Two-Year Blogiversary!

Image by Colin Knowles, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Image by Colin Knowles, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Today marks the Two-Year Blogiversary of Think Wilder. When I started this blog back in 2015, I had no idea how long I would stay interested enough in the project to keep cranking out regular posts, but at this point in time I can say that I'm as motivated as ever before and have some fun and exciting future things in the works!

Last year's One-Year Blogiversary came with a full 2.0 redesign, which improved on the visual aspects of the site's presentation and also made navigating through the site much easier. Today's post doesn't bring any site improvements, however I would like to make a formal promise that readers will see more featured posts (in other words, posts other than the regular This Week in Psychedelics and Weekend Thoughts columns) this year. I'm planning to dedicate more of my time to writing for the blog and coming up with some new additions as well.

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! And as always, keep thinking wilder! 

Weekend Thoughts - 3.25.17

Image by Jason Cline, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Image by Jason Cline, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

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

1. One of the major focuses in life right now is paying off all of my debts. So far, my girlfriend and I have saved up an emergency fund, paid off our credit cards and automobile, and all we have left is to pay off our student loans. Seeing the financial progress over the past several years has been very gratifying to me. I especially enjoyed this article describing Anthony Bourdain's financial freedom journey. He spent the majority of his life not paying attention to his finances—never having a savings account, ignoring AmEx and failing to file his taxes to the IRS. Bourdain turned everything around and is now in a much better position financially. Stories like these help keep me motivated, so I wanted to share them with the Think Wilder audience. If you're currently in debt, I'd consider checking out Dave Ramsey's advice.

2. This article concerning 10 "spiritual" things people do that are total bullshit was full of some great reminders for me as I continue navigating my own spiritual path. I remember a period in my life where I was considering using my "spirituality" as an excuse to not pay down my debts, which is listed as #2 in the article. I know that I've fallen prey (and been on the receiving end) of #4: "Judging others for expressing anger or other strong emotions, even when it's necessary to do so." I find that one to be tied to #6: "[Overemphasizing] 'positivity' in order to avoid looking at the problems in their lives and in the world." While the article gets somewhat repetitive, I did find it to be a good "check your spirituality" exercise, and would advise others to take a look!

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

Book Review - The Book: On the Taboo Against Knowing Who You Are

TheBookOnTheTabooAgainstKnowingWhoYouAre.jpg

Although I'd first heard of Alan Watts' The Book: On the Taboo Against Knowing Who You Are several years ago, it wasn't until I watched Dakota Wint's YouTube video Top 5 Books Every New Spiritual Seeker Needs that I was motivated enough to actually check it out. First things first—I know that I will benefit a lot from re-reading this book several times. It's extremely dense and packed with a lot of valuable information, a lot of which I likely didn't absorb during my first reading of the book.

The basic premise of the book is that we have been told that we are isolated beings, "unconnected to the rest of the universe", which has led to our viewing the "outside" world with hostility and "has fueled our misuse of technology and our violent and hostile subjugation of the natural world". However, Watts asserts that this belief is mistaken and that we are in fact directly connected to everything else there is. In the beginning of the book, Watts discusses the concept of cultural taboos—things like making direct eye contact with another person or performing an act that is against one's religion. This leads him to make the following point:

"The most strongly enforced of all known taboos is the taboo against knowing who or what you really are behind the mask of your apparently separate, independent, and isolated ego."

The concept of "I" is extremely powerful and commonplace in most societies on Earth, and it is so fundamental to our modes of speech and thought, as well as our laws and social institutions. Watts spends many words of this book arguing against the concept of personal selfhood in favor of a more universal concept of identity—one that includes the rest of reality in addition to the components that we would normally judge as "ourselves".

One of the other things I found interesting was Watts' definition of "attention" as "narrowed perception"—because when we attend to one thing, we ignore everything else. In Watts' own words: "conscious attention is at the same time ignore-ance (i.e., ignorance) despite the fact that it gives us a vividly clear picture of whatever we choose to notice."

These are just some of the concepts that Watts describes in The Book. If either of these ideas sound interesting to you, I would definitely give this a read. I wish that this review was able to more fully show how wonderful this book is, but since this is only my first read-through, I feel like I was only able to skim the surface of its ideas and therefore will likely have more to say about it upon successive readings. I definitely give this one two thumbs up though!

5/5 stars. 178 pages.

This Week in Psychedelics - 3.24.17

Image by Dahtamnay, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Image by Dahtamnay, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Cannabis

  • What Would A Federal Marijuana Crackdown Look Like? (NORML)
  • Federal Marijuana Sentences Plummet: Report (NORML)
  • People Are Calling Justin Trudeau a Hypocrite Over Marijuana (ATTN:)
  • World's first marijuana gym is in (where else?) California (USA Today)
  • Why medicinal cannabis is a slow growing business in Colombia (The City Paper Bogota)
  • How Does Cannabis Interact With Other Drugs? (Leafly)
  • Legislature Considering Indiana's First Medicinal Cannabis Laws (WVIK)
  • Startups downplay tobacco as they talk up cannabis (TechCrunch)
  • How to Assess THC and CBD Levels in Cannabis Strains and Products (Leafly)
  • Mother hopes child is picked for cannabis oil trials (The Clarion-Ledger)
  • Orlando Bloom, Sharon Stone, and More Celebrate Luxury Cannabis Brand Launch (Vanity Fair)
  • The Curious Trend of Celebrities Quitting Cannabis (Leafly)
  • Oregon Issues Another Marijuana Recall for Pesticides (Oregon Cannabis Connection)
  • For many seniors, medical cannabis is more threat than remedy (San Francisco Chronicle)

LSD

  • Father John Misty Was on LSD During This Interview (Rolling Stone)
  • In 1967, LSD was briefly labeled a breaker of chromosomes (Science News)
  • Santa Monica High School freshman dies after falling from apartment building while on LSD (Los Angeles Times)

Psilocybin/Magic Mushrooms

  • ACSO: Utah man busted with hallucinogenic mushrooms, pot, sword (KTVB)

MDMA/Ecstasy

Ayahuasca/DMT

Peyote/San Pedro/Mescaline

  • Pro-Marijuana Alabama Church Promotes Psychoactive Drugs as Medicine (Merry Jane)

Iboga/Ibogaine

  • Bahamas Treatment Center Uses "Clinical Ibogaine"for Addiction Therapy (EIN News)

Synthetic Cannabinoids/Psychoactive Research Chemicals

  • WA parents raise awareness of synthetic drug dangers after death of sons (Perth Now)

Dissociatives

  • American Psychiatric Association Says Ketamine Can Treat Depression, But Don't Expect the FDA to Approve It (Reason)
  • Mount Sinai researchers review progress made in using ketamine and other therapies to treat depression (News-Medical.net)
  • Workplace Depression Could Be Reduced Thanks To Restore Ketamine Infusion. A New Treatment for Depression (Digital Journal)
  • The dangerous club drug becoming more popular (New Zealand Herald)
  • Stratford Man - Allegedly High On PCP - Assaults Elderly Man, Store Clerk in Westport: Cops (Westport Patch)
  • PCP-Carrying Man Hits Hoboken Cop In Face: Police (Hoboken Patch)
  • Woman likely on PCP in crash that killed firefighter, report says (LeHigh Valley Five)
  • Cameron man arrested with PCP, pistol (Temple Daily Telegram)

Opiates/Opioids

  • Afghan Opium Production Has Flourished Under U.S. Occupation (Inquisitr)
  • From opium to fentanyl: How did we get here? (The Province)
  • Campaign heats up to make heroin-overdose reversal drug available everywhere (Yahoo! News)
  • Survey: Naloxone Successful at Reversing Overdoses in Most Cases (Pharmacy Times)
  • Positive Real-World Data for Naloxone Nasal Spray (MedPage Today)
  • Study: Pharmacies should proactively offer naloxone to all patients who meet evidence-based criteria (EurekAlert!)
  • Open borders, government crackdown on pills causing heroin epidemic – but Trump has plan to solve it (The Blaze)
  • Parrots high on drugs are raiding farmers' poppy fields to get their opium fix (Daily Mail)

Kambô

Kratom

Kava

Khat

  • Nearly three tonnes of Cathinone-contained Khat leaves seized in Hai Phong port (VietNamNet Bridge)
  • Two arrested for bid to smuggle Khat into Oman (Times of Oman)

Miscellaneous Psychedelics/Psychoactives/Drug Policy

  • Congress Wants To Drug Test People Applying for Unemployment (ATTN:)
  • Psychedelic Comedy and Radical Honesty: Interview with Comedian and Podcaster Duncan Trussell (Psychedelic Times)
  • Psychedelics: The Next Revolution In Psychiatry? (Wisconsin Public Radio)
  • This Catapult Exposes a Hole in the President's Proposed Border Wall (ATTN:)
  • Why coca leaf, not coffee, may always be Colombia's favourite cash crop (The Conversation)
  • With 'A Good Trip', Shane Mauss finds the intersection of comedy and psychedelics (The Daily Dot)
  • Jeff Sessions' Terrible Truth About Drugs Is a Lie (Reason)

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.

Weekend Thoughts - 3.18.17

Image by Peter, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Image by Peter, 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 followup to the last few week's of Border Patrol surveillance news, I thought it was hopeful that a new bill that would require Border Patrol agents to obtain a warrant before searching phones is being prepared in the Senate. There is no guarantee that the bill will become a law, but it certainly would be nice to be more protected at the border.

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