward to it. Like you, I had that idea that I've seen stuff, and death would be just one more awesome experience. DMT surely prepared me well enough for it. Sadly, that's not the case. When you go to a deeper level and really meet your mortality, all you get is fear and a clinging to life. To truly face Death, you need a very high level of maturity as a human being, and even then it won't be easy. Tibetans prepare their whole life for this event. But yeah, on a surface psychological level, I look forward to it, and it removes a lot of existential angst.
What did Rinpoche have to say about his? I'll be really surprised if he found it unpleasant.
By the way, this made me laugh out loud. Reads like a line from a British comedy.Gradually, the trip wore off and I came to understand that I hadn't actually transformed into some kind of immortal diety, but at that point, I was so blissed out that it didn't matter. Incidentally, the following day marked the only time that I was able to get along with a challenging coworker.

I think often it's not about the body, but precisely about the loss of "me". That consciousness continues doesn't necessarily mean that what I call "me" continues. I imagine cups of water being poured into an ocean, and then new cups being filled from it. The water is the same and in the end all water molecules will be inside a cup again, but they will never be the same exact glass of water. I (and most people, I think) am attached to this illusory "me" that not only will end up dissolving, but is already partially dissolving and being refilled at every moment. Fully realizing that last part will be helpful in letting go of the fear of complete dissolution, I believe.If you intuitively know and internalize that the awareness observing the body is the real you then why get so torn up over the loss of the body?
My take on it is a bit mundane. I think that his NDE strongly depends on the lineage or pedigree he came from. A simple Joe would never be born into a meditator's family. You can believe in karma or western genetic science, but the result is the same. Yes, you have similar capacity as Rinpoche, but to get to his state and openness, you need to do an equal amount of work. Our spiritual experience entirely depends on the quality of our energy body. That's one of the reasons people have Kundalini syndrome and similar complications. Try running a strong current through a thin wire, and it's going to burn.I'm curious if you've read, In Love with the World: A Monk's Journey Through the Bardos of Living and Dying, by Yongey Mingyur Rinpoche, and if so, what your thoughts are about his NDE, as described in the book.

This thread is getting good. I think we're really getting a glimpse into people's psyches now.
I think the last several posts really circle back to the original topic of this thread. If you intuitively know and internalize that the awareness observing the body is the real you then why get so torn up over the loss of the body? It'd be like getting your car totaled. Sucks, but you can always get a new one.
I'm a HUGE parapsychology nerd and I've read a lot of personal accounts of NDEs, and the vast majority of them are positive experiences. Only a small percentage are negative, and it seems to be when people carry some kind of guilt over the way they've lived their lives. What did Rinpoche have to say about his? I'll be really surprised if he found it unpleasant.
Now is the age of householders. Yes, there are still solitary practitioners in caves, but they are a dying breed. We're in a global transition phase, and no one knows where it will lead. I feel like genuine Dharma is well hidden today, and we have lots of superficial stuff. Imo, it's better to work for your family and practice inside your mind, unbeknownst to others. Why put yourself in the limelight if not for fame and monetary gain?There is a reason why some humans live on mountains in celibacy. Please notice that the vast majority of these humans are male. Try reaching the same level of spiritual freedom living as a single mother in a city.
This does not mean that we cannot be at peace with our own impending mortality. But unless we live a truly isolated and spiritually 'selfish' life, there is a lot more to consider than just 'I dont care if I die.'
People really dislike this term, levels (layers here). It's like a direct insult to their sense of self and worth. Chill, everyone; it's just a wordOn the contrary i don't fear dying anymore. That's why i'm curious about what you mean about it having deeper layers. In one occasion i almost died because a passionfruit seed blocked my airways and i couldn't breathe. I was terrified at first but, as i realized there was nothing more that i could do to survive, and i stopped desperately trying to breathe, fear went away. It was even before DMT opened me to the possibility death wasn't the end of everything.

Wait i wrote "layers" haha i didn't feel insulted by it but rather worried there could be a deeper layer of fear.People really dislike this term, "levels." It's like a direct insult to their sense of self and worth. Chill, everyone; it's just a word
I can put it differently. Psychedelics or life can produce lessons that wipe out your previous understanding by shattering it into pieces. A quick death could be very seamless and easy, compared to suffering for months in a bed with constant pain and inability to do anything. There is always a worse situation than what you can imagine. Our worldview is based on life experiences and is biased. Trying to compare yourself to others is kind of nonsense, too. Yes, we share some general traits, but every mind is a universe. All my responses on the topic of death are about being open and not stuck in the knowledge of something. It just stagnates you, because even if that knowledge was alive at some point, it went into the domain of memories long ago. The only real knowing is not knowing, or once again, being open and present. Hope this spin on things is a bit more clear.
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@fink i understand your fear. Specifically i used to fear eternity in general, but then i realized that what i feared was eternity through the lens of time. Like an infinite amount of time, a life that never ends, no rest ever. It's different from timeless eternity. If you change your perspective on eternity, by removing the human concept of time from the equation, it becomes timeless, like an ever-present instant, and it becomes the opposite of scary ime.
While an intrusive thought that i sometimes have is the one of having to live through eternity through my own mind, all alone. I recognize this as an illusion, first of all the illusion of having a separated mind, a "me" with boundaries, and again the illusion of infinite time.
On the contrary i don't fear dying anymore. That's why i'm curious about what you mean about it having deeper layers. In one occasion i almost died because a passionfruit seed blocked my airways and i couldn't breathe. I was terrified at first but, as i realized there was nothing more that i could do to survive, and i stopped desperately trying to breathe, fear went away. It was even before DMT opened me to the possibility death wasn't the end of everything. Wait maybe that's why hahaha. No honestly now i would only fear the possibility of rebirth in a hell realm if they exist in the literal sense. But if they exist in the literal sense, i probably have already been there before.
Yes, it's my personal joke with layers or levels at this point. I see the mind as an onion bulb, and you remove each layer until you reach the core, which is empty, by the way.Wait i wrote "layers" haha i didn't feel insulted by it but rather worried there could be a deeper layer of fear.
Yeah i meant the moment of death, what happens before death is another fear in itself.
I know that sticking to acquired knowledge is ultimately pointless, i would love to hold a nice scheme of how everything works, to crystallize knowledge and even states of mind, even if i know it's impossible. But i try to never stop doubting and renewing that knowledge to keep it alive
Now is the age of householders. Yes, there are still solitary practitioners in caves, but they are a dying breed. We're in a global transition phase, and no one knows where it will lead. I feel like genuine Dharma is well hidden today, and we have lots of superficial stuff. Imo, it's better to work for your family and practice inside your mind, unbeknownst to others. Why put yourself in the limelight if not for fame and monetary gain?
I feel that your family and social life are enough outer interactions. The spiritual quest is mostly a lonely endeavor, and any need to externalize it could be used as fuel to further your practice. However, it's an ideal. You see me talking about it all hereThis is a clean and intelligent perspective. Is it always a quest for limelight? Or is there some element of rebellion against the isolation of our own mind?
I don't think it's always 'look how great I am'. Most often it is just 'hellllloooooo....I am here!'
Even there, you can achieve a very high level, but I see such an experience mostly like a purgatory. It's a very hard path for mature souls.I think perhaps solitary confinement itself would be much easier if you didn't get reminded of it every day. When the food gets thrust under the door or by malicious guards disrupting your spiritual sanctuary.
I think so. You'd crave contact with others only if there's no clear goal and practice backing you up. Then there is a mystical aspect of spiritual practice in these conditions.Solitude with no hope of external contact must be a lot easier to accept.
Surely the need to externalize would evaporate if you were truly alone?
It's a coping mechanism. They were babies at one point, and life made them mean. I subscribe to rebirth and karma. You can look at it as ancestral trauma and epigenetics. The end result would be very similar. Trying to judge others, thinking that they made bad choices, is shortsighted. The entire Cosmos acts through them. When a person embodies this kind of understanding, their whole life and personality start to shift. Compassion is a very important quality, both to yourself and others. A human usually learns it in a family setting. If you had a rough start in life, fixing it later on is very hard.To me it seem much more likely that the meanest, most selfish people on this planet are that way because it protects them from feeling the guilt of dying and leaving other people in distress because of it.
To me it seem much more likely that the meanest, most selfish people on this planet are that way because it protects them from feeling the guilt of dying and leaving other people in distress because of it.