Hi Dicky,
Very well summed up. I can't fully explain my personal visitation of 'Brahman', but I've no doubt that steeping myself in oriental mysticism and reading about experiences of this kind had something to do with it. At any rate, it did not prove to be particularly relevant to living my life after a year or two, and I eventually began to regard it as a purely physically determined phenomenon - some weird product of brain chemistry.
Yes, it's very odd isn't it. Given the many ways we can be fooled (or fool ourselves) into thinking even the most profound experiences of supposed divinities are properly attributed when they're not, why on earth would anyone just dismiss those various real world explanations in favour of a supernatural one for which there's no investigatory method of any kind? It's this, "I really, really think that god paid me a visit, therefore - um - god must have paid me a visit!" certainty that leaves me looking askance.
Then throw in the fact that the gods such people reach for are almost invariably the ones that just happen to be most culturally proximate. And
then throw in that they'll often try to support their confidence with an
argumentum ad populum ("lots of other people have had my experience too") oblivious not only to the fact of many more people "experiencing"
different gods entirely, and to the workings of memetics - introduce to a long lost tribe
any new religious belief and suddenly they'll start experiencing its gods too - and the whole thing looks shakier and shakier as a proposition.
I really think that, if I woke up tomorrow convinced that a god had looked in in the night, I'd want to exhaust every damned alternative explanation before thinking I was right about that. And yet here we see "I experienced god" stories of such casual certainty that you have to wonder if only people of a deeply credulous and incurious nature go for them.
Odd indeed.