Thursday 11 June 2009 photo 3/3
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A Challenger Approaches. Ketamine.
<p style="text-align: justify;">Ketamine produces a dissociative state, characterised by a sense of detachment from one's physical body and the external world which is known as depersonalization and derealization.Users may experience worlds or dimensions that are ineffable, all the while being completely unaware of their individual identities or the external world. Users have reported intense hallucinations including visual hallucinations, perceptions of falling, fast and gradual movement and flying, 'seeing God', feeling connected to other users, objects and the cosmos, experiencing psychic connections, and shared hallucinations and thoughts with adjacent users.<p style="text-align: justify;">Users may feel as though their perceptions are located so deep inside the mind that the real world seems distant. Some users may not remember this part of the experience after regaining consciousness, in the same way that a person may forget a dream. At first, users may not remember their own names, or even know that they are human, or what that means. Movement is extremely difficult, and a user may not be aware that he or she has a body at all.
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