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Mixcoatl

Do you really need guidance for developing spirituality?

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As I have been working with substances like LSD and bufo, one of the main challenges I continually encounter is how easy it is to construct belief systems and mistake them for truth.

I spend a significant amount of time watching videos from various teachers and thinkers such as idealist philosophers and scientists, which has been valuable, as without them I might feel somewhat lost or disconnected. However, this is also where the problem arises. Each time I return from a bufo experience, I find myself trying to interpret what I experienced through the lens of what I’ve heard from these guides. In doing so, I sometimes attempt to convince myself that I’ve realized more than I actually have.

At this point, there are certain insights from my experiences that feel undeniably true, while others, especially those described by some teachers, remain uncertain to me. Despite this, I notice a tendency in myself to want to believe them anyway.

Because of this, I’m beginning to feel that it may be more beneficial to step back from external sources of guidance for a while and focus instead on forming my own understanding of truth based on direct experience.

I’m not sure if this is the best approach for my development, because before listening to teachers, I couldn’t understand what was happening during my LSD experiences.

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13 minutes ago, Mixcoatl said:

it may be more beneficial to step back from external sources of guidance for a while and focus instead on forming my own understanding of truth based on direct experience.

Yes, this is necessary at the highest stages.


You are God. You are Truth. You are Love. You are Infinity.

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The best advice you're going to get from any guru or manual is to go within and disregard external influences.  So yeah, just follow it.

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Both can happen simultaneously. I have to share that my spiritual advancement has become so quick thanks to an obsessive study of the greatest mystics of all time, at the same time these mystics teach you that at the end of the day it's you who do the work and must breakthrough it all, achieving total sovereignty of Mind and God-Realisation, as everything is but a figment of your own mind, hence no figment can shine for the Infinity of all that you are.

Anchoring your mind on the best can give you direction and invaluable advice, but can also trap your consciousness in subtle limitations and delusions.

Breaking free from all anchors will make you more sovereign and intelligent, but on its own may block you reinventing the wheel on consciousness traps already solved.

What is very clear, is that after a certain point nobody will have awaken to what you're Awakening to and then you're totally alone discovering the new frontiers of Consciousness.


God-Realize, this is First Business. Know that unless I live properly, this is not possible.

There is this body, I should know the requirements of my body. This is first duty.  We have obligations towards others, loved ones, family, society, etc. Without material wealth we cannot do these things, for that a professional duty.

There is Mind; mind is tricky. Its higher nature should be nurtured, then Mind becomes Wise, Virtuous and AWAKE. When all Duties are continuously fulfilled, then life becomes steady. In this steady life GOD is available; via 5-MeO-DMT, because The Sun shines through All: Living in Self-Love, Realizing I am Infinity & I am God

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2 hours ago, Mixcoatl said:

As I have been working with substances like LSD and bufo, one of the main challenges I continually encounter is how easy it is to construct belief systems and mistake them for truth.

I spend a significant amount of time watching videos from various teachers and thinkers such as idealist philosophers and scientists, which has been valuable, as without them I might feel somewhat lost or disconnected. However, this is also where the problem arises. Each time I return from a bufo experience, I find myself trying to interpret what I experienced through the lens of what I’ve heard from these guides. In doing so, I sometimes attempt to convince myself that I’ve realized more than I actually have.

At this point, there are certain insights from my experiences that feel undeniably true, while others, especially those described by some teachers, remain uncertain to me. Despite this, I notice a tendency in myself to want to believe them anyway.

Because of this, I’m beginning to feel that it may be more beneficial to step back from external sources of guidance for a while and focus instead on forming my own understanding of truth based on direct experience.

I’m not sure if this is the best approach for my development, because before listening to teachers, I couldn’t understand what was happening during my LSD experiences.

The buddha said "sangha is the whole of the path." Sangha are your friends that practice. They can help you move along.

The buddha also said "there must be someone to walk the path" 

 So, yea brother. "feel that it may be more beneficial to step back from external sources of guidance for a while and focus instead on forming my own understanding of truth based on direct experience."

Heck Yea :)

 

Edited by Jordan of the Shire

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