On Mar 31, 2009, at 9:02 AM, Richard M wrote:
--- In [email protected], Vaj <vajradh...@...> wrote:
On Mar 30, 2009, at 6:22 PM, bob_brigante wrote:
"How a month and a half on Paxil taught me to love being shy."
http://slate.com/id/2143243
Fascinating article Bob, especially the electrical/static discharge
phenomenon across the brain that Paxil withdrawal sufferers seem so
already familiar with. Despite being an anecdotal account, one's left
with the impression this is a real phenomenon. One can't help but
notice the overt similarity to kundalini experiences--physio-
kundalini syndrome. It raises the interesting question: are kundalini
experiences actually inter-neuronal changes taking place at the level
of the physical nervous system or is there a pranic or shakti
phenomenon we currently have no scientific basis for? Or both.
It also raises interesting ramifications for mental or emotional dis-
ease and kundalini disorders and their interconnection with
allopathic medicine. If we don't understand the subtle ramifications
for these Re-uptake Inhibitors and their basis in our innate subtle
"physiology", should we be using them like children playing with
mother nature's toys? What if they damage some subtle system that the
lack of holistic vision in Allopathy has blinded us to? If
reincarnation of the Spiritual Gene is a reality and we do take on a
succession of physical bodies based on changes to the Spiritual Gene,
what does this mean across time/lifetimes? How are we modifying
outcomes within the Spiritual Gene and the resulting bodies across
time? What sort of overall pattern would that weave?
There's just so much danger everywhere! Now you've got me fretting
over my re-uptake inhibitors just when I'm still trying to get a
grip on those pesky, embarrassing lower absorptions you highlighted
the other day:
"..easiness and slaxity to the lower absorptions...leads to rebirth
as an animal..."
Did you even read the article on Paxil? If you hadn't already heard
the horror stories of people on Prozac and other SSRI's it's an
interesting read.