And when I say "beings," I'm just saying they look like beings I don't really think they're actually beings. There are two different kinds of beings in the DMT experience. The curves of the room are the perfect curves. You'll know if you smoke enough to blast off because you'll reach this door that is intricately decorated, and if you step through that door you reach a three-dimensional visual hallucination, like the picture-perfect hallucination. I would do it before school because I found it would balance my day in a similar way to 20 minutes of meditation. But in my experience that was right around when I totally got rid of the apprehensions, and that allowed me to get into the nitty-gritty of the experience. Most people never push more than 15 or 20 times. Since then I've probably done it somewhere in the range of 200 to 300 times. I asked my friend, do you think this is actually DMT? And his response was, what the hell else would it be? Then I smoked it and it was obviously DMT. We ended up with a white crystalline powder. Extracting DMT was about the same level of difficulty as making pot brownies, which I'd done a lot, it just took longer and had more dangerous ingredients. That's the only way I had access to it, and I really wanted to try it. I just had the basement to myself basically, and I bought some Mimosa hostilis from the Internet and extracted DMT from it. The DMT experience is just shorter and more hectic. When you smoke it, it actually feels like it's meant to be there. I mean it's already getting made in your body, it just gets broken down too fast for you to feel it. It's just an experience that overcomes you. There's this mindset that people need to get themselves prepared for DMT, but I don't think that's the case at all. Here he is, in his own words, which we've edited for length, clarity and flow: But "Darius" says no: DMT is a safe shortcut to sanity, happiness, deep insight and some amazing Tuesday mornings in the dorms. Plenty of people avoid DMT because it's too scary. If any drug were going to fry your brain after extended use, you might think it would be DMT, which is a nuclear pixie dust that teleports the user into a hallucinated world of intricate geometry and crazy fractals and robe-wearing beings who look like aliens. While we know a lot of ents and acidheads, we've never met anyone who's used DMT that many times. However, we're mostly curious about his DMT use. Yet he isn't a pile of drool he's walking and driving and using his turn signal like the rest of us - even graduating soon with a valuable degree in a difficult subject of which he doesn't want us to get too specific about because some of the stuff he does is obviously illegal as fuck. Along with dabbling in party drugs like cocaine, he's fiended on hippie drugs, too, and has smoked cannabis over 4,000 times, drank kratom 1,400 times, dosed LSD 86 times, and smoked DMT an astounding 200 to 300 times.
Should i eat or snort x full#
If Schedule I drugs fry your brain like the government says they do, then "Darius," a CU-Boulder student, ought to have a cranium full of charcoal.