Luke Caverns
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
And it's so popular these days.
And it's so popular these days.
And it's so popular these days.
Yeah. But not his body.
Yeah. But not his body.
Yeah. But not his body.
Yeah, but it's pretty common for people, you know, if you read experiences like just on Reddit or there are people who put together these collections of people recording their experiences on ayahuasca. And something that's pretty common is people seeing a jaguar, you know, if they're doing it down on the Amazon or being able to see through the eyes of a jaguar.
Yeah, but it's pretty common for people, you know, if you read experiences like just on Reddit or there are people who put together these collections of people recording their experiences on ayahuasca. And something that's pretty common is people seeing a jaguar, you know, if they're doing it down on the Amazon or being able to see through the eyes of a jaguar.
Yeah, but it's pretty common for people, you know, if you read experiences like just on Reddit or there are people who put together these collections of people recording their experiences on ayahuasca. And something that's pretty common is people seeing a jaguar, you know, if they're doing it down on the Amazon or being able to see through the eyes of a jaguar.
And I just always wonder if that has something to do or not with your idea of this fanged deity in the Amazon.
And I just always wonder if that has something to do or not with your idea of this fanged deity in the Amazon.
And I just always wonder if that has something to do or not with your idea of this fanged deity in the Amazon.
I think he is definitely involved in the traditions of ayahuasca and San Pedro. Sometimes there's uprooted San Pedro floating in the background of scenes with this guy. But I do want to point out, too, that... But hallucinogenic drugs are not the only way that Native Americans found a way to hallucinate and be that other world.
I think he is definitely involved in the traditions of ayahuasca and San Pedro. Sometimes there's uprooted San Pedro floating in the background of scenes with this guy. But I do want to point out, too, that... But hallucinogenic drugs are not the only way that Native Americans found a way to hallucinate and be that other world.
I think he is definitely involved in the traditions of ayahuasca and San Pedro. Sometimes there's uprooted San Pedro floating in the background of scenes with this guy. But I do want to point out, too, that... But hallucinogenic drugs are not the only way that Native Americans found a way to hallucinate and be that other world.
Starving, you know, the vision quests that were done by the Indians of the plains, those didn't involve drugs at all. That was exhaustion, starvation, and it would trigger it. For the Maya, what they would do is they would, again, starve, keep themselves in darkness, kind of sensory deprivation. And then they cut themselves. And that sudden loss of blood is what would trigger the vision.
Starving, you know, the vision quests that were done by the Indians of the plains, those didn't involve drugs at all. That was exhaustion, starvation, and it would trigger it. For the Maya, what they would do is they would, again, starve, keep themselves in darkness, kind of sensory deprivation. And then they cut themselves. And that sudden loss of blood is what would trigger the vision.
Starving, you know, the vision quests that were done by the Indians of the plains, those didn't involve drugs at all. That was exhaustion, starvation, and it would trigger it. For the Maya, what they would do is they would, again, starve, keep themselves in darkness, kind of sensory deprivation. And then they cut themselves. And that sudden loss of blood is what would trigger the vision.
So a really bad cut when you are starved and exhausted is the trigger point. The Native Americans in the plains, they kind of ran around. They didn't know when it was going to happen to them. They had hit their threshold.
So a really bad cut when you are starved and exhausted is the trigger point. The Native Americans in the plains, they kind of ran around. They didn't know when it was going to happen to them. They had hit their threshold.