dave_a_mbs
Super Member
Offline
Afterlife Knowledge Member
Posts: 1655
central california
Gender:
|
Hi B-Man-
Remarks in this thread lead me to suggest re-reading Bruce's remarks about "state specific consciousness". He is making a point about a very valid concept. I think that he speaks best toward your initial thoughts.
I have a Cannabis Card and occasionally use pot to quiet my IBS, but being stoned certainly isn't anything with which to do the business of everyday commerce, nor psychotherapy. It's useful for meditation if you're too lazy to do the preliminaries yourself, or if you have neurological or mental conditions that make meditation difficult. Hindus have been using it for years for just that purpose. BUT you still have to meditate. Pot is only a catalyst.
Pot is a useful tool to unstick a constipated mind and get the ideas loosened up a bit. But it has a few drawbacks as well.
Typically, you toke up, get all goggly eyed, trip out on the pretty colors and blinky lights and pretty soon that kind of tripping becomes the target of your activities. What happened to the spiritual goals? At best you are now the repository for a dozen or two entities who want to share your fun, and at worst, you redirect your life pointlessly.
SO you rethink it all, toke up and meditate and you have a fantastic experience of unity with God. Then you try to understand it. That is difficult so you get some peyote, LSD, mascaline, peyote, ayahuasca or whatever and REALLY trip out. And again you have a fantastic experience - perhaps with God or perhaps you get to realize your frailties and talk yourself into going to hell for 8 hours or more. And you still can't analyze it.
I very methodically did all the above, and had my share of really wondefful experiences, none of which can I convey to you. There are no words, and most of the concepts are still "stored in a state specific place". Then I started to learn how to understand what I had experienced and to explain it. That was over 30 years ago. I discovered that I needed kinds of math that I didn't know existed when I was a grad student, plus a good background in physics, electronics and so on. I'm still working at it. There's a lot more stuff about dimensions, wormholes and on and on, right on into magic etc and it's all locked away in that SSM. (It's like self inflicted S&M.)
Had I initially chosen solely to use meditation, to study math, physics and related areas, I'd be farther ahead by roughly 6 years, by my estimation. The actual awareness I have seems to have come, not so much from my exotic drug trips, but progressively meditating my way through the universe.
Patanjali's Yoga Sutras agree that there are a very large numberof paths to enlightening experiences, including disease, emotional trauma, drugs, meditation and so on. What they don't say is that meditation is by far the best path if you can learn it. Bruce has done a very decent job with his books to describe a method of meditation that is easy, useful and rewarding. It's not the only one, but it's good. My only other preference is Tantra, but that's another story.
d
|