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2007-03-24 03:45:00 · 4 answers · asked by Olly S 2 in Arts & Humanities Philosophy

4 answers

The last time I did it I was floating through beautiful starry space and spoke to God. He said everything was and would be ok, and that I should stop taking K.

I decided that whether it had been a true religious experience or just a guilt trip induced by my rejected catholic upbringing, I'd heed the advice :)

2007-03-25 02:11:08 · answer #1 · answered by Foot Foot 4 · 0 0

Would this be what you're asking about?

"drug stories experiments in the K-hole"

out of your mind
It did take too long before people began to notice Ketamines unusual side effects.

A significant number of patients treated with the anaesthetic began to report vivid out-of-body experiences. There were tales of fantastical interactions with divine forces and full-on psychedelic weirdness.

These powerful, dream-like insights occurred as patients were regaining consciousness and were consequently termed 'emergent states'.

Doctors began adding a tranquiliser to Ketamine injections to block out the effect, but less scrupulous doctors, dentists, vets and academics were leading the way in experimenting with Ketamine at sub-knockout doses.

After the European origins of LSD, this was the first true all-American psychedelic drug. In the words of DM Turner (author of 'The Essential Psychedelic Guide') they had discovered an "intense, bizarre, and enjoyable" new psychedelic.

top


John Lilley - experimented with Ketamine and dolphins
down with the dolphins
The most famous K exponent was John Lilly, a California-based physicist, reknowned for his pioneering and fascinating experiments into communication with dolphins. His website is here.

At the same time, Lilly pioneered the use of the isolation tank to induce altered states and then developed a serious Ketamine problem. Over several years, he had numerous brushes with death, including one when his wife found him floating face down in a swimming pool.

Reflecting on the dissociative nature of the Ketamine experience, Lilly wrote a crazed 1978 autobiography, 'The Scientist,' entirely in the third person.

"With his adjusted awareness through the drug K, John felt and understood the currents of information travelling through the galaxy by means unknown at present. He felt the tremendous variety of intelligences which exist in the galaxy. He became aware of the competitive aspects of survival of solid-state intelligences versus those that were water-based."
From 'The Scientist' (1978).

Lilly's candid accounts of his spells in psychiatric wards around America culminated in a misguided attempt to warn US President Ford about a global network's plot to destroy mankind.

"Dolphins are the only beings that can save us," was his message in a Star Trek IV: The Journey Home stylee.

President Ford didn't appear to act on his warning."


for more, please see the link below.

2007-03-24 03:54:27 · answer #2 · answered by johnslat 7 · 0 0

Uh I am sorry but you need to ask it in a easy way for me to comprehend

2007-03-24 04:00:42 · answer #3 · answered by MafiaGal 4 · 1 0

All I can say is I know somehow I REALLY went some where and I didn't want to leave.

2007-03-24 04:07:03 · answer #4 · answered by salinger 4 · 0 0

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