Study: Mushrooms Trigger Profound Spiritual Experiences

IGBT

Lifer
Jul 16, 2001
17,967
140
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Text :Q

For many people, spirituality is tied inextricably to their belief in a higher power. Some find spiritual meaning in such intense life-changing experiences as the birth of a child or the death of a family member or close friend.
Others find it in mushrooms of the magical variety -- that is, those used by some Native Americans, hippies, musicians, artists and others for the purpose of altering consciousness.

Scientists report that more than 60 percent of study participants who took magic mushrooms -- that is, mushrooms containing the hallucinogen psilocybin -- described the "trip" the drug induced as a full-fledged mystical experience, as evaluated using standard psychological criteria.

Roland Griffiths, a professor of neuroscience and psychiatry and behavioral biology at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, led the study, which appears this week in the journal Psychopharmacology.

Lingering Positive Effects

The mystical mushroom trip ranked as the single most spiritually significant experience of a lifetime for a full third of the study participants; it numbered among the top five most spiritually meaningful experiences for more than two-thirds of the 36 subjects. The group was comprised of healthy, well-educated adult volunteers; most were middle-aged. All reported having active spiritual lives.

Researchers conducted follow-up interviews with the study participants two months after the experiment, and found that 79 percent reported a moderately or greatly increased sense satisfaction with their lives, compared to members of a study control group who received placebos at the same test session.

The mushroom eaters also reported positive changes in their moods and attitudes, which were corroborated by family, friends and co-workers.

Although some participants reported feeling extreme anxiety immediately after taking the drug, investigators who conducted psychological tests reported no lasting negative effects. Nor was there any evicence of addiction or toxicity.

Legal Status Same as Heroin

Psilocybin, which comes from several species of mushrooms native to the Americas, has an effect similar to serotonin, a message-carrying chemical, on brain cells. Serotonin is linked with mood.

Psilocybin might be useful in treating addictions, pain or depression, Griffiths suggested. He made a point of saying that the research is not meant to address the debate over whether God exists."This work can't and won't go there."

Under US law, psilocybin is a Schedule I hallucinogen, a category that also includes heroin. The government has approved its use in medical experiments, however
 

CrackRabbit

Lifer
Mar 30, 2001
16,642
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Hallucinogenics have been part of religions for millenia it isn't like this research shows anything new.
 

2Xtreme21

Diamond Member
Jun 13, 2004
7,044
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0
If you want a legal way to experience a "profound spiritual experience," salvia can be found in a bunch of witchcraft shops and such. I would highly recommend against it though as everyone I've talked to that has tried it has said how utterly horrible it was.
 

WildHorse

Diamond Member
Jun 29, 2003
5,006
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is delusion. Only shows that Maya fantastically strong, the trickster.

Once upon a time I thought that, until one say I read Ramakrishna's disparaging remark about "hemp smokers enjoy each others' company."

The seeming realness of such induced "insights" is a delusion. False. Illusory. Unreal. Can a mushroomman cast no shadow? Shring body to size of atom? Fly? other siddhis Patanjali describes? Hell no! not that they matter in themselves, but as signposts hinting that the experience is real. Mushrooms & other induced ways of getting high=False delusion of the material world.
 

waitman

Diamond Member
Oct 27, 2002
3,758
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Originally posted by: scott
is delusion. Only shows that Maya fantastically strong, the trickster.

Once upon a time I thought that, until one say I read Ramakrishna's disparaging remark about "hemp smokers enjoy each others' company."

The seeming realness of such induced "insights" is a delusion. False. Illusory. Unreal. Can a mushroomman cast no shadow? Shring body to size of atom? Fly? other siddhis Patanjali describes? Hell no! False delusion of the material world.

Your post, amazinly sounds like much of the spam I get in my email. :confused:
 

SagaLore

Elite Member
Dec 18, 2001
24,036
21
81
Originally posted by: waitman
Originally posted by: scott
is delusion. Only shows that Maya fantastically strong, the trickster.

Once upon a time I thought that, until one say I read Ramakrishna's disparaging remark about "hemp smokers enjoy each others' company."

The seeming realness of such induced "insights" is a delusion. False. Illusory. Unreal. Can a mushroomman cast no shadow? Shring body to size of atom? Fly? other siddhis Patanjali describes? Hell no! False delusion of the material world.

Your post, amazinly sounds like much of the spam I get in my email. :confused:

I think he was on some shrooms when he wrote that. :confused:
 

amicold

Platinum Member
Feb 7, 2005
2,656
1
81
Originally posted by: SagaLore
Originally posted by: waitman
Originally posted by: scott
is delusion. Only shows that Maya fantastically strong, the trickster.

Once upon a time I thought that, until one say I read Ramakrishna's disparaging remark about "hemp smokers enjoy each others' company."

The seeming realness of such induced "insights" is a delusion. False. Illusory. Unreal. Can a mushroomman cast no shadow? Shring body to size of atom? Fly? other siddhis Patanjali describes? Hell no! False delusion of the material world.

Your post, amazinly sounds like much of the spam I get in my email. :confused:

I think he was on some shrooms when he wrote that. :confused:

Seriously.