 Aikono Chichō. I never read this book, Salvador, in the psychedelic essence of Salvia de Venor. I now read it, read it on, print them from a website like, why did you go in psychedelics in the first place? Multiple reasons, Aikono. Multiple reasons. One of the reasons I explored Salvia de Venor and I've explored Salvia de Venor more than anyone I know or anyone I've read about hardcore. I want ballistic on this thing. It's because it scared the shit out of me and as Frank Herbert states in Dune, fear is the mind-killer. So when I encounter something that scares me, that I'm afraid of, and there aren't too many things that I'm afraid of now, and I'm not. I try to make sure I am not afraid of whatever it is that my perception or lack of understanding of the information has led me to be. So specifically in terms of Salvia de Venor, because it was so fucking scary crossing over, I had to understand what it was all about and then Salvia de Venor is called the teaching plant and all of a sudden once I started exploring Salvia de Venor and the doors opened up and I was able to process information up the fucking yin-yang. It's the biggest upgrade I've had to the processing system. More in mathematics, more in dealing with death, more in dealing with life, period. Salvia de Venor was the biggest upgrade to my processing system. It was like going from a 286 computer in the 1980s, late 1980s to early 1990s to fucking quantum computing, really. That's how large the upgrade was. I needed time to process that information. I took about three, four, five years off to reread books that I had read before, relearn mathematics, physics, and chemistry. It was fucking huge, which is the reason why centralized power criminalizes in large parts psychedelics and fugens is because it's a huge upgrade to the processing system. Once you're able to understand that information, we realize this whole fucking thing is a sham. Right?