Medicinal Mushrooms

by BurnTheShips 33 Replies latest jw friends

  • BurnTheShips
    BurnTheShips

    http://www.nytimes.com/2010/04/12/science/12psychedelics.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

    Hallucinogens Have Doctors Tuning In Again

    By JOHN TIERNEY

    As a retired clinical psychologist, Clark Martin was well acquainted with traditional treatments for depression, but his own case seemed untreatable as he struggled through chemotherapy and other grueling regimens for kidney cancer. Counseling seemed futile to him. So did the antidepressant pills he tried.

    Nothing had any lasting effect until, at the age of 65, he had his first psychedelic experience. He left his home in Vancouver, Wash., to take part in an experiment at Johns Hopkins medical school involving psilocybin, the psychoactive ingredient found in certain mushrooms.

    Scientists are taking a new look at hallucinogens, which became taboo among regulators after enthusiasts like Timothy Leary promoted them in the 1960s with the slogan “Turn on, tune in, drop out.” Now, using rigorous protocols and safeguards, scientists have won permission to study once again the drugs’ potential for treating mental problems and illuminating the nature of consciousness.

    After taking the hallucinogen, Dr. Martin put on an eye mask and headphones, and lay on a couch listening to classical music as he contemplated the universe.

    “All of a sudden, everything familiar started evaporating,” he recalled. “Imagine you fall off a boat out in the open ocean, and you turn around, and the boat is gone. And then the water’s gone. And then you’re gone.”

    Today, more than a year later, Dr. Martin credits that six-hour experience with helping him overcome his depression and profoundly transforming his relationships with his daughter and friends. He ranks it among the most meaningful events of his life, which makes him a fairly typical member of a growing club of experimental subjects.

    Researchers from around the world are gathering this week in San Jose, Calif., for the largest conference on psychedelic science held in the United States in four decades. They plan to discuss studies of psilocybin and other psychedelics for treating depression in cancer patients, obsessive-compulsive disorder, end-of-life anxiety, post-traumatic stress disorder and addiction to drugs or alcohol.

    The results so far are encouraging but also preliminary, and researchers caution against reading too much into these small-scale studies. They do not want to repeat the mistakes of the 1960s, when some scientists-turned-evangelists exaggerated their understanding of the drugs’ risks and benefits.

    Because reactions to hallucinogens can vary so much depending on the setting, experimenters and review boards have developed guidelines to set up a comfortable environment with expert monitors in the room to deal with adverse reactions. They have established standard protocols so that the drugs’ effects can be gauged more accurately, and they have also directly observed the drugs’ effects by scanning the brains of people under the influence of hallucinogens.

    Scientists are especially intrigued by the similarities between hallucinogenic experiences and the life-changing revelations reported throughout history by religious mystics and those who meditate. These similarities have been identified in neural imaging studies conducted by Swiss researchers and in experiments led by Roland Griffiths, a professor of behavioral biology at Johns Hopkins.

    In one of Dr. Griffiths’s first studies, involving 36 people with no serious physical or emotional problems, he and colleagues found that psilocybin could induce what the experimental subjects described as a profound spiritual experience with lasting positive effects for most of them. None had had any previous experience with hallucinogens, and none were even sure what drug was being administered.

    To make the experiment double-blind, neither the subjects nor the two experts monitoring them knew whether the subjects were receiving a placebo, psilocybin or another drug like Ritalin, nicotine, caffeine or an amphetamine. Although veterans of the ’60s psychedelic culture may have a hard time believing it, Dr. Griffiths said that even the monitors sometimes could not tell from the reactions whether the person had taken psilocybin or Ritalin.

    The monitors sometimes had to console people through periods of anxiety, Dr. Griffiths said, but these were generally short-lived, and none of the people reported any serious negative effects. In a survey conducted two months later, the people who received psilocybin reported significantly more improvements in their general feelings and behavior than did the members of the control group.

    The findings were repeated in another follow-up survey, taken 14 months after the experiment. At that point most of the psilocybin subjects once again expressed more satisfaction with their lives and rated the experience as one of the five most meaningful events of their lives.

    Since that study, which was published in 2008, Dr. Griffiths and his colleagues have gone on to give psilocybin to people dealing with cancer and depression, like Dr. Martin, the retired psychologist from Vancouver. Dr. Martin’s experience is fairly typical, Dr. Griffiths said: an improved outlook on life after an experience in which the boundaries between the self and others disappear.

    In interviews, Dr. Martin and other subjects described their egos and bodies vanishing as they felt part of some larger state of consciousness in which their personal worries and insecurities vanished. They found themselves reviewing past relationships with lovers and relatives with a new sense of empathy.

    “It was a whole personality shift for me,” Dr. Martin said. “I wasn’t any longer attached to my performance and trying to control things. I could see that the really good things in life will happen if you just show up and share your natural enthusiasms with people. You have a feeling of attunement with other people.”

    The subjects’ reports mirrored so closely the accounts of religious mystical experiences, Dr. Griffiths said, that it seems likely the human brain is wired to undergo these “unitive” experiences, perhaps because of some evolutionary advantage.

    “This feeling that we’re all in it together may have benefited communities by encouraging reciprocal generosity,” Dr. Griffiths said. “On the other hand, universal love isn’t always adaptive, either.”

    Although federal regulators have resumed granting approval for controlled experiments with psychedelics, there has been little public money granted for the research, which is being conducted at Hopkins, the University of Arizona;Harvard; New York University; the University of California, Los Angeles; and other places.

    The work has been supported by nonprofit groups like the Heffter Research Institute and MAPS, the Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies.

    “There’s this coming together of science and spirituality,” said Rick Doblin, the executive director of MAPS. “We’re hoping that the mainstream and the psychedelic community can meet in the middle and avoid another culture war. Thanks to changes over the last 40 years in the social acceptance of the hospice movement and yoga and meditation, our culture is much more receptive now, and we’re showing that these drugs can provide benefits that current treatments can’t.”

    Researchers are reporting preliminary success in using psilocybin to ease the anxiety of patients with terminal illnesses. Dr. Charles S. Grob, a psychiatrist who is involved in an experiment at U.C.L.A., describes it as “existential medicine” that helps dying people overcome fear, panic and depression.

    “Under the influences of hallucinogens,” Dr. Grob writes, “individuals transcend their primary identification with their bodies and experience ego-free states before the time of their actual physical demise, and return with a new perspective and profound acceptance of the life constant: change.”

  • Robdar
    Robdar

    Turn off your mind, relax
    and float down stream
    It is not dying
    It is not dying

    Lay down all thought
    Surrender to the void
    It is shining
    It is shining

    That you may see
    The meaning of within
    It is being
    It is being

    That love is all
    And love is everyone
    It is knowing
    It is knowing

    That ignorance and hate
    May mourn the dead
    It is believing
    It is believing

    But listen to the
    color of your dreams
    It is not living
    It is not living

    Or play the game
    existence to the end
    Of the beginning
    Of the beginning
    Of the beginning
    Of the beginning
    Of the beginning
    Of the beginning

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rTMOSCh7aJU

  • shamus100
    shamus100

    ZOOOMERS!

  • Robdar
    Robdar

    I am glad for the re-newed research into psychedelics. Psilocybin, under the proper conditions, is life changing and an excellent tool for opening the mind to alternative realities.

  • darkuncle29
    darkuncle29

    I've been wanting to try either the shrooms or salvia, for a few years now, but I'm chicken. I think the main thing holding me back is fear of not setting the scene right, or having the wrong people present. I don't think of these things as "party" favors or stuff to play with, I respect them, and really think they could help with depression and perception of chronic body pain. With mushrooms, how bumpy a ride can you expect?

  • shamus100
    shamus100

    DA,

    Mushroooms are.... woooooooowooo! Um, they make you really really high. You don't want to be around other people who are not on them, you laugh a lot, and you can have a good trip - or a bad.

    Do them with someone who has experience and only do a gram. Don't do a lot - and don't do them with someone who wants you to do a lot your first time.

    I dabbled for many years maybe every second year ? ish, but haven't since wanted to do them again. They are powerful, funny, hilarious, and they can make you hallucinate. The field I was looking at was rolling like waves.

    Communication with the ouside world is impossible when on them. Get food ready, or whatever you need. BEWARE!!! Moooohahaha!

    Hope all is well with you. Ya still got me email?

  • darkuncle29
    darkuncle29

    Hey monkey boy, yes still have your email, thanks for the travel pics too BTW, I used one of them as wall paper.

    I don't think for me it would be a laughter filled "fun" time. When I smoke/eat 420, I have a VERY different kind of experience than people around me or what I was told it was like. For me it is very calm, reverential, meditative. I've achieved altered states before through meditation, music, and sensory deprivation, but that was all a few years ago. My health is worse now, and I don't have the physical or mental stamina to get there now.

    When it comes to pharmaceuticals or alcohol, I am a supper light weight, so keeping it under a gram sounds like a good idea. Thanks for that.

    I'm back in eastern WA now, I'm probably only 5-6 hours away from you now.

    I think that "Kiss ME" with the drooling monkey face is the funniest shit I've seen in a while.

  • shamus100
    shamus100

    DA,

    Maybe by plane, love.

    I told you I met up with RAy... yeah, probably. It was a blast. And my travels were, um, life-changing to say the least. I may be moving back to VAncouver, because I've met someone there, LOL. Never thought that I would settle down... we'll see. Need to secure overseas employment before that can happen, but it's coming. So I'd be a lot closer.... stay tuned.

    Mushrooms are unlike anything else you've had. It's nothing like marijuana at all - trust me on that.

    Take care, and hope all is well with you.

    (it's all I can do not to rip your face off right now... )

    P.S.

    The werewolfers have been asking about you - LOTS!

  • darkuncle29
    darkuncle29

    You're back east now? You met with RaZ, that sounds cool. Where are the were wolfers? I've thought of them often the past two years.

    I'm happy for you finding someone. I remember that it was good while it lasted.

    email me your phone number eh, I'm not much of a talker, but can get gabby with the right folks.

  • darkuncle29
    darkuncle29

    Hey Burn, sorry to HJ your thread a bit, thanks for posting the topic. Do you shroom too?

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