Weekend Thoughts - 10.31.15

Image by Jon Fife, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Image by Jon Fife, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

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

1. Pretty much the only yoga-specific blog that I read on a regular basis, The Everything Yoga Blog, has a post titled Yoga Privilege that discusses the tendency that some typically-cheerful, focus-on-the-bright-side, spiritual folks have to actively avoid addressing the "dark" aspects of life. Combined with that, there is the possibility that someone will catch said people on a bad day and ask in a snarky tone, "I thought you were all about being grateful and everything being love?" The author (Diane DeGiorgio) defines this as yoga privilege—yogis are expected to be happy-go-lucky, zen, meditative, chill people who aren't supposed to feel sad, angry, annoyed, frustrated, impatient, afraid, or grumpy. Rather than buy into this outsider's opinion, DeGiorgio recommends that we give ourselves the permission to feel all of our feelings fully, even the "bad" or "negative" ones.

2. Earlier this week, the World Health Organization (WHO) released a statement showing that processed meat (like hot dogs and bacon) causes cancer. Eating 50 grams of processed meat (meat that has been salted, cured, fermented, smoked, or processed in another way) each day increases the risk of colorectal cancer by 18%. In addition, red meat (which includes beef, lamb, and pork) was deemed "probably carcinogenic to humans" and has associations with colon cancer, pancreatic cancer, and prostate cancer. In light of that news, I would like to encourage my friends and family to put down the plate of meat and pick up a plate of vegetables, fruits, beans, grains, nuts, and seeds!

3. During the same week that a South Carolina police officer was fired for violently throwing an unarmed (albeit unruly) high school teenager across the room, one cop in Washington DC spun a negative conflict into a positive dance-off that was fun for all. I highly recommend checking out the video. As one of the DC kids mentioned, "There are some good cops." Amen to that.

4. Turns out that people who have stressful jobs suffer from years being shaved off of their lives. In other words, according to science, your job is literally killing you.

5. Finally, to leave you with some otherworldly brain fodder, a think-piece that discusses the concept that if we encounter extraterrestrial life, it may be inorganic. This means that the aliens we're looking for may be more similar to our cell phones, televisions, computers, and aircraft than any organic life that exists on Earth. This idea does sit well with me, as it makes sense that the next "stage" in evolution could involve inorganic, rather than organic, life forms.

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

This Week in Psychedelics - 10.30.15

Image by Dahtamnay, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Image by Dahtamnay, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Cannabis

  • 50 Pounds of Pot Accidentally Mailed to the Wrong Address (TIME)
  • Will Canada or Mexico legalize pot before the United States? (Boing Boing)
  • The Next Country To Legalize Cannabis: Iran (New Republic)
  • How Important Is the 2016 Election for Cannabis? (The Huffington Post)
  • Bernie Sanders Proposes Removing Marijuana From Federal Drug List (TIME)
  • Disturbing New Video of Teen Killed by Cop Over Marijuana (ATTN:)
  • Has The Rate of U.S. Marijuana Usage Really Doubled? (Reset.me)
  • Federal agents seize 30,000 marijuana plants on Menominee Native American tribal land (Boing Boing)
  • The GOP Candidates Failed the Marijuana Test (ATTN:)
  • Marijuana Legalization: A Second Thought (Disinformation)
  • MythPuffers: The Curse Of The White Lighter (NYU Local)
  • Pot Pleasure, Pot Problems (Reason)
  • How America Gets It's Weed (Disinformation)
  • Landmark Case in Mexico's Supreme Court Could Pave the Way for Marijuana Legalization (Drug Policy Alliance)
  • Snoop Dogg Launches Online Platform for All the Cannabis Lovers (BET)
  • Pot for your pup? Startups cash in on cannabis trend (SFGate)
  • Netherlands and Israel, a Marriage of Cannabis (The Times of Israel)
  • Cannabis farm worth more than half a million pounds discovered in Hoylake (Liverpool Echo)
  • How smoking cannabis raises the risk of STROKE: Drug 'significantly narrows blood vessels in the head' (Daily Mail)
  • DEA Raid on Wisconsin Tribe's Cannabis Crop Infuriates and Confuses Reformers (U.S. News & World Report)
  • Peter Dunne backs NZ clinical trials for medicinal cannabis (Stuff.co.nz)

LSD

  • Report: NIU student 'Timi' Okedina used LSD, pot before falling from dorm window (Northwest Herald)

Psilocybin/Magic Mushrooms

  • What's the best way to give up smoking? Take Magic Mushrooms, says study (Newstalk)
  • Autumn is the season of magic mushrooms and psychedelic maple trees (The Spectator)
  • Ministers and magic mushrooms: Why religion is about more than mysticism (Christian Today)

MDMA/Ecstasy

  • MDMA-assisted psychotherapy could come into play in 2021 (Mixmag)
  • Mississippi Police Just Fell for the Oldest Halloween Drug Myth (ATTN:)
  • Muay Thai fighter bust for supplying MDMA for tattoo bill (The Queensland Times)
  • Queensland news: Former Gold Coast Titan under-20 player Dan Kilian accused of being drug mule (Herald Sun)
  • An Urban Legend Evolves: First Pot, Now MDMA in Trick-or-Treat Bags (Reason)
  • Is that candy or Ecstasy? Halloween warnings spook parents (CBS News)

Ayahuasca/DMT

  • On Finding Ayahuasca and Taking the Psychedelic Drug for the First Time (Inverse)

Peyote/San Pedro/Mescaline

Synthetic Cannabinoids/Psychoactive Research Chemicals

  • North Country Sen. Griffo wants to ban synthetic drug 'N-Bomb,' says mimics LSD's hallucinogenic effects (North Country Now)
  • Punishment for 'N-Bomb' soldiers (New Zealand Herald)
  • Soldiers hospitalised in Palmerston North after taking mystery substance (Manawatu Standard)

Dissociatives

Opiates/Opioids

  • Now Kids Are Being Trained to Stop Heroin Overdoses (The Daily Beast)
  • Heroin vs. Fentanyl: What's the difference? (WMUR)
  • Children, teens to receive naloxone training (EMS1.com)
  • How CVS pharmacies are trying to stop fatal heroin overdoses with an over-the-counter remedy (PIX11)
  • Myanmar anti-drug crusaders uncover $500K ledger of payoffs (WiscNews)

Absinthe

  • The absinthe allure; Oregon distillers make up for liquor's long "absinthe" (The Bulletin)
  • Arbutus Distillery: Delicious craft spirits in bewitching packaging (VUE Weekly)

Kratom

Khat

  • The Investigators: Smugglers Trying To Bring Drugs, Weapons, Fake Money Through FJK Airport (WABC-TV)
  • These are the 9 most popular and bizarre drugs in the Middle East (Al-Bawaba)

Miscellaneous Psychedelics/Psychoactives/Drug Policy

  • Censored UN paper calling for decriminalization marks beginning of the end of drug war as we knew it (Salon)
  • Turn on, tune in to psychedelics as medicine (NOW Magazine)
  • In Search of Burt Shonberg's Lost 1960s Psychedelic Art (Los Angeles Weekly)
  • China's Five-Year Plan Now Has Its Own Psychedelic Music Video (Wall Street Journal)
  • Newly Digitized 'Phenakistocope' Animations That Pre-Date GIFs by Over 150 Years (Colossal)
  • This desert's become a psychedelic wonderland (New York Post)
  • Saudi prince held in massive drug bust in Lebanon (CBS News)
  • Absurd Creatures: Don't Do Drugs. But If You Do, Look At This Trippy Critter (Wired)

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.

Weekend Thoughts - 10.24.15

Image by Benjamin Balázs, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Image by Benjamin Balázs, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

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

1. In a harrowing tale about the NSA and surveillance, Waltern Kirn at The Atlantic suggests that if you're not paranoid, you're crazy. The story is fairly lengthy, but definitely worth a read—it explores the surveillance techniques and technology that are currently used to sell us products as well as policies. A bit bone-chilling, to say the least, and a perfect fit for the Halloween month of October.

2. In another heartbreaking example of United State law enforcement's zero tolerance demand to receive 100% compliance from its citizens, an unarmed 17 year-old named Deven Guilford was fatally shot by a Michigan police officer for flashing his high-beams at the patrol SUV to let the driver know that the vehicle's high-beams were activated. In a dash of irony, Sergeant Jonathan Frost pulled him over for violating a state law that requires drivers to "use a distribution of light or composite beam so aimed that the glaring rays are not projected into the eyes of the oncoming driver." In surveillance footage from Frost's body camera, Deven is shown to have been laying face-down on the ground shortly before being tased by a stun gun. Seconds later, the video goes black and gunshots and screams are heard from the teenager. Frost will not be reprimanded by the police department for his actions and was deemed to have acted within the limits of Michigan's self-defense law. However, Deven's family has initiated a lawsuit to sue him. In a statement from the boy's mother, she asks, "Whatever happened to protect and serve?" Whatever happened, indeed—this situation was utterly unconscionable and entirely avoidable.

3. There is an assumption being promoted by Fox News and others in the lamestream media that there is a "War on Cops" occurring simultaneously to the "War(s) on People" that the cops are waging against us. However, that point of view is entirely incorrect. In fact, violence against police officers has been steadily trending downward rather than upward, with 2013 being the lowest level of violence against United States police in recorded history. Although the number of police officer deaths caused by civilians is up since the all-time low in 2013, that doesn't take away the fact that being a police officer is safer than it ever has been before. Don't let the mainstream media distort the facts and mislead you into believing their fictive stories.

4. Caffeine and technology are often blamed for poor sleeping experiences, but is it possible that our judgment of sleep is tainted by the fact that we just don't know what an average night of sleep looked like for pre-technology humans? Some new scientific research has showed that pre-industrial peoples sleep an average 6.5 hours per night, and their bedtimes are regulated by temperature, rather than daylight.

5. A rigorous landmark government-funded study found that people who are diagnosed with schizophrenia are better off with less drugs and more therapy. Specifically, the article states that "patients who received increased drug counseling along with individual talk therapy, family training, and support for employment and education experienced a greater reduction in symptoms, were more likely to resume work and school, and reported a higher quality of life than those receiving current standard treatments". Current treatments require lifelong use of antipsychotic drugs, which have side effects so severe that three out of four patients stop taking their prescriptions after a year and a half. In the new treatment program (called NAVIGATE), doses are reduced by 20%-50%, the families are given "psychoeducation", and the patient participates in resilience-focused individual therapy before progressing to an employment and education program. This is excellent news because it means that our society now has the evidence that supports changing the approach to helping people diagnosed with schizophrenia, although it makes me wonder if psychedelic medicines could also play a role, as in the case of a schizophrenic drug addict who was able to reclaim his life with help from the root bark iboga. In fact, many other cultures treat the people who are now diagnosed with schizophrenia differently, by encouraging them to pursue practices like shamanism, rather than forcing them to think and behave more like the normal population.

6. The Nintendo Entertainment System (the first console I owned) turned 30 this week! I spent countless hours playing and learning with video games, which certainly helped shape the person I have become today. Happy Birthday NES!

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

This Week in Psychedelics - 10.23.15

Image by Dahtamnay, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Image by Dahtamnay, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Cannabis

  • Incoming Canadian Government Plans to Legalize Marijuana (Reason)
  • More Americans Than Ever Support Legalizing Marijuana (TIME)
  • Why People Are Giving Marijuana to Their Pets (ATTN:)
  • Pot is Legal in Colorado. So Why Can't You Smoke It Anywhere? (Reason)
  • Australia to legalize medical cannabis (WDIV Detroit)
  • Bernie Sanders Told Jimmy Kimmel Where He Stands on Marijuana (ATTN:)
  • Bernie and Hillary's Marijuana Misconceptions (Reason)
  • Here's Why Cannabis Legalization Doesn't Lead to Higher Teen Use Rates (Leafly)
  • Stiletto Stoners: Why More Women Are Choosing Cannabis Over Alcohol (Reset.me)
  • Australia to give green light to medical cannabis (CNN)
  • Fed Rejects Colorado's Attempt to Create Marijuana Bank (TIME)
  • Ben Carson Wants to "Intensify" the War on Drugs (Reason)
  • Women hold far more executive positions in the cannabis industry than other US sectors (Extract)
  • DEA Must Stop Interfering With Legal Medical Marijuana Dispensaries, Federal Court Rules (TIME)
  • Marijuana Enthusiasts Might Be Flocking to Canada Soon (ATTN:)
  • Marijuana Use In America Has Doubled In the Past Decade, Study Says (TIME)
  • Hundreds participate in N.J. Cannabis Freedom Rally in Trenton (NJ.com)
  • As Prohibition Crumbles, Cannabis Users Are Less Apt To Abuse It (Reason)
  • New Canadian Prime Minister Promises To Legalize Marijuana (Reset.me)
  • Man denied use of medical cannabis despite qualifying (Valley News Live)
  • Judge Agrees DOJ Harassment of Medical Marijuana Suppliers is Illegal (Reason)
  • 7 of the most unusual uses of cannabis (Metro)
  • The UK's first legal cannabis vaporiser is here — and the user reviews are in (Metro)
  • Canada's new governing party promises to legalize, regulate marijuana sales (USA Today)
  • Steep fall in cannabis offences points to silent relaxation of drugs policy (The Guardian)
  • Brookings Report Decries the Federal Government's 'War on Medical Marijuana Research' (Reason)
  • Medicinal cannabis: Turnbull government to introduce bill to legalise and license growers (The Sydney Morning Herald)
  • Latest Gallup Poll Puts Support for Legal Pot at 58% (Again) (Reason)
  • French customs seize cannabis worth £15m in chic Paris arrondissement (The Telegraph)
  • Medicinal cannabis legalisation 'unlikely to benefit' Tasmanian farmers (ABC News Australia)
  • Albanian police seize 3.2 tons of cannabis in major sweep, growers escape (Fox News)

LSD

Psilocybin/Magic Mushrooms

MDMA/Ecstasy

  • MDMA Psychotherapy Could Be Legal In Just Five Years (The Huffington Post)
  • Hold Up Guys, Amsterdam Is Not Letting People Carry More Ecstasy Because of ADE (Vice's Thump)
  • Hair samples can reveal whether you took ecstasy months ago, study finds (Science Alert)
  • For Some Reason, Police Believe People Will Give Out Ecstasy And Other Pricey Illegal Drugs On Halloween (Inquisitr)
  • Family of teen who suffered crippling drug overdose posts new pictures showing her amazing fightback (Mirror)
  • Dog dodges death after devouring ecstasy pills (CBS News)
  • 'X Factor' Contestant Anton Stephans Reveals Eight-Year Ecstasy Addiction (The Huffington Post)
  • Official Report From M.E.'s Office States TomorrowWorld Death Caused By MDMA (Your EDM)
  • Ecstasy drug deal arranged on Snapchat lands Oak Lawn man in jail: Prosecutors (Chicago Tribune)
  • Arab Arrested While Trying to Smuggle 1,500 Ecstasy Pills (Arutz Sheva)
  • Is ecstasy being passed off as Halloween candy? Probably not (WRTV Indianapolis)
  • Ecstasy Masked as Candy Raises Concern as Halloween Nears (NBC Connecticut)

Ayahuasca/DMT

  • DMT Research from 1956 to the Edge of Time (Reality Sandwich)
  • Joe Rogan On Cheating Death With TRT & Tripping Balls ON DMT (Low Kick MMA)
  • CUPD Make Arrest in Year-Old Suspicious Chemicals Case (Ithaca.com)

Iboga/Ibogaine

  • How A Schizophrenic Drug Addict Reclaimed His Life With Iboga (Reset.me)
  • The Case for Studying Ibogaine, the Anti-Addiction Drug (Inverse)
  • A New Perspective: How Ibogaine Treatment Helped Turn My Life Around (Reality Sandwich)

Synthetic Cannabinoids/Psychoactive Research Chemicals

  • LSD-style legal highs rife in prison after being soaked into pages of books and letters (Mirror)
  • SA pair charged after 'liquid acid' seized (Daily Mail)

Dissociatives

  • Ketamine trafficking: P'sula man gets death, woman freed (Daily Express)
  • 22 drug smugglers held in China (India.com)
  • Man arrested for driving a vehicle under the influence of PCP (The Bay Net)
  • Hayward: Officer-involved death prompts lawsuit by family, questions about handling of case (Contra Costa Times)
  • Cop gone bad CAGED for 5 years - busted with LOADED GUN, ketamine, cocaine and ecstasy (Daily Star)

Opiates/Opioids

  • Overdose Reversal Drug Naloxone Is Saving Lives, But Not All Police Departments Are On Board (The Huffington Post)
  • The CDC and The Opium Wars: The Trouble with the Guidelines (National Pain Report)
  • UN: Opium Grown in Afghanistan Down by 48% (Voice of America)
  • Why naloxone wasn't used on pregnant woman who died of likely heroin overdose (Michigan Live)
  • Heroin addict films her own detox (CBS News)
  • Could Iran be the next country to legalise cannabis and opium? (The Conversation)
  • Obama says US will tackle prescription drug abuse (Bradenton Herald)
  • Addicts in Kyrgyzstan Fight to Break Heroin's Grip, Armed With Stones (The New York Times)
  • Survey shows decrease in Afghanistan opium poppy cultivation (12 News Now)
  • As heroin antidote spreads, next step is treatment (Press of Atlantic City)
  • Obama targets nation's heroin problem in West Virginia trip (Reuters)
  • Fed up with heroin, Vermont town fights back (CBS News)
  • Federal agents intercepted 88 pounds of heroin destined for Vermont (Boston.com)
  • Afghan Farmers Find Alternative to Opium: Pomegranate (Epoch Times)
  • Pennsylvania Cops to Overdose Victims: Drop Dead (AlterNet)
  • 'Heroin kingpin' sentenced despite 'witchery' (Pensacola News Journal)
  • Prevention, awareness called key in fight against heroin (WMUR9)

Absinthe

Kratom

Kava

Khat

  • Ethiopia: It Is Becoming Ubiquitous — A Boon or Bane? (Geeska Afrika)

Miscellaneous Psychedelics/Psychoactives/Drug Policy

  • What a Week! Everyone's Hopping on the 'No Drug War' Train (The Huffington Post)
  • UN to call on governments around the world to decriminalise all drugs, says Richard Branson (The Independent)
  • The economic case for decriminalising drugs (Independent)
  • The U.N. Has Not Officially Backed a Paper Calling for the Global Decriminalization of Drugs (TIME)
  • The truth behind the UNODC's leaked decriminalisation paper (Transform Drug Policy Foundation)
  • The Growing Bipartisan Consensus for Rolling Back the Failed War on Drugs (The Huffington Post)
  • From Psilocybin To MDMA: Researchers Are In The Throes Of A Psychedelic Revival (Mintpress News)
  • Calling all clergy: Psychedelics study aims to induce spiritual experiences (Crux)
  • What is Shamanic Initiation? (Reality Sandwich)
  • The Hidden Psychedelic History of Martial Arts (AlterNet)
  • The Psychedelic Evolution of a Cell (The Atlantic)
  • Finally - a change in course on drug policy (Virgin)
  • That Time the UN Almost Called for Decriminalizing Drug Use (Reason)
  • Supper with the Psychedelic Society — tales of therapy, poetry and ayahuasca (The Guardian)
  • Say 'know' to drugs (The Daily Californian)
  • WUD event highlights many uses of psychedelics (The Badger Herald)
  • Fun factory: DABSMYLA cover an LA building with psychedelic illustrations (Wallpaper)
  • Richard Branson is Pushing for Drug Decriminalization (ATTN:)
  • Documentary about a tribe in Nepal who hunt for psychedelic honey (Boing Boing)

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.

Book Review - Letting Go of the Person You Used To Be

Photograph taken by David Wilder.

Photograph taken by David Wilder.

Lama Surya Das, an authorized lama in the Dzogchen lineage of Tibet and author of the best-selling book Awakening The Buddha Within, offers practical advice about dealing with change, loss, and spiritual transformation in the book Letting Go of the Person You Used To Be.

The book is broken into sections that focus on different aspects of the main topic, such as "Naming Our Losses", "Letting Go of the Person You used to Be", and "Being Heroic in the Face of Loss". Each chapter opens with a thought-provoking and inspiring quote from the likes of Buddhist teachers, Mark Twain, Charlie Parker, and Philo. The words by these wise people offer an excellent introduction to the chapter's topic and serve as a mindfulness reminder before the reader begins the chapter.

Following the opening quote, each chapter launches into a discussion of the topic and includes anecdotes from Buddhist teachers and friends of Surya Das. The chapter then closes with a spiritual or meditation practice that can be cultivated to work on and integrate the topic.

I read Awakening The Buddha Within several years ago when I first became interested in meditation and only had a preliminary interest in Buddhism, and really enjoyed it. I was unaware that it was the first book in a trilogy until picking up this book and reading a bit more about it. This has definitely sparked my interest in reading more by Surya Das!

Overall, I found the book to be extremely valuable and easy to read. I marked inspiring stories, quotes, and pieces of advice to return to later, and also plan to explore the meditation practices included at the end of each chapter. I would recommend this book for anyone, regardless of whether they desire a change or are currently experiencing loss, because both are things that we will all come across during our lives.

4/5 stars. 224 pages.