DANIEL PINCHBECK has done a lot of psychedelics, and he's here again to tell us about those trips and the resulting dreams, daemons and synchronicities, as well as the forthcoming 'global decimation' that might be avoided if people begin 'confronting their habitual mechanisms of avoidance and denial, overcoming their fear and conditioned cynicism.' In his previous book, 'Breaking Open the Head: A Psychedelic Journey Into the Heart of Contemporary Shamanism,' Pinchbeck mined much of the same material and substances. '2012' pushes the baggie a little further and 'advances a radical theory: that human consciousness is rapidly transitioning to a new state... A transformed realization, of time and space and self.' He adds: 'The transition is already under way...
2012 Return Of Quetzalcoatl Pdf Download. Ancient American Issues in PDF on CDs. You can do it, too! On 14 December 2006, Pinchbeck appeared on the television program The Colbert Report to discuss his book, 2012: The Return of Quetzalcoatl. Daniel Pinchbeck is the author of Breaking Open the Head (Broadway Books, 2002),2012: The Return of Quetzalcoatl (Tarcher/Penguin, 2006), and Notes from the Edge Times(Tarcher/Penguin, 2010). He is the founder of the think tank, Center for Planetary Culture which produced the Regenerative Society Wiki and his. His current book, 2012: The Return of Quetzalcoatl, has been largely panned in the mainstream press. In fact, his original publisher dropped it, with Gerald Howard, a venerable editor of authors like Don. DeLillo, offering the comment 'Daniel, you're not Nietzsche.' Says Pinchbeck, 'It was hard for him to.
And will become increasingly evident as we approach the year 2012.' That's the year the Mayan 'Great Cycle' ends. In 2012, urban liberals and fundamentalist Christians alike lose their heads to the Pinchbeckian guillotine, a machine made not of wood and steel but the after-effects of DMT ('a seven-minute rocket-shot into an overwhelming other dimension'), ayahuasca, magic mushrooms, LSD and iboga ('a psychedelic root bark that is the center of the Bwiti cult'). Of the multiple difficulties encountered by the writer of drug-induced-mind-expansion narratives, none is more important to overcome than that of transferring the effect of the drug to his prose, a near impossibility attained by only a few — William S. Burroughs comes to mind, as well as Thomas De Quincey.