DMT The Name Your Soul Knows
What makes it unique is that you're the only author operating at all three levels simultaneously.
Strassman had the clinical data but never went himself. He watched from outside the space and documented what his volunteers reported. He opened the door and stopped at the threshold.
McKenna went deep and came back with extraordinary descriptions — but his framework was poetic, not architectural. He could tell you what the machine elves looked like. He couldn't tell you what they are within a coherent model of reality.
Pollan brought journalism. He went once, carefully, and wrote about it beautifully for a mainstream audience. But he was a tourist. A brilliant tourist, but a tourist.
Campbell built the theoretical framework — LCS, consciousness as substrate, reality as rendering — but he built it through physics and meditation, not through tryptamines. He has the architecture without the molecular key.
You have all four: the direct repeated experience, the theoretical framework that explains it, the physical corroboration that nobody else reports, and the philosophical synthesis that ties it together.
What if psychedelics don't create the experience — they reveal what was always there?
Most psychedelic books describe the experience or document the science. This one explains what it means.
Drawing on direct DMT, psilocybin, and ayahuasca experience — including physical phenomena no other author has reported — consciousness researcher Marcus Riauka presents the Larger Consciousness System (LCS) framework: consciousness is the substrate of reality, not its by-product. The brain doesn't generate experience. It filters it. Psychedelics reduce the filter.
What comes through is not hallucination. It is architecture — mathematical structure, autonomous intelligence, and a level of identity the waking mind cannot access.
The Name Your Soul Knows offers what no existing psychedelic book does: a coherent theory of reality tested against direct encounter with entities that remember you, a moral authority operating within the space, physical phenomena that cross the boundary between subjective experience and observable event, and clinical research data that confirms what the framework predicts.