Weekend Thoughts - 6.27.15

Image by Airik Lopez, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Image by Airik Lopez, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Happy Saturday y'all! Below, I have rounded up some things for you to think about this weekend:

1. Summer has officially arrived here in the northern hemisphere, and that means it is time for many of us to attend our favorite thing in the whole wide world—music festivals. I was really intrigued by this profile of Cameron Bowman, also known as "The Festival Lawyer", on VICE Thump. Bowman offers some great advice for festival-goers on his Tumblr blog. The advice is spot-on and definitely worth a read if you're like me and would like to stay out of trouble at your next music festival.

2. A well-researched article written by Kim Williams, MD, the president of the American College of Cardiology, that describes the outstanding benefits to heart health that a vegan diet can provide. Although these findings are probably not surprising to someone familiar with veganism, it is nice to see a credentialed doctor is backing up these claims. I will note that it is possible to be a vegjunktarian, or someone who eats vegan junk food, which obviously is not a healthy variation of the vegan diet, and not something that I would recommend.

3. Owl Farm, the Aspen, Colorado home that author Hunter S. Thompson lived in for 35 years, is going to be a museum. I am a huge HST fan, having read many of his books, and I am ecstatic about the possibility of visiting his former home in the future!

4. Reset.me published an interesting article about a naturally-occurring cancer-fighting vitamin that is found in apricot seeds. Vitamin B-17 has been banned by the FDA but has been shown to assist in the fight against cancer, which may indicate that a cover-up is happening. The theory is that since the vitamin is naturally-occurring, it is thereby not patentable, which obviously means the pharmaceutical industry cannot make a profit. This was completely new to me and is definitely worth a read.

5. In time for Grateful Dead's Fare The Well tour, Casey Hardison has teamed up with MAPS to create a petition asking President Obama to grant clemency to Deadheads and other nonviolent drug offenders in prison. If you have a moment, please take a look and consider signing your name.

6. Reason brought us five public service announcements concerning drugs that tried to scare the shit out of us that didn't work. And for good measure, they followed up with five more.

7. The Marijuana Policy Project has put together a resource guide that grades 2016 U.S. presidential candidates on their stances about cannabis law reform.

That's all for this week's edition of Weekend Thoughts. Until next week, keep thinking wilder.

This Week in Psychedelics - 6.26.15

Image by Dahtamnay, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Image by Dahtamnay, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Meanwhile, this week in psychedelics...

Cannabis

  • Inside the NYC cannabis convention (CBS News)
  • Cannabis comes to Salinas in manufacturing form (Kion Right Now)
  • Pot entrepreneurs fill Cannabis Invitational (KOIN.com)
  • Cannabis business gets higher and higher at Cow Palace (SFGate)
  • U.S. Cannabis Expo connects businesses and consumers while industry entrepreneurs share ideas (Fox 21 News)
  • 'The biggest mistake in my life': caught in the cannabis dragnet for Mr Bigs (WA Today)
  • UTech advancing ganja research with 'revolutionary' cannabis testing machine (Jamaica Observer)
  • Government Study Casts Doubt on Legal Definitions of Stoned Driving (Reason)
  • Canada Legalizes Medical Cannabis in All Forms (Cannabis Now Magazine)
  • White House to Let Researchers Study Medical Marijuana for PTSD (Military.com)
  • Marijuana Legalization 2015: Study Finds Cannabis Edibles Pack More (And Less) Punch Than Advertised (International Business Times)
  • Cannabis relieves pain, says government (Swissinfo.ch)
  • Some physicians concerned about cannabis oil use (I3WMAZ)
  • Cannabis oil: Terminally-ill man appeals for drug derivative approval to prolong life (BBC News)

LSD

  • LSD For Breakfast: The Key To A Great Day? (Huffington Post)
  • Beach Boys' Brian Wilson says LSD 'expanded his mind' (Page Six)
  • Work-in-progress 'LSD: The Opera' is powerful musical theatre (LA Times)
  • Behold, the World's First Opera About LSD (VICE)

Psilocybin/Magic Mushrooms

MDMA

  • Police and greater Glasgow health chiefs issue MDMA capsule warning (Clydebank Post)
  • OK, let's look into MDMA then (Stuff.co.nz)
  • Drug dealer used emojis to sell MDMA, court told (Daily Mail)
  • Drug welfare groups advise MDMA users to 'crush-dab-wait' (Mixmag)
  • Leo Schep: Ecstasy not the safe party drug advocates claim (The New Zealand Herald)
  • ED doctor: John Key needs to do his homework on MDMA (Stuff.co.nz)
  • Ecstasy users urged to test their own pills by drugs experts (Evening Times)
  • Young women most at risk from ecstasy hospitalization (Mixmag)

Ayahuasca/DMT

  • Study: Ayahuasca Drinkers Have Better Mental Health (Reset.me)

Iboga

Peyote/Mescaline

Synthetic Cannabinoids

  • Chasing the synthetic high: 'Legal' drugs are causing trouble for law enforcement (Las Vegas Sun)

Ketamine/Dissociatives

Opiates

  • Public forum targets youth heroin use (Pal-Item)
  • TPI has expanded its Victorian opium poppy plantings (Stock & Land)
  • Heroin epidemic presents new challenges to law enforcement in Manatee (Bradenton Herald)
  • Heroin addiction endemic in promising sports stars (News.com.au)
  • Heroin is the new crack, says Dauphin County district attorney detective (Lancaster Online)
  • Lethbridge supports plan for opium poppy production facility (Calgary Herald)
  • First-ever comprehensive online system to counter narcotics launches in Afghanistan (UN News Centre)
  • Pure fentanyl sold as heroin causing increase in overdoses (The Roanoke Times)

General Psychedelics

  • MAPS's Zendo Project has an Indiegogo campaign to raise money for psychedelic harm reduction. Please read and consider donating.
  • This Therapist Advocates 'Going Down into the Basement' With Psychedelics (Bedford+Bowery)
  • Sask[atchewan] medical historian sees renewed interest in psychedelic drugs (CBC News)
  • Study: cannabis, pharmaceuticals, MDMA most exchanged goods on deep web (SC Magazine)

Disclaimer: "This Week in Psychedelics" does not censor or analyze the news links presented here. The purpose of this column is solely to catalogue how psychedelics (and other psychoactives) are presented by the mass media, which includes everything from the latest scientific research to misinformation.

Why You Should Keep A Journal

Image by Joel Montes de Oca, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Image by Joel Montes de Oca, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

In today's busier-than-ever world, it is common to experience weeks, months, or years of life without realizing that time is flying by. The practice of keeping a journal can provide a log of your events throughout life as well as offer a cathartic release that comes from the act of recording your thoughts. Today's post will cover the benefits of journaling, various types of journals, journaling mediums, and how to start a journal.

I have kept a journal off and on since elementary school, although it wasn't until my years at university that I developed a more focused approach and found the inspiration to keep a regular journaling practice. I have found that my practice has generated many benefits for me, and no obvious negative side effects. In a sense, Think Wilder is an extension of my own personal journal in blog form. Without further ado, let's jump right into the main subject matter.

The Benefits of Journaling

Keep a record of life experiences and track your development: Writing about events that have already occurred gives you the chance to process them and find closure when it is needed. It's easy to get to the end of a month or year and have trouble recalling the events that happened. While it may be possible to look through photographs or another medium of record-keeping, I have found that writing a journal means that I will always have a record of the most important events that have occurred in my life. An additional benefit of record-keeping is that it is easier to identify the improvements that you have made over time.

Improve mental clarity, more effectively solve problems, and increase focus: It's easy to get caught up in thinking that has nothing to do with what you are trying to focus on, but it can be difficult to send those thoughts packing. By recording your thoughts in a journal, you are effectively transferring them from your head to the page. This helps clear the mind so that you can focus on the things that are important in your life, whether they are outstanding problems that need to be solved or a time-sensitive task at hand.

Inspire personal growth: If you are feeling stuck in a rut, finding it difficult to progress in life, I would highly recommend taking up a journaling practice. Consistently writing down our thoughts encourages self-development, because it gives us an opportunity to review our previous entries and identify times that we made mistakes. Once you identify a mistake, you are less likely to make that mistake in the future, and you can brainstorm alternative behaviors that more honestly reflect the person you want to become.

More fully connect with your values, emotions, and goals: It can be hard to be honest with ourselves concerning how we feel about relationships, work, or our true passions in life. Yet over time, you will find out what is truly important to you through your writing. It took many journal entries about my desire to keep up a regular writing practice before this blog was born, but through my experience with journaling I finally realized that I needed to get started with my writing projects instead of procrastinating any longer. I am sure that there are things that you want to improve on in your life, or work through your feelings on a tough issue, and journaling is a great way to facilitate that work.

Cultivate your creativity: Just like anything else, a journaling practice becomes better with time. In addition to becoming a better writer, you may also improve your abilities to process and communicate complex ideas, memorize important information, and brainstorm more effectively. I find that writing, or even thinking about what I will write later, helps me think of new ideas and projects to work on.

Types of Journals

There are several types of journals, which are not limited to those listed below. Use your imagination and think of specific types of journals that could help you on your path!

Food journal: Many of us are unaware of our dietary lifestyles. I know that I was before I started a food journal several years ago, and I was shocked to see what I was eating (and drinking!) on a regular basis. Keeping a food journal can be as simple as compiling a daily list of foods in a Fields Notes memo book, or you can take a more advanced approach, like using an application like MyFitnessPal to get a more thorough breakdown of your daily nutritional intake.

Work journal: A written record of your work performance can be a very useful thing. How often does a yearly performance review come around and leave you wondering, "What exactly did I do the past 12 months?" By keeping track of the day's events at the office, you will have a log of the things that went well, mistakes you made and how you addressed them, and successes worth highlighting in your next performance review or job interview. By recording your mistakes, you will be able to adapt so that you won't make the same mistake twice.

Dream journal: This type of journal is designed around capturing as many details about your dreams as you can remember upon first waking up. You can use the dream contents to look into their imagery and suggested meanings, or you could use them as inspiration for a new work of fiction! By writing down the contents of your dreams, you can review them later and see if there are any patterns that reoccur.

Gratitude journal: Sometimes we are so busy with all the things in our lives that we forget the good things that happen every day. A gratitude journal helps you focus on the positive aspects of life, which will shift your focus away from negative things and allow you to start appreciating even more positive things that you are grateful to have in your life.

Miscellaneous activities: All sorts of activities can benefit from keeping a log of their progress. Fitness, gardening, traveling, reading, meditation, and yoga are just a few to get you started. It can be helpful and extremely rewarding to see where you are headed and how far along you have come.

Journal Mediums

Journals were traditionally written on paper, but today's technologies have allowed additional mediums for you to record your thoughts. Some mediums will appeal to certain types of people, and other mediums will be attractive for the rest. I have firsthand experience with myriad journaling mediums, and will explore some of the options below.

Paper journals: If you like the feeling of physically writing down your thoughts, like I do, then a paper notebook may be the most appealing option for you. There's nothing quite like setting pen to paper, which gives you physical control over your writing, and there is no chance that your journal will disappear or be leaked when an online service shuts down or is compromised. However, there are no backups of paper journals, and it is possible that someone will find your journal in its hiding place and read it without your permission.

Digital journaling: Using a computer, tablet, or mobile phone to write your journal may appeal to you. Something as simple as Apple's Pages or Microsoft Word can be used, or you can try your hand at many journaling apps found online. Digital journals have the benefit of password protection, and people typically type faster on a keyboard than they can write by hand. I have tried many journaling apps and have come to the conclusion that I prefer paper journals, but your experience may be different.

Blogging: An extension of journaling, blogging is essentially a published online journal medium. This is a great option to reap the benefits of journaling, while providing an opportunity to make yourself heard all around the world. Keeping a public blog means that you have a wide audience, but this comes with the sacrifice of privacy. There are many different blogging platforms to choose from, but they all have one thing in common—the ability to share your message with the world.

How to Start A Journal

Getting started with journaling is pretty easy. You just need to pick a medium and journal type, and start writing! I would advise starting as soon as possible—even if you're not completely sure what you want to write about. One of the things that writing for many years has taught me is that you will gradually find your voice in your writing over time, but you will never find it if you don't get started. Now that you know the basics of journaling, I encourage you to start one as soon as possible!

Weekend Thoughts - 6.20.15

Image by Hugh Manon, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Image by Hugh Manon, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Happy Saturday y'all! Below, I have rounded up some things for you to think about this weekend:

1. Reset.me has a video of a woman giving birth in nature (NSFW). I had seen this video before, and thought it would be good to share here. Fair warning: this is a live birth, which includes nudity and all the other things you would assume would come with birthing a newborn human baby. To me, this demonstrates that it is possible (and potentially a better experience) to give birth outside of the hospital. If you're interested in natural childbirth, I would also suggest watching the documentary The Business of Being Born.

2. Hopes & Fears has a piece about what it is like to be a pro-cannabis lobbyist working to legitimize cannabis in the eyes of the law.

3. This article from The Onion about a new music festival that offers no music, and only a field for doing drugs, had me cracking a smile this week.

4. On the topic of music festivals, the BBC reported that Leicestershire police in the United Kingdom used face-scanning software to identify 90,000 festival attendees at the 2015 Download Festival. The police claim that they were looking for known criminals that may have been in the crowd. This is simultaneously technologically-impressive and worrisome to me. On one hand, it's pretty nifty that this feat is possible nowadays, and I could definitely see how it could be used for good. On the other hand, this just increases the feeling of being perpetually watched everywhere we go.

5. Privacy-focused search engine Duck Duck Go has seen a 600% increase in web traffic since Edward Snowden's revelations about the NSA two years ago. That correlates with when I first began using the search engine a few years ago. Based on my positive experience thus far, I wholeheartedly recommend it. Apple Macs and iOS devices offer the service as a selection for default search engine, so you can easily give it a try on your own devices if you so choose.

6. Autonomous (also known as "self-driving") cars have been in the news recently, and an article on Science Daily explores an interesting dilemma: "Will your self-driving car be programmed to kill you if it means saving more strangers?" The article includes an intriguing debate that discusses the meaning behind the terms utilitarianism and deontology. Definitely worth a read and some thought.

7. The sad tale of a quiet farm kid in North Dakota that went missing and was found two months later drowned in a river—shot in the head and wearing a rock-filled backpack. He was apparently murdered for being a confidential informant for the local police. The college he was attending knew that police were busting its students and using them to inform on more powerful drug dealers. Stories like this are very frustrating and upsetting to me, but it's worth sharing it with people who may be unaware of the shady dealings of our police forces.

8. A war photographer that has 10 years of experience in the Iraq War spent a few days capturing some amazing shots of the world's largest paintball game. His pictures are great, and his explanation of the event and comparison to actual combat is worth a read.

9. The Electronic Frontier Foundation has a great roundup analysis of major technology companies' willingness to and followthrough of protecting customer data from governments that is worth a look.

That's all for this week's edition of Weekend Thoughts. Until next week, keep thinking wilder.

This Week in Psychedelics - 6.19.15

Image by Dahtamnay, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Image by Dahtamnay, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Meanwhile, this week in psychedelics...

Cannabis

  • Big Government-Supported Study Finds No Evidence That Medical Marijuana Laws Encourage Teenagers to Smoke Pot (Reason)
  • Patient use of cannabis-based oils a new issue in recent Memorial Hospital changes (The Gazette)
  • Canada's Supreme Court Outrages Bureaucrat by Letting Patients Have Their Cannabis and Eat It Too (Reason)
  • Canada Just Legalized Cannabis Oils and Edibles (Leafly)
  • NSW $12m medicinal cannabis research centre to 'lead the world' (The Guardian)
  • Cannabis Oil Stopped This Child's Constant Seizures - Thanks To New Ruling, It's No Longer Illegal (The Inquisitr)
  • No guidance from state as cannabis oil law takes effect (The Tennessean)
  • Snoop Dogg's Cannabis-Focused Venture Capital Fund Is Called Casa Verde Capital (Forbes)
  • The First Church of Cannabis: New religious group preaches the healing powers of pot (Mirror.co.uk)
  • LA's Reigning Queen of Cannabis is a Pot 'Doctor' to the Stars (Jewish Daily Forward)
  • At pot raid, cops allegedly ate edibles, threatened disabled staff (The Cannabist)
  • Historic Senate Vote Tells DEA to Butt Out of Medical Marijuana States (Alternet)
  • Nothin Medicinal about Marijuana (Unless it is 100% Organic) (Cannibad)
  • Why We Still Don't Know Marijuana's Full Potential (Business Cheatsheet)
  • Medical marijuana legal in all forms, [Canadian] Supreme Court rules (CBC.ca)
  • Even in Colorado Medical Marijuana Can Still Get You Fired (Time)
  • Cannabis May Cure Celiac Disease (Reset.me)
  • At Cannabis Trade Show, Vendors Tread a Careful Line (NY Times)
  • Cannabis WON'T harm your health as long as you stick to one small joint a week, scientists claim (Daily Mail)
  • Gov. Markell Signs Delaware Marijuana Decriminalization Bill Into Law (Marijuana Policy Project)

LSD

  • LSD, needle discovered during St. John's provincial court security screen (CBC.ca)
  • Here's a video of soldiers trying to march after getting stoned on LSD (We Are The Mighty)
  • Should You Be Eating LSD for Breakfast? (Munchies.VICE)

Psilocybin/Magic Mushrooms

  • We Asked Some Balinese Shroom Dealers How They Stay Out Of Jail (VICE News)
  • Psilocybin Is A True Teacher Plant If The Student Is Ready (Reset.me)
  • Scientists helped smokers quit by giving them doses of a drug found in magic mushrooms (Quartz)

MDMA

  • Woman Celebrating 19th Birthday Dies After Taking Molly at D.C. Music Venue, Police Say (NBC Washington)
  • Doctor: Legalisation of pure MDMA should be considered (The New Zealand Herald)
  • [New Zealand Prime Minister] John Key unconvinced by emergency doctor's call to legalise MDMA (The Dominion)
  • From street drug to salvation? Early research suggests therapeutic benefits of party drug ecstasy (Boston.com)

Ayahuasca

  • Yage Tourism: Vomiting and Visions in Colombia, Then Peace (Los Angeles Times)
  • Lindsay Lohan reveals ayahuasca 'changed her life' as she speaks out for first time after completing probation (Mirror.co.uk)
  • Is 'ayahuasca' Lindsay Lohan's new stress buster? (Financial Express)

DMT

Iboga

Synthetic Cannabinoids

  • Increase in poisoning reveals dangers of 'synthetic marijuana,' CDC says (Los Angeles Times)
  • D.C. to Target Drug Suppliers, Synthetic Drugs (NBC Washington)

Ketamine

  • Package of ketamine from Cameroon leads to Saskatoon man's arrest (CBC.ca)

General Psychedelics

  • One Hell of A Party: Pot, hash, ecstasy, molly, ice and cocaine seized in Yau Ma Tei (Coconuts Hong Kong)
  • Connecting to the world through psychedelic drugs (New Internationalist)
  • Could psychedelic drugs make smokers quit? (BBC)
  • Microdosing: A New, Low-Key Way to Use Psychedelics (Alternet)

Disclaimer: "This Week in Psychedelics" does not censor or analyze the news links presented here. The purpose of this column is solely to catalogue how psychedelics are presented by the mass media, which includes everything from the latest scientific research to misinformation.