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ENTHEOGENS & Visionary Medicine Pages
Medical
and Psychiatric research has proven that psychedelics
such as Psilocybin, LSD, DMT and Mescaline are
effective in helping people realize new aspects
of their inherent abilities or potentials and
to assist in identifying
and changing subconscious motivations and habitual
behaviors. Terrence McKenna
notes that, "The pro-psychedelic
plant position is clearly an anti-drug position.
Drug dependencies are the result of habitual,
unexamined and obsessive behavior; these are precisely
the tendencies that the psychedelics mitigate."
A fact worth considering is that reading
Medical journals or even the DEA website will
disclose that Psychedelic compounds and plants
are all classified as Counter-Addictive, (meaning
that the effects of the drug itself discourage
repeated indiscriminate use.) There is a huge
difference between advocating responsible psychedelic
plant use for medical reasons, spiritual reasons
or for inspiration, and advocating uncontrolled
drug abuse.
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Current
Information and Compiled Research on Psychedelics |
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Personal
Reports & Essays: |
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EXPERIENCE
REPORTS: Mescaline, Psilocybin, LSD, DMT |
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DMT
"Contact" Experiences
Reports
from the web of the classic DMT mystery;
'autonomous entity contact' and otherworldly intelligences |
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 "Steve
Jobs, founder of Apple Computers told a NY Times
reporter that taking LSD was
“one of the two or three most important
things he has done in his life.”
Nobel-prize-winning chemist Kary Mullis told Hoffman
that LSD helped him
develop the polymerase chain reaction that helps
amplify specific DNA sequences.
When Kevin Herbert CISCO computer engineer has
a particularly intractable programming problem,
or finds himself pondering a big career decision,
he deploys a powerful mind expanding tool -- LSD-25.
Kevin fought to ban drug testing of technologists
at CISCO.
LSD's inventor Albert Hofmann says,
“There is global healing in these compounds
which have been
used for millennia by indigenous people that have
much to teach modern man and modern woman.”
- Albert Hoffman's 100th Birthday,
from WIRED magazine 2006
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