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G_j

(40,367 posts)
Sat May 5, 2018, 03:35 PM May 2018

The New Science of Psychedelics

https://www.wsj.com/articles/the-new-science-of-psychedelics-1525360091

Recent studies are finding that drugs such as LSD and psilocybin can help to alleviate depression, anxiety and addiction—and may have profound things to teach us about how the mind works

By Michael Pollan

To anyone who lived through the 1960s, the proposition that psychedelic drugs might have a positive contribution to make to our mental health must sound absurd. Along with hallucinogens like mescaline and psilocybin (that is, magic mushrooms), LSD was often blamed for bad trips that sent people to the psych ward. These drugs could make you crazy.

So how is it possible that, 50 years later, researchers working at institutions such as New York University, Johns Hopkins, UCLA and Imperial College in London are discovering that, when administered in a supportive therapeutic setting, psychedelics can actually make you sane? Or that they may have profound things to teach us about how the mind works, and why it sometimes fails to work?

Recent trials of psilocybin, a close pharmacological cousin to LSD, have demonstrated that a single guided psychedelic session can alleviate depression when drugs like Prozac have failed; can help alcoholics and smokers to break the grip of a lifelong habit; and can help cancer patients deal with their “existential distress” at the prospect of dying. At the same time, studies imaging the brains of people on psychedelics have opened a new window onto the study of consciousness, as well as the nature of the self and spiritual experience. The hoary ‘60s platitude that psychedelics would help unlock the secrets of consciousness may turn out not to be so preposterous after all.

The value of psychedelic therapy was first recognized nearly 70 years ago, only to be forgotten when what had been a promising era of research ran headlong into a nationwide moral panic about LSD, beginning around 1965. With a powerful assist from Timothy Leary, the flamboyant Harvard psychology professor, psychedelics had escaped the laboratory, falling into the eager arms of the counterculture. Yet in the decade before that there had been 1,000 published studies of LSD, involving 40,000 experimental subjects, and no fewer than six international conferences devoted to what many in the psychiatric community regarded as a wonder drug.

..more..
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Kirk Lover

(3,608 posts)
1. I saw a dateline like report many years ago that Ecstasy helped terminally ill people have a
Sat May 5, 2018, 03:38 PM
May 2018

better outlook etc. etc and it helped make them happier.

I found it very interesting.

 

bdtrppr6

(796 posts)
2. that's some much needed good news.
Sat May 5, 2018, 04:05 PM
May 2018

psychedelics need to be studied in great depth. it's been years since i've gotten my hands on any, but when i had a steady supply of mushrooms was one of the best periods of my life. high and happy, sure, but i spent a lot of time spelunking my brain and helped me to understand my position in the world and universe. as an artist, it significantly changed my subject matter and painting style. folks can call bullshit on the spiritual side, but i know what i experienced and came out better.

unsupervised or without prior knowledge, they can be dangerous but the after effects are so positive that i look forward to the day usage is expected or at least utilized to help those in need.

unc70

(6,115 posts)
3. We were already crazy, at least crazed
Sat May 5, 2018, 04:05 PM
May 2018

No LSD in nearly 50 years myself. Those were the days. Probably.

marble falls

(57,120 posts)
4. Psychedelics helped and entertained me. Haven't tripped since the mid-eighties. Those were....
Sat May 5, 2018, 04:19 PM
May 2018

wonderful times and I'd do them again all things being equal.

Cartoonist

(7,319 posts)
5. Windowpane
Sat May 5, 2018, 04:29 PM
May 2018

It changed everything for me. I would recommend it for everyone but with warning. As noted elsewhere, guidance and supervision are a must.

Sorry, I can't provide.

dweller

(23,646 posts)
7. as a buddy once admonished me
Sat May 5, 2018, 04:51 PM
May 2018

Last edited Sat May 5, 2018, 09:41 PM - Edit history (1)

"acid is like a telephone ... once you've got the message, you need to hang it
up "

to which I replied "every once in awhile I like to pick it up to make sure I still have a dial tone"
✌🏼️
ymmv

Nitram

(22,825 posts)
13. Excellent reply, dweller.
Sat May 5, 2018, 06:25 PM
May 2018

Whoever wrote this article fails to realize how many of us have had positive experiences.

askyagerz

(776 posts)
10. For about a week after eating shrooms
Sat May 5, 2018, 05:29 PM
May 2018

You always feel like a better person and want to do the absolute best you can in every aspect of your life. You can actually feel all of lifes complacent loops break open.
Ive never tried micro dosing but definitely see how it could be benifitual to depressed people.

Nitram

(22,825 posts)
12. I take issue with the first sentence. We did not think the idea that psychedelic drugs might have a
Sat May 5, 2018, 06:24 PM
May 2018

positive contribution to make to our mental health must sound absurd. Many of us found that taking psychedelics booted us out our self-complacency and brought us to appreciate the world on new terms. Timothy Leary's whole schtick was that with the right set and setting psychedelics could be a powerful tool for therapy, self-understanding, and even a spiritual awakening. In the 90s when I finally took ecstasy, it was obvious to me that here was a powerful tool for getting past anxiety and fear in interpersonal relationships. The US government put the kibosh on valid research by clarifying these substances, including marijuana, as Schedule I drugs, forbidding their use even in research. It has taken years, and great patience, to overcome those barriers.

SergeStorms

(19,204 posts)
14. Peyote was my drug of choice.
Sat May 5, 2018, 06:38 PM
May 2018

I dabbled in Acid, Mescaline and the like, but Peyote was the 'go to' drug if I was going to get psychedelic. This was back in the 60s-70s, and I haven't touched anything like that since. Peyote was so clean, no "speedy" sensation and the trips were magnificent. Most people I knew used to get sick and throw up, because of the supposed "strychnine" contained in the buttons. I never got sick once. I don't know if that's good or bad, but I never did. I've always had a cast-iron stomach, and still do to this day.

They're having a big problem in Peru right now with Ayahuasca "tourism". People are getting murdered, it's a big mess. Behind it all? People who want to make money from it's hallucinogenic and curative powers. That's all it takes for people to fuck up a good thing.

Ahhhhh, aging hippies reliving their "glory years".

GreenPartyVoter

(72,378 posts)
15. I've always been afraid to try recreational drugs, esp w my bipolar.
Sun May 6, 2018, 08:00 AM
May 2018

Wouldn't it be ironic if it turned out that they could help?

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