Magic mushrooms and the rise of Christianity on 18:25 - Nov 4 with 691 views | BlueBadger | There's a certain school of thought amongst etymologists that suggests that the term 'pissed' has its roots in shamanic times when the shaman would eat the whole mushroom and the rest of the tribe would drink his piss(which would be placed into a mead or similar) to experience a considerably less hardcore version of the visions the shaman was experiencing. | |
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Magic mushrooms and the rise of Christianity on 18:28 - Nov 4 with 678 views | factual_blue |
Magic mushrooms and the rise of Christianity on 18:25 - Nov 4 by BlueBadger | There's a certain school of thought amongst etymologists that suggests that the term 'pissed' has its roots in shamanic times when the shaman would eat the whole mushroom and the rest of the tribe would drink his piss(which would be placed into a mead or similar) to experience a considerably less hardcore version of the visions the shaman was experiencing. |
Or, 'A Saturday Night In Glemsford', as the ritual you describe is usually called. | |
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Magic mushrooms and the rise of Christianity on 18:29 - Nov 4 with 673 views | factual_blue |
The writer of the blog is very much a self-appointed anthropologist, with no qualifications in Ancient Hebrew or in exegesis of the Bible. | |
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Magic mushrooms and the rise of Christianity on 18:33 - Nov 4 with 658 views | XYZ |
I'm a strict amateur in these things | | | |
Magic mushrooms and the rise of Christianity on 18:35 - Nov 4 with 651 views | BlueBadger |
Magic mushrooms and the rise of Christianity on 18:28 - Nov 4 by factual_blue | Or, 'A Saturday Night In Glemsford', as the ritual you describe is usually called. |
Pffft. Only if you're a part-timer. | |
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Magic mushrooms and the rise of Christianity on 18:40 - Nov 4 with 643 views | TheReverendSpooner | All true, dear boy, all true. The Abbot of a rather charming monastery which I used to visit on occasion, would often appear from the woods in a state of great excitement with a basket full of a wide variety of fungi, from Chicken of the Woods to Giant Puffball. I particularly enjoyed his Horn of Plenty, and Blewit. | |
| There veritably is only one Sticky Mockwell, don't you know. |
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Magic mushrooms and the rise of Christianity on 18:42 - Nov 4 with 640 views | footers | Isn't it true that the book of Revelation was written on an island*, or somewhere anyway, with a high number of psychoactive plants which may have led to some of the more bizarre things written in it? Not sure where I read this before. But I'm sure I wasn't tripping. *Patmos, apparently [Post edited 4 Nov 2021 18:43]
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Magic mushrooms and the rise of Christianity on 18:47 - Nov 4 with 625 views | Guthrum |
Magic mushrooms and the rise of Christianity on 18:33 - Nov 4 by XYZ | I'm a strict amateur in these things |
A lot of it stemmed from the desire of the hippies (including counter-culture academics) to draw together their quasi-spiritual experiences on psychadelic drugs with more traditional religion. The same movement which produced Carlos Casteneda and his supposed (but probably fictional) shamanic encounters with peyote gods. | |
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Magic mushrooms and the rise of Christianity on 20:04 - Nov 4 with 535 views | factual_blue |
Magic mushrooms and the rise of Christianity on 18:42 - Nov 4 by footers | Isn't it true that the book of Revelation was written on an island*, or somewhere anyway, with a high number of psychoactive plants which may have led to some of the more bizarre things written in it? Not sure where I read this before. But I'm sure I wasn't tripping. *Patmos, apparently [Post edited 4 Nov 2021 18:43]
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Yes, that's where I wrote it. #wibble | |
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Magic mushrooms and the rise of Christianity on 20:05 - Nov 4 with 532 views | wkj | I was trying to figure out the pun on this, and then realised it wasn't an EricClacton post | |
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Magic mushrooms and the rise of Christianity on 20:16 - Nov 4 with 521 views | leitrimblue |
Magic mushrooms and the rise of Christianity on 18:47 - Nov 4 by Guthrum | A lot of it stemmed from the desire of the hippies (including counter-culture academics) to draw together their quasi-spiritual experiences on psychadelic drugs with more traditional religion. The same movement which produced Carlos Casteneda and his supposed (but probably fictional) shamanic encounters with peyote gods. |
It's a little known fact that the builders/early users of early Neolithic monuments like maes howe an Stonehenge etc were very heavy users of hallucinogenics. At least at the time of year these monuments we're in use. Though henbane rather then mushrooms seemed to be their favorite | | | |
Magic mushrooms and the rise of Christianity on 20:21 - Nov 4 with 501 views | factual_blue |
Magic mushrooms and the rise of Christianity on 18:35 - Nov 4 by BlueBadger | Pffft. Only if you're a part-timer. |
Do the full-timers indulge in goat-based perversions then? Reminds of a joke I heard the other day. 'Kinky' is when you use a feather. 'Perverted' is when you use the whole chicken. | |
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Magic mushrooms and the rise of Christianity on 21:08 - Nov 4 with 466 views | XYZ |
Magic mushrooms and the rise of Christianity on 20:05 - Nov 4 by wkj | I was trying to figure out the pun on this, and then realised it wasn't an EricClacton post |
Sadly I'm not in his class of punner. | | | |
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