Shrooms Have Lasting Effects On Self-Confidence and Optimism

Caduceus Mercurius

Holofractale de l'hypervérité
This article was published on CBS News and MSNBC yesterday. :D

Psychedelic Study Shows Positive Results
"Magic Mushrooms" Found To Have Lasting Effects On Self-Confidence and Optimism

(AP) In 2002, at a Johns Hopkins University laboratory, a business consultant named Dede Osborn took a psychedelic drug as part of a research project.

She felt like she was taking off. She saw colors. Then it felt like her heart was ripping open. But she called the experience joyful as well as painful, and says that it has helped her to this day.

"I feel more centered in who I am and what I'm doing," said Osborn, now 66, of Providence, R.I. "I don't seem to have those self-doubts like I used to have. I feel much more grounded (and feel that) we are all connected."

Scientists reported Tuesday that when they surveyed volunteers 14 months after they took the drug, most said they were still feeling and behaving better because of the experience.

Two-thirds of them also said the drug had produced one of the five most spiritually significant experiences they'd ever had.

The drug, psilocybin, is found in so-called "magic mushrooms." It's illegal, but it has been used in religious ceremonies for centuries.

The study involved 36 men and women during an eight-hour lab visit. It's one of the few such studies of a hallucinogen in the past 40 years, since research was largely shut down after widespread recreational abuse of such drugs in the 1960s.

The project made headlines in 2006 when researchers published their report on how the volunteers felt just two months after taking the drug. The new study followed them up a year after that.

Experts emphasize that people should not try psilocybin on their own because it could be harmful. Even in the controlled setting of the laboratory, nearly a third of participants felt significant fear under the effects of the drug. Without proper supervision, someone could be harmed, researchers said.

Osborn, in a telephone interview, recalled a powerful feeling of being out of control during her lab experience. "It was ... like taking off, I'm being lifted up," she said. Then came "brilliant colors and beautiful patterns, just stunningly gorgeous, more intense than normal reality."

And then, the sensation that her heart was tearing open. "It would come in waves," she recalled. "I found myself doing Lamaze-type breathing as the pain came on."

Yet "it was a joyful, ecstatic thing at the same time, like the joy of being alive," she said. She compared it to birthing pains. "There was this sense of relief and joy and ecstasy when my heart was opened."

With further research, psilocybin (pronounced SILL-oh-SY-bin) may prove useful in helping to treat alcoholism and drug dependence, and in aiding seriously ill patients as they deal with psychological distress, said study lead author Roland Griffiths of Johns Hopkins.

Griffiths also said that despite the spiritual characteristics reported for the drug experiences, the study says nothing about whether God exists.

"Is this God in a pill? Absolutely not," he said.

The experiment was funded in part by the National Institute on Drug Abuse. The results were published online Tuesday by the Journal of Psychopharmacology.

Fourteen months after taking the drug, 64 percent of the volunteers said they still felt at least a moderate increase in well-being or life satisfaction, in terms of things like feeling more creative, self-confident, flexible and optimistic. And 61 percent reported at least a moderate behavior change in what they considered positive ways.

That second question didn't ask for details, but elsewhere the questionnaire answers indicated lasting gains in traits like being more sensitive, tolerant, loving and compassionate.

Researchers didn't try to corroborate what the participants said about their own behavior. But in the earlier analysis at two months after the drug was given, researchers said family and friends backed up what those in the study said about behavior changes. Griffiths said he has no reason to doubt the answers at 14 months.

Dr. Charles Grob, a professor of psychiatry and pediatrics at the Harbor-UCLA Medical Center, called the new work an important follow-up to the first study.

He said it is helping to reopen formal study of psychedelic drugs. Grob is on the board of the Heffter Research Institute, which promotes studies of psychedelic substances and helped pay for the new work.

Source: CBS News
 
Positive news, but...

CaduceusMercurius a dit:
Experts emphasize that people should not try psilocybin on their own because it could be harmful. Even in the controlled setting of the laboratory...

*sigh

I just hope researchers will be working together with people from the psychonaut-scene
 
Another example that the opinions of so-called 'experts' are often useless. Even if all the 'experts' agree, it doesn't mean shit.

"Think for yourself. Question authority."
 
CaduceusMercurius a dit:
Without proper supervision, someone could be harmed, researchers said.

Even with proper supervision people can get psychologically damaged if they are not in the right set/setting. So, that's just like "your opinion", Man.

But hey, it ain't all bad. 'Experts' warning people to not take experiences like this lightly is in line with what we do here, namely putting information out on how to use drugs like this respectfully. The wording is just a bit too 'ideologically coloured'.
 
Yeah this was posted on CBC too, which is nice. Although the reader response comments are never a true representation of what the population thinks, it was nice to see the vast majority of comments (and recommended comments) in favor of the research.

I saw articles I'm assuming were on the same studies last year. And this seems to be a follow-up showing long-term benefits of psilocybin. Nice that the media would publish a follow-up article...

So we win some, lose some (florida :( )
 
Forkbender a dit:
So, that's just like "your opinion", Man.

*hears Tommy Chong saying it out loud :mrgreen:

But good to hear a message like this in mainstream media!

Quoting Heartcore's "msn-sig": "Media: the spreading of darkness, with the speed of light"
 
Nice to see something like this making it into mainstream media. This was actually a relatively well written and well informed article. Compared to a lot of shit I've seen on MDMA/LSD/Psilocybin in the news this was actually quite refreshing to read.
 
CaduceusMercurius a dit:
Another example that the opinions of so-called 'experts' are often useless. Even if all the 'experts' agree, it doesn't mean shit.

"Think for yourself. Question authority."

you get what you expect to get. observer dependancy. Shrodingers cat,
self fulfiling prophesy kind of thing. if you read literature,"official" literature that claims "cake makes you psychotic" then thats what you will get going in to your cake experience.
it doesnt have to be that way. you can decide for yoursef what the thuth is.
if it turns you on, man doo it, but if it freaks you out then it is bad, hmmkay.

you get what you expect. or create. its handy to remember,hmmkay

iv been doing mushrooms for 21 years, my older friends, 1st generation hippies
for a lot longer. you can take shitloads of mushrooms and learn to "drive" them,
and nothing bad will hapen to you.
ive taken 1000 psilocybe mushrooms. nothing bad happened.
im not boasting. im stating a fact.

your world is what you make it. its what you believe it to be.
if you take hold of, become aware of it.
then your slightly less susseptable to brain washing.
you have a bullshit detector. you can chose what goes "in"
and filter the missinformation and manipulation out,
and get a laff at their efforts.

it makes me larf.
 
reading your post made me think of mushrooms and other psychedelics as troubleshooting software to our operating system aka Mind :)
 
It was on CNN as well:

 
Isnt it just the same jealousy that Hofmann and some of the scientific comunity had at the begining of the LSD boom against Leary . They have a toy and dont want to share it . They want to emphasise their superiority .

I agree with Drugless . I`ve made teas with 10.000 Semilanceata and drunk it in one go with a group of friends and nobody had a bad time . That was done by all the people at the Psilocybin fair in wales in the early 70s and i never saw anyone freaking out . Because they new how to handle the mushrtooms and themselves . It also trashes that heroic dose shit people keep talking about .
 
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