alright, im almost certain there's a different thread with the same questions, buuutttt this is farther up on the list now =P describe your favorite mushroom experience, the biggest realizations the mushrooms have fueled for you and how they influenced the way you live your life(i understand that words wont be able to describe, but an attempt would be appreciated) im truely interested in all of the knowledge any of you have gained
hahah, ive tripped once, and all of my thoughts were crazy and i dont really remember much of them, any idea why that would happen? i smoked weed aswell and had a very visual trip, was it the weed or something else? either way. my one almost kind of realization was fire is power. lol no one fucks with fire
It was your first time? The first time I ate mushrooms I was completely incoherant and didnt get anything out of it. I was also 13 or 14. Do it again man.
yeah i dont remember much of my first time i ate an 8th of actually very VERY potent mushrooms i saved some from that stash for a few weeks, ate 1g and tripped as hard as i would with an 8th of good mushrooms that i would get now needless to say, i freaked out and thought i was dying, ran around my house whispering "ipod" and "internet porn", i remember i also almost smoked a bowl, but refused to let myself, as it would cloud the experience, and i should appreciate the experience whether it was good or bad
its also difficult to remember any good entheogenic experience because there is no "you" there to construct the memories. I can remember the actions my body was doing while peaking on shrooms or dpt or dmt, but to actually remember what was going on "up there" is impossible, for a very simple reason. Your memory only records things that your conscious mind is aware of, and tryptamines crack open the natural divide between your awareness and your consciousness, and you are aware but not "conscious" in the classic sense. Thus you have come to a place where memory is left behind. This is assuming you took enough . Memory is just your encyclopedic mind's way of habitually recording things, sometimes to your advantage, sometimes to your dismay, and often times with no purpose or rhyme. Memory is overrated, everything is happening now.