Graham Hancock on contact with Insectoid Beings in the Dmt dimensions
Analysis Summary
Summary
Dr. Rick Strassman is a professor of Psychiatry at the University of New Mexico. He conducted research using DMT, a powerful hallucinogen, with human volunteers. During their experiences, many volunteers reported encounters with beings resembling elves and aliens. They described being in other realms and meeting entities that communicated with them. Strassman noted that these experiences were similar to those reported by people who claimed to have been abducted by aliens, despite the volunteers being in a controlled hospital setting. After the research, Strassman had to stop due to the overwhelming results. The encounters led to questions about the nature of reality and consciousness, suggesting that there may be more to reality than what is normally perceived.
Program Intelligence Analysis
Dr. Rick Strassman discusses his groundbreaking research on DMT and its effects on human consciousness. He highlights the extraordinary experiences reported by volunteers, including encounters with alien-like beings, and critiques the limitations of Western scientific perspectives on reality. Strassman suggests that the brain may act as a receiver of consciousness, potentially allowing access to alternate realities.
Rick Strassman's research indicates that DMT can induce shared experiences of encounters with non-human entities.
Dr Rick Strassman
“Rick Strassman eventually had to give up his research because it was so mind-blowing in the results.”
Managed by: University of New Mexico
Research the effects of DMT on human consciousness
Rick Strassman received permission from the US federal government to conduct research with human volunteers using DMT.
Volunteers reported extraordinary experiences, including encounters with beings described as elves and alien-like entities.
Experiences reported by DMT volunteers in the 1950s were similar to those reported by modern UFO abductees.
Western science has prematurely closed accounts with reality by dismissing non-materialistic experiences.
The brain may function as a receiver of consciousness rather than a generator, allowing access to other levels of reality.