Psychedelics

Psychedelic Therapy Music Playlists

Mendel Kaelen, a post-doctoral neuroscientist at Imperial College London who specializes in the function of music in psychedelic therapy, has created a series of psychedelic music playlists that can be used for therapeutic purposes:

The music playlists I release publicly are either short mixtapes or full playlists created for therapeutic work. The easiest way to stay updated on new music is by following me on twitter or spotify

If you are a therapist interested in using this music in psychedelic therapy, please be aware that music-selection is only one component of the therapeutic work with music (preparation, guidance & integration). I am available to consult on this.

I am so glad that I stumbled upon Kaelen's incredible playlists. A recent experience with the Psilocybin I playlist—which was originally created for a 2016 psilocybin depression study—showed me just how skilled he is at creating the perfect soundscape for an entheogenic voyage.

As a lover of all things music and psychedelic, I was elated to discover that there is someone out there who specializes in creating marvelous playlists for psychedelic therapy and research studies. I highly recommend that you check out his work.


19-Year-Old Rescued From Drug-Fueled Doomsday Sect in Peru

The Local:

According to José Antonio Capa, head of the anti-trafficking police unit, sect leader Félix Steven Manrique considered himself an envoy of God and called himself "Prince of Gurdjeff." 

He managed to groom Aguilar and other women through a Facebook group he set up, painting himself as a messiah on a mission to repopulate the world and one who would save his followers from the apocalypse.

In fact Manrique ran a harem of women who submitted to him. He forced them to have sex and consume Ayahuasca, an indigenous drink that causes hallucinations and anxiety attacks.

Absolutely horrific. This is the first time I've heard about an ayahuasca doomsday sect having been formed, but it's reminiscent of the murderous cult Charles Manson led in the 60s. However, instead of brainwashing his followers with "sex, LSD, Bible readings, repeated playing of the Beatles’ White Album and rambling lectures about triggering a revolution," Capa used Facebook to find his followers and held them captive by raving about the impending apocalypse and drugging them with ayahuasca.


Caribbean Nations Agree to Consider Marijuana Legalization

Tom Angell, writing for Marijuana Moment:


The heads of Caribbean nations have agreed to “review marijuana’s current status with a view to reclassification,” noting “human and religious rights” issues stemming from criminalization as well as “the economic benefits to be derived” from legalization.

Another base hit for the cannabis team—people everywhere are finally starting to listen to those of us that have been advocating for the reform of marijuana laws for generations.


Transformational Festivals and the New Psychedelic Revolution

Wesley Thoricatha, writing for Psychedelic Times:

In the 60’s there used to be this idea of creating this commune where people could gather together and live and grow veggies and all that stuff, and I think now we’re more of this gypsy global tribe where we have these nodes that we come together at and then we go apart again. I hadn’t been to Lightning in a Bottle in years, and there were so many people there- you go from one hug to the next. The more time you spend within the family, the more people you meet, and the more you feel at home. That sense of belonging I think is one of the things that transformational festival culture has been able to provide. It’s more and more rare in today’s society.

This is an excellent interview with James Oroc, author of the recent book The Psychedelic Revolution: The Genesis of the Visionary Age.


Psychedelics And Male-Perpetrated Violence

The Third Wave:

Male-perpetrated violence is, unsurprisingly, soaked throughout culture and history. It’s not just a phenomenon confined to the bloody sands of ancient battlefields or the slave trade of America and Europe’s shameful legacies. It’s reflected in modern domestic violence statistics, showing that male-perpetrated domestic violence accounts for 91% of all domestic abuse prosecutions, and that 87% of all domestic homicides are perpetrated by men. 

There is clearly a very current, prevalent, systemic issue with male-perpetrated violence in society. The incel movement is just another way in which this problem is being highlighted. And we need to do something about it.

Since the early 2000s, studies have consistently shown that psychedelics are associated with reductions in violence. A recent survey of more than 1,200 men and women had several important findings:

  • Emotional dysregulation (the inability to understand and control emotions) is associated with increased levels of domestic violence in both men and women.

  • The men in the study who had taken psychedelics were associated with improved emotional regulation, however this finding did not exist with the women.

  • Men with a history of psychedelic use are half as likely to commit violence against a partner.

These findings are not only interesting—they could also aid in healing the world by helping men get in touch with their feelings for the first time, which may lead to a significant reduction in overall violence.