Frederick Burroughs wrote:
 Tinkerntom wrote:
  Frederick Burroughs wrote:
 
 Here, just breath normally. There's plenty of smoke to go around.
 Don't try to hold your breath. The contact buzz will still get you.
 See:
 http://www.user.shentel.net/riburr/p...ng070401b.html
 
 
  But I don't like any smoke! In fact, I don't like anything, that
dulls
  me to the wonderful feeling of being alive. If you have never died,
you
  may not be familiar with the extreme delight of being alive!
Apparently
  Thompson did not share that delight! Maybe to much smoke? TnT
 
 HST(hompson), by his own count, was documented to have died sixteen
 times by 2003. Unfortunately he wasn't able to perform the final
tally
 himself. (Guess he was off by at least one, by necessity.) Though, it
 is said he made adequate arrangements in case of an unredeemable and
 irreversable demise. It can't be argued HST didn't live a full life,
 or that his life was devoid of any delight.
 Personally, my life has been perilously close to the edge a few
times.
 The fact that I'm still here gives me pause. Each incident is like a
 skin has been shed from a progressing metamorphosis. Most people I
 know have stood at death's door once or twice, but were denied
 admittance by luck or attentive guardian angel.
 Absent any inhalation or ingestion of psychotropic substances,
 paddling offers a number of opportunities for a natural high. There's
 the endorphin rush from strenuous exercise. We've probably all
 experienced frequent jolts from adrenaline rushes, which are no
 stranger to the paddle sports. Sunshine has a direct affect on
 melatonin and vitamin D levels in the body, resulting subtle changes
 in consciousness. The constant bobbing and tipping of a canoe or
kayak
 is stimulating to the inner ear and our sense of balance. Flowing
 water generates an electric current. What are the effects of this
 current on the nervous system? On fla****er and slow rivers the
 absence of sound is a form of sensory deprivation, relative to the
 noise of normal modern developed environments. Sensory deprivation
can
 cause profound changes in consciousness. The sparkling of sunshine
 across wavelets and ripples can have a stroboscopic effect. Strobe
 lights are well known and used to induce changes in consciousness.
So,
 you're right. With all the psychedelic pandemonium going on in your
 canoe or kayak, why on earth would you need a joint?
 --
 "This president has destroyed the country, the economy,
 the relationship with the rest of the world.
 He's a monster in the White House. He should resign."
 - Hunter S. Thompson, speaking to an antiwar audience in 2003.
Probably explains why I like to paddle, bike and hike, ski and skate,
and even set in front of my monitor posting to usenet. Its the electric
current flowing out from the monitor, combine that with all the warm
fuzzies that I get reading on the RBP, I can't help myself. Though the
brownies would help. TnT