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Hermetic Hermit
"Magic" mushrooms create profound mystical experience and change behaviour

A group of healthy well educated volunteers appear to have achieved some sort of profound mystical experience that led to behaviour changes lasting for weeks after taking a drug derived from 'magic mushrooms'.

Magic mushrooms have been used by Native Americans and other groups in religious practices for centuries, to induce a mystical experience and became famous in the 60's when hippies used them to alter consciousness.

Psilocybin, like LSD or mescaline, is one of a class of drugs called hallucinogens or psychedelics and is derived from the mushrooms.

In a study led by professor Roland Griffiths at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, volunteers were given capsules of psilocybin and more than 60 percent of the group had what is described as a "full mystical experience."

The participants had an average age of 46, and had never used hallucinogens before.

Griffiths who is a professor of neuroscience and psychiatry and behavioral biology says many of the volunteers in one way or another, reported a direct, personal experience of the 'beyond'.

A third of the group said the experience was the single most spiritually significant of their lifetimes and many compared it to the birth of their first child or the death of a parent.

More significantly the effects lingered and two months later 79 percent of the volunteers reported a moderately or greatly increased well-being or life satisfaction.

Professor Griffiths believes the drug might be used to treat addiction as well as severe pain or depression.

For the study Griffiths and his team tested the drug purposely on people who had active spiritual lives, with the notion that spiritual people would be less troubled by the drug's effects.

It was important to Griffiths that the research with psilocybin was conducted in a rigorous, and systematic manner under carefully monitored conditions, to avoid any comparison with the antics of Dr. Timothy Leary, the former Harvard University psychologist best known for his 1960s experiments with LSD in the 1960s.

Griffiths says even with tightly controlled conditions to minimize adverse effects, about a third of subjects reported significant fear, and some also reported transient feelings of paranoia and under unmonitored conditions such emotions could easily escalate to panic and dangerous behavior.

Psilocybin is a nontoxic and non-addictive and acts in the same manner as serotonin on brain cells which is linked with mood.

To guarantee that people did not imagine their experiences, each volunteer received either psilocybin or methylphenidate, a stimulant used for treating attention deficit hyperactivity disorder.

Each were given psilocybin during one visit to the lab and the stimulant methylphenidate better known as Ritalin on one or two other visits.

Only six of the volunteers knew when they were getting psilocybin.

Each visit lasted eight hours with the volunteers resting on a couch in a lounge room setting, wearing an eye mask and listening to classical music.

They were encouraged to focus their attention inward.

Most reported an experience which included among other things, a sense of pure awareness and a merging with ultimate reality, a transcendence of time and space, a feeling of sacredness or awe, and deeply felt positive moods such as joy, peace and love.

Griffiths says many were unable to find words to express the depth of the feeling.

Most volunteers said the experience had changed them in beneficial ways, such as making them more compassionate, loving, optimistic and patient and family members and friends supported this view.

Psilocybin is derived from several species of mushrooms native to the Americas and under U.S. law it is a Schedule I hallucinogenic substance, comparable with drugs such as heroin.

The drug has approval from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, to be used in medical experiments and is currently being tested by a team in California on patients with end-stage cancer to test its efficacy in reducing anxiety, depression and physical pain, and improving the quality of life in such patients.

The study is seen by many as a landmark as it is one of only a few rigorous examinations of the effects of an hallucinogen and may provide a way to study what happens in the brain during intense spiritual experiences.

The study was partly funded by the U.S. Government and published online in the journal Psychopharmacology.

Source


Magic mushrooms hit the God spot

Professor John Bradshaw, an Australian neuropsychologist from Monash University, says the brain's medial temporal lobe is rich in serotonin receptors and has previously been described as the 'God spot' because it is active in transcendental states.

In a commentary accompanying the article, Professsor David Nichols of the Purdue University school of pharmacy says it's likely that psilocybin triggers the same neurological process that produces religious experiences during fasting, meditation, sleep deprivation or near-death experiences.

He says the current research adds to the emerging field known as neurotheology, or the neurology of religious experience, and could shed light on the "molecular alterations in the brain that underlie religious and mystical experiences".

Source

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zandore
Good find HH.
I think there was a thread like this before.
Imaginary Friend
It's why psychedelics are illegal. If we could freely harvest and consume those properties that cause the veil of disassociation between ourselves and creation to fall away, we would realize we have no need for the controls enacted by governments and clergy, or any of the fear mechanisms currently in place that cause our sense of self-worth to be instructed and presided over, by those authorities.
Shuriken
QUOTE
It's why psychedelics are illegal. If we could freely harvest and consume those properties that cause the veil of disassociation between ourselves and creation to fall away, we would realize we have no need for the controls enacted by governments and clergy, or any of the fear mechanisms currently in place that cause our sense of self-worth to be instructed and presided over, by those authorities.

good point...
Hermetic Hermit
QUOTE(zandore @ Aug 8 2006, 12:16 PM) [snapback]1299950[/snapback]

Good find HH.
I think there was a thread like this before.


Hey thanks zandore, I'm not sure if it is the one but I do remember the article in the Front Page News section about psychedelics perhaps helped in the evolution process. That article had some great points that I can testify to from experience. When the mind is expanded using such aids as psychedelics, even after the experience, it doesn't retract to its original "size" but remains somewhat "stretched".

QUOTE(Imaginary Friend @ Aug 8 2006, 12:52 PM) [snapback]1300004[/snapback]

It's why psychedelics are illegal. If we could freely harvest and consume those properties that cause the veil of disassociation between ourselves and creation to fall away, we would realize we have no need for the controls enacted by governments and clergy, or any of the fear mechanisms currently in place that cause our sense of self-worth to be instructed and presided over, by those authorities.


Well said IF, strange how harmful alcohol and cigarettes are yet they are legal though offer no insight. On the other hand we have much less harmful substances that come with great benefits yet are deemed illegal. Anti-depressant meds that increase the chance of suicide are legal but the alleviation of pain with THC is called illegal. Things are very wrong here and it doesn't take a mushroom trip to realize it, does it?

Though pondering this type of backwardness in our society while tripping can lead to profound realizations and the rejection of this backwardness in all of its forms afterwards, on the experimentors part.
Imaginary Friend
QUOTE(Hermetic Hermit @ Aug 9 2006, 08:37 AM) [snapback]1300066[/snapback]

Though pondering this type of backwardness in our society while tripping can lead to profound realizations and the rejection of this backwardness in all of its forms afterwards, on the experimenters part.


My point exactly! thumbsup.gif Which would lead to anarchy, and revolution evolvement into an exodus of true freedom. Making possible a cultural model akin to the allegory in; "Ecotopia". A "stable-state" ecosystem, for example.

Loved "Ecotopia" by the way. I listened to the "books on tape" unabridged copy during a two day road trip. Some of the best mileage of my life. thumbsup.gif
OlDrippy34
QUOTE(Imaginary Friend @ Aug 8 2006, 05:13 PM) [snapback]1300118[/snapback]

Loved "Ecotopia" by the way. I listened to the "books on tape" unabridged copy during a two day road trip. Some of the best mileage of my life. thumbsup.gif

"Two day trip" would've been better wording. Just to fit with the theme I mean.
Imaginary Friend
innocent.gif I was thinking my allusion was more fitting for the all age theme of this board, subject to interpretation. wink2.gif
ShadowDancer
weeeeeee.....
magic mushrooms were fun, back in the day..........
the only effect on me was feeling like an Alien amidst the crowd.
quite funny actually, seing "us" from another point of view. tongue.gif
Imaginary Friend
And given the preponderant viewpoint, that's not a bad thing. user posted image wub.gif
Hermetic Hermit
Nice pic and interesting book, how exactly do the ritual war games tie in to this Ecotopia?

XOCHIPILLI

Xochipilli, The Prince of Flowers, is the Aztec god of flowers, maize, love, games, beauty, song and dance. (Xochi is from the Nahuatl xochitl or 'flower', while pilli means either Prince or child.) He is the husband of Mayahuel and the twin brother of Xochiquetzal. He is also referred to as Macuilxochitl, which means "five flowers".

In the mid-1800's, a 16th century Aztec statue of Xochipilli was unearthed on the side of the volcano Popocatapetl near Tlamanalco. The statue is of a single figure seated upon a temple-like base. Both the statue and the base upon which it sits are covered in carvings of sacred and psychoactive flowers including mushrooms (Psilocybe aztecorum), tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum), morning glory (Turbina corymbosa), sinicuichi (Heimia salicifolia), possibly cacahuaxochitl (Quararibea funebris), and one unidentified flower. The figure itself sits crosslegged on the base, head tilted up, eyes open, jaw tensed, with his mouth half open. The statue is currently housed in the Museo Nacional de Antropologia of Mexico.

It has been presented by Wasson, Schultes, and Hofmann that Xochipilli represents a figure in the throes of entheogenic ecstasy. The position and expression of the body, in combination with the very clear representations of hallucinogenic plants which are known to have been used in sacred contexts by the Aztec support this interpretation.

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