Since you asked.
Anything that dissociates you from your body that is initiated by yourself generally seems to wander into the territory of the occult/Satan/demons. Some drugs break down your barrier between your mind/spirit and the spirit world, and you can be shown whatever the local devils want you to see.
One thing I noticed about all such phenomena is that not once, ever has anyone "come back" from the experience and said "Wow, I saw Jesus, and he said not to do this stuff, and to repent for my sins."
Like, literally, NEVER.
Same with UFO stuff, etc.
It all orbits around the same forbidden topic, but won't mention it, just like the news media and Q. They will never ask Trump about Q, because they know it's real, just like you don't get any news with these strangely missing celebrities.
I know that in the occult, any time your mind wanders towards Jesus Christ, SOMETHING will leap up and block it, misdirect you, or somehow interfere.
Jesus is Lord. Trying to get out of your body artificially is not Biblical, and the Bible is there for our good.
I have had God show me stuff in dreams, but it was never a matter of traveling to a distant place outside my body, but it has happened to others, but it's more of a "I saw a vision of so-and-so that I knew doing this or that they needed to repent of."
This stuff is interesting, but opening your mind up, dropping its defenses via artificial and/or chemical means can make you vulnerable to some evil spirits, there is no mile they will not try to claim if you yield an inch to them.
I have never seen anyone say "Wow. I was tripping on mescaline, and Jesus miraculously healed my broken leg." But I have seen people tell of such miracles in Church services.
I don't have all knowledge of such stuff. I do observe that two things don't accompany such occult/mind expanding/whatever things:
Miraculous healings
Repentance and turning to Jesus Christ.
Also, no one ever seems to find a missing child using these things. Satan never works against Satan.