You realize you will be known as the shroom guy who talks to trees from here on out?
He's the guy who admitted it, to me that makes him more trustworthy. As long as you don't go totally insane, or have something bad occur while you are tripping, both real possibilities, psychedelics are usually mind expanding. I'm glad I took a handful of trips back in the 90's. Never touching that stuff again though.
You do realise that I am fully aware that trees can't talk English, German, Japanense, or any other kind of obscure treepixie language?
When the mind is hit with a phenomena that it doesn't understand, the first thing it does is puts arms and legs on it to transform it into a form which it can readily recognise and deal with. The 'talking' tree was my mind's very first attempt at transcribing the fact that I was aware that this tree was filtering an energy, the exact same energy for which the organism that I refer to as 'my body' is also a filter.
When it comes down it, our whole awareness and experience of the universe consists of our mind transcribing and interpreting sensory information into a form which we can relate to and understand. This occurs on a multi-layered and multi-faceted level, is fractal in nature and is expanding and contracting in various areas or dimensions of reality all the time (at least on an evolutionary time frame).
It's not very productive to interpret anything experienced on psychedelics as paranormal. Fun, yes. Interesting, yes. Proof/evidence of supernatural forces? No.
I'm no stranger to psychedelics and other mind altering drugs, and have experienced some very weird phenomena including anthropomorphism of inanimate objects, telepathy, synaesthesia and even full-blown ego-death. However, when I return to baseline, I can see these experiences for what they almost certainly are - hallucinogenic illusions.
I think I've experienced a similar thing to what you're describing, while under the influence of 4-HO-MET and ketamine - I was lying in a field and it seemed as though "nature itself" was trying to communicate, and I felt the energy that you describe, the feeling that everything was inexplicably linked in the same "web of consciousness". I think this can be attributed to the brain innately wanting to make sense of the world, and subconsciously applying "cause and effect" to everything it sees/hears/feels. Also the brain losing its sense of "individuality/ego" and manifesting the different facets of the personality as different beings entirely.
I used to believe in a lot of supernatural phenomena, but over the years I've appreciated the lack of evidence and changed my views accordingly. I therefore think of myself as quite open-minded. If I were to see any evidence of supernatural phenomena when sober, I'd change my outlook straight away, but using psychedelic experiences as proof of anything? Nah.
PS I also think I've felt the same "energy beings" when I first broke through with DMT, it felt like I was in a crystal realm with benevolent entities watching over me, almost pleading with me to stay. I felt like an "avatar" of myself made of pure energy, a bit like the robot in the animatrix film "Matriculated":
I wish I could go back. But until I see any proof of this while in my normal state of consciousness, I'm gonna assume that it was a hallucination brought on by the DMT, and a result of my brain manifesting facets of my mind, as described above. Still absolutely amazing though, I was in tears of joy when I came back to reality. I don't pretend to understand this shit, but it's totally illogical to think of it as proof of anything paranormal.