Dispositivo Alteracion Mental
by Malditos Cyborgs.org
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Ayahuasca
Description
from Psychedelic Shamanism
by Jim DeKorne
From [the Amazonian rain forst] comes one of the most potent
catalysts for expanded awareness yet discovered by human
beings. In Ecuador and Peru this medicine is known as Ayahuasca,
a Quechua Indian word meaning, ironically, "vine of
the dead". In Columbia and parts of Brazil, the Tupi
Indian name Yage (pronounced Ya-hay) is used, and among
Amazonia's proliferating mestizo relious cults it is called
Daime...
"Ayahuasca"
as a hallucinogenic substance does not properly refer to
one single plant, but to a singular mixture of two very
different plan species...there is no such thing as an "ayahuasca
plant," or a "yage plant", any more than
there is a simple liquor simply called "Martini."
Ayahuasca correctly refers to a psychedelic combination
of plants which varies in potency according to the skill
of its maker.
While
each shaman has his own secret formula for the mixture (with
probably no two exactly alike), it has been established
that true ayahuasca always contains both beta-carbo0line
and tryptamine alkaloids, the former (harmine and harmaline)
usually obtained from the Banisteriopsis caapi vine, and
the latter (N, N-dimethyl-tryptamine, or DMT) from the leaves
of the Psychotria viridis bush. (There may be variations
among plant species, but the alkaloids are always consistent.
It
is significant to note that neither one of these plant substances
by itself is normally psychoactive in oral doses. (Harmine/harmaline
is said to effect hallucinosis at highly toxic levels, but
in less heroic quantities it is at best a tranquilizer,
at worst an emetic.) DMT, in any quantity, is not orally
active unless used in combination with a monoamine oxidase
(MAO) inhibitor. This principle is precisely what makes
ayahuasca effective; the harmala alkaloids in the Banisteriopsis
caapi vine are potent short term MAO inhibitors which synergize
with the DMT-containing Psychotria viridis leaves to produce
what has been described as one of the most profound of all
sychedelic experiences.