One-Year Blogiversary and Site Redesign

Image by Dražen Jerković, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Image by Dražen Jerković, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Think Wilder was launched one year ago on March 27, 2015. Since then, I have learned a lot about blogging, developing a regular writing practice, news cultivation, and more recently website design. It is with great pleasure that I announce a new design today!

For the past year, I have received feedback from many of you that it would be nice if it was easier to get around the site. First of all, thank you for the feedback and keep it coming! Although I have been tagging posts and placing them in categories, I realize that it has been difficult to find other pages on the site aside from stumbling upon those categorization options and the pagination available at the bottom of the site. There is now a sidebar on the right side of the site that will allow you to view popular posts, featured posts, and a list of categories. I plan to add more navigational capability in the future as well.

I have additional plans for Think Wilder that will be launching in the next few months. To those of you reading this post, thank you for your continued support and staying along while I learn how to make this project even better! As always, keep thinking wilder!

Weekend Thoughts - 3.26.16

Image by Stefan Rüdiger, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Image by Stefan Rüdiger, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

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

1. As a creative person, I have often suffered from periods lacking in productivity. For fellow writers and artists, the feeling of writer's block can be a crippling and demoralizing experience. This article explains the history of writer's block and techniques that one can practice to overcome it. Having procrastinated on my creative projects during the better part of a decade after earning a Bachelor's of Arts in Communication (with a concentration in Print Journalism), I know the depression that can come from not producing creative work. If you find yourself in a similar situation, give the aforementioned article a read!

2. For a visual treat, check out this gallery of panoramic photos that experienced technical glitches. Some of them are disturbing, some funny, and some border on psychedelic.

3. An interesting analysis of the pitfalls of Internet media explores various ways that corporations and governments manipulate news via the mainstream media. Techniques such as favoritism in search engines, misleading and clickbait headlines, siloing and polarization, enforcing copyright laws only when they use copyrighted material in a way the copyright holder disapproves of, blatant Internet censorship, and paid commenters are just some of the methods that are used to sway public opinions, report misinformation, and essentially get away with lying to audiences. Always consider your source, be open-minded to information that conflicts with your own opinion, and do your own research!

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

This Week in Psychedelics - 3.25.16

Image by Dahtamnay, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Image by Dahtamnay, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Cannabis

  • Supreme Court Won't Take Case Challenging Colorado Marijuana Laws (TIME)
  • Peek Into Uruguay's Legal Marijuana Scene (NORML)
  • Marijuana Legalization and the Presidential Election (NORML)
  • Blockbuster Report Backs U.N. Cannabis Regulation, End to Prohibition (Leafly)
  • Tampa City Council Votes to Decriminalize Possession of Small Amounts of Marijuana (Reason)
  • Here's Why A Cardiologist Took A Second Look At Cannabis (Reset.me)
  • The Hidden Hypocrisy of the Marijuana Industry (ATTN:)
  • Texas gentleman explains why he led police on a 100 mile chase (Boing Boing)
  • Families swear by cannabis oil's effect, but legislation to expand it in Georgia stalls (Gainesville Times)
  • What You Should Know Before Taking Marijuana Edibles (ATTN:)
  • Why Sports Leagues And Owners Should Allow Players To Consume Medical Cannabis (The Weed Blog)
  • Drugs gang smuggled £24 million worth of cannabis in carpets (Evening Standard)
  • Over €500,000 worth of cannabis seized in Belfast (Newstalk)
  • The Real but Exaggerated Danger of Stoned Driving (Reason)
  • Medical Cannabis Access Associated With Decreased Opioid Use In Chronic Pain Patients (NORML)
  • Hillary Clinton Talks About Emails, Apples and Pot on Jimmy Kimmel (TIME)
  • Kansas Seized Disabled Vet's Children While He Was Moving to Colorado to Use Medical Marijuana Legally (Reason)
  • Marijuana Startup Accelerator CanopyBoulder Is Leading A Cannabis Industry Boom, But Some Grads Say The Program Isn't Worth The Hype (International Business Times)
  • Pesticides 101: Question and Answers for Cannabis Patients and Consumers (Leafly)
  • Cannabis smokers end up in worse jobs and have less money than average, study finds (Mirror)
  • The National Cannabis Festival is coming to D.C. in April (The Washington Post)
  • Cannabis Testing: The Importance of Independent Third Party Analyses of Cannabis Products (Leafly)
  • Queensland father who gave cancer-stricken daughter cannabis oil avoids jail (ABC Online)
  • The Secrets of Colorful Cannabis Revealed: Here's Why Some Strains Turn Purple (Leafly)
  • Cannabis clubs lead community clean-up (KOAA)
  • Thousands of cannabis plants wiped out in summer raids (Stuff.co.nz)
  • UCD study finds cannabis 'not safe' for long-term users (KCRA)
  • Three due in court following cannabis seizures (The Irish Times)
  • Fire leads to alleged cannabis 'house' (The Courier Mail)

LSD

  • Man Claims to Have Successfully Used LSD to Break His Facebook Addiction (NextShark)
  • India's Temporary Acid Tattoos Revive the Dallas Cowboys LSD Hoax (Inverse)
  • Police: Man, woman had 499 doses of LSD (The News & Observer)
  • Ohio man, allegedly high on LSD, accused of biting chunk of father's ear off (WKRC)
  • Police: Suspect was high on LSD when he brutally attacked woman in U District (KOMO News)
  • Man sold almost $2K worth of LSD to police informant, cops say (Sun Sentinel)
  • Washington student charged in alleged LSD-fueled murder (CBS News)
  • Fife man sentenced to do unpaid work after 'bad trip' on LSD (The Courier)
  • Biggs Sentenced for LSD Possession (KOWB)

MDMA/Ecstasy

  • MDMA Steps Closer to FDA Approval as a Drug, but Now it Needs to Leap (Inverse)
  • Legal MDMA Could Happen By 2021 (As Long As You've Got A Prescription) (UPROXX)
  • Patients in ecstasy clinical trial find drug beneficial (San Francisco Chronicle)
  • MDMA moves a step closer to becoming legal medicine (JOE.co.uk)
  • I Took A Pill In Ibiza: Controversial Mike Posner song about ecstasy hits UK No 1 (The Independent)
  • UC Santa Cruz students face potential felony charges in Ecstasy case (Santa Cruz Sentinel)
  • Wellington student at Otago University dealt ecstasy to friends to fund own drug use (Stuff.co.nz)
  • Crest Hill man who had ecstasy in his system pleads guilty in fatal crash (The Herald-News)
  • KZN govt confirms 'mystery drug' was a bad batch of ecstasy (Eyewitness News)

Ayahuasca/DMT

Peyote/San Pedro/Mescaline

  • Huachuma (San Pedro Cactus) And Ayahuasca Taught Me The Meaning Of Enlightenment (Reset.me)
  • The abuelita who dealt peyote: Amada Sanchez Cardenas (Santa Fe New Mexican)

Iboga/Ibogaine

Dissociatives

  • New study strengthens ketamine's use as an antidepressant (Mixmag)
  • Ketamine abuse can permanently damage your bladder (Zee News)
  • Ketamine May Provide Lasting Relief From Depression (Psychiatry Advisor)
  • Ketamine Gaining Traction as a Treatment Option for Depression (Healthline)
  • News release makes claim about ketamine for depression based on thin evidence (HealthNewsReview)

Opiates/Opioids

  • Mexico mayor: To beat opium farming, legalize it (CBS News)
  • MOH gives greenlight for Buprenorphine-Naloxone as heroine addict treatment (The Sun Daily)

Kratom

Kava

Miscellaneous Psychedelics/Psychoactives/Drug Policy

  • Legalize It All (Harpers Magazine)
  • Myths, Moralism, and Hypocrisy Drive the International Drug Control System (StoptheDrugWar.com)
  • Common Antidepressant Side Effects: Why You Might Want to Use Psychedelics Instead of SSRIs (Psychedelic Times)
  • From cannabis cafes to death row: drugs laws around the world (The Guardian)
  • In Florida Rehabs, Addicts Are Bought And Sold (BuzzFeed)
  • Physicians Face Moral Dilemma In Conscription on War on Drugs (Reason)
  • Can Club Drugs Revolutionize the Psychiatric Industry? (Verge Campus)
  • The Psychedelic Re-Evolution (Reset.me)
  • Assault Charges for Pregnant Drug Users to Stop in Tennessee (Reason)
  • What Do Your Hallucinations Mean? What Psychedelics Teach Us About Human Consciousness (Psychedelic Times)
  • 5 Ways Over-The-Counter Drugs Are Misused (ATTN:)
  • The Dangerous Side Effects of Benzodiazepine: Using Psychedelics as an Alternative Anxiety Treatment (Psychedelic Times)

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 - Anger: Wisdom for Cooling the Flames

Photo taken by David Wilder.

Photo taken by David Wilder.

Anger is an emotion that everyone experiences from time to time. I have worked very hard to improve my own relationship with anger over the years, and still feel like I have a long way to go. Although my temper does not flare up often, when it does rear its ugly head, it can sometimes be difficult for me to control. I suspect that it is most likely congruent with others' experiences as well. When something pushes us over the line, it seems like calming down is but an impossibility.

Being a fan of Thich Nhat Hanh's writing, I decided to give Anger: Wisdom for Cooling the Flames a read. I have read some other books on anger, most notably Working With Anger by Thubten Chodron. I anticipate that I will read plenty more in the future, because I have discovered that developing a healthy relationship with anger requires a lot of practice.

Hanh's Anger defines what anger truly is, explores its causes, provides advice for learning to communicate effectively with others, and offers mindfulness and meditation techniques that address how to handle the feeling of anger (and other negatively-associated emotions). There are several stories, both from Hanh's personal experiences and people he has encountered, as well as fictional situations, that help illustrate his points for the reader.

I found the book to be extremely easy to read and full of great information about anger. I have read many of Hanh's books and have noticed that many of the stories are repeated from book to book. I do not take issue with this, and actually find the repetition to be helpful for me. But it is certainly worth noting that if one was to read many of his books, then it is perhaps worthwhile to expect to reread some of the stories multiple times. Compared to Chodron's book mentioned above, I did not find Hanh's Anger to be as practical or helpful, but it is certainly an excellent overview, with many techniques to practice and stories to learn from. Anger is certainly something that we will all face at various times of our lives, and I believe that reading this book could help transform our relationships with it.

227 pages. 4/5 stars.

Click here to buy the book.

Disclaimer: Think Wilder is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to amazon.com. I may earn a small commission for my endorsement, recommendation, testimonial, and/or link to any products or services from this website.

Weekend Thoughts - 3.19.16

Image by madaise, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Image by madaise, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

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

1. Our future will most likely involve computer-driven, autonomous vehicles. This article takes a look at the problems that we can expect to encounter and posits some solutions. For example, computer-driven vehicles will have a difficult time understanding a construction worker's hand signals to navigate through a work zone. Or detecting the color of a traffic light that has bright sunlight behind it. The problems are real, but not insurmountable. Just like our transition to trains, we will need to anticipate this change well in advance and plan accordingly. This article is one of the few that I have seen that offers up some potential resolutions—let's hope that more like it start churning out on a regular basis.

2. For fellow fans of color, Hindu culture, or festival celebrations, check out this article detailing the Holi Hai "Festival of Colors". There is a description of the tradition and plenty of beautiful color photographs to boot.

3. New smartphones have become fairly predictable in the past few years. Each year they're generally faster, more secure, and include some new features and updated operating systems. This article argues that the next stage of smartphones will include a lot of uncertainty, including how we interact with them. Similar to the Spike Jonze film Her (which is excellent, by the way), we may end up touching our screens less than we think. Could it be time for us to interact verbally with artificial intelligence software?

4. This article proposes two simple Buddhist techniques for amplifying positive feelings and softening negative moods. It includes a discussion about how aversion and attachment cause suffering, the differences between Western and Eastern philosophies, and suggests two visualization techniques that can be used during a meditation practice or even just when waking from sleep. There is a lot of great information and it may help those who are struggling with controlling their reactions to negative feelings. Plus, there is a funny picture of a laughing Buddha!

5. If you were wondering what the United States government would do if a zombie outbreak occurred, wonder no further. Through a Freedom of Information Act request, documentation outlining the official governmental response to a zombie apocalypse have been released. Information about how to handle various zombies, including "evil magic zombies", "space zombies", "vegetarian zombies", and "chicken zombies" (no, I'm not kidding) are detailed in the documentation. For the sake of all Americans, please read this information and plan accordingly.

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