Ayahuasca and Human Destiny
Ayahuasca and Human Destiny
Ayahuasca and Human Destiny
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The psychedelic research chemist Alexander Shulgin created the “Shulgin Scale” as a
pragmatic and compact measure and notation for reporting the subjective effect of
psychoactive substances at a given dosage, and at a given time. Whilst useful for the
calibration of psychedelic experiences, and journaling during bioassays, it is, however, of
limited applicability to the calibration of entheogenic experiences and qualia. To address
such limitations, I propose an “Altered Shulgin Scale” (ASS).
At EGA09, my presentation essayed the concept of “Conceptual Hallucinogen” and
examined the analogue family of “EC2C” conceptual hallucinogens, of which the “Altered
Shulgin Scale” is a member. I described two extant conceptual hallucinogens “EC2C-ASS-
AUM-2008” and “EC2C-ASS-AUM-2009”, and assessed whether they can be classed as
entheogens, cognitogens or cogito-ergogens.
Nota Bene: This presentation is neither an explicit nor an implicit critique of Alexander
Shulgin and his life’s work and love – it is something quite orthogonal.
Focussed on the textual and procedural potentiation of the psychedelic and entheogenic
experiences and modelling possible psychedelic movements and the deconstructive politics
of the establishment of such. The Colonel’s other passion is tilting at windmills. Not one
word wasted. This is an experimental presentation.
The mystery of physical death raises questions of perennial concern to the living, not
the least of which is the problem of whether or not consciousness and personal identity
persists without the support of a living body. Answers to such questions are the traditional
provenance of religions, which have drawn conclusions from visions, myths, introspection,
reflection, dream and trance. Each of these modes of revelation suggests the possibility of
existence beyond flesh, but many entheogens are remarkable in that they routinely present
disincarnate experiences in a convincing manner without the need for lengthy metaphysical
training.
Epistemological questions about the ontological status of “entities” experienced during
entheogenic trance have been raised previously and various rationalisations have been made
regarding them, such as attempts to explain them away as neurophysiological, psychological,
or socio-cultural constructs. Concomitantly, there have been vigorous and popular moves to
irrationalise these numinous encounters by attributing them to spiritual, shamanic, animistic,
or other non-tangible agencies. While frameworks like Jungian psychology, phenomenology
and “agency-detection theory” greatly expand our understanding of particular facets
of discarnate entheogenic experiences, they ultimately tend towards reductionism and
lose sight of the broader illuminated landscapes and the clues they provide to the bigger
questions of life and death. The object of this short paper is to place vital and ultimate
concerns squarely in the centre of entheogenic discourse.
Death is the ultimate attraction point or telos on the road of virtually every life, and defines
even the lives of those saints, heroes and alchemists who are alleged to have attained
immortality through their purity or labours. One of the major functions of religions and
spiritualities is to try to make sense of the mysteries of life and death. Generally, religions
do this through cosmologies or explanations about how the world came to be the way it
is, and soteriologies or systems of salvation that attempt to outline a safe course through
the inscrutable paths beyond the mortal horizon. Cosmologies and soteriologies are
arguably the most important of all religious constructs, but they are also found in other
cultural domains. For example, cosmologies are common in physics and astronomy, while
soteriologies are common in political science, futurology, ecology and medicine. Systems
of medicine in particular provide exemplary models of soteriology under the rubrics of
diagnosis, prescription and prognosis. Conversely, these medical concepts are also explicit
in the soteriologies of many forms of shamanism and folk healing where patients may
be diagnosed with spiritual illnesses such as soul loss, mal aire, envido and the “evil eye”.
Ayurvedic diagnostics also inform the Eight Noble Truths of Theravada Buddhism, which
is in essence a generalised diagnosis of suffering and a universal prescription for the dis-
eased mind.
Entheogens also provide cosmological and soteriological insight, and in this sense fulfil
the principal functions of religion as a generalised ideal. The soteriological aspects are
especially important, because the search for reassurance and the transcendence of death
is probably the most powerful motivator of religious involvement. Cross-culturally,
entheogens are often explicitly associated with death, suffering and soteriological systems.
The close relationship of entheogens and death is attested to mythologically. For example,
7.
the myths relating the origins of ayahuasca often centre on themes of sacrifice and
death. In the mythology of the Desana people of the western Amazon, ayahuasca or yajé
(Banisteriopsis caapi) was first obtained by their ancestors as a result of their tearing apart
the radiantly luminous newly born child of the supernatural Yajé woman. The idea that
ayahuasca arose from the transubstantiation of the flesh of a legendary ancestor is also
reported for the Záparo of Eastern Ecuador and is likewise associated with shamanism
in Peru. Indeed, the very word ayahuasca is Quichua for “vine (huasca) of dead people
(aya)” or “vine of the soul”, and the terms “dying” and “suffering” are metaphors for the
often frightening and nauseating inebriation the potion provokes. Kava (Piper methysticum),
a tranquilising entheogen widely distributed through the islands of the Pacific, also has
many well-documented creation myths featuring this same archetype of a magical plant that
grows from the corpse of an ancestor and which may therefore be used to die “the little
death” and to enter into contact with the disembodied world. The entheogenic Iboga plant
(Tabernanthe iboga) of Gabon in equatorial West Africa is also said to have grown from the
transformed corpse of a man named Bitamu, and on account of this connection with the
dead it may be used to facilitate contact with ancestors and the “death side” of existence.
The idea that the soul or souls (the number and nature of the soul/s varying from culture
to culture) can separate from the other components of a person is extremely widespread.
This belief is naturalistic in that it is suggested by dreaming and trance ecstasy, in which
an individual’s subjective experience of travel is at odds with an observer who can testify
that the subject appeared to be merely asleep or entranced. The notion of separability of
the body and soul is also attractive and useful, in that it provides some possibility for the
transcendence of death in a disembodied form.
Entheogens in post-industrial societies are often used by loose-knit communities of vision-
seekers who construct new cosmologies to culturally codify their visionary experiences.
Prominent among such shared cosmologies are ideas of disembodied realms such as “DMT
hyperspace”—a bustling spirit world accessed through smoking n,n-dimethyltryptamine;
the “K-hole”—an intricate realm of flowing, disembodied awareness achieved with the
aid of the dissociative anaesthetic ketamine; “Tussin-space”—the often discombobulating
set of dimensions reached through the unlikely portal of Robitussin DM, a cough syrup
containing the potent dissociative dextromethorphan or DXM; and “Salvia-space”—the
strange and enchanted abode of the Spirit of the shamanic herb Salvia divinorum. The
various communities that use these entheogens are all well-represented on the Internet,
at core cultural events, and related networks. DMT Hyperspace is perhaps the most
thoroughly described of these “corroborated” disembodied realms. Over the last ten
years I’ve collected over one hundred testimonies of DMT use, primarily from Australian
informants. Many DMT users experience vivid “contact experiences” with disembodied
beings in a parallel world. Many users identify the visionary world or “DMT hyperspace”
with “the Death Zone” and Near Death Experiences (NDEs). Both DMT and
ketamine have been proposed as models for explaining the endogenous basis for
NDEs. DMT and related substances have been found in trace amounts in human
cerebrospinal fluid by McKenna and Towers in 1984; and in 1997 Rick Strassman
hypothesised that the pineal gland could secrete active quantities of DMT during
8.
periods of great physiological stress and that this endogenous DMT might produce
NDEs. Karl Jansen proposed a “ketamine model” of the phenomenology of NDEs and
argued that an endogenous ketamine-like agent could be involved in specific natural body
responses that function to reduce brain-trauma but that would also
produce compelling visionary episodes.
Regardless of any physiological correlation,
entheogens can produce experiences
phenomenologically similar to NDEs. The NDE
is itself but one variety of discarnate or Out of
Body Experience (OBE). Many users of entheogens
including DMT, Ayahuasca, Salvia divinorum,
ketamine and DXM report OBEs and encounters
with discarnate entities beyond the usual restrictions of
physicality. These experiences often raise subsequent ontological problems about
the “reality” or “unreality” of the physical body and the sensory world. Such powerful,
lived experiences present a certain kind of evidence for the existence of consciousness
or identity independent of the physical body, and thus fulfil some of the more significant
existential functions of religions, such as coming to terms with the enigmas of life, death
and consciousness.
Entheogens are not an easy path. Many entheogens can be profoundly confronting. The
naïve notion of psychedelics as “enlightenment in a pill” rings hollow when faced with
a viscous vegetable brew of indescribable acridity and bitterness that initiates sweating,
nausea, chills, vomiting, and a visionary audience with the forces of death. But such
ordeals are a path to valuable gnosis—a perennial cosmology that is both old and new—and a
remedy—a soteriology—for the disabling chapter of modern disenchantment through which
we now pass. Entheogens empower their users with spiritual knowledge of the discarnate
world, and are therefore functionally equivalent to the socially-enshrined consolations of
faith and the certainties of existential transcendence found in other spiritual traditions,
consolations and certainties that make sense of and enrich both life and death and that are
eminently deserving of ethical and legal sanction.
9.
About Time... Shift Happens! is based on research in relation to the occurrence of rapid
changes & significant events which transform life as we know it on planet Earth. The
lecture demonstrates as the title suggests- that shift does indeed happen. The topic of time
itself will also be examined and explained more specifically as Time (with a capitalised T)
which is not limited to the duration of movement through space (mechanical time) but is
rather a 4th dimensional constant which is the universal factor of synchronisation (natural
Time).
Natural Time is the type described in terms of ‘timelessness’ or ‘eternal
presence’, a state of mind which wizards and shamans have been seeking
to access through various means of psychoactive medicines,
trance inducing rhythms, ritual songs, ceremonies and
creative crafts. Accounts following these mystical or
altered states indicate that the seer’s experience an
activation of macro-cosmic awareness, a
sort of far-sighted presence from
which to view the current
moment. It is from these states
of expanded perception that the
healing of imbalances in the lives
of those seers are undertaken, Allona Patricia
Mercier1 calls it “weaving the threads on the mat of
time”, consciously working with the intention that personal
and collective transformation be initiated and as a result “eco-
spiritual” harmony be brought about.
An understanding of the apparent subjectivity of time is common for most people.
Depending on the degree of our engagement in the activities of the present moment
Time can seem as though it goes relatively fast or slow, something like the concept of time
dilation stated in the theory of relativity. This effect is pronounced in entheogens such as
DMT & psilocybin which tend to evoke visions which can require more time to recount
than they did to experience.
The following excerpt is from an article which describes my personal observations on the
subjectivity of Time in relation to self-perception2.
In exploring the effects of Natural Time on consciousness I have identified changes in
the quality of my self-familiarity. My perception of ‘self ’ is affected by my capacity to alter
the perimeter of that which I consider my ‘self ’ to encompass. When I intend to, say for
example, consider my ‘self ’ in relation to the physical parameters of my biology, I become
increasingly aware of physical sensory input and what is happening within my body, such
as feeling my body’s posture and the movement of my breath. When I then extend
the personification of my self out beyond the surface of my skin I can consider
my existence in relation to my proximity, which on a micro level is my immediate
surrounding environment (near space, low time*) and on a macro level the entire
planetary biosphere and beyond (far space, high time*).
10.
In order to offer a detailed description of Time I have studied several areas of thought
about the characteristics of human perception, revealing the intrinsic relationship between
time and mind. “Just as air is the atmosphere of the body, so time is the atmosphere of
the mind.” writes José Argüelles3. “Time is mental because it is experienced and known
through the mind. Mental cultivation is basic to the experience of time. Time is aesthetic
because it consists of different whole levels of order whose proportions and ratios are
consistent across scale, each level or order of which is reflected holographically in every
other.”
It is as though our perception of time could be considered as another type of sense which
encompasses our 5 physical senses; just as the fourth dimension of time is greater than and
inclusive of the three dimensions of space. By coming to terms with the dynamics of Time
as the 4th dimension we can come closer to understanding the meaning of ‘dimensional
shift’ as we make the transition through the closing of the Mayan Long Count on the
Southern Summer Solstice of 2012.
1
Mercier A P, 2002 The Mayan Shamans - Travelers in Time http://www.mayasunserpent.com
2
Dawn E, 2008 Another Yourself - Second Creation episode 2.2 p. 32 http://www.mindheartmedia.com
3
Argüelles J, 1992 The Call of Pacal Votan - Time is the 4th Dimension p. 25 http://www.lawoftime.org
11.
12.
13.
In every traditional African village, there is always a spirit house (also may be called shrine or
ancestral room) that represents where the ancestors live. This spiritual house is where we come
from and the place where we go after we leave this life. Most importantly, this spiritual place
is where we truly exist. The macro village has within it, tiny mathematical reflections called
fractals1. “A fractal is a pattern that repeats itself at different scales. It is ideal for modeling
nature: a tree is a branch of a branch of a branch; mountains are peaks within peaks within
peaks; clouds are puffs of puffs, and so on. But modern computer scientists aren’t the only
ones to use fractals: Africans have been using them for centuries to design textiles, sculptures,
architecture, hairstyles and more.” The tiny spirit villages emerge from the fem-to world where
tiny sub “elementary” particle worlds exist, where civilizations at scales so small they are now
only being conceived of in science. These inter-dimensional villages are stepping-stones to our
reality. They model our reality and the only villages on earth that are found to be fractal are in
Africa. Ron Eglash writes in Fractals, Complexity, and Connectivity in Africa “an understanding
of the fractal culture enables an appreciation of the complexity of the mundane indigenous
artifacts. This singular understanding can act as a powerful motivator for rethinking modernity.”
These symbolic worlds built upon the knowledge of the ancestors form a virtual reality world
that is materialized in our consciousness through the use of hallucinogenic plants and fungi.
Africans along the great grasslands of the Sahara, while gathering food encountered the
hallucinogenic mushrooms. The oral traditions speak of these other worlds encountered while
under the influence of these compounds. Inter-dimensional travel is one of the hallmarks of
experience encountered under initiation to the secret societies.
The inter-dimensional village is an alternate reality that can be experienced in real time on
multiple levels. The village is also a plenum of information from the imagination of the travelers
and a repository of knowledge from those novel dimensions encountered while under the sway
of the mushroom. The village exists everywhere it is superimposed over beneath and through
the everyday reality we exist in and provides a refuge from ordinary space-time. Travelers in
modern times are practicing group entheogenic journeys where the mushroom is ingested
and individuals link up in hyperspace and enjoy group experiences in those realms. A man in
Ohio links up with a woman from Baltimore in a pre-determined pre-created place under the
influence of the mushroom to encounter the worlds together although physcally separate. The
purpose of the spiritual village is to serve as the great refuge from the mundane world of what
we call real. These tiny communities exist in remote areas separated from the cities by hundreds
of miles where the people live in poverty but are happy with life. This is because they live a
double life and that extra ordinary life is where the fullness and grandeur of the posthuman life
is fulfilled. A life unbound by the constraints and complaints of how we live in the so-called
real world. It is our true home and a reflection of the true self ungoverned by the physical body
or the laws of physics. The early African travelers of hyperspace delved into uncharted waters
alone without guides or gurus and made their way through unexplored areas of consciousness
and left a useful roadmap for us to use today. The Africans, along the great
grasslands of the Sahara, gave to the world the first and the oldest examples of
hallucinogenic usage that are only now being acknowledged by the rest of the world.
1.
African Fractals by Ron Eglash
14.
Psychedelic Literature
Paul Elliott (Gonzo)
The British Empire was founded on the back of the opium trade and to this day the trade in so-called licit and
illicit drugs is one of the largest money-spinners in the world. With the 20th century adoption of the US “war
on drugs” model, the trade in opium became an even larger source of money and as the sun set on the British
Empire it dawned on the American one.
Since WWII, opium production has faithfully traced a geographical trail of US political hotspots
and military engagements from Asia to Afghanistan. A simple equation of guns for drugs has
allowed dictators to flourish, illegal wars to be fought and huge profits to be netted. Paranoid as
it may sound, the main orchestrators and beneficiaries of this seem to have been the CIA.
In the late 1940s, the newly-formed Central Intelligence Agency was in desperate need of a
new bogeyman to justify its existence. The Soviet bloc and Communist China were perfect
candidates for the job. Saving the free world however is
expensive (and often unethical) work. A source of
invisible funds was required.
By 1949, America’s allies the nationalist Chinese had
been reduced to the tiny island of Taiwan and a
mountainous region on the Thai/Burmese border…
what’s now known as the Golden Triangle. Their
leader Chiang Kai-shek, had a long history of
involvement in international opium trafficking. A
model capitalist, he was only too happy to trade
opium for guns, take the next step up the warlord ladder
and amass a huge army on the borders of Mao’s China.
This made good strategic sense to the boys at the CIA and had the happy side-benefit of
creating an unofficial Agency cash-cow. With existing contacts within the Mafia fraternity, it was
a simple matter to enable, protect and, in some cases, actively manage the international heroin
biz. This was the beginning of South-East Asia’s pre-eminence in world heroin production and
with US assistance remained a very successful model for the next 25 years.
Alongside America’s decreasing military involvement in this region, strangely enough a de-
escalation of opium production also seems to have occurred. Nowadays, most of the world’s
illegal smack comes from Afghanistan.
Other drugs have also been the basis for empire - cocaine, amphetamines, marijuana, and even
good old LSD. At the heart of these empires has always been a consortium of career criminals,
corrupt cops and shadowy intelligence operatives. From the CIA-funded opium armies in Laos
to Ron Stark helping to flood the world with acid, from Nugan Hand to Mark Standen, the
intelligence community has left its grubby paw-prints all over big time drug trafficking. Whether
this has been an unofficial company policy or simply the work of “rogue” agents
remains unclear. At very least, a blind eye has been consistently turned to enterprises
that are unmistakably criminal. National security (so-called) is apparently more
important than the health and well-being of the world’s citizens.
16.
Much of the world’s suffering is unnecessary. Where can we turn for help in healing the
world and building more joyful lives?
Across cultures and eras, profound experiences of unity with the cosmos – called, variously,
mystical experiences, non-dual consciousness, unitive consciousness, or primary religious
experiences – have sometimes lead to lasting, and lastingly beneficial, changes in the lives of
those who encounter them. Some of them (Moses at the Burning Bush, the Buddha under
the Bodhi tree, Saul of Tarsus on the road to Damascus, Bill Wilson in Towns Hospital) are
not only life-changing but world-changing.
Many different activities – meditation, prayer, chanting, fasting, and dancing among them
– have been used with the intention of preparing for such experiences or for occasioning
them, and their nature seems to be largely independent of how they come about. The
skillful, careful use of certain plants and chemicals is one of the least demanding means
in terms of time and among the most likely to bring about a profound experience on any
given occasion.
The wisdom traditions emphasize the critical importance of ongoing practice for spiritual
development and to stabilize what may be gained in a primary experience. Today’s
interconnected world presents a rich, even bewildering, array of old and new techniques
and paths. Tradition and reason also say that the existence of a social “vessel” to contain
the process – a group of people with some shared understanding of what the experience
means and what is to be done with it – reduces risks and increases the chances that a given
experience will lead to lasting benefit.
But this knowledge is scattered, incomplete, and tacit; there is more of it in the minds and
hearts of teachers than there is in the writings of scientists. We know little, for example,
about which practices work best for which people. There is much to be learned.
These observations lead us to believe that bringing more focus to this area would tend
to decrease suffering and increase prosocial behavior in the world. We can pursue this
goal by catalyzing research to improve scientific knowledge of the phenomena and their
consequences, by working to create social understandings that make seeking out primary
experiences seem less unusual than it now does to most westerners, and by encouraging
people to find or imagine and develop social contexts that serve as appropriate vessels.
Foremost, we can redouble our commitment to our own spiritual growth, to the long
personal work of tilling the soil for awakening, and to the communities that hold these
intentions.
17.
Introduction
The notion of ‘legal’ and ‘herbal’ highs emerged in the late 1960’s and early 1970’s within
the context of a broad social movement as a response to international legislative changes
to the legal status of many psychoactive substances (e.g., ratification of the United Nations,
1971, Convention on Psychotropic Substances). The term ‘legal high’ is simply derived
from legal discourse (Bright, Marsh, Smith & Bishop, 2008), and is thus demarcated from
‘illegal high’ as a consequence of the substance’s legal status. In contrast, the term ‘herbal
high’ might be considered to have developed from medical discourse. Within the context of
Australia, Bright et al. (2008) have determined that medical discourse “constructs [certain]
psychoactive substances as pathogens [i.e., ‘drugs’], and thus [as] inherently dangerous”
(p. 139). This serves to perpetuate the authority of the medical institution in that those
substances that might have alternative healing properties to those endorsed by the medical
institution are vilified, as are practitioners of alternative treatment modalities (Szasz, 1985).
In turn, it is reasonable to assume that alternative treatments using organic products
were given the label of herbal supplement within the medical discursive framework, with
primacy given to pharmaceutical medicines. Indeed, the pharmaceutical companies also
have strong fiscal motivations to perpetuate this dichotomous taxonomy of substances in
which primacy is given to their products. This taxonomy is even evident in the International
Classification of Diseases (World Health Organisation, 2007) within which a significant
diagnostic distinction is made between the harmful use of traditional drugs of dependence
(F10 – F19) and harmful use of folk and herbal remedies (F55.6)
Initially, many legal and herbal highs were relatively innocuous (e.g., Leonotis leonurus
as a substitute for Cannabis); however, with rapid developments in ethnobotany and
psychopharmacology, some legal and herbal highs have been re-categorised as drugs
and subsequently scheduled by some Governments (e.g., Salvia divinorum and MDMA).
The present paper endeavours to describe some of the available legal and herbal highs
in Australia through documenting the technological advancements that have led to this
situation, in addition to the Australian legal context. In doing so, I will consider the harms
that might be minimised through the availability of these substances and the concurrent
potential harms that the availability of these substances could produce.
A Brief History
While the influence of technology on substance use might be traced back to the ‘hive’,
a bulletin board system that allowed users to exchange methods of drug manufacture,
it is only with the advent of the internet that less computer literate individuals have
been able to purchase psychoactive substances in the same way that an individual might
purchase a book. This was perhaps most evident in the early 2000s when a range
of substances, many of which were detailed in the Shulgins’ (1991, 1997) writings,
were being manufactured and sold by legitimate companies worldwide as ‘research
chemicals’. By indicating that the substances were not for human consumption,
vendors were able to circumvent the 1986 Federal Analogue Act of the United
20.
States, and similar policies in other countries. This essentially ended in 2004 with the Drug
Enforcement Agency’s (DEA) enactment of ‘Operation Web Tryp’ (Arnold & Hindman,
2005). However, while less exposed than the companies operating pre-2004, there remain
numerous vendors accessible online that manufacture and sell newly developed chemicals
that are not scheduled in a number of countries, including Australia (Schifano et al., 2006).
In addition to these research chemicals, at the turn of the millennium in some countries
such as the United Kingdom and New Zealand, piperazine-based products began to
appear as harm reduction strategies (Gee & Fountain, 2007). The most well known
piperazine, Benzylpiperazine (BZP), is a Central Nervous System (CNS) stimulant
that has been marketed as an amphetamine substitute by companies manufacturing
‘herbal party pills’ in these countries (Staack, 2007). In addition, mixtures of BZP with
other piperazine analogues have been produced and marketed as MDMA substitutes
(Staack, 2007). Other countries such as Australia and the US immediately outlawed
the primary piperazine constituents contained within these party pills including BZP
and Triflourophenylmethylpiperazine (TFMPP) (DEA 2007; Therapeutic Goods
Administration, 2007).
The availability of these substances has culminated in a multi-million dollar industry,
in which these and other products are being sold around the world through online
‘headshops’. Put simply, ‘headshops’ are distributors that stock products from a range
of legal/herbal high manufacturers. In addition to the new range of party pills, online
headshops sell a range of exotic plants and extracts. It is within this context that the
internet has allowed increased accessibility to numerous psychoactive substances from
around the world. For example, with regard to the potent shamanic brew known as
Ayahuasca, Dalgarno (2008) states that “while information describing the effects of these
[plants contained within the Ayahuasca brew] together with extraction techniques was
widely available, the plants themselves remained difficult to source until the proliferation of
online ‘headshops’ trading in legal alternatives to controlled drugs” (p. 1).
Hagigat, are being developed and sold (Levertov, 2008). These substances have been
readily available within Australia and appear to contain novel cathinone analogues such as:
Dimethylcathinone, 4-Methyl-Meth-cathinone, and Phthalimidopropiophenone (Bluelight,
2008).
Finally, a range of smoking blends, promoted as legal alternatives to Cannabis, have been
available within Australia. An analysis of one of these products, reported by Jack (2009),
has allegedly revealed the presence of a number of cannabinoid agonists including JWH
018, and an analogue of CP 47,497.
Harm minimisation?
Given the paucity of research conducted on legal and herbal highs, it is difficult to assess
the potential for these products to minimise harm. Certainly, the legal harms that can
arise from being prosecuted for using illicit substances are great and can have a significant
impact on an individual’s developmental trajectory (e.g., Lenton, 2005). Further, it
might be assumed that the production of legal and herbal highs does not occur within
clandestine laboratories, but rather are manufactured by legitimate chemical producers,
albeit perhaps without the stringent regulations that are placed upon the manufacturers of
pharmaceuticals.
However, unlike other psychoactive substances that have an extensive history of use
(e.g., DMT) or a plethora of toxicological data (e.g., MDMA), it is unclear whether these
novel substances can produce acute toxicity reactions or long-term harms. With regard
to piperazine-based products, while there have been reports of acute toxicity (Gee,
Richardson, Woltersdorf, & Moore, 2005; Wood et al., 2007) and psychological disturbances
(Austin & Monasterio, 2004) following the use of these products, the only reported deaths
following the use of piperazine-based party pills have involved poly-substance use (e.g.,
Balmelli, Kupferschmidt, Rentsch, & Schneemann, 2001) – this is despite an estimated
5 million pills being sold in New Zealand in 2007 alone (Gee & Fountain, 2007) and has
typically been associated with a disregard for the directions for use (Nicholson, 2006).
However, there does not appear to be any reliable data regarding those legal and herbal
highs available in Australia.
Further, to evaluate the effectiveness of these products as a harm reduction strategy,
it would be necessary to determine whether their availability reduces or increases the
probability of individuals using street pills with unknown contents, and whether such
changes in use of illicit substances are balanced out by potential harms resulting from the
use of party pills among individuals who would not normally consume illicit substances.
This has not yet been established (Gee & Fountain, 2007).
Legal Loopholes?
The primary reason that these products have been able to enter the Australian market
relatively unnoticed by authorities is due to the definition of drugs. Specifically, the legal
definition of a drug in most Australian states is a chemical, compound, or substance
that is listed in a schedule, such as the Misuse of Drugs Act, 1981. Thus, from a legal
perspective these products are not considered drugs. Determination of a substance’s
status with regard to such scheduling is influenced by other dominant discursive
frameworks such as the medical model. For example, the medical discursive
22.
framework precludes consideration of herbals highs as drugs given the dichotomy that
exists within this framework between herbal and pharmaceutical products. Further, if
within the medical model the substance is determined to be unhelpful therapeutically or if
the therapeutic effectiveness of the drug would be compromised without the oversight of
medical practitioners (i.e., the pathology of self-medication), then it would be irresponsible
to allow people to have access to the said substance. Shulgin (1992) believes that this is the
result of “an increasing trend in our culture towards both paternalism and provincialism”
(p. xviii).
Public opinion and medical/legal discourse are reciprocally influenced such that the
continued prohibition of a chemical is not a consequence of its dangerousness, but rather,
a substance is regarded “as harmful in order to maintain our justification for prohibiting
it” (Szasz, 1985, p. 35). The degree to which these arbitrary taxonomies have been socially
constructed is evident in the strange inconsistencies that emerge. For example, an outcome
of having a particular set of socio-historic-political circumstances dictate legislation, which
highlights the inherent relativity of such methods of classification, is that there become
obvious and strange inconsistencies between legislations such as that which is evident
between State and Federal legislation in Australia. For example, it would appear that the
manufacture of Dimethylcathinone, a CNS stimulant with seretonergic and dopaminergic
activity (Cason, et al., 1997) that has reportedly present in the aforementioned cathinone-
based legal highs (Bluelight, 2008) is not considered illegal in Western Australia (Misuse
of Drugs Act, 1981); however, importation of this chemical into Western Australia
is prohibited since Dimethylcathinone can be considered a derivative of a substance
scheduled within the Customs (Prohibited Imports) Regulations 1956.
Where to from here? Given the current socio-political milieu, it is likely that these
products will simply be prohibited as a result of the increased awareness among the
public concerning the potential dangerousness of these products. The futility of this is
highlighted in the Israeli Hagigat experiment wherein as soon as one substance is banned
another is released (Levertov, 2008), with the properties of the new substance unknown
to the consumer. Alternatively, a zero-tolerance approach might see tough analogue laws
introduced worldwide. Given Mugford’s (1992) ’J’ curve theory of drug-related harm
(where the x axis represents level of regulation over a substance and the y axis represents
the degree of harm experienced in the population), such changes would not minimise
harm; rather, harm can only be minimised where there is an appropriate level of regulation
and restriction.
Ultimately, the categories and definitions of drugs
that have been described are socially
constructed, and thus pharmacologically
and toxicologically arbitrary. As such,
they are an impediment to the successful
implementation of harm reduction
since regulation and legislation does not
reflect the harm potential of a substance.
Indeed, an incidental consequence to
the discursive analysis presented in
which dominant discourses maintain the
23.
dangerousness of certain drugs is that other substances (e.g., alcohol, caffeine, codeine) are
often not perceived as being harmful. Thus, to reduce harm an overhaul of the drugs laws
in Australia is required. In doing so, the regulations placed on a substance should be directly
related to the harm potential of that substance. Such an assessment of harm potential has
been conduced by Nutt, King, Saulsbury, and Blakemore (2007). While the dimensions
of harm that Nutt et al. (2007) selected might be disputed, through highlighting the
discrepancy between legal status and harm potential, Nutt et al. provide a positive direction
for future policy.
References
Allen & Clarke Policy and Regulatory Specialists. (2007). Proposal to Classify BZP and related
substances as Class C controlled drugs under the Misuse of Drugs Act 1975. Wellington, New Zealand:
Author.
Arnold, T. C., & Hindman, B. W. (2005). “What a tangled web we weave…”: Poison center
contribution to DEA investigation of illegal chemical supply web-sites. Clinical Toxicology, 43, 662.
Austin, H., & Monasterio E. (2004). Acute psychosis following ingestion of ‘Rupture’. Australasian
Psychiatry, 12, 406-408.
Australian Customs (Prohibited Imports) Regulations, SR 1956 No. 90, (1956)
Balmelli, C., Kupferschmidt, H., Rentsch, K., & Schneemann, M. (2001). Fatal brain edema after
ingestion of MDMA and benzylpiperazine. Deutsche Medizinische Wochenschrift, 126, 809-811.
Bluelight. (2008). Chemical analysis. Retrieved August 4, 2009, from http://www.bluelight.ru/vb/
showpost.php?p=5564335&postcount=147
Bright, S. J., Marsh, A., Smith L. M., & Bishop, B. (2008). What can we say about substance use?
Dominant discourses and narratives emergent from Australian media. Addiction Research and Theory,
16, 135-148.
Cason, T. A., Young, R., & Glennon, R. A. (1997). Cathinone: An investigation of several N-Alkyl and
Methylenedioxy-substituted analogs. Pharmacology, Biochemistry, and Behavior, 58, 1109-1116.
Dalgarno, P. (2008). Buying Ayahuasca and other entheogens online: A word of caution. Addiction
Research and Theory, 16, 1-4.
Dargan, P. I., Button, J., Hawkins, L., Archer JR, Ovaska H, Lidder S, et al. (2008). Detection of the
pharmaceutical agent glaucine as a recreational drug. European Journal of Clinical Pharmacology, 64,
553-554.
Drug Enforcement Agency. (2007). Drugs and Chemicals of Concern: N-Benzylpiperazine. Retrived
April 19, 2009, from http://www.deadiversion.usdoj.gov/drugs_concern/bzp_tmp/bzp_tmp.htm
Gee, P. & Fountain, J. S. (2007). Party on? BZP party pills in New Zealand. Journal of the New
Zealand Medical Association, 120(1249). Retrieved March 14, 2008, from http://www.nzma.org.nz/
journal/120-1249/
Gee, P., Richardson, S., Woltersdorf, W., & Moore G. (2005). Toxic effects of BZP-based herbal
party pills in humans: a prospective study in Christchurch, New Zealand. Journal of the New
Zealand Medical Association, 118(1227). Retrieved March 14, 2008, from http://www.nzma.org.nz/
journal/120-1227
Gower, P. (2007). Herald investigation: Party pill pushers beat the ban. Retrieved March 14, 2008, from
http://www.nzherald.co.nz/topic/story.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=10473827
Jack, A. (2009). The story of Spice. Retrieved August 4, 2009, from http://www.ft.com/cms/
s/2/1721e2da-f8a0-11dd-aae8-000077b07658.html
Lenton, S. (2005). Deterrence theory and the limitations of criminal penalties for cannabis use. In
Stockwell, T.R., Gruenewald, P., Toumbourou, J. and Loxley, W. Preventing harmful substance
use: The evidence base for policy and practice. John Wiley & Sons, Chichester, UK.
Levertov, M. (2008). Dancing with danger: Israel’s new clubbers. Retrieved March 14, 2008,
from http://www.thejc.com/Home.aspx?ParentId=m14&AId=57645&ATypeId=1&secid=14
&prev=true
24.
/* Standard Header: This is an excerpt from the on-going real-time here-now science-fiction story
“homomorphism”, the story is devoid of plot, characters and themes, which have been totally outsourced to
the milieux of the readers, what remains is merely some object-oriented linguistic super-glue. Just because
the story is called “homomorphism”, it is neither asserted nor warranted in any manner that the story is
homomorphic to the real-time reality of the theorised readers. */
27.
Introduction
People take psychoactives for many and varied reasons – insight and enlightenment, exploration
of mysterious realms, escape, even for fun (!) – but few embark on the journey expecting major
difficulties. Yet, from time to time, difficult situations arise – situations for which those involved
are usually totally unprepared. The consequences are generally temporary but occasionally can be
long-term, even irreversible. Permanent positive outcomes are probably what are sought but, sadly,
permanent negative outcomes are sometimes the result… and their consequences raise questions
about the risks involved.
Fundamentally, the issues stem from the fact that drugs cause alterations – in physiology, in
sensory perception, in state of mind - all of which are normally maintained in a “steady state” of
sorts, homeostasis. The bottom line is that the human mind and body are finely tuned and finely
balanced. Perturbations in the steady state can lead to changes – not always positive - in the tuning
and the balance.
The consequences discussed here are the unintended ones. Some individuals may ingest
psychoactives with the express intention of causing themselves harm, but clearly they are in the
great minority. Besides, there are far more expedient ways to self-inflict physical and psychological
damage – like going to war, for example. So for our purposes, accidental misadventure is the
underlying theme of the Drug Darwin Awards.
One additional point to be stressed is that a so-called “bad trip” does not itself qualify a candidate
for the Drug Darwins. As terrifying as they may be, severe negative emotional experiences
resulting from otherwise physiologically safe doses of anything are part of the everyday risk
profile of most psychoactives. There are two key points here. One, the therapeutic window, is
the gap between a dangerous (or lethal) dose of a substance and the amount required to achieve
the intended, or at least not completely atypical, effects. The other is the dual concept of Set and
Setting, related more to the inner landscape of the explorer and his/her surroundings than to the
substance itself, that nonetheless has value in considering the psychological (and also secondary
physical) effects experienced in the course of any given journey. Both must be taken into account
in the Judges’ deliberations.
Types of Trouble
Difficulties associated with drugs fall into several categories, reflecting the diversity of physiological
and psychological effects that various compounds can have.
Blood pressure and heart rate: The intimate relationships that exist, particularly within the
sympathetic nervous system, often lead to problematic physiological responses. The most
noteworthy effects of noradrenaline release, reflecting the evolutionary role of the sympathetic
nervous system, are vasoconstriction and increased heart rate, leading inevitably to an increase in
blood pressure unless pharmacological measures are taken to counteract these effects.
Hepatotoxicity and renal damage: The liver and kidneys are the primary means available to the
body to detoxify and clear out foreign compounds such as drugs, usually by coordinating chemical
modification followed by dialysis and excretion. Some compounds and/or their metabolites cause
cell death in these organs, while in some cases harm is caused simply by overload of the system.
Gastrointestinal stress: It is perhaps not well known that by far the highest quantity of serotonin
in our body is contained in the neurons associated with the gastrointestinal tract, where 5HT3
receptors coordinate gut motility and hence the passage of food and ultimately waste through the
system. Also relevant is the fact that 5HT3 receptors in the brain are involved in the neurologically
based functions of nausea and vomiting. Excessive endogenous serotonin levels, elicited for
example by 5HT receptor agonists, often cause GI distress and sometimes real harm.
Serotonin syndrome: Acute hyperactivity of serotonergic neurons can result in serious,
occasionally life-threatening, symptoms including hyperthermia, high blood pressure, agitation
and shock. The condition can stem from a number of causes, among which excessive doses or
synergistic combinations of certain psychoactives figure prominently.
Psychosis, anxiety and depression: Given our current understanding of the role of the major
neurotransmitters in human psychology, modulation of affect is hardly a surprising consequence
of ingesting agents that mimic or induce release of these compounds. The concern is when the
circuitry is significantly, even permanently, modified in an unfavourable way.
potentiating agents, e.g. the phenethylamine and tryptamine alkaloids when taken in combination
with MAOIs. Essentially, such combinations result in a significant increase in the effective dose of
the compound, as the body’s normal means of degrading monoamines is incapacitated. This has
an impact both on intensity and duration of the primary drug’s effects.
Alcohol is another co-drug that may be regarded as a potentiator, although once again, the
pathways involved are many and varied. Alcohol is probably the primary culprit in adverse drug
combination profiles, due both to its pharmacological effects as a GABA agonist (depressant) and
its disinhibitory effects on behaviour which may lead to poor judgement – prime Drug Darwin
territory.
Mistaken identity: Error in identification leading to overdose is another angle on the dose issue,
one that is not hard to comprehend given that many widely differing drugs are often encountered
in the form of anonymous white crystalline powders. In fact, the dirty end of the drug black
market is sustained primarily by the strong resemblance between cocaine and caffeine, glucose,
mannitol and talc.
Idiosyncrasy: Finally, any drug may elicit an idiosyncratic reaction, for example an allergic/
immune response or hyper-response in a susceptible individual (e.g. cytochrome P450 insufficiency,
which can compromise the individual’s ability to metabolise and hence clear the body of a given
drug or class of drugs).
The Main Offenders - This list is just an introduction, and an arbitrary one at that.
Datura & friends: Dr David Caldicott (2007) presented the finding, based primarily on a study of
hospital admissions records, that the majority of serious drug-related admissions, including deaths,
involved tropane alkaloids sourced usually from the Solanaceae. The steep dose-response curve,
notorious difficulty in judging an appropriate dose, unpredictability of the experience, impact of
set and setting, and the prevalence of unwanted peripheral actions complicating the CNS effects,
combine to make tropane alkaloids treacherous territory for psychonauts.
Salvia divinorum: Salvinorin A is an unusual psychotropic compound, being a diterpenoid rather
than an alkaloid, and of very low toxicity. Details of its site of action are still being investigated,
but the kappa opioid receptor is heavily implicated. This is probably the reason for its strong
dysphoric effects in many (possibly 50%) subjects. Like many psychoactives, it can exert a strong
anterograde amnesic effect that amounts to a blackout of cognition during a trip in which the
subject is otherwise physically functional. The retention of motor skills can render an experience
hazardous, as panic and dysphoria may lead the subject to perform physical acts that are dangerous
to self and others.
Ergot alkaloids: History is rich with accounts of accidental poisoning by ergot derivatives,
resulting from ingestion of bread or other products made with flour infected by the fungus. Most
would be disqualified from the Awards by failing to meet criteria 2 or 3; however, since LSD
became popular in the early 1960s, a distinguished line-up of contenders has gone well beyond the
call of duty to qualify. The adverse consequences have generally been psychological rather than
physiological, although at least one example rates a mention and is discussed briefly below.
Research Chemicals: While “Synthetic” may refer to any drug not occurring
in nature, including commercially available pharmaceuticals used off-label for
recreational purposes, “Research Chemical” usually refers more specifically to
analogues of one or two classes of natural psychoactives. Hence, synthetic
30.
feel compelled to desperate measures so as to avert the agony of withdrawal - but how
much of this is a function of pharmacology, and how much a consequence of prohibition?
Given the unmitigated failure of the ‘War on Drugs’, and the well-established link between
‘zero tolerance’ approaches and the exacerbation (if not outright creation) of existing social
problems - it is interesting that notions of the ‘evil drug’ and the ‘evil addict’ as the scourge
of society continue to hold so much weight. Prior to the late-1800s self-administration
of medicines was considered the right of the individual - in an unregulated market-place,
regular consumption of opiates was commonplace. Although dependency may have
been frowned upon if it impinged on work or social
obligations, the use of opiates was not understood as
an immoral or criminal activity. Rather, the differences
between ‘medicinal’ and ‘recreational’ use of opiates
were not clearly defined - euphoria was part-and-parcel
of the therapeutic effect. What changed?
The first drug laws sought neither to curtail mass
consumption nor address concerns for public health
- they were aimed squarely at the then enemy of
‘civilised’ Christian society—Chinese immigrants.
Opium smoking, a distinctly Chinese practice, was
outlawed whilst wholesale ‘legitimate’ use of opiates by
the general community continued unabated. In a rapidly
changing world the Chinese and other marginalised
groups including immigrants, indigenous people and the
urban poor were easy targets and scapegoats for the fear
associated with social change. Drugs became convenient
weapons in justifying the apportioning of blame; they
validated the imposition of harsh penalties and social
control. When the demographics of opiate use moved
from the mainstream to the social fringes regulation
and prohibition soon followed. Later, LSD and other
drugs—seen to be insidiously connected with ‘moral
decay’, sexual permissiveness and the rebelliousness of
the counter culture—paved the way for more blame,
more regulation, and more prohibition.
We may challenge the absurdity of these perspectives
today: the overt racism, xenophobia and ignorance;
yet drugs continue to be used as instruments in the
‘othering’ of our fellow human beings, by externalising
our undigested fears of societal change, sexuality, loss
of control, and ultimately, death.
We cannot discount the tragic consequences of opiate
addiction, yet in the same breath we may discount
33.
the person who becomes dependant. ‘Once a junkie, always a junkie’—there are few
figures as reviled and ostracised in our culture; considered inherently flawed, beyond
redemption, forever incomplete. The idea that heroin leaves a permanent hole in a person’s
aura is a vestige of these old fears framed for New-age sensibilities. The effect of opiates
on subtle energies notwithstanding, what are we really saying, thinking and feeling when
we see people who use opiates as different from ‘us’? In communities where ‘drug’ use
is normalised, what does the ‘junkie’ represent —an instructive contrast against which
we define our own ‘responsible’ drug use? Is the boundary between responsible and
‘irresponsible’ that clear cut? So entrenched and
pervasive is the idea of the ‘evil junkie’ that, paralleling
the ‘War on Drugs’, it has both perpetuated and actively
contributed to the suffering of people who use opiates
and other drugs. Illegality and stigma not only foster
unsafe practices, but prevent people from seeking
support or accessing services for fear of being exposed
and condemned. This is not to absolve people of
personal responsibility—nor to glibly blame addiction
on ‘society’, but to bring awareness to the part we all
play in the cyclic construction and revision of what
drugs mean, and what it means to use them.
34.
Psychedelic art has an implicit or explicit relationship to the psychedelic, or drug taking,
experience. Calling art “psychedelic” now does not refer directly to drug experience
because aspects of that experience have been subsumed into culture since the 1960’s to
be implicit in art. Correspondingly, psychedelic art is fundamentally representational.
The term “representation” suggests that something is re-presented, or presented again.
For psychedelic art, representation arises after some initial experience. Because the
representation is a mediation of an experience, not the experience itself, the representation
of the experience will be different to the experience itself. However, because of the
subjectivity of these experiences, representations become important to communicate
between people who have similar interests in psychedelic experiences.
Art that is psychedelic produces drug-like experiences. Conceptual artists like painter
Bridget Riley, and contemporary installation artist Olafur Elisasson produce work that
literally gives the subject in the exhibition space an experience. In Riley’s case it might be
an optical effect while in Eliasson’s it might be a pulsating colour wave in a dark space. The
term psychedelic in this case characterises the designed experience as having qualities that
are recognisable as potentially drug induced. These experiences are abnormal and arise
from an altered state of consciousness. As a culturally recognisable vehicle for altering
consciousness, aspects of the drug experience have become an aesthetic that applies much
more broadly than to simply the drug experience. Work with this aesthetic uses colour and
light as a material for directly altering perception. Of course if one views a photograph of
the exhibition then one is not a participant in it but is viewing another representation.
35.
The language that we use when communicating anything is laden with meaning hidden
meaning, often based on the stereotyping and unquestioned assumptions. These underlying
meanings are also enabled by the conscious way in which people manipulate language in
order to achieve a desired outcome, often related to gaining power, or instilling fear. Nixon’s
“War on drugs”, which has echoed down the lexicon of the last 40 years is a classic case
in point. The very “need” for a “war” against “drugs” implies that they are something evil,
that need to be combated. And of course the word “drugs” is plastic, and has expanded
over the years to include newly discovered substances, such as MDMA.
For most people, the word “drugs” arguably conjures up a range of thoughts, revolving
around degenerate addicts, who are unable to control their use of a dirty, disgusting
substance, and who, while often victims, in turn victimise others, through violence
and crime. Ironically, alcohol, the very substance that is responsible for the most social
disruption and violence in our community gets a free ride. Being legal, it is always corralled
and mentioned separately. That one can do a TAFE course in “Alcohol and Other Drugs”,
or work in shows how even the Community Service sector has been co-opted into
perpetrating the myth that it is somehow special and less dangerous than “drugs”.
Entheophiles, however, don’t “do drugs”. Instead we are consumers of a particular
type of “Mind Altering Substance”, known as “Entheogens”. It is a
substance which “creates the Divine within”. This
allows people to directly touch the Divine
for themselves, albeit in a purely subjective
sense. While the term itself is three
decades old, it has yet to achieve a general
cultural awareness, or usage and is thus
both open and susceptible to framing.
Perhaps surprisingly, the term “Entheogen”
has yet to be defined in any meaningful sense,
beyond the “creation of the Divine within”.
This allows it to be corrupted by those outside the
community, and that this process is ongoing can be seen on Wikipeadia,
where the meaning of the term has been extended to include any substance that is “used in a
religious context” and where alcohol in the form of wine is listed as being entheogenic.
This “all in” attempt at defining Entheogens stands in stark contrast to the more nuanced
results obtained in David Caldicott’s 2007 survey of over 100 members of the Australian
Entheogenic community. Here only two Mind Altering Substances were reliably identified
as being used for “Enlightenment”. These three were LSD (91%) and “Mushrooms” (ie
psilocybin) (92%). Given its importance to the community, DMT, which was accidently
left off the survey would expect a similarly high response. Interestingly only, four other
substances, cannabis (50%), Ecstasy (MDMA) (31%), Ketamine (39%) and Nitrous Oxide
(40%) scored higher than 30%, but none of these exceeded 50%. Perhaps unsurprisingly to
any Entheophile will be the fact that only three percent of the respondents reported using
alcohol in this way.
37.
Clearly then, the way that the Entheogenic community percieves Entheogens is very
different to that of the dubiously entheogenic authors of Wikipedia. It is incumbent
upon us to take the initiative, in order to frame the debate through a basic definition
of Entheogens that highlights the key differences between these substances and more
common “drugs”. Interestingly, unlike the latter, each of the substances identified in
Caldicott’s research are both non-toxic and non addictive (although some might be habit
forming), with experiences regulated by set and setting.
Accordingly, I propose that in order to be classed as an “Entheogen” a Mind Altering
Substance must meet four fundamental criteria. They:
• allow users to reliably experience a subjective connection to the Divine”.
• are non toxic in normal doses.
• are non-addictive.
• are psychologically safe, especially when taken within an appropriate set and setting.
With this basic definition, Entheophiles will be well equipped to understand the nature
of their Mind Altering Substance of choice, while being more easily able to participate
effectively in discussions on issues, such as legalisation. It is here, in particular, where
having a simple definition can act as a powerful framing tool, by virtue of the fact that
toxic, addictive and psychologically unsafe compounds are excluded by definition, thereby
removing three main objections to the use of any substance that is not alcohol.
conspiracy to keep people subservient, meek and mild, and ignorant of their own potency
and glorious divinity. The divine is typically posited without and remote, not within and
imminent, and access, we are told, is expensive and attainable only through the proper,
ordained channels.
It is not in a preacher’s professional interest to tell his or her congregation the truth about
“God”; that is, that “God” can be experienced by anyone, anywhere, for free, and without
the assistance of any approved intermediary such as an imam or priest. If the pastor at the
local church were to admit that the divine might just as readily be accessed in the still silence
and solitude of a forest as within the communion of his Sunday service, he might quickly
find himself preaching to an empty room and collecting tithes from nobody.
An old Navajo elder once told an anthropologist something like “the white man goes into
his church and talks about God. The red man goes into his tipi, eats peyote, and talks to
god.” The peyote eater grows intoxicated, enters that wondrous ineffable space where time
and personal identity have no
currency, and talks directly to
god, whatever god is to him.
I too have munched on
some Peyote buttons in the
Mexican desert, retired to a tipi
and enjoyed the ecstatic states
that followed. I neither required
nor sought permission from
any religious hierarchy, I did
not have to forfeit any money, no liturgical or other religious observances
were demanded of me, nobody told me what I should feel or how I should respond,
indeed, the whole experience was entirely anarchic, unstructured, free and democratic. The
peyote was my vehicle. There are many vehicles, one does not have to ingest psychoactive
substances to access the divine. It just happened to be the case that upon that, like so
many other occasions for me, such a substance proved to be a most marvellous, rapid and
effective vehicle.
In that tipi I had an experience of the divine, the ineffable. But in the very moment I
realised I was having such an experience, the experience escaped me somewhat. I remember
reflecting upon the experience. Wow, I thought to myself, I am having an experience here.
The spell broke, something was lost. We might say I became one step removed from the
divine in that moment that I extracted myself from the experience in order to reflect upon
it.
After the experience was over, so profoundly shaken as I was by the whole affair, I
attempted to draw what I had experienced of the divine. I drew crude symbols, such
is the language of the divine. But such symbols, though undeniably archaic, (axis
mundi [world tree] uroborus, etc..) are still but poor representations of the initial divine
experience, from which I now had become two steps removed.
40
.
My next mistake, if we are to believe the advice of the most ardent renunciates and ascetics,
particularly those within some Buddhist traditions, was to speak of the experience. For
language is surely an even cruder and clumsier tool than symbols when one is attempting to
communicate experience of the sacred and divine. A picture tells a thousand words. How
true. in this moment, we might say I became three steps removed from the divine.
I am not possessed of sufficient guilt to start my own religion, but were I, I could well have
made a common error suffered by so many of those scoundrels possessed of a narcissistic
grandiosity and messiah complex. That is, I could have used my divine experience in the
tipi as the basis and foundation of a whole new religion. In doing so, however, I would
sadly have grown a further step removed from that original wondrous experience, once
an ecstatic blissfulness, once a fleeting, haunting memory, now a liturgy, a dogma, an
ecclesiastical or other hierarchy, a set of rules, taboos, instructions and formulae.
I could make matters worse. I could not only start a new religion based on my initial
transcendent experience, I could insist that others adhere to it too, and so grow five steps
removed from the original source of that great light and dazzlement. But why stop there? I
could line anyone up who dared to disagree with my description of the divine and the rules
I had invented governing how it must be approached, accessed, experienced and articulated,
and shoot them dead, thus emphatically disillusioning them for the sake of their wretched
sinful souls. History offers us too many examples of the tragic consequences of growing
six steps removed from the divine. Even more dismaying is the resurgence in recent years
of such zealous and rabid fundamentalism in the east and west. It threatens to tear the
world asunder right at this moment.
And it is not just classic religion as we know it that does violence to the human spirit and its
possibilities for freedom and transcendence. It is the religious impulse within any discourse
or ideology, science, politics, etc. that is to be resisted, the impulse that seeks to stifle dissent
and free thought, to tell us how things are and must be.
#1. Of the numinous states I refer to, I regard the highest and most nourishing - the psychedelic state
par excellence - to be that which I refer to as the “Little Death,” that is, that state in which the egoic
consciousness is entirely extinguished, and in which a blissful and complete timelessness prevails. In this
state the I-thou distinction is lost, and the subject experiences themselves as both all things and none. In this
condition there exists no ego to make demands, to create wants, needs or desires. There is no individual mind
aware of its boundedness and distinctiveness. There is no such consciousness reflecting upon the experience.
41.
When you enter the temple complex at Chavin de Huantar, (900 BCE to 200 BCE) in
Northern Peru, you are greeted by a large stele that is graced with a fabulously engraved
man/beast. He has fangs, claws and bulging eyes. His head supports a multi-layered
crown of shamanic symbology, including snakes and Cayman. Another engraving found
at the centre of a crossroad in a sunken plaza shows a similar wild eyed, man/beast with
snakes for hair. He is clutching a piece of San Pedro cactus in his taloned hand. This
Shamanic man/beast and his cactus are at the centre of the Chavin cultural mystery where
sacramental plants seemingly played an important part in the spiritual cosmology of the
people. This is an important fact given that this culture, which appears to have begun as a
temple cult, ended up covering a large geographical area and strongly influencing all future
Peruvian culture including the Incas, Moche and Nazca.
The evidence suggests that this small group of people, who had no standing army of
any kind, would end up ‘conquering’ their neighbours with little more than their living
philosophy. The Jaguar Priests used the information they gained in their shamanic
ceremony and ritual to advance their culture. This evidence of a more evolved culture
must have seemed very appealing to the surrounding peoples who were still operating on a
harsher hand to mouth existence when the Temple was in its hey day.
Art and textiles flourished, animals were domesticated for food, metal work was developed
to high degrees and trade and exchange with neighbours thrived. All these are signs of a
peaceful, stable and fearless society. It appears that the Jaguar priests and their holy cactus
are an Axis Mundi for shamanic culture throughout Peru and that they, like many of the
following cultures of Peru, had a intimate relationship with the wisdom of San Pedro and
other plants.
Whether it be in the art narratives of the Chavin or the wisdom weavings of the Qero
Indians, we find again and again a stunning reiteration of the essential wisdom that All
IS ONE. In the Chavin we see this deep wisdom being applied to successful, sustainable
development of new technologies of living such as, agriculture, weaving, metal work and
artistic expression. In the Qero we see a direct line linage of information pertaining to the
deep wisdom body and the future of the planet contained within the delicate confines of
the women’s weavings.
All of these ‘shamanic’ teachings hold fundamental truths about the nature of reality and
our place in it. The South American wisdom traditions (and ours here in Australia) with
their deep connection to the wisdom body of
the planet, are hidden treasures for all of us
in the NOW. Cultures like the Chavin learned
the ‘profit’ of peace from working with the
plants…and so can we.
42
.
Masquerade Corroboree
DJ Krusty
Following on from the evaluation and discussion on the Experimental Shamanic Trance
Dance, Sacred Plant and Sound System Workshop (Entheogenesis Australis, EGA2006, Opeioa
Victoria, June 2006), it was decided that we would attempt another experiment at this
year’s conference. The idea is to fuse aspects from a traditional commercial bush doof
with a trance dance workshop and a theatrical ritual. This is a synthesis approach to the
experiment, in that all delegates of the conference are asked to participate: We aim to create
an art form that brings together many strands of great diversity in a unique but somehow familiar way to
form a synthetic whole.
There are no spectators only participants
Let’s be open minded about opening our minds
The Central Fire: The central fire pit is of phenomenal importance for the workshop
however it is hard to quantify and gauge exactly why this aspect works so successfully. Maybe
it is because humans have danced around fires for eons and a return to this practice invokes
in the participant an ancient deep wisdom tradition. By creating a circular sacred space with
a circular fire in the middle a troidal doughnut is created – which happens to be a fundamental
creation pattern of the universe, so like the fractal it self replicates the pattern constantly –
what this means I am not sure but it could mean that the humans and the dance floor space
synchs in perfect harmonic balance.
The Trance Dance: Dancing hard, releasing and pushing both physical and inner boundaries
to reach a space within the self, so that the dance becomes a dance of reverence, a celebration
of existence, of life, of being, of nature, of the sunset, the elements and to experience the
awe. The challenge for participants was to move the body throughout the space in new and
exciting physical movements. Gabrielle Roth, a shamanic trance dance teacher, identifies
life as a wave and the dance coming from the wave and being in the wave. She expresses
the dance patterns of: staccato, flowing, lyrical, chaos and stillness as aspects in the dance
and each of these are explored by the participants. There is also a NO TALKING RULE
for all participants on the dance floor because the energy vortexes in the dance space drop
immediately when people stand and start talking.
Dance Floor: Becomes a space for inter-dimensional exchanges because the dancing
bodies become vortex generators creating exchange or experience gateways or portals into
other dimensions. This allows for plant entity, intelligence or spirit guides and entities to
interact with the human psyche and the higher dimensional selves. This allows for a technical
paradigm to be set up whereby the participant can connect to source, in singularity or
epiphany of the perennial divine.
The Sacred Plants: Honouring the union and symbiosis of intelligence that enters our
‘normal’ human system and then opens us up to ‘new’ potentialities. Honouring the ancestral
heritage of working with the entheogen, ‘teacher’ plants and the potentials that are available to
us as humans from the plant world. In plants we trust.
The Sound System: This modern tool of technical wizardry, the sound system, provides the
workshop with a very cutting edge opportunity to experience full spectrums of frequency.
The trance dance workshop participants are bathed in a full emersion of surround sound.
The dance floor zone is filled with the sounds of special psychedelic trance techno electronic
dance music drawing from a wide selection and history of this genre of music. These
surround sound waves penetrate deep into the human system causing the whole cellular and
energetic structure of the trance dance participants to vibrate. The experiment is conducted
with a full array six-way surround sound system - with each of the 10 speaker boxes being
tuned individually. Two speakers will be dedicated to chakra tunning frequencies during
the workshop. It may take up to 2 hours of tuning and mixing to get the balance
perfect but once this is achieved the dance floor then perfectly balance itself - with
participants spreading out equally throughout the space. This means there is no front
or back or sweet spot - just a dance space. The aim here is to physically entrance the
dancers at the cellular level so each individuals body can be at a higher vibrating
frequency and possibly travel to higher levels consciousness.
44
.
The Healing & Therapy Aspects: Humans are beings of light. A bio body suit, fused
with some form of self conscious awareness. Working in this way with sound, dance,
trance, plants and theatre ritual provides us with a unique opportunity to meet our ego,
pass through the constructs of the ego, voyage into the sub conscious and enter into the
higher self states. Ultimately this is the intention/aim/goal of the workshop - to connect
all the way back to the creator source – where all is one . Bringing back the ‘elixir’ of - the
Shamanic Utopian Vision, and integrating the experience into one’s life and community.
Theatrical: These aspects, such as entering a space, participating in the story (of a
journey), performing with other players on the dance floor and performing for the eyes of
god, wearing costume, theatrical not just disco lighting, theatrical props not just décor, and
opening & closing the curtain for of the workshop.
Installation: The dance floor space was set up so that focus was totally towards the centre
where there was a large earth ‘sacred’ fire. This installation structure moved the focus
from the traditional proscenium arch stage performance construct with the aim of bringing
the event away from entertainment and watching a performance and further toward the
workshop individuals as co-creators of the experience.
Music: Electronic dance music now provides composers and disc jockeys with the unique
opportunity of actualising the global consciousness of humans and our many diverse
cultures through music. This is a fusion of instruments, sounds, voices and creative peoples
musical compositions from many cultures all over the planet. The language of music is a
language of light and communicates to us like no other medium can. The idea behind the
music was to facilitate the endeavours of the workshop and not to entertain or administer
a fashion of what is good or bad or enjoyable or not. This music was all about what works
best for the journey and was a major part of the experiment. The music started with gentle
ambient music built through many stages to very hard and fast psychedelic trance and then
came back down to very gentle spoken word ambience as one continuous workshop sound
track.
Journey: The 8-hour trance dance was loosely based on Joseph Campbell’s treatise on the
Hero’s Journey. Starting at home the ordinary world, willingness to undertake the ordeal
a call to adventure, entering the special world, tests & allies & enemies, approaching the
inmost cave, challenges & ordeal & death,
reward, return, resurrection, return with the
elixir, grounding the experience.
45.
Start 1hr 2hr 3hr 4hr 5hr 6hr 7hr 8hr Finish
Call to Adventure Threshold Test, Allies Inmost Cave Death Ordeal Road Back Return with Elixir
Gentle
Tribal
Chakra
Spiral
Activate
Hard Trance
Lift
Confrontation
Tuff Disco
Chill
“The Hero’s Journey is universal, it occurs in every culture, in every time or epoch. It is
as infinitely varied as the human race itself and yet its basic form remains constant. The
Hero’s Journey is an incredibly tenacious set of elements that springs endlessly from
the deepest reaches of the human mind; different in its details for every culture, but
fundamentally the same. The Hero’s journey has an appeal that can be felt by everyone,
because the archetypal characters and the deep source of the collective unconscious well
up from a universal source for all of us to share and reflect our universal concerns. The
Journey deals with the universal childlike questions of : Who am I? Where do I come
from? Where will I go when I die? What is good and what is evil? What must I do about
it? What will tomorrow be like? Where did yesterday go? Is there anybody else out there?
The answers or constructs become the myths and belief systems of human culture which
are accurate models of the workings of the human mind, true maps of the psyche. No
matter how fantastic, impossible, or unreal the events they are psychologically valid and
emotionally realistic when based on this shared experience of the Hero’s journey. The
Journey can be understood on a two-track line. The outer-journey, which ultimately leads to
oneself and the inner-journey, which is what we understand to be ones-self.” (Christopher
Vogler, The Writer Journey).
46.
For what and why do we do This?
Julian Palmer
A lot, if not most drug use is by those who are trying to escape from the present moment,
and this may indicate much dissatisfaction with life as it is or this drug use may be a sign of
not dealing with one’s problems or suffering - hence the stigma associated with “drugs”.
The psychedelic or entheogenic path, as delineated in one of its most mature forms, by
such pioneers as Alexander Shulgin and Myron Stolaroff, is not to remove yourself from
your present condition, but to transform your living condition, through acceptance and
intelligent understanding.
Acknowledging that human beings are not just chemical, but also electrical in nature is one
of the first steps to awakening beyond the present western ideological contention that only
the body and mind are real. (and therefore that love, and most agreed upon measures of
true meaning in most cultures- are unreal)
Yet, even the most simple minded reductionistic scientism, must recognise the electro-
chemical nature of the body, because, very simply, the heartbeat itself is electrical in nature.
Most all Asian cultures, innately acknowledge “chi” or “prana” as being the basis for what
we understand as physical awareness.
Many do not want to acknowledge a “non-physical” reality, because they would have to
relinquish an overly simplistic and certain kind of arrogant reductionism as reality - or the
description of the thing, is the thing! (ding an sisch)
Underlying this perspective often lies a deep insecurity, which in order to access, can require
a deep humility and an ability to explore beyond the obvious. This is an ability often lacking
in the robotic and haughty nature of typically conformist academic or corporate styles of
thinking - for example.
In the west, I feel our path is to relinquish mental control, domination and disintegration
from the natural world, and let go and reintegrate into the primordial forces our
fragmentations and dualisms have forsaken, processing the shadow and coming to terms
with different levels of consciousness which may have previously remained unconscious.
Entheogenic awareness can result in a state where deep inner work can occur, where years
of psychiatric work can occur as if automatically; where realising how one is creating pain
and suffering for oneself and others is more readily understood. Very simply, this can be a
way that we can utilise in order to become more conscious human beings.
And then, what inordinate value is there in being operated on by a team of inter-
dimensional surgeons? And furthermore, recognising other domains of existence beyond
the physical as often appearing more credible than our dimension?
Such experiences are far from aberrations of consciousness; but entirely valid in and
of themselves. The simplest explanation is the one we would do well to accept as being
most plausible. In this case, it is that the inter-dimensional beings and realms reported by
thousands of people are actually inter-dimensional phenomena. Occams razor applies well
here.
47.
In any entheogenic path, there is not usually any final quest to a final state of achievement
or “enlightenment” within the human realm - and in the light of gnosis, such a quest is
usually found to represent sheer hubris at the very least.
Yet, what is of most value, is perhaps a greater connection to an evolutionary collectivity,
and the intelligence and living nature of the human species in all of its wholistic levels.
At an individual level, the price that few, if any, are willing to pay, for sincere realization,
is to accept the total enchilada of collective consciousness. For many, it is not by seeking
higher realms, but by facing the suffering within
this wholistic framework that brings a
meaingful fruitfullness.
The nature of this suffering, is not
physical or mental – or of the mind
or the body. Acknowledging this pain,
brings us to an awareness of how
out of balance we may be, and how
humanity presently is. This can allows
us to make the inner and outer changes,
and whereby happiness and love become
necessary factors in spiritual survival.
I believe the key to our being a species which continues to live upon the earth
and even thrive, is to realise our innate connectivity and responsibility to all forms of life.
And to do that, we need to stop trying to “get out of it” and get into it, and realise what is
stopping us from getting into it and “with it”.
At the end of the day, it is our relatings and relationships which define who we are. If we
are to transition to a way of life, in which our relationships and relatings are given priority,
over the fuel which enables these relationships to be possible, we must realise the non-
physical basis of reality as our primordial centre and foundation of value - rather than the
present golden calf of physical enjoyment of physical items - corresponding to the way of
disassociated cunt and cock, rather than meaningful relations.
By engaging in the enjoyment and challenge of entheogenic states, we can realise our
potentials, understand the sentience of the world at manifold levels, become respectful
and sane human beings, who can successfully live with each other in a way that brings us
deliverance within this particular manifestation of creativity.
49.
There are topics often overlooked for community discussion at conference level gatherings.
These issues are of pragmatic value to our growing community, especially given our role as
visionaries, way -finders and plant ambassadors to the world.
Like all communities that come into contact with novel ‘new’ ways of seeing and
understanding the world, there has been a period of ‘adjustment’ as Western ‘Drug’ Culture
met head on with traditional Entheogenic Indigenous practice. Since the early 60’s this
adjustment has slowly been taking place and many of us have found new and novel ways
of not only seeing the world but the shamanic practices which have constituted our birth
process.
We are in a position to reflect on how we as a community have changed and grown as a
result of our own personal explorations with plants and spirit molecules. Have the changes
been for the better? Are we as a community working to ground the treasures we are finding
back into 3D in the form of new healing technologies or better strategies to educate and
strengthen ourselves for the work we do? Are we sharing our newfound knowledge or
hording it like misers? How well do we look after each other? Are we always truly mindful
of the welfare of others when we share the Entheogenic experience?
Our practice and journeying offers a wealth of tasty experience to examine, especially in
light of the ultimate outcome of the hero’s journey, which is to bring back ‘treasures’ for
the human community. In this case the Entheogenic Community, is the human community
that requires the sharing of our treasures. Like all living organisms our human community
must be nurtured, so it too may grow in wisdom and understanding. As the Entheogenic
Community is a microcosmic reflection of the larger planetary system we can through the
truthful, transparent and joyful sharing of our ‘treasures’ ensure that our community is
healed and high intentioned. In healing and shaping our own community consciously, from
the heart, we know that we affect the Macrocosm in profound and mystical ways…it’s all
one you know!!!
But it starts with us. How open we are? How much we love to ask hard questions of
ourselves? How willing we are to truly be of service to our community, the Earth and to
the lesson of love which the plants show us everyday in everyway? If you wish to be part
of a flourishing community of the Heart then share your ‘treasures’ of experience for the
greater good of all…
50.
Seekers of the Mystery
Rak Razam
But what science cannot explain is the psychic effect of this “mother of all plants”, the
sense of the numinous and the spiritual world it reportedly opens up. Those who drink say
that each ayahuasca journey is unique. They say that the spirit of the vine comes alive, it
guides and teaches and on the other side nothing is ever the same. Or so they say.
The native men and women who safeguard the knowledge of the vine and of the spirits
it is said to reveal are the curanderos and curanderas—or as the West would call them—
shamans. Their role has been that of healer, priest and traveler between worlds, acting as
intermediaries between the spiritual dimension and this world on behalf of their patients.
Yet the demands of the work and the rise of Western materialism throughout South
America have seen a fall in prestige—and customers—for the curanderos. The profession,
usually hereditary, was in danger of extinction before an unprecedented wave of Western
gringos started coming in search of ayahuasca and the healing it can provide.
Over the last twenty years or so a new gringo trail—this one a journey of the soul—has been
blossoming in the jungles of South America. Seekers and thrillseekers alike have been
coming from the West for a reconnection to the deeper reality shamanism connects one
to—and bringing back amazing stories of hallucinogenic trips, healing and enlightenment.
Indigenous shamanism has quickly become the most profitable business in town and
numerous jungle lodges and retreats have sprung up across South America to cater to the
influx of rich tourists. This has spilled over onto the internet as hundreds of ayahuasca
websites, chat rooms and forums have emerged to crystallize a global subculture engaging
with an indigenous spiritual practice and seeding it back into the Western world.
As well as being used by hundreds of thousands, perhaps millions of indigenous peoples
throughout South America, ayahuasca has also become one of the world’s fastest growing
religions, with branches of Brazilian churches like Santo Daime and União do Vegetal
springing up in Europe, Britain, Australasia, America, Japan and elsewhere. In January 2006
the US Supreme Court ruled in favor of a New Mexico branch of the UD V, saying they
had a constitutional right to be allowed to legally practise their ayahuasca ceremonies under
the freedom of religion law. The US government immediately appealed, but the genie was
out of the bottle.
The mystery of ayahuasca had left the jungle and entered the cities, via religion, media and
the web. And here I was, a thirty-six-year-old freelance journalist, a gonzo reporter in the
time-honored Hunter S. Thomson and Tom Wolfe style, freelancing for Australian Penthouse
on an academic-style conference with a pronounced twist: it was all about Amazonian
shamanism, with a hands-on component.
Strange, to think that in the first decade of the 21st century I would be heading to the
Peruvian jungles in search of a connection to the primal consciousness that
indigenous wisdom revealed. Yet in a world of global warming and environmental
collapse it seemed all the more urgent to reconnect with the planet in a visceral way.
52.
And in this age of reality television, blogging and urban surveillance, being an embedded
journalist was par for the course. Nowadays we’re all part of the story—and getting down-
and-dirty in the far crevasses of consciousness was a prospect I was relishing.
Despite cultural diffidence back in the baseline world of war, mortgages and climate
change, Australian Penthouse was willing to have a peek under the covers of reality and
embrace the story I was chasing—to understand the mythic pull of shamanism—one of
the last global archetypes that connects to a numinous “Other.” Yet at the same time it’s
also one of the most appropriated, glorified and repackaged brands embedded in the global
consciousness. So much so that it now attracts thousands of Westerners each year back to
the disappearing jungles and the plant medicines they provide.
But what was the business of spirituality doing to all these backpacking ayahuasca tourists
that dared to journey into the mysteries of creation? And what did it say about the growing
Western need for an authentic reconnection to the planet?
‘Margaret… Shane?’ I spot a couple of familiar faces sitting at a table in the McDonalds
food court, surrounded by their luggage and that homogenized glaze that global travelers
give off when they’ve been in airport departure lounges for too long and their internal body
clocks have gone haywire. Margaret’s furiously loading digital photos from their camera
onto an iBook while Shane pauses over the keyboard and looks up with a smile. With his
stocky broad shoulders and close-shaven head he looks like a cop, but nothing could be
further from the truth.
‘Dr Razam, I presume,’ Shane jokes, shaking my hand and grinning broadly. ‘I’m glad you
could make it.’
‘Drinking hallucinogenic brews with the shamans of the Amazon? I wouldn’t miss
this for the world.’
‘Rak? How are you darling?’ Margaret cries, standing up and giving me a hug full
of unconditional love. She’s a strong, confident woman with big brown eyes and
shoulder-length brown hair, an earth mother from way back.
They both stare at me with a good-natured energy, like somebody’s parents that also
happen to be psychedelic trippers. I’d drunk ayahuasca with them in Australia a few months
previously and wasn’t surprised to see them here now, smack dab in the Lima airport food
court, along with all the other ayahuasca tourists waiting for the early morning flight to
Iquitos.
The first time I’d had “the medicine”, as ayahuasca is called, was back in Australia at an
outdoor electronic music festival in northern New South Wales, a few hours west of the
hippie mecca of Byron Bay. A rogue psychonaut chemist had brewed up an ayahuasca
analogue—often called “pharmauasca,” or “Aussiehuasca”—using extracts from Acacia
maidenii and Syrian rue for thirty participants to be initiated into the ways of the spirit
world. But after downing the bitter brown liquid and chasing it with a hit of DMT crystal
wrapped in tissue paper, I’d had no real psychedelic effect. The same had been true for my
other three encounters with the vine, leaving me to wonder at the reports of otherworldly
contact, overwhelming beauty and a deep connection to the spirit that runs through all
living things.
53.
Ayahuasca was a mystery to me, and despite some people returning from last year’s shaman
conference, I got the feeling that many of the ayahuasca tourists here in the food court
were in the same boat. We were all chasing the root of the vine, eager for the secrets she
might provide but like children in the ways of the spirit.
In the hours before the plane leaves the ayahuasca seekers magnetize together, gently
feeling each other out and swapping stories. Two big ladies from the States in native
American-inspired tribal wear come over and introduce themselves, as does a bald-headed
guy from LA and a young backpacker from Europe wearing a “Treehugger” t-shirt.
As we finally board the early morning flight to Iquitos, filing down the departure gate aisle,
it strikes me how different we all are. A few obvious “new agers” for sure, but the vast
majority of seekers here are remarkable for only one thing: their conformity.
The ayahuasca network appears to cut across race, social class and gender, a secret society
of plant worshippers all united by the common experience of this potent hallucinogenic.
And through them the ayahuasca vine was spreading her tendrils across the world, and a
genuine “archaic revival” was underway. My bags were packed, the jungle beckoned and the
ancient mystery of the rainforest awaited…
I wanted in on it.
The above is an extract from Aya: A Shamanic Odyssey by Rak Razam
54.
Psychedelics and Psychosis:
Dimethyltryptamine as an Endogenous Psychotogen
Faustus
Beginning in the mid-1990s and continuing to the present day, there has been renewed
interest and research into psychedelic drugs. One theory that has been given new life
is the possibility that the hallucinogen dimethyltryptamine (DMT) is an ‘endogenous
psychotogen’, or a substance produced by the body that causes schizophrenia. As you
may know, DMT is present in humans and this theory was initially proposed shortly after
DMT-forming enzymes were found to be present in mammalian tissues in 1961. Research
into DMT continued in the subsequent decades but ended when it was found that DMT
concentrations were generally no higher in schizophrenics than in healthy controls. Here
we’ll briefly examine this theory in light of new evidence, and demonstrate that a possible
role of DMT in schizophrenia still remains viable. This article will be expanded upon in my
presentation. Refer to Wong and Van Tol [1] for a good overview of schizophrenia.
schizophrenia [6]. For instance, classic hallucinogens typically produce visual hallucinations,
yet auditory hallucinations e.g. hearing voices, predominate in schizophrenia. Clearly
then, for DMT to be a psychotogen, we need to demonstrate that aspects of the DMT
experience cause disturbances that are somehow similar to those observed in schizophrenia.
In the past few years, several studies have done just this. In these studies, the effects of
DMT have been compared against the NMDA antagonist ketamine, the latter being a well-
regarded pharmacological model of schizophrenia. For example, after administering both
drugs to healthy volunteers, Gouzoulis-Mayfrank et al. [7] reported that DMT may be a
more appropriate model of paranoid psychosis than ketamine, and in particular produces
prominent thought disorder and inappropriate affect (emotion).
Other studies have focussed on the disturbances in attention that are characteristic of
schizophrenia. ‘Inhibition of return’ reflects an automatic, inhibitory mechanism of
attention, which is thought to protect an organism from redundant, distracting sensory
information. Deficits in inhibition of return are commonly observed in schizophrenia,
an effect which is greater after the administration of DMT than ketamine [8]. DMT
also produces disturbances in ‘mismatch negativity’, a pre-attentive process for
detecting changes in a stimulus e.g. sounds, but this deficit is more pronounced after the
administration of ketamine [9]. Schizophrenics also display problems in sensorimotor
gating, a mechanism that protects us from early stimulus processing and prevents us from
experiencing sensory overload. After the administration of DMT and ketamine, however,
neither drug was found to produce deficits in sensorimotor gating [10].
What does this all imply? It suggests that previous attempts to quantify
DMT concentrations have been
flawed, because they’ve attempted
to measure DMT exclusively, when
instead they should also be examining
the metabolites unique to DMT,
specifically DMT-NO and NMT.
Instead of measuring ~1% of DMT
concentrations, by administering
an MAOI such as iproniazid
and quantifying its metabolites, a
substantially larger concentration of
DMT can accounted for.
Therefore, the failure to find any noticeable difference in schizophrenics and controls could
be an artefact of inappropriate assays. However, it’s entirely possible that regardless of this
consideration, the endogenous concentrations of DMT are never sufficiently high for it to
act as a psychotogen.
It’s also important to note that schizophrenia is a syndrome, or an illness characterised by
a cluster of symptoms such as hallucinations and delusions. Because it’s a heterogeneous
disorder, if DMT is involved in schizophrenia, it’s likely that it would only affect a subgroup
of people. Therefore, the elevated DMT concentrations in few schizophrenics might be
masked by the low levels of DMT in many schizophrenics. The implications of this and the
problems it causes for schizophrenia research will be discussed in my presentation.
Other considerations
Jacob and Presti [13] propose that DMT might not be involved in schizophrenia, but
instead, mood regulation as an agonist of the newly-discovered TAAR1 receptor [14]. This
is supported by the finding that when DMT is administered at low, non-hallucinogenic
doses, it has mood elevating properties [15].
It’s interesting to note that when given amphetamine, TAAR1 genetic knockout mice
display hyperactivity in the mesolimbic dopamine pathway [16, 17]. This is considered an
57.
animal model of schizophrenia because such disturbances are also seen in schizophrenics
and are reversed by antipsychotics. Furthermore, tyramine, an endogenous TAAR1 agonist,
has been shown to reduce amphetamine-induced hyperactivity of dopamine pathways
in mice that do have the TAAR1 receptor [17]. This suggests that TAAR1 agonists may
have antipsychotic properties by exerting a modulatory effect on dopamine transmission.
As an agonist of TAAR1, this suggests that DMT may paradoxically have antipsychotic
properties.
References
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neurobiology. Neuroscience and Biobehavioral Reviews, 27, 269-306.
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5-HT2A receptors in atypical antipsychotic drug actions. Progress in Clinical Neuroscience, 5, 254-262.
3. Gonzalez-Maeso, J., et al. (2007). Hallucinogens recruit specific cortical 5-HT2A receptor-
mediated signaling pathways to affect behavior. Neuron, 53, 439-452.
4. Hollister, L.E., Chemical psychoses: LSD and related drugs. 1967, Springfield, IL: Charles C Thomas.
5. Barker, S., Monti, J., and Christian, S. (1981). N,N-dimethyltryptamine: An endogenous
hallucinogen. International Review of Neurobiology, 22, 83-110.
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comparison. Annals of the New York Academy of the Sciences, 96, 80-88.
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N-dimethyltryptamine (DMT): A double-blind, cross-over study in healthy volunteers.
Pharmacopsychiatry, 38, 301-311.
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NMDA antagonist model of psychosis. Neuropsychopharmacology, 31, 431-441.
9. Heekeren, K., et al. (2008). Mismatch negativity generation in the human 5HT 2A agonist and
NMDA antagonist model of psychosis. Psychopharmacology, 199, 77-88.
10. Heekeren, K., et al. (2007). Prepulse inhibition of the startle reflex and its attentional modulation
in the human S-ketamine and N, N-dimethyltryptamine (DMT) models of psychosis. Journal of
Psychopharmacology, 21, 312-320.
11. Angrist, B., et al. (1976). Dimethyltryptamine levels in blood of schizophrenic patients and
control subjects. Psychopharmacology, 47, 29-32.
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dimethyltryptamine and their N-oxides in the rat. Biochemical Pharmacology, 36, 2235-2237.
13. Jacob, M.S. and Presti, D.E. (2005). Endogenous psychoactive tryptamines reconsidered: An
anxiolytic role for dimethyltryptamine. Medical Hypotheses, 64, 930-937.
14. Bunzow, J.R., et al. (2001). Amphetamine, 3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine, lysergic acid
diethylamide, and metabolites of the catecholamine neurotransmitters are agonists of a rat trace
amine receptor. . Molecular Pharmacology, 60, 1181-1188.
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Subjective effects and preliminary results of a new rating scale. Archives of General Psychiatry, 51,
98-108.
16. Wolinsky, T., et al. (2007). The trace amine 1 receptor knockout mouse: an animal model with
relevance to schizophrenia. Genes, Brain and Behavior, 6, 628-639.
17. Lindemann, L., et al. (2007). Trace amine-associated receptor 1 modulates dopaminergic activity.
Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics, 324, 948-956.
58
.
Tryptamines at the End of Time:
Birthing a Spheroid Awareness
Dan Schreiber
Whitefella Jump-up
(Indigenising Guest Australians)
Shifting Australia’s entire Reconciliation/Rapprochement landscape
Kanyini/Deep Reconciliation
(Archaic Revival Roads)
Its only a Whiteman’s Dreaming that you’re listening to,
Its only a Whiteman’s Dreaming that is getting through,
But it’s the Blackman’s Dreaming that surrounds you!
Coloured Stone, Bending the Arc of History
The Entheogenic Community: Bridge & Ambassador for the Plant Kingdom &
Originary Tradition Shamanism
I suggest that our entheogenic community has for at least 40 years been making a cardinal
error and consequently it has had no success. Advocating illicit drug legalisation is, in the
public mind, the equivalent of advocating child abuse, leprosy or cancer! It relegates us to
the lunatic fringe; in the very least we are labelled as socially irresponsible if not corruptors
of youth and public enemies. Pharmakon in Greek is nuanced; it means medicine, venom,
poison, drug, empathogen or entheogen depending upon context and usage. Drug abuse is a
symptom of the ruling toxic paradigm or Dreaming. The drug war is therefore an exercise in
futility and given that we not interested in drugs qua drugs in the first place it was never
our problem and we should never have bought into the Secular State’s problem. I don’t know
why we painted ourselves into this corner except by accident of history, and because naive as
we were when the state dropped on us like a ton of bricks in the 1960’s we had not developed
a thoroughly thought through strategy. Only now a strategy that truly reflects our position is
emerging, and part of that strategy is to refuse to abandon moral high ground by debating
with the Hegemon on the grounds of his choosing.
The mechanist is unnerved and wrong-footed by the term entheogen, (spirit revealing) which is
why he insists on blasphemously debasing it by the materialising term “drug”. The shamanic
world of spirits is so far outside his shallow perception of reality and, if the truth be known,
he is frightened by it; hence his dismissiveness, hence his denunciation of the entheogen, of the
traditional shaman, and of course the psychonaut. Rather than deal with problems inherent in
mechanistic-materialism at that level, which is as futile as swatting a million gnats, the wisest
course is to undercut it by putting the axe through its taproot: the Archaic Revival is that rug
pulling strategy.
Now it speaks volumes about the modern world when one realises that in Originary Tradition
cultures it is the shaman and elders who determine when someone
has achieved sufficient maturity for the initiatory experience that is
Otherworld. In the modern world that experience is mediated by
the criminal. The sole criteria is not psychic readiness but whether
one has the cash! We have all seen the You Tube videos of Salvia
abuse by young men clearly in need of initiation! Salvia Divinorum
is one of the most sacred plants of the Mazatec and it is sad to
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see such gross disrespect not just of Mazatec Indigenous culture, but of one of the Earth’s
most honoured emissary plant spirits. This does Red Texta the inherently disrespectful nature
of materialism as if that needed highlighting! The definition of the Mechanistic-Materialist
Dreaming is that it is totally without respect, nothing is sacred, and its only constraint is greed!
Treating an entheogen as a drug profanes the holy. Materialism’s mislabelling of a sacrament is an
extreme abuse because it imprisons the holy in a mechanistic straightjacket.
Since the dawn of consciousness, rituals have set the scene for both individual and group
experiences. Rituals range from fasting, using incense, chanting and cleansing to the more
extreme examples such as tattoos, scarification and piercing. Shamans from Dee to Crowley
to Eliade to Castanada, took part in, and used, rituals as initiations to access other realms.
Scholars such as van Gennep, Turner and Campbell have documented the rites of passage.
As we meet with peers, gain knowledge and have experiences, a deeper understanding of
our “Self ” is gained. Many of these experiences are impossible to explain with simple
language and one needs to experience the crossing of the threshold to truly understand.
However, in today’s consumer based society, emphasis has shifted to purely taking a
“substance” rather than the observing the ritual that enhances the experience. Van Gennep
condensed the basic form of ritual to:
Separation, or simple preparation and setting up a space
Liminality, or moving between realms and,
Re-Incorporation, or integrating the transition and closing space
“Liminality is a period of transition, during which the normal limits to thought, self-understanding, and
behaviour are relaxed, opening the way to something new.”
All rituals provide a deep connection to the Universe. Teachers, initiates, novices and
journeymen alike are therefore advised to take time to consider socially, culturally and
symbolically appropriate rituals for their own purposes.
Aspects of ritual include:
Separation
• Being aware of the 4 bodies: Balance your physical, Emotional, Intellectual, Spiritual states
• Setting personal space and Being clear of your intent: utilise all your senses - smell, sound,
taste and touch.
Liminality (Journey / experience)
• Know how to Cross the bridge of Conscious-ness and Remove Ego-based luggage
• Know how to Connect with your totems / guides
Re-incorporation
• Closing Personal space: using the similar sounds smells etc.
• Recording any visions or ideas
• Group sharing
• Closing Circle: take time to re-balance the 4 bodies before resting.
By following a ritual for a more balanced, connected, and present “Self ” both prior to,
and following any experience, we can better understand our “Self ”, our intent, our ancient
history and evolve ☺
63.
Ayahuasca and Human Destiny
Dennis J. McKenna, Ph.D.
For most of the last 33 years, ayahuasca has been one of the major preoccupations of my
life. In that time, I have written extensively on the botany, chemistry, and pharmacology of
ayahuasca, on its potential therapeutic uses, and on the need for more, and more rigorous,
scientific and clinical investigations of this remarkable plant decoction. Working with
colleagues such as Dr. Grob, my good friends Jace Callaway and Dr. Luis Eduardo Luna in
Finland, my mentor Dr. Neil Towers, my late and beloved brother Terence, Dr. Glaucus de
Souza Brito, and others, to investigate the myriad mysteries of ayahuasca, has been as rich
and rewarding an experience as any scientist could ever hope for.
Partly as a result of our collective efforts, over the last few decades ayahuasca has become
one of the most thoroughly studied of the traditional shamanic plant hallucinogens. We
now have a firm understanding of the plant species that are utilized in its preparation,
including the diverse pharmacopoeia of ayahuasca admixture plants, a shamanic technology
unto itself that begs additional investigation. We understand the chemistry of the
active constituents of its primary botanical components, and have better insight into its
remarkable synergistic pharmacology.
We have identified potential therapeutic applications for ayahuasca and the role that it
may some day find in healing the physical and spiritual wounds of individuals, if it is ever
afforded its rightful place in medical practice. Ethnographically, my colleagues and I have
made contributions to an understanding of the central role that ayahuasca already has in
the context of Amazonian shamanism and ethnomedicine. We have described, and written
about, its status as a window into the sacred cosmology of magic, witchcraft, transcendent
experience, and healing that permeates and defines the practices of Mestizo ethnomedicine.
The visionary paintings of Peruvian shaman and artist Pablo Amaringo, brought so
beautifully to the attention of the world by Dr. Luis Eduardo Luna, has helped to make
that tradition accessible to many who would otherwise have seen it (if they were aware
of it at all) as alien, exotic, and incomprehensible. To an extent, our work has shed some
small light on the more contemporary role of ayahuasca as the sacramental vehicle of
syncretic religious movements that originated in Brasil and now are reaching out globally, if
incrementally, to embrace a sick and wounded world that desperately yearns for the healing
that this mind/body/spirit medicine can offer.
The story of ayahuasca, and our evolving understanding of its place in the world, and of
its significance for medicine, pharmacology, ethnobotany, and shamanic studies, is far from
over, and in fact, it may have just begun. I would like to believe that is the case. But for the
purposes of this contribution, rather than submit yet another dense and lengthy review on
the botany, chemistry, pharmacology, &c., of ayahuasca, I have chosen to adopt a broader
perspective, and to indulge in some reflections, and speculations on the past and future of
ayahuasca of the sort that a scientist, probably mercifully, rarely shares with his colleagues
or the larger world.
To those readers who may wish for my more usual nuts-and-bolts approach to
the subject, I call attention to my recent review in the journal Pharmacology
and Therapeutics (McKenna, 2004). In addition, a complete list of all of “my”
publications on ayahuasca is appended to the end of this article; and I use the term
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“my” advisedly because these publications represent the work and creativity of many
people with whom I’ve been privileged to collaborate over the years. They would not exist
without them.
On a personal level, ayahuasca has been for me both a scientific and professional
continuing carrot, and a plant teacher and guide of incomparable wisdom, compassion,
and intelligence. My earliest encounters with ayahuasca were experiential; only later did
it become an object of scientific curiosity, sparked in part by a desire to understand the
mechanism, the machineries, that might underlie the profound experiences that it elicited.
As a young man just getting started in the field of ethnopharmacology, ayahuasca seemed
to me more than worthy of a lifetime of scientific study; and so it has proven to be.
Pursuing an understanding of ayahuasca has led to many exotic places that I would never
have visited otherwise, from the jungles of the Amazon Basin to the laboratory complexes
of the National Institute of Mental Health and Stanford; it has led to the formation of
warm friendships and fruitful collaborations with many colleagues who have shared my
curiosity about the mysteries of this curious plant complex.
These collaborations, and more importantly, these friendships, continue, as does the quest
for understanding. Though there have been detours along the way, always, and
inevitably, they have led back to the central quest. Often, after the
fact, I have seen how those apparent detours
were not so far off the path
after all, as they supplied some
insight, some skill, or some
experience, that in hindsight
proved necessary to the
furtherance of the quest.
Just as ayahuasca has
been for me personally
something of a Holy Grail, as it
has been for many others, I have
the intuition that it may have a
similar role with respect to our entire species.
Anyone who is personally experienced with ayahuasca is aware
that it has much to teach us; there is incredible wisdom and intelligence there. And
to my mind, one of the most profound and humbling lessons that ayahuasca teaches – one
that we thick-headed humans have the hardest time grasping – is the realization that “you
monkeys only think you’re running things.”
Though I state it humorously, here and in other talks and writings, it is nonetheless a
profound insight on which may depend the very survival of our species, and our planet.
Humans are good at nothing if not hubris, arrogance, and self-delusion. We assume that we
dominate nature; that we are somehow separate from, and superior to, nature, even as we
set about busily undermining and wrecking the very homeostatic global mechanisms that
have kept our earth stable and hospitable to life for the last four and a half billion years. We
65.
devastate the rainforests of the world; we are responsible for the greatest loss of habitat
and the greatest decimation of species since the asteroid impacts of the Permian-Triassic
boundary, 250 million years ago; we rip the guts out of the earth and burn them, spewing
toxic chemicals into the atmosphere; at the same time we slash and burn the woody forests
that may be the only hope for sequestration of the carbon dioxide that is rapidly building
to dangerous and possibly uncontrollable levels. For the first time in the history of our
species, and indeed of our planet, we are forced to confront the possibility that thoughtless
and unsustainable human activity may be posing a real threat to our species’ survival, and
possibly the survival of all life on the planet.
And suddenly, and literally, “out of the Amazon,” one of the most impacted parts of our
wounded planet, ayahuasca emerges as an emissary of trans-species sentience, to bring this
lesson: You monkeys only think you’re running things. In a wider sense, the import of this
lesson is that we need to wake up to what is happening to us and to the planet. We need to
get with the program, people. We have become spiritually bereft and have been seduced by
the delusion that we are somehow important in the scheme of things. We are not.
Our spiritual institutions have devolved into hollow shells, perverted to the agendas of
rapacious governments and fanatic fundamentalisms, no longer capable of providing
balm to the wounded spirit of our species; and as the world goes up in flames we benumb
ourselves with consumerism and mindless entertainment, the decadent distractions of
gadgets and gewgaws, the frantic but ultimately meaningless pursuits of a civilization that
has lost its compass. And at this cusp in human history, there emerges a gentle emissary,
the conduit to a body of profoundly ancient genetic and evolutionary wisdom that has long
abided in the cosmologies of the indigenous peoples of the Amazon who have guarded and
protected this knowledge for millennia, who learned long ago that the human role is not
to be the master of nature, but its stewards, Our destiny, if we are to survive, is to nurture
nature and to learn from it how to nurture ourselves and our fellow beings. This is the
lesson that we can learn from ayahuasca, if only we pay attention.
I find it both ironic, and hopeful, that within the last 150 years, and particularly in the last
half of the 20th century, ayahuasca has begun to assert its presence into human awareness
on a global scale. For millennia it was known only to indigenous peoples who have long
since understood and integrated what it has to teach us. In the 19th century it first came to
the attention of a wider world as an object of curiosity in the reports of Richard Spruce
and other intrepid explorers of the primordial rainforests of South America; in the mid-
20th century Schultes and others continued to explore this discovery and began to focus
the lens of science on the specifics of its botany, chemistry, and pharmacology (and, while
necessary, this narrow scrutiny perhaps overlooked some of the larger implications of this
ancient symbiosis with humanity). At the same time, ayahuasca escaped from its indigenous
habitat and made its influence felt among certain non-indigenous people, representatives of
“greater” civilization.
To these few men and women, ayahuasca provided revelations, and they in turn responded
(in the way that humans so often do when confronted with a profound mystery) by
founding religious sects with a messianic mission; in this case, a mission of hope, a
message to the rest of the world that despite its simplicity was far ahead of its time:
that we must learn to become the stewards of nature, and by fostering, encouraging,
and sustaining the fecundity and diversity of nature, by celebrating and honoring
our place as biological beings, as part of the web of life, we may learn to become
66.
nurturers of each other. A message quite different, and quite anathema, to the anti-
biological obsessions of most of the major world “religions” with their preoccupation with
death and suffering and their insistence on the suppression of all spontaneity and joy.
Such a message is perceived as a great threat by entrenched religious and political power
structures, and indeed, it is. It is a threat to the continued rape of nature and oppression of
peoples that is the foundation of their power. Evidence that they understand this threat and
take it seriously is reflected by the unstinting and brutal efforts that “civilized” ecclesiastical,
judicial, and political authorities have made to prohibit, demonize, and exterminate the
shamanic use of ayahuasca and other sacred plants ever since the Inquisition and even
earlier.
But the story is not yet over. Within the last 30 years, ayahuasca, clever little plant
intelligence that it is, has escaped from its ancestral home in the Amazon and has found
haven in other parts of the world. With the assistance of human helpers who heard the
message and heeded it, ayahuasca sent its tendrils forth to encircle the world. It has found
new homes, and new friends, in nearly every part of the world where temperatures are
warm and where the ancient connections to plant-spirit still thrive, from the islands of
Hawaii to the rainforests of South Africa, from gardens in Florida to greenhouses in Japan.
The forces of death and dominance have been outwitted; it has escaped them, outrun
them.
There is now no way that ayahuasca can ever be eliminated from the earth, short of
toxifying the entire planet (which, unfortunately, the death culture is working assiduously to
accomplish). Even if the Amazon itself is leveled for cattle pasture or burned for charcoal,
ayahuasca, at least, will survive, and will continue to engage in its dialog with humanity. And
encouragingly, more and more people are listening.
It may be too late. I have no illusions about this. Given that the curtain is now being rung
down on the drunken misadventure that we call human history, the death culture will
inevitably become even more brutal and insane, flailing ever more violently as it sinks
beneath the quick sands of time. Indeed, it is already happening; all you have to do is turn
on the nightly news.
Will ayahuasca survive? I have no doubt that ayahuasca will survive on this planet as
long as the planet remains able to sustain life. The human time frame is measured in
years, sometimes centuries, rarely, in millennia. Mere blinks when measured against the
evolutionary time scales of planetary life, the scale on which ayahuasca wields its influence.
It will be here long after the governments, religions, and political power structures that
seem today so permanent and so menacing have dissolved into dust. It will be here long
after our ephemeral species has been reduced to anomalous sediment in the fossil record.
The real question is, will we be here long enough to hear its message, to integrate what it is
trying to tell us, and to change in response, before it is too late?
Ayahuasca has the same message for us now that it has always had, since the beginning of
its symbiotic relationship with humanity. Are we willing to listen? Only time will tell.
67.
References
McKenna, Dennis J. (2004) Clinical investigations of the therapeutic potential of
Ayahuasca: Rationale and regulatory challenges. Pharmacology and Therapeutics. 102:111-
129.
Dennis J. McKenna (1999) Ayahuasca: an ethnopharmacologic history. In: R. Metzner,
(ed) Ayahuasca: Hallucinogens, Consciousness, and the Spirit of Nature. Thunder’s Mouth
Press, New York.
Callaway, J. C., D. J. McKenna, C. S. Grob, G. S. Brito, L. P. Raymon, R.E. Poland, E. N.
Andrade, E. O. Andrade, D. C. Mash (1999) Pharmacokinetics of Hoasca alkaloids in
Healthy Humans. Journal of Ethnopharmacology. 65:243-256.
McKenna, DJ, JC Callaway, CS Grob (1999). The scientific investigation of ayahuasca: A
review of past and current research. Heffter Review of Psychedelic Research 1:
Callaway, J. C., L. P. Raymon, W. L. Hearn, D. J. McKenna, C. S. Grob, G. S. Brito, D. C.
Mash (1996) Quantitation of N,N-dimethyltryptamine and harmala alkaloids in human
plasma after oral dosing with Ayahuasca. Journal of Analytical Toxicology 20: 492-497
C. S. Grob, D. J. McKenna, J. C. Callaway, G. S. Brito, E. S. Neves, G. Oberlender, O. L.
Saide, E. Labigalini, C. Tacla, C. T. Miranda, R. J. Strassman, K. B. Boone (1996) Human
pharmacology of hoasca, a plant hallucinogen used in ritual context in Brasil: Journal of
Nervous & Mental Disease. 184:86-94. McKenna, DJ (1996)
James C. Callaway, M. M. Airaksinen, Dennis J. McKenna, Glacus S. Brito, & Charles
S. Grob (1994) Platelet serotonin uptake sites increased in drinkers of ayahuasca.
Psychopharmacology 116: 385-387
Dennis J. McKenna, L. E. Luna, & G. H. N. Towers, (1995) Biodynamic constituents in
Ayahuasca admixture plants: an uninvestigated folk pharmacopoeia. In: von Reis, S., and R.
E. Schultes (eds). Ethnobotany: Evolution of a Discipline. Dioscorides Press, Portland
Dennis J. McKenna, & G. H. N. Towers, (1985) On the comparative ethnopharmacology of
the Malpighiaceous and Myristicaceous hallucinogens. J. Psychoactive Drugs, 17:35-39.
Dennis J. McKenna, & G. H. N. Towers, (1984), Biochemistry and pharmacology of
tryptamine and ß-carboline derivatives: A minireview. J. Psychoactive Drugs, 16:347-358.
Dennis J. McKenna, G. H. N. Towers, & F. S. Abbott (1984) Monoamine oxidase inhibitors
in South American hallucinogenic plants: Tryptamine and ß-carboline constituents of
Ayahuasca. J. of Ethnopharmacology 10:195-223.
Dennis J. McKenna, G. H. N. Towers, & F. S. Abbott (1984) Monoamine oxidase inhibitors
in South American hallucinogenic plants Pt. II: Constituents of orally active Myristicaceous
hallucinogens. J. of Ethnopharmacology 12:179-211.
Dennis J. McKenna & G. H. N. Towers (1981) Ultra-violet mediated cytotoxic activity of
ß-carboline alkaloids. Phytochemistry 20:1001-1004
68.
The Economic Consequences of Black Markets, Specifically in
Reference to Drug Prohibition
Bear Stanley
Rhetorical question: If the stated purpose of prohibition is to limit the use and reduce
consumption, why make distribution and sale of drugs the most highly paid job on Earth?
No limits or employment requirements, any sex any age can do it. Start with a few dollars
and walk away with thousands by dinner time. A dealer on every street corner, in every
suburban mall and schoolyard. So many thousands that the risk of arrest is virtually
nonexistent. Drug use in 1900 other than alcohol and tobacco was about 0.1% of total
population- today around 60-70% and in many groups 100%.
With something like a third of all $ world trade value in the underground, what hope have
the world’s economic managers? None. What did/does the mob do with all those annual
trillions? Can’t bank it, can’t stash it either, there is not enough money in existence for that,
it has to be spent. I think they bought and are buying all the big multinationals, banks,
loan companies and foreign exchange traders (the classic means of laundering the money).
Corporate behaviour gives the game away especially executive salaries in the multi-millions
and loans to people who have no hope of repayment, just to collect the interest- standard
loan sharking. Start a war and then get exclusive contracts to ‘rebuild’ which never happens,
like the ‘protection’ racket, etc.
Yes, I have the answer, it is all in an old 60’s comic book, The Fabulous Furry Freak
Brothers: ‘Dope will get you through times of no money better than money will get you
through times of no dope’. Thus, ‘stimulus’ money also is drained out for the legit economy
as fast as it is provided.
/* Standard Trailer: This has been an excerpt from the real-time, here-now, ongoing, occasional
science-fiction story “homomorphism”, it is neither warranted nor asserted that the story is, in fact,
homomorphic to the real-time realities of the putative reader, if in doubt, you are hallucinating. */
71.
Entheogenesis Australis 2009 Biographies and Synopses
Michael Bock
Biography: I have been investigating the ethnobotany of Australasian plants for a long time, and have
since discovered the reason why humanity is on this earth.
Lecture: Oils ain’t oils: Essential oils in Australasian Flora
5pm Sat 7 Nov Main Dome
It is about the occurrence of what Shulgin calls ‘The 10 essential Oils’ (plus a couple of
other interesting oils) in the Australasian flora, what the plants could be used for, and maps
of the general region of where they are found, and why these oils are so essential.
Stephen Bright
Biography: Stephen is a registered psychologist and the co-ordinator of the addictions program at
Curtin University. He has published research on behaviour change, the role of spirituality
in psychotherapy, and Australian drug policy.
Lecture: Legal Highs: Legal Loopholes or Harm Reduction?
5pm Sun 8 Nov Main Dome
I will discuss the current idiosyncrasies inherent to Australian drug laws which allow for the
sale and use of some legal/herbal highs that might be more harmful than those substances
that are illegal. While some would suggest that analogue laws (such as those in the US and
NSW) would prevent this situation, I believe that this is only a ‘band-aid’ solution, and does
not solve thez underlying issue of there being no correlation between the legal status of a
substance and the potential harms of that substance.
Rob Bruce
Biography: Rob Bruce lives in Bundjalung Nation, near the rural town of Nimbin. He is a performing
and recording musician and organic gardener. He has lived and worked extensively with
shamans in Latin America. www.myspace.com/robbrucemusic
Lecture: Shamanism and Sorcery in South America - Andes and Amazonia
4pm Sat 7 Nov Main Dome
My lecture will focus on shamanism and witchcraft in the Amazon and Andes in South
America. The ritual use of vegetal Entheogens remains an indispensable aspect of the
practice of shamanism in the Andean highlands and the Amazon lowlands of South
America. Rob Bruce examines the use of Ayahuasca amongst indigenous Cofan and other
Tukanoan speaking tribes-people of North-West Amazonia, and of Achuma (San Pedro)
amongst Mestizo peoples of the highlands of northern Peru. Broader elements of Latin
American shamanism (curanderismo) and witchcraft (brujeria) are also discussed.
Margaret Cross
Biography: Margaret was born in Far North Queensland in 1963 and as child of the 60’s resolutely
started on a life of questioning and quite rebellion for the rest of her life. As a young
mother of three daughters she has been involved in every parent run co-operative known
to mankind and spent much of her free time doing voluntary work for various social justice
or environmental causes. As boredom set in- some time after her second child- she turned
her thirst for questioning into a relentless pursuit of knowledge which has resulted in the
acquisition of a couple of degrees. She has a Bachelor of Secondary Education, a Graduate
Diploma in Women’s Studies, and a Masters in Criminology. By the time she had started
her Post Doctoral Thesis, for which she received an Australian Post Graduate
Award, she realised that Academia held little in the way of honest action or interest
for her. This coincided with the breakdown of her marriage and a very forceful visit
from spirit... which was to remind her that she is here for a reason. Twelve months
after spirits first visit she was introduced to the Psychedelic Trance Community and
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the first steps in her spiritual liberation began, via the medium of mind-altering substances,
transcendental, spiritual healing and tribal living. At her third outdoor party after a massive
dose of LSD (who knew those tiny bits of paper could do that??) she fell into a three -hour
trance dance that ultimately lead to her first transcendent experience which showed her
that she was connected to every thing everywhere, That was 6 years ago. Today she helps
run Shamanic circles and is about to attend the 2nd Ayahuasca Conference in Iquitos Peru,
followed by training and healing work with a Traditional Shaman many, many, kilometres
up the Amazon. She is also embarking on a course of learning with the Daughters of the
Greening, who are a global collective of women healers working on healing Mother Gaia.
Ultimately her life has been about service for all and the understanding that dreams do in
fact come true.
Discussion Forum:
Keeping it Real Shamanism 101
9.45am Sun 8 Nov Entheo Dome
For the girls... As the topic of our discussion centres around the divine feminine and
medicine work we will be creating a Mesa which will express aspects of the divine feminine.
The Mesa will be constructed as part of the discussion. We welcome all women to bring a
symbolic object which captures for them an aspect of the goddess. Maybe its a part of the
goddess that is wounded in you, or the shadow in you or the part you celebrate the most,
maybe its your intuition, or your heartspace, power, sexuality etc... etc. This Mesa is a sacred
altar for medicine work and healing. If we are to aid this world all our medicine work
begins within... the altar is a good way to transform that which no longer serves us. Phe is
also going to join us and we can discuss dreaming and plant work... because we see more
and more each day that the dream is a natural domain of plants and women.
Becca Dakini
Biography: Dakini (AKA Becca Dakini) is a cultural creative and artist actively participating within the
Australian and international festival/electronic music community as a: dj, producer, project
manager, event coordinator, writer, journalist, editor, décor artist, holistic therapist, ritual
performer, truthseeker, networker, consciousness explorer and visionary dreamer.
Talk and Sound Workshop:
Eternal Now - Keys To Being Present in the Moment As the Observer of the Ego
10am Sat 7 Nov Mykopod
This workshop will focus on explaining the basics of “presence principles” - how to be
in the present moment, the function of the Ego, and tips on how to master being the
Observer of the Ego. Inspired by the teachings of Eckhart Tolle, this workshop is designed
to reveal the Essence within each human being, giving key tips on how to embrace living
more fully in the Now with a new and freeing awareness of the Ego. The workshop will
comprise of a talk by Becca Dakini, followed by a sound healing performance of Don
Peyote’s ambient release “Eternal Now.”
Matthew Daniele
Biography:Studied horticulture and permaculture in 2001, has done revegetation of ephemeral/
wetland habitats.Since been working at CERES including running workshops in
propagation and permaculture.
Workshop: Food Forests in our Neighbourhood
10.30am Sun 8 Nov Workshop Dome
Discover how a natural forest is a plant community, resilient in its diversity and productive
on many levels. This workshop will look at food forests emulating a natural forest
and providing food for all five kingdoms. A must for nomads, shamans and villagers.
Workshopping food forest scenario’s in a variety of landscapes we will explore the potential
of the wild and cultivated edibles in our world. Every villager, shaman, urban dweller,
herbalist, plant lover and nomad can have access to the cornucopia of food and medicinal
plants by planting and seeding food forests, from backyards to small farms and upper
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riparian and ephemeral habitats, and bring our abundance to our foreground and our
lives. Lets explore the way food forests work, the plants that we would use, the methods
of creating food forests and the benefits of them in our community and our culture.
Lets learn from each other with a discussion of what food plants, native, wild, medicinal
and cultivated fit into a Food forest ( plant community) and be empowered to creating
sustainable food systems and a sharing community.
Darklight
Biography: Darklight has spent more than ten years in places as diverse as greenhouses, fields and
laboratories, making plant cells sing and learning from their songs.
Lecture: High Tech Overdrive
10.30am Sun 8 Nov Main Dome
A brief overview of the relative merits and possibilities offered by high technology
approaches to our field, including some case studies.
Eve-N Dawnsong
Biography:Even Dawn is a visual artist, musician and meta-poetic emcee who avidly investigates the
synchronic order and co-edits ‘2C’ the galactic culture zine about 2012.
Lecture: About time!...…Shift Happens
2.15pm Sun 8 Nov Entheo Dome
Shift Happens is a presentation which covers the occurrence of great changes in the state
of life on Planet Earth as has happened in the known past and is anticipated for the future.
Based upon astronomical, anthropological and paleontological observations, this research
provides insight into the cause of many changes which are occurring, not just on Earth
but throughout the solar system and greater galactic order in which we exist. Even also
offers an overview of the Mesoamerican Long Count Calendar; investigations into crop
circle formations, and an explanation of the significance of December 21st 2012, climate
changes and eschatology.
Workshop: The Art of Time
11.00am Sat 7 Nov Workshop Dome
The Art of Time explores the relationship between the structure of the human holon
and the 4th dimensional holon of Timeship Earth. This workshop utilises a multisensory
approach to teach participants about the mathematical principals underlying the 260 kin/
day count cycle of the Tzolkin, the 360 kin cycle of the Ha’ab and the 365 + 1 kin cycle
of the 13 Moon 28 Day synchonometer. Guided by illustrated handouts, there will be an
introduction to the relevant timing cycles, an overview of the effects of macro and micro
programming devices such as the mechanical clock and the calendar of the roman catholic
church, and then a demonstration of the mathematical frequency encoded in the form of
the physical body, the etheric holon (plasma centers), and the geomagnetic structure of the
planet holon.
Jewelli Dollman
Biography:Jewelli talks with plants, is a certified Australian Bush Flower Essence practitioner and
teacher and has enjoyed dallying with the Devas for over seven years.
Workshop: Dropping with the Devas - Australian Bushflower Essences
3.30pm Sun 8 Nov Grassy Knoll
Learn how the vibrational medicine of flower essences can support, enhance and evolve
your psychedelic experience. Explore seven different Australian Bush Flower Essences and
the healing qualities they offer. As well as the role that sacred plant essences have to play,
the workshop will cover topics such as: attunement to the plant kingdom, spiritual
discernment and clear spiritual communication, pineal gland activation, psychic
protection, healing and strengthening the aura, releasing negatively held psychic
energies, telepathic communication, grounding and care of the subtle bodies
post-journey, and how to set up optimal conditions to protect and enhance your
psychonautical experience.
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Faustus
Biography: There he goes. One of God’s own prototypes. Some kind of high powered mutant never
even considered for mass production. Too weird to live, and too rare to die.
Lecture: Psychedelics and Psychosis: Dimethyltryptamine as an Endogenous Psychotogen
9.30pm Fri 6 Nov Main Dome
DMT is an intense hallucinogen whose endogenous presence in humans has prompted
suggestions that it is involved in schizophrenia. However, despite research spanning almost
half a century, its relationship with this illness still remains unclear. This presentation
will examine the evidence for and against DMT’s role in schizophrenia. The basic
rationale behind the ‘DMT hypothesis’ and more recent human studies will be discussed.
Evidence regarding DMT’s interaction with the newly discovered trace amine receptors
and their link with schizophrenia will also be examined. Only a basic understanding of
psychopharmacology and neuroscience is needed to understand this presentation.
Phe Gitsham
Biography:Extra Sensory Healing and Acupuncture. B.H.Sc. Chinese Medicine. Shamanic Healing
- Huna & Maya-Toltec. Trance Medium Theta Hypnotics. Sound Healing. Shamanic
Ceremonies. Alchemystic Concoctions. Teacher of Extra Lucid Shamanic Dreaming and
Trance Mediumship.
Workshop: Lucid Dreaming with Plant Sprits and a Hypnotic Journey Dreaming Awake.
4.15pm Sat 7 Nov Workshop Dome
A discussion and hypnotic journey about Lucid dreaming techniques and pathways in
relationship with Entheogenic Plant Spirits. Lucid dreaming is a pathway of journeys,
healing, teachings, psychic development and re-integration of dreamtime into awakening.
Come chat with Phe about our inter-species relationships with plant spirits and lucid
dreaming, trance states and entheogenic dreamings: as we are all an artist of the spirit
who is always dreaming... Phe’s shamanic lucid dream artistry is influenced by Maya-Toltec
Shamanic Dreaming, Tibetan Dzogchen Dream Yoga, Xhosa Dream Divination and
more...This workshop includes a deep theta state Hypnotic Shamanic Dreaming Journey
experience, to transmit to you an upgrade of your lucidity navigation and integration
potentials. “May I awaken within the Dream so that all beings may Awaken...” (Tibetan
prayer)
Workshop: 13x Homepathic Entheogenics Chat-Lab.
5.15pm Sat 7 Nov Workshop Dome
Have you created or tried a homeopathic entheo-essence? This chat-lab is a portal to hear
and share insights into the vibrational essence potentials of plant medicines. Some of us
have been making and trying them with great and exciting insights to share about how
much these essences have to offer. Phe worked with traditional healers in mexico using
entheo-essences, has been developing a range of entheo-essences and has some special
guests who have been doing the same. Vibrational alchemystic linguistics.
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Chris Hansen
Biography: Curious carbon based Gringo seeks ways of The Force through the medium of Plants,
Shamanism and natural medicine after years of searching for a state of wellbeing and
holistic health. A certified high school drop out with studies in Cynicism, Altered States
and Patient to Western Medicine Combat. Turn ons: Sacred Plants, Purging, Chinese
Medicine and long walks in the forest... Turn offs: Prohibition, excessive left brain activity
and intestinal parasites...
Lecture: Chasing Butterflies - from Peruvian Core Shamanism to the Yin and Yang
12.45pm Sun 8 Nov Entheo Dome
Me and Ralph. With the gifts of Ayahuasca and Huachuma, the deep cleansing and
profound changes, there can be a price paid for the joys of their sweet consciousness
expanding nature. There is a need to maintain a physical body able to support this change.
The process of grounding, integration and the consequences of change seem seldom
discussed and are made all the more difficult by a body not up to the task. From the joys of
gut wrenching vomiting, the love of the purge bucket Ralph, he’s always there when I need
him... Through the regime of nutritional replenishment, massage, exercise and on to the
magical realms of Chinese medicine... it’s compatibility with the drug world, Sacred Plants
and it’s place in the process of potential post Shamanic exhaustion.
Shane Huebner
Biography: Shane was born in Port Morseby, Papua and moved to Melbourne for 8 years. During
this period he became his mother’s seed collecting ‘monkey’ for S.G.A.P (Society for
Growing Australian Plants). He also helped propagate an extensive native plant nursery
for an Arboretum on a new bush property at Nelson in 1966. His family were modern day
pioneers establishing a farm from the last virgin crown land allotments (before the National
Parks Act). ABC Landline made two documentaries on his families pioneering efforts,
entitled Pioneer Huebner (1968/1974). At the tender age of 17 he joined the army in 1975
where he discovered hashish gunja, opium, mushrooms, black microdots and Californian
Orange Barrels. As a consequence his work involved intelligence gathering... but not for the
army... and the ‘information’ he collected saw him leave the army early to pursue his new
love. He spent a massive amount of time gathering, collating, pressing, and taxonomy with
his mother Leila as she was understudy to Cliff Beauglehole one of Victorias Botanists.
Shane later helped in botanising many of Victoria and South Australia’s Reserves and
Parks. Some of the projects were gathering an extensive personal collection of Acacia’s,
Euc’s, grasses and hosts of other flora. During this period he found that some of these
plants were in demand in the dried flower trade (no seriously) and he developed specific
lines of where PBR’s where issued... such as Ixodia Achilliodes. He worked with S.A.R.D.I
(South Australian Research and Development Institute), finding lines for over seas markets
and so became a leader in developing technology in Germination, Growing and Processing
etc. This knowledge was used to assist the department of Agriculture in Q.L.D, W.A and
S.A. He grew and wild crafted foliage grasses and flowers for whole sale and export. After
becoming too country-fied he left the farm and the wildflowers and came to Melbourne
to study Natural Medicine at the Melbourne College of Natural Medicine from 1999-
2002. Whilst at college he came into contact with people doing Amazon Jungle Tours and
eventually met Sayre Tupac Wirichoca and through him Wasuma, Ayahuscha, Salvia and
DMT. These days he is running medicine circles with his amazing partner, who are both
dedicated to creating the spaces within programs of where one can go beyond... beyond...
beyond. Enabling the individual to let go of all preconceived notions and ideas about their
imitations and capabilities... by showing the true nature of limitless consciousness.
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Discussion Group:
The Crazy Cactus Wisdom of Chavin-Ancient Knowledge-Hidden Truths
11.15am Sat 7 Nov Entheo Dome
This is a community discussion forum intended to offer a space to reflect on the eternal
messages that are transmitted via plant based work. Using the Chavin Cactus Culture
and its Crazy Wisdom as a starting point we will explore topics such as universal oneness,
Enlightenment, the Paradigm Shift and the role of the plants and spirit molecules as
teachers and guides. The use of San Pedro in South America has mostly fallen into
the lower intentional realms of Burjo/sorcery and the message of ‘Light’ than was
synonymous with the original cactus cultures of Northern Peru has been forgotten in the
selling of ‘charms’ and love spells. However the resurgence of ‘modern’ interest in the
plant teachings has lead to a spiritual resurgence throughout the West and a contingent
growth in understanding around topics like enlightenment and Universal Consciousness.
The ancient wisdom held by the plants hold many keys for mankind’s conscious evolution
and our exploration of their stories has powerful implications for our own internal journey.
Kilindi Iyi
Biography: Kilindi Iyi is the head instructor and technical advisor of the Tamerrian Martial Arts
Institute. The Tamerrian Institute teaches ancient and contemporary African martial
science. Kilindi Iyi works and lives in Detroit Michigan. www.tamerrian.com
Lecture: The Interdimensional Village: The African Uses of Entheogens
9.45am Sat 7 Nov Main Dome
This talk will explore the African uses of Entheogens. The African continent gave to the
world the oldest representations of hallucinogenic use. By sharing the cultural dynamics
that surround the novel states of consciousness delivered by power plant ingestion, the
interdimensional village concept will be revealed to the conference participants. The so
called primitive family groups existing on several planes of existence at once give us a
pattern for the next phase of being. Kilindi will share his experiences dealing with these
ancient concepts and how they can impact the larger Entheogenic community.
Jeremy J
Biography: Jeremy is a field-based scientific researcher, specialising in Australian Acacias. Over the last
eight years he has travelled widely across Australia documenting, identifying and analysing
the plants he finds.
Lecture: Entheogenic Acacias of Australia: A review of known active species and an
introduction to more previously unreported species.
11.15am Sun 8 Nov Main Dome
I will be presenting a brief review of my previous EGA presentation, followed by new
research findings regarding the chemistry and botany of more Entheogenic Australian
Acacias which remain so far unreported. In concluding the presentation, future directions
of Entheogenic Acacia research shall be suggested.
Robert Jesse
Biography: Bob Jesse is the organizer of the Council on Spiritual Practices (http://csp.org/about/),
which aims to shift modernity’s awareness and practices with respect to primary religious
experience (http://csp.org/PRE/). CSP also encourages people to imagine and develop
social contexts to contain such experiences and help them yield lasting benefit. Through
CSP, Bob and his colleagues initiated a study, conducted at Johns Hopkins (http://csp.org/
psilocybin/) and reported around the world, of the psycho-spiritual effects of Psilocybin in
healthy volunteers (http://csp.org/psilocybin/). This expands the emphasis in hallucinogen
research beyond the medical treatment of ill people to include the betterment of well
people, contributing to a science of pro-social development. On his home front, Bob is
co-convenor of a spiritual community formed around ecstatic dance. His formal training is
in engineering. He currently resides in San Francisco. http://csp.org/about.html
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Discussion group:
Communities of Spirit
2.00pm Sat 7 Nov Entheo Dome
Lecture: Psilocybin and Spirituality: Notes from the Johns Hopkins Psilocybin Study
9.45pm Sat 7 Nov Main Dome
Lecture: (Entheogens), Awakening and Spiritual Development
9.00pm Sun 8 Nov Main Dome
Much of the world’s suffering is unnecessary. Where can we turn for help in healing the
world and building more joyful lives? Across cultures and eras, profound experiences of
unity with the cosmos - called, variously, mystical experiences, non-dual consciousness,
unitive consciousness, or primary religious experiences - have sometimes lead to lasting,
and lastingly beneficial, changes in the lives of those who encounter them. Some of them
(Moses at the Burning Bush, the Buddha under the Bodhi tree, Saul of Tarsus on the road
to Damascus, Bill Wilson in Towns Hospital) are not only life-changing but also world-
changing. Many different activities - meditation, prayer, chanting, fasting, and dancing
among them - have been used with the intention of preparing for such experiences or for
occasioning them, and their nature seems to be largely independent of how they come
about. The skilful, careful use of certain plants and chemicals is one of the least demanding
means in terms of time and among the most likely to bring about a profound experience
on any given occasion. The wisdom traditions emphasise the critical importance of
ongoing practice for spiritual development and to stabilise what may be gained in a primary
experience. Today’s interconnected world presents a rich, even bewildering, array of old
and new techniques and paths. Tradition and reason also say that the existence of a social
“vessel” to contain the process - a group of people with some shared understanding of
what the experience means and what is to be done with it - reduces risks and increases the
chances that a given experience will lead to lasting benefit. But this knowledge is scattered,
incomplete, and tacit; there is more of it in the minds and hearts of teachers than there
is in the writings of scientists. We know little, for example, about which practices work
best for which people. There is much to be learned. These observations lead us to believe
that bringing more focus to this area would tend to decrease suffering and increase pro-
social behaviour in the world. We can pursue this goal by catalysing research to improve
scientific knowledge of the phenomena and their consequences, by working to create social
understandings that make seeking out primary experiences seem less unusual than it now
does to most westerners, and by encouraging people to find or imagine and develop social
contexts that serve as appropriate vessels. Foremost, we can redouble our commitment to
our own spiritual growth, to the long personal work of tilling the soil for awakening, and to
the communities that hold these intentions.
Greg Kasarik
Biography: Working as a counsellor, and with studies in both Psychology and Philosophy, Greg is
and is interested in Entheogens as a means for expanding Metaphysical understanding,
while being active proponent for legalising safe mind altering substances within a harm
minimisation framework.
Lecture: Entheogens vs Drugs: Framing the Sacraments
2.30pm Fri 6 Nov Main Dome
This presentation will look to discuss the nature of “Entheogens”, including what they
are, what qualities they possess, and what makes them different from normal “drugs”. In
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particular, it will look to address issues, such as potential harm from use, addiction and the
political implications of their use. It is the intent of this presentation to contribute to the
ability of participants to effectively engage in the process of framing Entheogens as a unique
class of substances, thereby allowing freer discussion of these substances, with the aim of
increasing acceptance and the probability of legalisation.
Keith King
Biography: Loving partner and parent with a strong interest in ethnobotanicals and mycology.
Workshop: Spreading The Mycelial Love - Introduction to cultivating wood-lovers
2.15pm Sat 7 Nov Workshop Dome
A hands on workshop where people can create their own hessian spawn and learn about
cultivating legal, wood loving fungi.
Richard King
Biography:Developer of the Thorr’s Harm Avoidance Shield known as ‘Delightenment,’ I am a lifelong
student of shamanism. www.earthsacraments.org
Lecture: The Archaic Revival Road - Whitefella Jump Up - Indigenising Guest Australians
(Kanyini, Deep Reconciliation, Power Plants and Continuum Consciousness)
4.00pm Fri 6 Nov Main Dome
Workshop: The Experience of Delightenment (A modern application of Thundernaut
Shamanism. Electro Luminescent Efflluve and Sound as an Earth Sacrament)
All Day Mon 9 Nov @ the Masquerade Corroboree
Richard King has always felt an abiding connection to the natural world. His background
is in apiculture. Richard observes that the honeybee with 100 million years of experience
has forgotten more about weaving the life-web and maintaining the ancient (and now
shredded) ‘Contract with Nature’ than materialist modernism ever knew! In the mid 1960’s
when “Haight was Love” he visited San Francisco. This experience has had a profound life-
long effect. He immediately recognised that the Counter Culture was presciently pointing
western society to the recovery of its lost co-operative tribal values. These survival values
have been trodden underfoot in our heedless careen into soulless mechanistic-materialism.
Richard is overjoyed that these life-affirming verities are alive and well and finding their
expression through the Entheogenic renaissance. Richard is a life-long student of pre-pagan
Originary Tradition shamanism. He is founder of ‘An Comhaltas Celtia Og’ and ‘Thórr’s
Shield and Forge’ pagan religions (in the religioning, [re-connecting] not the blind-faith
sense of the word.) Thórr’s risk-reduction Bliss Bays, as a service to the community, proffer
Full Body Blossoming Delightenment at Dance Party Festivals. Delightenment draws
upon Neolithic shamanic tech. Richard is an advocate for Deep Reconciliation. because it
invites real engagement, is genuine reconciliation. It is not, (unlike John Howard’s ‘Practical
Reconciliation’) just another despicably disguised form of assimilation by the dominant
culture. Deep Reconciliation is purposed to, (with the assistance and blessing of Aboriginal
elders and the spirit of Australia’s native Entheogen ‘Wattlewaska,’) forging an abiding
relationship leading to Union with the spirits and founding ancestral cultures and Creator
Beings of our Land. The holy wattle, our national colours, the green and gold, is the binding
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motif and wisely chosen floral emblem of the Commonwealth Coat of Arms. It is a
natural gateway to deeper realities. Richard’s dream is to see Wattle Day transformed into
National Wattlewaska Medicine Ceremonies honouring our Land and the First Australians.
Richard feels that, though it may take generations, Wattlewaska (Somacacia) and other
powerful Earth Sacramental ceremonies will help repair the Dreaming and the Song Lines
in those places where they are now in disrepair.
DJ Krusty
Biography:I Live a Creative Life as a contributing artistic member in the community. I enjoy Writing,
Reading, Film, Music, Health, Spiritual Growth, Art, Literature, Costume, Home, my
relationship to Nature, my Shadow and Subconscious, our Cats, and my Wife. DJ Krusty
has a BA (Human Movements); BSc (Physical Education) and lives in Melbourne Australia.
Lecture: The Entheogenic Shamanic Imperative of the Bush Doof Trance Dance
Experience is the Darkness of the Night or Why The Daytime Party is Something
Else Entirely
Midnight Fri 6 Nov Main Dome
The Entheogenic Shamanic Imperative of the Bush Doof Trance Dance Experience is
the Darkness of the Night or Why The Daytime Party is Something Else Entirely. While
day time doofing is a lot of fun, it is a long way from the mythic heroic Entheogenic
undertaking of the traditional bush doof trance party, where each individual on mass
struggled and astounded themselves throughout the night in the depths of darkness,
passing between the worlds at dawn, to be reborn and redeemed in the light of a new
day. The central tenant of the bush doof is the Entheogenic shamanic journey quest to
experience the perennial. Without this vital focus on the ritual of the heroic journey for
each individual, the bush doof simple becomes a watered down commodification of the
entertainment industry.
Workshop: Masquerade Corroboree - An experimental Sayonara PSY Soiree
Midnight Sun 8 Nov Mykopod
EGA Invites all conference delegates to participate in the Masquerade Corroboree. An
experimental Sayonara PSY Soiree. There are no spectators only participants. Let’s be open
minded about opening our minds. After midnight Sunday till Monday arvo you are invited
to come and participate in a special masquerade corroboree event. The idea is to inspire
all EGA conference attendees to actively participate in the event in some manner and
encourage the group mind and communication. Experiment with dressing up in costume,
bring some food and drink to share with each other, hang out, dance and converse in a
colourful creative environment of theatre, dance and ritual. We invite you all to join in on
the collective Grok... that is the EGA experimental Masquerade Corroboree.
Colonel Kurtz
Biography: Layman psychedelic hobbyist and dilettante amateur entheonaut. Specialising in the textual
and procedural potentiation of the psychedelic and Entheogenic experiences and modelling
possible psychedelic movements.
Lecture: Conceptual Hallucinogens and the Altered Shulgin Scale
9.45am Sun 8 Nov Main Dome
The psychedelic research chemist Alexander Shulgin created the “Shulgin Scale” as a
pragmatic and compact measure and notation for reporting the subjective effect of
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psychoactive substances at a given dosage, and at a given time. Whilst useful for the
calibration of psychedelic experiences, it is of limited applicability to the calibration of
Entheogenic experiences and qualia. An “Altered Shulgin Scale” will be proposed, to
address such limitations. The concept of “Conceptual Hallucinogen” will also be essayed
and the analogue family of “EC2C” conceptual hallucinogens examined, of which the
“Altered Shulgin Scale” is a member.
Michele Maselli
Biography:Artist, DJ, father and altered states enthusiast Mickey has been practicing Yoga for 15 years
and teaching professionally since 2007 in community centres, prisons, studios, gyms and
corporate environments.
Workshop: Yoga and Consciousness (with Bill Walsh)
9.00am Sat 7 Nov Entheo Dome; 3.30pm Sun 8 Nov Workshop Dome; 2.30pm Mon 9
Nov Grassy Knoll
Information session to begin with summarising Yoga philosophy and the ultimate esoteric
path to awakening deeper states of consciousness. Tools are then given through Hatha
practical sessions, focusing on the Gita system which rebalances the hormonal system and
strengthens the nervous system to prepare the body to withstand higher energetic work.
Mulga
Biography: Sometime gardener and naturalist, with over twenty years of learning, growing and
cultivating knowledge and experience of herb lore as a global human phenomena and
researching Australian plants.
Lecture: Dreamtime or Delusion? Ways of seeing and the transfer of knowledge
9.00am Sat 7 Nov Main Dome
Have the experiential and scientific results of recent decades, in this country and around
the world, contributed to greater awareness, confusion, or both when it comes to
Entheogenic plants? Our knowledge of, and relationship with, the natural world around
us is transformed and influenced by both how and what we see and experience and our
beliefs. Between the modern laboratory and the ancient rite there are numerous ways of
seeing or interpreting our relationship and connection with plants, with some of these
seeming to be in conflict. There are many influences, from technological and economic to
spiritual and cultural, concerning our knowledge of and relationship with plants. I hope
to explore some of the external and internal individual and community based factors that
influence what we know and think. From direct experiences, good and bad, science, friends,
family, media, internet, books, cultural events and groups, political and economic agents.
What we know and the value of it, very often, depends upon where and how we know. Can
apparently opposing viewpoints co-exist? Are they actually necessary at different times and
places?
Orryelle
Biography: Orryelle Defenstrate-Bascule is an artist-magickian interested in the reification of
surrealism and divinity on the physical plane, employing such methods as Metamorphic
Ritual Theatre and other visual and sonic arts to earth his visions. His main current projects
are the creation of the ‘Tela Quadrivium’ fourfold book-web of alcyhmical Graphic
Grimmoires (the first, CONJUNCTIO, was published by Fulgur Limited (UK) 2009)
and the completion of a series of group Global Chakra Workings (2 remaining) aimed
to culminate in 2012. Orryelle occasionally employs Entheogens to explore other realms
and garner inspiration, and did a panel on the subject with Daniel Pinchbeck and other
luminaries at the Glastonbury Festival UK 09 and Burning Man Festival (Entheovillage) US
09.
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Julian Palmer
Biography: For 10 years Julian Palmer has been deeply exploring psychoactives. He is a very
experienced facilitator of group healing spaces, humouressness and proactive hubrisness.
Lecture: For what and why do we do this?
3.15pm Fri 6 Nov Main Dome
So I want to talk about the reasons that we may take psychedelics and what they are good
for. What these substances can do for us, for society and how they can be useful to us on
different levels. I want to bring this back to specific substances, and so talk about the use
of ketamine for releasing the fear of death, ibogaine for heroin addicts, DMT to open one
up the ineffable spirit world and so on. I want to outline an understanding and framework
of intention and relate this to certain spiritual paths, religions and validify this way. And
I want to talk about possible scenarios and contexts in which psychoactive plants and
substances could be constructively utilised in a global context.
Don Peyote
Biography: Don Peyote (AKA Yvon Mounier), is a Melbourne based producer, composer and multi
instrumentalist with a strong and original style. His music is featured in various dub,
chill-out, world music, and dance compilations as well as film jingles and documentary
soundtracks.
Talk and Sound Workshop:
Eternal Now - Keys To Being Present in the Moment As the Observer of the Ego
10am Sat 7 Nov Mykopod [For synopsis, see Becca Dakini]
Neil Pike
Biography: Neil Pike is a musician, videographer, activist and professional weirdo. He has been waiting
patiently for the “next big psychedelic wave” since at least 1973. www.paganlovecult.com
Lecture/Discussion Panel:
The Unbroken Chain: A Hidden History of the International Drug Trade
2.30pm Sun 8 Nov Main Dome
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The British Empire was founded on the back of the opium trade and to this day the trade in
so-called licit and illicit drugs is one of the largest money spinners in the world. With the 20th
century adoption of the US “war on drugs” model, the trade in opium became an even larger
source of money and as the sun set on the British Empire it dawned on the American one.
Since WW2, opium production has faithfully traced a geographical trail of US political hotspots
and military engagements from Asia to Afghanistan. A simple equation of guns for drugs has
allowed dictators to flourish, illegal wars to be fought and huge profits to be netted. Paranoid
as it may sound, the main orchestrators and beneficiaries of this seem to have been the CIA.
In the last 40 years, other drugs have also been the basis for empire - cocaine, amphetamines,
marijuana, and even good old LSD. At the heart of these empires has always been a consortium
of career criminals, corrupt cops and shadowy intelligence operatives. From the CIA-funded
opium armies in Laos to Ron Stark helping to flood the world with acid, from Nugan Hand to
Mark Standen, this panel will examine this history.
Panellists: Miss Guidance, Mulga, Neil Pike [facilitator], Bear Stanley
Kitty Purvinas
Biography:An environment campaigner for 16 years Kitty, and her apprentices, can usually be found
loitering in an endangered forest near you.
Workshop: Non-violent community action
4.00pm Sat 7 Nov Grassy Knoll
Mining, logging old growth forests, desalination plants, coal stations. Industry and government
ignoring the growing community consensus that our planet needs our help now. Want to have
your say? Nonviolent community action has inspired, triggered or brought about the most
momentous political changes of our lifetimes. Communities affecting positive change from
a grass roots level. This practice-based workshop will give participants valuable practical and
theoretical insights into nonviolent action reflecting the collaborative nature of nonviolence
praxis. Acquire effective consensus decision-making skills, learn about activism and inform
yourself of the legalities of protesting.
Julian Raxworthy
Biography: Julian is a landscape architect and bibliophile.
Lecture/ Discussion Panel:
You had to be there - Psychedelia, Representation
10.30pm Fri 6 Nov Main Dome
It’s hard to describe the psychedelic experience, because, really, you had to be there, but lots of
people have tried to. Accompanied by images of psychedelic artwork, Julian will introduce this
panel with an overview about how Psychedelia represents itself in literature, but particularly in
art.
Panellists: Richie Allen, Paul Elliott [Gonzo], Martin Kirkwood, Julian Raxworthy [facilitator], Alyssa
Simone, Des Tramacchi
Rak Razam
Biography: Rak Razam is a new wave Entheogenic researcher and the co-founder of Undergrowth.org. A
freelance journalist and editor, he specialises in underground and counterculture, spirituality
and technology issues. www.ayathebook.com
Lecture: AYA: The Shamanic Resurgence
11.30pm Sat 7 Nov Main Dome
This lecture talks about the author’s book, AYA: a Shamanic Odyssey, using it as a springboard
to discuss the global Ayahuasca movement and the shamanic resurgence around the world.
What is shamanism and why is it important at this time of global warming and rapid cultural
acceleration? Why are tens of thousands of Westerners re-engaging with Ayahuasca and
other earth sacraments? Razam cleverly juxtaposes his story with the history of Amazonian
shamanism and the current surge of Western interest, using advances in modern physics and
consciousness research to provide a definitive overview of this fast-growing global subculture
and the impact it is having on the world.
83.
Discussion Panel:
Spirits of The Vine, Leaf and Flower
Midday Sat 7 Nov Main Dome
Join passionate plant heads sharing their experiences with psychoactive plants and their
relationship to the Gaian matrix. Behind the chemistry are there active intelligences in the
plant world, and if so how do we best interact with them? How can reclaiming our human-
vegetal partnership help us become a sustainable culture? Why do we need to connect to
the plant world? If plants can be teachers, can humans be students? What is our historical
and bio-chemical relationship with plants? What does Nature have to teach us? What is the
Australian plant kingdom’s place in the global entheo blossoming?
Panellists: Michael Bock, Rob Bruce, Margaret Cross, Jewelli Dollman, Mulga, Julian Palmer, Rak
Razam [facilitator], Daniel Schreiber
Discussion Panel:
REC-CHEMS: Language of the gods?
2.30pm Sat 7 Nov Main Dome
Pharmauscas glossalize and tantalize in their quest for the divine spark. What are “rec-
chems”, the thousands of new wave chemical compounds catalogued by bio-chemist
Alexander Shulgin and others? What pathways do these compounds open up, and
what do these keys say about the architecture of consciousness itself ? Are rec-chems
a neurochemical language of the divine, a “Neurobet” spoken only by a new wave of
psychonautical translinguists? Is better living through chemistry possible, and what
potentials does it offer us individually and as a species? What new maps of hyperspace
do rec-chems open up? If rec-chems were integrated by society at large, would we be
medicated or augmented? What are the dangers? Are rec-chems catalysts to transhumanity?
Panellists: Jeremy, Julian, Martin, Nano Brain, Rak Razam [facilitator], Torsten
Discussion Panel:
Psy-Tribes: Entheogenic Communities Past, Present & Future
Midday Sun 8 Nov Main Dome
Is a psychedelic community merely a state of mind? Can meaningful change be manifested
in the material world by an activated collective? From Elesius to the Haight Asbury,
illuminated communities have pointed the way, but what would a 21st century psychedelic
community be like? How do emerging technologies and sustainability dovetail with a
psychedelic future? What models for psychedelic community both living existing, past and
potential (tribes, kibbutzes, communes etc) can we draw upon? What is the correct place
for a workable entheogen at the core of the tribe? What went right and what went wrong
in the 60s-70s back to the earth movement? Is a psychedelic sustainable community the
much needed step forward?
Panellists: Paul Abad, Rob Bruce, Margaret Cross, Bob Jesse, DJ Krusty, Neil Pike, Rak Razam
[facilitator], Daniel Schreiber
Robin Rodd
Biography: Robin is an anthropologist with a long-term interest in plant hallucinogens, consciousness
and mental health. He is Lecturer in Anthropology at James Cook University, Townsville.
Lecture: Chemicals, not Symbols: The Chemical Ecology of Shamanism as a HealthCare
System
7.30pm Fri 6 Nov Main Dome
This paper presents an overview and critique of anthropological theories of shamanic
healing, and proposes a biocultural approach to understanding the nature of shamanic
information and communication, as well as a means of understanding how
Amazonian shamanic practices may promote health at the population level. The
paper ends with two conclusions:) that chemical ecology is a useful analogy
for interpreting the functional logic of Amazonian shamanism; or 2) that
Amazonian shamans promote health, and morph matter, by renegotiating chemical
communication flows among interdependent species.
84.
Dan Schreiber
Biography: Bio Earth Imagineer, creative director, multimedia producer, self-taught herbal healer,
ecologist, landscape gardener with a shamanic bent and if I could be so bold... visionary.
Bachelor of Science [BSC] - Oceanography, marine biology, Astrophysics, zoology, Botany.
Creative director of Starseed Gardens presently working on Designing meditation retreat
centre - ‘Cloud temple gardens’, Directing Earthimagineers - alternative living consultancy,
organising a ‘Bamboo Earth festival’ and producing various multimedia projects in relation
to plants, culture, consciousness, love and altered states.
Lecture: Tryptamines at the End of Time - Birthing a spheroid awareness
8.45pm Sat 7 Nov Main Dome
In our current world situation it seems as if the perfect storm is brewing and yet the
strategies of governing bodies seems only to exacerbate the downward spiralling trends. It
seems that the insanity is so widespread that we no longer recognize’ sane’ and yet there
are plant teachers , our kin, that have been keeping safe the sacred wisdom of the ages to
be revealed at this critical juncture. This wisdom is a reflection of the wakening awareness
spreading across the globe enabling a rich new yet ancient cultural dynamic to rise to the
surface. In every aspect of reality we see the glimmer of transformation. The ‘tools’ and
‘seeds’ are our salvation as we gracefully garden our way to a new paradigm. My personal
experiences with entheogenic plants explore some of the stranger realms and dimensions
of reality and question the very nature of this dream within a dream that we have chosen
to navigate. From expanding planet to expanding mind I will explore the return of the right
brain to herald the return of beauty, magic, awe and light in a stunning photo rich keynote
presentation. Hmmmm.
Penny Scott
Biography: A lifelong fascination for the natural world inspired Penny to explore plant-human
relationships through experiential and formal study. She currently works in health
education.
Lecture: Pleasure and Pain - A Brief Social History of Opiates and Their Uses
9.00am Sun 8 Nov Main Dome
The opium poppy and its derivatives have held a prominent place throughout human
history, their status shifting between panaceas and poisons. In much the same way, the
status of people who use opiates has also changed over time and within various contexts
of use. For the temporary relief of anxiety or psychological pain opiates arguably remain
unrivalled; yet for this reason they also hold a high potential for dependency; is this what
makes them so dangerous? This talk explores how our ideas and feelings about opiates may
influence and shape the realities surrounding their use.
85.
Stuart Smith
Biography: Following a shamanic path for the last 8 years, I would like to share with the community
some of my experiences and knowledge.
Lecture: The Role of Ritual
Midday Sun 8 Nov Entheo Dome
Since the dawn of conscious-ness rituals have set the scene for experiences. From fasting,
using incense, chanting and cleansing to the more extreme examples such as tattoos,
scarification and piercing. Shamans from Dee to Crawley to Eliade to Castanada, took
part in, and used, rituals as initiations to access other realms. Scholars such as van Gannep,
Turner and Campbell have documented the rites of passage. However, in today’s society,
emphasis has shifted to purely consuming the substance rather than the preparation, and
closure, of the journey.
Natasja Sproat
Biography:Natasja is a certified yoga instructor and has been teaching for over 5 years throughout
Australia, India and Japan.
Workshop: Yoga - Exploring the Physical and Energetic Body
8.00am Sun 8 Nov Grassy Knoll; 8.00am Mon 9 Nov Grassy Knoll
I create an interesting and varied asana workout that tailors to any level of physical fitness
and flexibility. I have witnessed the shamanistic practices of yoga in India. I am a herbalist
by trade and am obviously keenly interested in plant pharmacology, and their effect on
consciousness and the energetic body. With an open, relaxed and quite mind, yoga is truly
experienced for its benefits, when one can truly ‘let go’. Throughout the class I explore
energetic meridians and nadis, yoga therapy, pranayam, and yoga nidra at the end of class.
Bear Stanley
Biography: Considered by many as one of the legends of the sixties counterculture, Bear Stanley
denies his heroic status, and spends his days working on various sculptures and writing
essays on subjects such as the importance of carbon dioxide, the primary and only
‘plant food’, to the expansion of food crops and life on earth, fair and equitable taxation
(equal and low percentage on all ‘income’), a proper run-off method to determine the
results of elections and how to unify and balance law making. Writing laws in ordinary
language rather than legalese. Including ‘sunset clauses’ to allow change to adjust to the
rapid changes in today’s world-- amongst others. He is renowned for his contribution to
sound engineering, particularly working with live gig iconoclasts, the Grateful Dead, and
perfecting the idea of on-stage monitors and high quality PA’s. A tireless archivist, he kept
a ‘diary’ of his front-of-house mixes, including hundreds of Grateful Dead performances,
and has seen the release of a number of albums from his “sonic journal” tapes of PA
mixes. Bear was a minor participant in the Acid Tests of Ken Kesey and the Merry
Pranksters. He was the first underground cook to produce high-purity LSD in the 1960s,
when it was legal, including the famous White Lightning and Monterey Purple. Bear Stanley
now lives in Australia. www.thebear.org/
Lecture: The Economic Consequences of Black Markets, Specifically in Reference to Drug
Prohibition
7.15pm Sat 7 Nov Main Dome
Lecture: The effects of certain psychedelics on mind function including interaction with
electronic circuits - a possible route to mental machine control
7.15pm Sun 8 Nov Main Dome
86.
Ray Thorpe
Biography: Ray Thorpe is the owner of The Happy High Herb franchise group of alternative herb
shops around Australia and a founding member of The Plant Freedom Alliance. www.
happyhighherbs.com
Lecture: The Benefits of Herbs and Entheogens in Society
6.30pm Fri 6 Nov Main Dome
Ray will discuss and question the reasoning of the many restrictions on beneficial medicinal
plants and Entheogens. He will also discuss the approach of Codex Alimentaris over our
health care, the harm of drug laws and the benefits of Entheogens for mental health and
a better society. Ray Thorpe will discuss the benefits of restricted plants such as ephedra,
soma, coltsfoot, cactus, amanita muscaria, Psilocybin cubensis, dimethyltryptamine, salvia
divinorum, kava, kratom, opium poppy and more... he will question the value of drug
laws upon these beneficial plants and the approach of Codex Alimentaris upon our plant
freedom.
Torsten
Biography:Torsten is an avid plant collector and amateur ethnobotanist specialising in
pharmacologically active plant species. He runs a nursery and online community for
enthusiasts of psychoactive and other ethnobotanical plants. On his subtropical property
‘Wandjina Gardens’ he maintains a large collection of native and exotic plants for
preservation and research. Torsten’s main interest lies in plant species and drugs that affect
the serotonin neurotransmitter system as he believes this to hold the key to a happy and
content individual life and society. He was privileged to be one of the first to propagate the
tropical west African shrub Tabernanthe iboga outside its native countries and has made
the species widely available to the rest of the world. Torsten is doubtful of the existence
of gods and spirits and hence approaches the astonishing healing power of plants such as
iboga on a pharmacological basis with full recognition of the cultural context.
Workshop: Propagation of ethnobotanicals
4.00pm Sun 8 Nov Entheo Dome
General principles of propagation demonstrated on relevant ethnobotanical species.
Workshop: Brian’s Plant Trade Space
6.00pm Sun 8 Nov Entheo Dome
So you’re coming to EGA this year and want to share some of your plants and get some
new additions to your garden? Well the Plant Trading Place is for you. After Torsten’s
practical workshop we will be hosting a plant trading space so your funky specimens can
mingle with others. Bring along all your legal plants, herbs and extracts to trade, donate
or sell. And if you have nothing to offer then let someone help you out with getting your
funky garden started. So get your hands dirty and meet plant and people friends in the
spirit of sharing. This is a essential component of EGA because we are all located in
different areas and this a great way for us to come together, share knowledge and create
more diversity amongst our gardens!!
87.
Des Tramacchi
Biography: Dr Des Tramacchi has a PhD in religious studies, specialising in Entheogens. His research
interests include the religious uses of psychoactive substances, ecstatic dance cultures, and
the anthropology of consciousness. His publications include:
Tramacchi, D. (2006). Vapours and Visions: Religious dimensions of DMT use. University
of Queensland, Brisbane.
Tramacchi, D. (2006). “Entheogens, elves and other entities: Encountering the spirits
of shamanic plants and substances.” In L. Hume and K. McPhillips (Eds.), Popular
Spiritualities: the Politics of Contemporary Enchantment. Aldershot, Hampshire: Ashgate.
Tramacchi, D. (2005). “Terence McKenna...” In B. Taylor (Ed.), The Encyclopaedia or
Religion and Nature.
Tramacchi, D. (2004). “Entheogenic dance ecstasis: Cross-cultural contexts.” In G. S. John
(Ed.), Rave Culture and Religion (pp. 125-144). London: Routledge.
Tramacchi, D. (2001). “Chaos engines: Doofs, psychedelics and religious experience.” In G.
St John (Ed.), FreeNRG: Notes from the Edge of the Dance Floor (pp. 171-188). Altona,
Australia: Common Ground.
Tramacchi, D. (2000). “Field tripping: Psychedelic communitas and ritual in the Australian
bush.” Journal of Contemporary Religion, 15(2), 201-213.
Lecture: Entheogens and the Discarnate
10.45pm Sun 8 Nov Main Dome
Many users of Entheogens such as DMT, Ayahuasca, Salvia divinorum, ketamine and
DXM report journeys to other worlds and encounters with discarnate entities. These
experiences often raise subsequent ontological problems about the “reality” or “unreality”
of the physical body and the sensory world. Such powerful, lived experiences present a
certain kind of evidence for the existence of consciousness or identity independent of
the physical body, and thus fulfil some of the more significant existential functions of
religions. This presentation explores the implications of Entheogenic experiences of the
“discarnate” for understanding the enigmas of life, death and consciousness.
Martin Williams
Biography: Lost in mid-life and definitely in crisis. Has spent a major proportion of his adult life
producing a legal psychoactive agent, wine. Now back into study and planning the next
gentle assault on an unsuspecting world.
Lecture: The Inaugural Drug Darwin Awards - A tribute to those who have pushed the
boundaries in the name of psychedelic exploration and excitement
Midnight Sat 7 Nov Main Dome
Treading close to the edge is something that practitioners of psychedelic experimentation
often do, however sometimes the boundaries of comfort and safety are crossed. By
examining a few pertinent case studies, this light-hearted talk is intended to demonstrate
how easy it is for each and every one of us to make the occasional significant error of
judgement and end up looking like a bloody idiot. The benefit of this talk will be the
implicit warning to all of the potential risks (to both health and sanity) associated with
psychedelic experimentation.
88.
EGA’09 Artists
Izwoz [www.izwoz.com.au]
Barbi and Carla Joffe
The Inner Temple Visionary Art [www.myspace.com/liquidambercreations]
Kylie Robinson
Crystal Mandala space
PiXiE LoU
Lighting installation [louiseloren/myspace.com]
Tony Bowen
Djalu – An ongoing informal workshop during EGA with the aim of completing a large
scale mosaic mural, and offering participants the opportunity to undertake smaller works.
The mural relates intrinsically to the people, the country, the ideology, the energy, the EGA
community – and represents rainbow fella.
Futurelic
Sacred Robotec Botanica exhibition - An installation of botanic organisms sculpture, an
interactive space for people to visit as a type of sacred deity area. The organisms are made
from redundant machines and industrial waste reanimated into new botanic life [www.
futurelic.va.com.au]
Jason Communal Tipi
Imogen Labyrinth & sculpture made from surrounding natural timbers
Dan and Kitty
Pussy Cat Lounge
From 09:45 From 09:00 08:00 – DJ - Psilonaut From 10:30 From 08:00
Margaret Cross—Keeping it Real Penny Scott—Pleasure and Pain 13:15 DJ - Zowzi Matthew Grassy Knoll A
Shamanism 101 Colonel Kurtz—Conceptual Daniel—Food Natasja
Stuart Smith—The role of ritual hallucinogens forests Sproat—Yoga
Chris Hansen—Chasing butterÁies Darklight—High tech overdrive workshop
Jeremy J—Entheogenic Acacias of
Australia
PANEL—Psy-Tribes
Lunch
Eve-N Dawnsong—About time!..... PANEL—The unbroken chain 14:15 – DJ - Dakini From 15:30 From 15:30
Shift happens Santo Daime Representative—Santo 18:00 DJ - SeeWa Michele Maselli Grassy Knoll A
Torsten—Propagation of Daime: Ritualised DJ - Phoebe & Bill Walsh Jewelli
ethnobotanicals Stephen Bright—Legal highs Kiddo Yoga workshop Dollmann—
Dropping with
the Devas --
Brian—Plant Trade Space 18:00 – Grassy Knoll B
19:00 EGA Banquet
Bear Stanley—Psychedelics and Mind 19:00 –
Function Midnight
Robert Jesse—Psilocybin and Spirituality
Des Tramacchi—Entheogens and the
discarnate
RafÁe Draw
Martin Williams - Conference Close
Midnight Masquerade
– 08:00 Corroboree
An Experimental
Saynara PSY
Soiree
Saturday 7 November
Entheo Main Workshop
TIME Mykopod Grassy Knoll
Dome Dome Dome
Mickey Maselli & Bill Walsh —Yoga Mulga—Dreamtime or Delusion From 10:00 From 11:00
Shane Huebner —Crazy Cactus Kilindi —African Uses of Entheogens Dakini & Don EveN
Wisdom Orryelle —Entheogens & Magical Ritual 09:00 – Peyote —Eternal Dawnsong
Erik —Drinking Poetry 13:15 Now Talk & —The Art of
PANEL —Spirits of the Vine, Leaf & Sound Workshop Time
Flower
Lunch
Robert Jesse —Communities of Spirit PANEL —Rec-Chems: Language of DJs: Keith King From 16:00
Tim Payne —Dyad, the Face & the Core the gods? Oblique —Cultivating Kitty Purvinas
Rob Bruce —Shamanism in South Industries, Woodlovers —Non-Violent
America 14:15 – Oli, Phe Gitsham Community
Michael Bock —Essential Oils in 18:15 Rythmic —Lucid Action
Australasian Flora Dreaming
Dinner
Bear Stanley —Consequences of Black DJs:
Markets Shagga –
Dan Schreiber —Birthing a Spheroid Funkadelic,
Awareness 19:15 - K & Ale [from
Robert Jesse —John Hopkins Midnight 23.30]
Psilocybin Study
Rak Razam —Aya: Shamanic
Resurgence
Martin Williams —Inaugural Drug DJs:
Midnight
Darwin Awards K & Ale
– 03:00
Pagan Love Cult
95.
96.
Friday 6 November
Entheo Main Workshop
TIME Mykopod Grassy Knoll
Dome Dome Dome
Greg Kasarik—Entheogens vs Drugs
Julian Palmer —For what and why do 14:30 –
we do this? 17:15
Richard King —Archaic Revival Road
Opening Ceremony
Dinner
Martin —Welcome From 20:30
Ray Thorpe —BeneÀts of Herbs & DJs:
Entheogens SchoÀeld,
Robin Rodd —Chemical Ecology of Dr Zaius
18:15 –
Shamanism Midnight
Paul Elliott [Gonzo] —Psychedelic
Literature
Faustus —Psychedelics & Psychosis
PANEL —Psychedelia, Representation
Krusty —Entheogenic Shamanic DJ:
Midnight
Imperative Paul Abad
– 03:00
Pagan Love Cult
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