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Salvia 40X Trip October 18th 2008

Salvia divinorum (The eyes of the shepherdess) Immediate effects Psychedelic experiences are necessarily somewhat subjective and variations in reported effects are to be expected. Aside from individual reported experiences there has been a limited amount of published work summarising the effects. D.M. Turners book Salvinorin—The Psychedelic Essence of Salvia Divinorum quotes Daniel Sieberts summarisation, mentioning that the effects may include: An example of salvia-inspired Visionary art Uncontrollable laughter Past memories, such as revisiting places from childhood memory Sensations of motion, or being pulled or twisted by forces Visions of membranes, films and various two-dimensional surfaces Merging with or becoming objects Overlapping realities, such as the perception of being in several locations at once A survey of salvia users found that 38% described the effects as unique. 23% said the effects were like yoga, meditation or trance. Media reporters rarely venture to take salvia themselves, but one firsthand journalistic account has been published in the UK science magazine New Scientist: the salvia took me on a consciousness-expanding journey unlike any other I have ever experienced. My body felt disconnected from me and objects and people appeared cartoonish, surreal and marvellous. Then, as suddenly as it had began, it was over. The visions vanished and I was back in my bedroom. I spoke to my sitter—the friend who was watching over me, as recommended on the packaging—but my mouth was awkward and clumsy. When I attempted to stand my coordination was off. Within a couple of minutes, however, I was fine and clear-headed, though dripping with sweat. The whole experience had lasted less than 5 minutes. Gaia 2006-09-29 (UK Media) There have been few books published on the subject. One notable example is Dale Pendells work Phamako/Poeia—Plants Powers, Poisons, and Herbcraft, which won the 1996 Firecracker Alternative Book Award[39] and has a chapter dedicated to Salvia divinorum. It includes some experience accounts: Its very intense, I call it a reality stutter, or a reality strobing. I think that having been a test pilot, and flying in that unforgiving environment with only two feet between our wingtips, helped to prepare me for this kind of exploration. Pendell 1995 Some have written extensive prose and/or poetry about their experiences.[40][41] Some describe their visions pictorially, and there exist examples of visionary art which claim to be salvia-inspired. Others claim musical inspiration from the plant: examples are the songs Salvia divinorum by 1200 Micrograms, "Salvia" by Deepwater Sunshine, and "Flight 77" by Paul Dereas.

Author: alzombie
Keywords: psychedelic Salvia trip humanities social science physical medicine wisdom aviation space environment
Added: October 19, 2008


Salvia 40X October 18th 2008

Salvia divinorum (The eyes of the shepherdess) Immediate effects Psychedelic experiences are necessarily somewhat subjective and variations in reported effects are to be expected. Aside from individual reported experiences there has been a limited amount of published work summarising the effects. D.M. Turners book Salvinorin—The Psychedelic Essence of Salvia Divinorum quotes Daniel Sieberts summarisation, mentioning that the effects may include: An example of salvia-inspired Visionary art Uncontrollable laughter Past memories, such as revisiting places from childhood memory Sensations of motion, or being pulled or twisted by forces Visions of membranes, films and various two-dimensional surfaces Merging with or becoming objects Overlapping realities, such as the perception of being in several locations at once A survey of salvia users found that 38% described the effects as unique. 23% said the effects were like yoga, meditation or trance. Media reporters rarely venture to take salvia themselves, but one firsthand journalistic account has been published in the UK science magazine New Scientist: the salvia took me on a consciousness-expanding journey unlike any other I have ever experienced. My body felt disconnected from me and objects and people appeared cartoonish, surreal and marvellous. Then, as suddenly as it had began, it was over. The visions vanished and I was back in my bedroom. I spoke to my sitter—the friend who was watching over me, as recommended on the packaging—but my mouth was awkward and clumsy. When I attempted to stand my coordination was off. Within a couple of minutes, however, I was fine and clear-headed, though dripping with sweat. The whole experience had lasted less than 5 minutes. Gaia 2006-09-29 (UK Media) There have been few books published on the subject. One notable example is Dale Pendells work Phamako/Poeia—Plants Powers, Poisons, and Herbcraft, which won the 1996 Firecracker Alternative Book Award[39] and has a chapter dedicated to Salvia divinorum. It includes some experience accounts: Its very intense, I call it a reality stutter, or a reality strobing. I think that having been a test pilot, and flying in that unforgiving environment with only two feet between our wingtips, helped to prepare me for this kind of exploration. Pendell 1995 Some have written extensive prose and/or poetry about their experiences.[40][41] Some describe their visions pictorially, and there exist examples of visionary art which claim to be salvia-inspired. Others claim musical inspiration from the plant: examples are the songs Salvia divinorum by 1200 Micrograms, "Salvia" by Deepwater Sunshine, and "Flight 77" by Paul Dereas.

Author: alzombie
Keywords: Psychedelic Salvia trip humanities social science physical medicine wisdom aviation space environment
Added: October 18, 2008


Unbinding the bad magicians' spell

checkout this cool audio show, especially Dale Pendell's talk: In this week's installment of psychonautica, Max Freakout first talks about a new scientific study into near-death experiences, and mentions the forthcoming UK hemp expo in London in November. Next, Max plays a talk from Dale Pendell at the World psychedelic forum called 'Plant teachers and the path of Eve, the mythopoetic roots of psychedelic practise in the Western tradition'. Dale Pendell talks about the importance of having a shadow, losing your shadow, the importance of luck in some shamanic traditions, Western shamanic figures such as Orpheus, Socrates, divine madness and shamanism, scapegoating drugs, Faust the necromancer, necromancing as Western shamanism, giving bodies to spirits, black magic and conjuring, Buddhist philosophy on the 6 levels of the world, plant wisdom, possible entheogen allusions in religious art, William Blake, artistic depictions of Eve and the serpent in the garden of Eden, Eve as the protector of the 'poison path', and as Isis, modern cultural myopia towards sacred plants and the poetry of John Milton. Playlist: the Beatles - tomorrow never knows DOWNLOAD HERE: http://media.libsyn.com/media/dopecast/psychonautica051.mp3

Author: zezt
Keywords: guitar singalong Unbinding the bad magicians' spell
Added: September 22, 2008