Aphrodisiacs
[The best known is Cannabis (you risk tobacco addiction for one and overuse isn't great for the lungs, and according to Psychics it doesn't do any good to your aura, so occasional use at best). The other is small doses of LSD. Better still, learn Tantra, or combine the two. Avoid Amphetamines and Cocaine.]
8 Basic Winner and Loser scripts by Robert Anton Wilson
See: Psychedelics
Quotes
Much of the alchemical literature of Europe now appears to be a
coded tradition of drug-and-sex programming.....This
code is especially notable in The Chemical Marriage of Christian Rosycross
(1615), which forms the visible link between traditional alchemy and modern
Rosicrucianism. The mystical rose and cross from which the Rosicrurians take
their name are, in fact, no more or less than the vagina and the penis,
respectively...(For the curious, here is the rest of the traditional symbolism,
as given by Louis T. Culling in his Manual of Sex Magich Cucurbit—the
vagina; retort—the same, during copulation; eagle—the vagina, or
the female mouth, depending on the context; lion—the penis;
transmutation—the sexual "peak experience"; elixer of life—the semen;
quintessence—the semen as transmuted by ritual and ecstasy.)
----Sex
and Drugs by Robert Anton Wilson
p66
Marijuana helps to disinhibit people of the guilt and restraint they may have picked up in the past. It gives them the freedom to respond to each other in terms of here-and-now, rather than in terms of the constrictions they may have learned as they were maturing—then it heightens and enhances such love associated phenomena as tactile sensations, so that touching becomes immensely pleasurable The period of foreplay is, or appears to be, greatly prolonged. There is no rush to reach orgasm. And finally, marijuana opens up the associational bank of the mind, which then adds the fantasy. And fantasy is very important when it comes to good sex---I feel that most of our sexual hang-ups stem from our puritanical training, from too much censorship. And for some people, marijuana may be a first, awakening step.---Reverend L. (Sutton (Methodist), National Sex and Drug Forum
Books
Sex and Drugs: A Journey Beyond
Limits by Robert Anton Wilson
