Weekend Thoughts - 1.27.18

Image by susannp4, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Image by susannp4, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

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

1. It's been roughly six months since Amazon announced its intention to acquire Whole Foods Market. When that story first broke, I speculated that it wouldn't be too long before we would be "walking into a store and making a purchase without interacting with another human being." Well, that time is now. Amazon opened the first store cashier-less in Seattle this Monday, dubbed Amazon Go. It is essentially a partially-automated grocery store, stocked with sandwiches, salads, snacks, and even beer and wine. There is little-to-no interaction between customers and human employees—once you scan your cell phone at the entrance, cameras track your behavior in the store and your credit card is automatically charged when you leave the store. That's right, there is no cashier at all. The only time you would need to interface with a human is if you were attempting to purchase an alcoholic beverage, because that would involve someone verifying that you are of legal age to buy booze. If you're interested in seeing what the store looks like, Recode has an excellent set of photographs for you. Just walking out of a store and not being required to wait in a line is an innovative, exciting concept. We'll have to wait and see how this experiment goes though—unless you're in or near Seattle this type of store isn't yet available.

2. Burger King came out with an advertisement dubbed "Whopper Neutrality" this week that explains the basics concepts of Net Neutrality. After interviewing several people in a Burger King parking lot about their understanding of what Net Neutrality really is and finding out that the general public is fairly clueless about this issue, the video moves into the restaurant. The prices have been changed to reflect the speed with which the customers will receive their Whoppers. Customers who want to get their burgers quickly must also be willing to pay $26! In addition to being entertaining in a kafkaesque way, this ad may do a lot for helping the mainstream understand this topic a bit better.

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

This Week in Psychedelics - 1.26.18

Image by Dahtamnay, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Image by Dahtamnay, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Cannabis

  • Vermont Becomes the Ninth State to Legalize Recreational Marijuana (Reason)
  • Medical Cannabis Protections Extended As Part Of Short Term Federal Budget Agreement (NORML)
  • What The Government Shutdown Means For Marijuana (NORML)
  • Bipartisan Members Of Congress Speak Out Against AG Sessions (NORML)
  • Why marijuana retailers can't use banks (The Economist)
  • Washington DC's Cannabis Market Is Still Untested, Untaxed, and Underground (Leafly)
  • What Is THCV (Tetrahydrocannabivarin) And What Does It Do? (High Times)
  • New Jersey: New Governor Calls For 'Patients First' Expansion Of State's Medical Cannabis Access Program (NORML)
  • Cannabis Stock Investors Should Pay Attention To The U.S. Federal Policy Change (Forbes)
  • Ontario asks for public's opinion on allowing cannabis lounges as legalization looms (Global News)
  • How a Cannabis Ban Turned One California County Into 'Ground Zero for Chaos' (Leafly)
  • Poll Commissioned by Pot Prohibitionists Shows How Unpopular Pot Prohibition Is (Reason)
  • Why No Gadget Can Prove How Stoned You Are (Wired)
  • The PAX Era Ushers in a New Generation of Cannabis Cartridge Technology (Leafly)
  • Most U.S. Attorneys in States With Legal Pot Don't Seem to Be Planning a Crackdown (Reason)
  • Political Commentator Angela Rye on Ending Systematic Racism in the Marijuana Industry (ATTN:)
  • Cannabis measures make headway in Indiana Legislature (WISH-TV)
  • NORML Activists Take Marijuana Reform Fight to Harrisburg (NORML)
  • A 9-Year-Old Accidentally Shared Her Grandpa's Marijuana Gummies With Her Fifth-Grade Class (TIME)
  • Looking For Inspiring Work? Consider Cannabis Marketing. Here's Why. (Forbes)
  • Re-criminalizing cannabis is worse than 1930s 'reefer madness': Guest opinion (The Oregonian)
  • Leafly Readers Share Their Cleverest Hiding Places for a Cannabis Stash (Leafly)
  • WeedMD Commences the Sale of Cannabis Oil (GlobeNewswire)
  • 'Beyonce Takes THC': The Week in Cannabis Quotes (Leafly)
  • Oregon's marijuana industry showcased at cannabis conference (KGW8)
  • Getting to Know the Glossy Cannabis Lifestyle Magazines on the Market (Leafly)
  • Canadian cannabis firm Aurora in talks to buy both CanniMed and Newstrike: sources (Reuters)
  • Introduction to Growing Cannabis with Aquaponics (Leafly)

LSD

Psilocybin/Magic Mushrooms

  • Psychedelic mushrooms reduce authoritarianism and boost nature relatedness, experimental study suggests (PsyPost)
  • Psilocybin (from magic mushrooms) plus meditation and spiritual training leads to lasting changes in positive traits (Research Digest)
  • Psychedelic Mushrooms Is the Potential Anti-depressant Treatment of the Future (Health Aim)
  • New Psilocybin Research Suggests 'Set and Setting' Are Crucial to Helping Patients Get Better (Reason)

MDMA/Ecstasy

  • The psychedelic renaissance: Can Ecstasy really be used to treat mental illness? (International Business Times)
  • MDMA For PTSD Therapy Enters Final Round of Trials, Could Be Approved In U.S. and Canada By 2021 (Newsweek)
  • From "X" to Rx: Discussing MDMA with Rick Doblin (Psychedelic Frontier)
  • Psychedelic-Psychotherapy-QuickFacts (National Post)
  • Fake ambulance worker exposed when teenager died from ecstasy at illegal rave (Metro)
  • MDMA is Vipassana (Disinfo)
  • Grieving mother, 50, whose daughter, 22, died after taking ecstasy in a 'final fling' to celebrate finishing her exams collects her maths degree in moving ceremony just months after her death (Daily Mail)

Ayahuasca/DMT

  • No reason to believe the pineal gland alters consciousness by secreting DMT, psychedelic researcher says (PsyPost)
  • Acute antidepressant effect of ayahuasca in juvenile non-human primate model of depression. (bioRxiv)

Synthetic Cannabinoids/Psychoactive Research Chemicals

  • 'MDMA' warning after 8 Thanet men taken to hospital - with one said to be in a serious condition (The Isle of Thanet News)

Dissociatives

  • Can Ketamine Improve 'Electroshock' Therapy? (The Fix)
  • Ketamine could prove useful in treatment of severe social anxiety (PsyPost)
  • Ketamine 'cures' suicidal woman of bipolar and severe depression (Metro)
  • Man faces 5 years for sending PCP to Save the Children (CT Post)

Opiates/Opioids

  • Why some US cities are opening safe spaces for injecting heroin (Vox)
  • Tom Petty Died of an Accidental Drug Overdose, Coroner Says (TIME)
  • Study of Postsurgical Patients Shows Addiction to Pain Pills Is Rare (Reason)
  • Scripps researcher developing vaccine to battle heroin addiction (Chron)
  • Philadelphia's Government 'Expresses Interest' in Safe Injection Sites (Reason)
  • Opium cultivation down by 40%, narcotics chief says (The Nation)
  • Chinese Drugmakers Are Getting Opioids Into the U.S. Through the Postal Service (TIME)
  • The Feds Are Willing to Let More Medical Workers Treat Opioid Addicts. Now the States Need to Step Up and Allow It. (Reason)

Kratom

  • Effective Ways To Deal With Kratom Constipation (Kratom Guides)
  • FDA Warns Promoters of Herbal Addiction Treatments (Pain News Network
  • Kratom: Libertarian Party of Colorado Rips Denver Human Use Ban (Westword)
  • The Controversial Painkiller Known As Kratom (TG Daily)
  • Kratom: substitute for opioids? (KOLO)

Kava

  • 'Acute pain, sore muscles, anxiety, and lethargy': Athletes are embracing kava as an alternative to everything from supplements to opioids (Daily Mail)
  • Farmers Keep Potential Buyers At Bay So Yaqona Plants Can Mature Properly (Fiji Sun)
  • Kava maker brings popular Polynesian health drink to America (Daily Mail)

Khat

  • What Is Khat? (High Times)
  • Chewing khat leaves increases risk for chronic liver disease (Healio)
  • UK Khat Ban Fails To Stop Contraband Imports (High Times)

Miscellaneous Psychedelics/Psychoactives/Drug Policy

  • Your Sloppy Bitcoin Drug Deals Will Haunt You For Years (Wired)
  • A psychedelic trip could tackle depression in a way that antidepressants can't (Business Insider)
  • The Experience Elicited by Hallucinogens Presents the Highest Similarity to Dreaming within a Large Database of Psychoactive Substance Reports (Frontiers in Neuroscience)
  • Cryptocurrency and Psychedelics: Interview with Brian Normand of Psymposia (Psychedelic Times)
  • We Ate the Acid: A Note on Psychedelic Imagery (The Oak Tree Review)
  • Trump's 24-year-old drug policy appointee was let go at law firm after he 'just didn't show' (The Washington Post)
  • The Office of National Drug Control Policy Is on the Chopping Block Again. Here's Why That's Not a Bad Thing (Reason)
  • Herbal Supplements May Be Dangerous When You Take Certain Prescription Drugs (TIME)
  • How to Use TripSit's 'Guide to Drug Combinations' Chart (Psychedelic Times)
  • Building a Modern Eleusis (Reality Sandwich)
  • Bill aims to introduce driver drug testing for MDMA, cannabis and methamphetamine (Stuff.co.nz)
  • Group urges safe use of psychedelic substances (The Kingston Whig-Standard)

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.

Book Review - A Walk in the Woods

AWalkInTheWoods.jpg

This one remained on my "To-Read" list for several years, but it sat there untouched until I recently started getting more interested in hiking. Sometimes going into a book knowing next-to-nothing is a good idea, whereas other times it can help to have a solid foundation of what to expect. I didn't know much about A Walk in the Woods before I cracked it open other than that it was about hiking the Appalachian Trail, and I was pleasantly surprised by what I found.

In this book, author Bill Bryson weaves together a captivating tale with well-researched information about the Appalachian Trail's history and the surrounding sociology, plants, animals, and people. The story starts with an interest in hiking the trail that grows in him after moving to New England and follows Bryson on his voyage through the wilderness alongside his old friend "Stephen Katz". Their general naïveté concerning the art of hiking and frequently-clashing personalities make for some hilarious (and occasionally foolishly dangerous) situations.

The book is written in a style that cleverly mixes together gut-busting humor and Bryson's serious storytelling ability into an extremely satisfying concoction. I wholeheartedly recommend reading A Walk in the Woods if you have any interest in hiking, nature, or having a good laugh. It's no wonder that this book made The New York Times Best Sellers list and was named the funniest travel book ever written by CNN—Bryson's ability to be honest and vulnerable about the myriad of challenges that he and Katz faced on the trail make for a compelling and entertaining read.

4/5 stars. 305 pages.

Compassion Meditation – An Introduction

Image by Fr Lawrence Lew, O.P., courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Image by Fr Lawrence Lew, O.P., courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

This is the second post in a series featuring helpful meditation techniques. The first post focused on introducing mantras.

In previous blog posts about meditation I have discussed the benefits I have experienced by committing to a regular meditation practice and an introduction to mantras. Another technique that can be used while meditating is to focus on compassion. In this article I will introduce the concept of compassion meditation and explore some simple ways to incorporate it into your own meditation practice.

What is Compassion Meditation?

The practice of cultivating compassion during meditation is extremely beneficial. Unlike some other types of meditation, compassion meditation always involves an object of focus, rather than simply a general feeling of loving-kindness or goodwill. Without this focus on an object—which could be another person or the meditator—the compassion would seem shallow and the meditator would not reach the same potential as they are able to when directing their feelings of compassion toward a specific object. The concept of compassion reflects the wisdom that all things are interconnected with one another, and it quite naturally leads toward feeling connected with the rest of the universe.

How Does Compassion Meditation Help?

Developing a sense of compassion can help us connect more deeply and easily with others and ourselves, consider whether our day-to-day actions are all that wise after all, and understand and care for others instead of disliking or judging them. Compassion meditation can help you learn to stay present with the suffering that you face each day without getting overwhelmed.

This sense of compassion can be extended into concrete actions like giving money to disaster relief efforts, donating time and effort at a local food bank or homeless shelter, or lending an ear for listening or a shoulder to cry on to someone who is going through a difficult time. As you can see, there are myriad benefits to developing compassion. This type of meditation can help even the least empathetic person learn how to appreciate how others feel, which will go a long way toward healing the world.

Five Compassion Meditations

The following meditations are listed in order of difficulty, and can be helpful to become familiar with the easier meditations before tackling the more difficult ones. As you develop experience with each meditation, you can then assess whether you feel ready to move on to the next one. The typical advice for other types of meditation applies with compassion meditation, such as finding a quiet and peaceful location and sitting in a comfortable position

Developing compassion takes time for the majority of people, so do not get discouraged if you are not getting it right away. The important thing to focus on is making sure that you are sincere, lest you develop a sense of false compassion instead of true compassion. With that said, if you find it more difficult to develop compassion for yourself or a loved one than it would be to develop compassion for a neutral person, then it may be more beneficial for your to change the order in which you practice these meditations. Many people have great difficulty showing compassion to themselves, so if you are one of them please do not think that you are alone—just change this order to fit your needs.

Compassion for Oneself

  • It can be very difficult for some people to develop compassion for themselves. If you feel that this meditation will be more difficult for you than one of the following meditations, feel free to begin with one of them instead.

  • When you are ready to begin a self-compassion meditation, it can help to start by identifying qualities you possess that you are grateful for, like your warm generosity or your beautiful smile. Another helpful thing to focus on is any act that you have performed recently that fill you with the feeling of love. It can take time to begin to feel any forgiveness or appreciation for yourself—for some people this may take weeks, months, or even years—so be patient with yourself.

  • After you have generated a feeling of loving-kindness for yourself, you can then begin to think of a time that you have suffered, such as a difficult breakup or when you were struggling in a strained relationship. Pay attention to how you feel while you are reflecting. And after a short time, redirect your energy to the wish that your suffering will soon end.

  • You can even recite a positive mantra that helps you to stay focused, such as "May I be free from this suffering," or "May I have joy and happiness." Following your meditation, dedicate your session to the benefit of all sentient beings.

Compassion for a Loved One

  • Picture someone who is close to you, someone toward whom you have a great deal of love. Pay attention to how that love feels in your heart. You may feel a sensation of warmth, openness, or tenderness. Continue breathing easily and focus on these feelings as you visualize your loved one. You may choose to envision a golden light flowing from your heart to this person with each exhalation, bringing them peace and happiness.

  • Now reflect on a time when this person was suffering, perhaps from an illness or injury. Notice how you feel when thinking of their suffering. You may continue to feel the positive emotions that you previously experienced, however you may begin to feel something negative like aching or sadness. Try to imagine with all your heart that you wish them freedom from suffering.

  • You may recite a wish or prayer to take away their suffering, like "May you be content," or "May you live with ease." Following your meditation, dedicate your session to the benefit of all sentient beings.

Compassion for a Neutral Person

  • The focus of this meditation can be anyone that you do not feel any strong feelings toward, such as a classmate or grocery store clerk. The person that you choose to focus on should be someone that you see regularly, but not someone who you greatly like or dislike. Even though you do not have a personal connection with them, you can still develop compassion for them.

  • You can begin by thinking about how this person may suffer in their own life. They may be struggling with addiction or suffering from bullying, for example. Imagine a situation that would cause this person to suffer and begin to visualize it in your mind's eye. Sit with the feeling that this causes for a moment, and then put all of your energy into wishing them joy and happiness and an end to their suffering.

  • You may wish to silently offer phrases of compassion to them, saying things like "May you be free of pain and sorrow," or "May you be healthy and happy." You are free to alter the sayings so that they fit your own way of speaking or use any that have any personal significance. Following your meditation, dedicate your session to the benefit of all sentient beings.

Compassion for an Enemy

  • Now you can progress to developing compassion for someone that you have difficulty with in your life. This could be a parent or child that you have been arguing with lately, a boss who you do not get along with, or a roommate that is not doing their fair share of chores.

  • Even though you have negative feelings toward this person, begin thinking of how this person has suffered in their own life. You may have firsthand knowledge of their suffering—perhaps they lost someone they love or have recently been laid off. Visualize this person experiencing their suffering, and note how it makes you feel to witness it. Sit with that feeling for a moment, and then begin to cultivate compassion toward them. See if you can grow this feeling to be as strong as when you developed compassion for your loved one. If you are struggling to feel compassion toward this person, think of any positive interactions that you have had with them in the past that would help you wish them joy and happiness, such as times when you got along or laughed together.

  • You may wish to send them some positive vibes, thinking things like "May your health improve soon," or "May you have success at school." Following your meditation, dedicate your session to the benefit of all sentient beings.

Compassion for All Sentient Beings

  • This is the noblest form of compassion meditation; it is also the most difficult. In the Mahayana tradition of Buddhism, the concept of bodhicitta is extremely important. Bodhicitta is essentially the wish for all sentient beings to be free from suffering and the causes of suffering. Mayahana practitioners set the cultivation of bodhicitta as a primary goal for their practice—everything in life is done in order to seek enlightenment for the benefit of all sentient beings.

  • Expanding on the above meditations, the compassion meditation for all sentient beings includes the task of developing compassion for every single sentient being in the universe. This will be much easier to do after you have progressed through the previous meditations. Simply hold the concept of suffering in your mind and generate the feeling of goodwill toward all sentient beings. Then, send it outward to as far as you can possibly imagine. Really focus on putting as much positive energy into this act as possible, while remaining relaxed and mindful. And remember: this meditation will be most powerful when it is performed with true sincerity.

  • You can generate good karma by living your life with the honest intention of attaining enlightenment for the purpose of helping others. One way of doing that is finish your meditation by reciting prayers such as, "May all sentient beings be free from suffering and the causes of suffering", or "May all sentient beings have happiness and the causes of happiness." Following your meditation, dedicate your session to the benefit of all sentient beings.

Conclusion

It can be helpful to practice compassion meditation intuitively. The practice will likely be difficult at times for most people—even painful for some. This practice is not intended to make the practitioner feel that they are responsible for solving all of the world's problems, but rather to greet each moment with a compassionate heart. Relax as much as possible, be gentle with yourself, and breathe naturally. With each time that you practice compassion meditation, you are healing the world in a small way. Go easy on yourself and others, and good luck.

Namaste.

Weekend Thoughts - 1.20.18

Image by ntrief, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Image by ntrief, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

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

1. According to NASA, 2017 was the second-hottest year on record since 1880—with 2016 being the hottest. In fact, the six warmest years on record for the planet have occurred since 2010. Hopefully humanity will figure out a way to reverse this trend, by doing things like converting to renewable energy sources and consuming less animal products (which contribute a TON to climate change). However, we as individuals do not have to wait for the rest of the world to make changes. You can make lifestyle changes on your own, and if enough people do the same then it will make a noticeable impact.

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