Help Clean Up the Planet on Global Psychedelic Earth Day: An Interview with Kwasi Adusei

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Every year on April 22nd, various events are held all around the world to demonstrate support for environmental protection. Until now, there hasn’t been an Earth Day event that psychonauts could take part in to honor the Earth and bring attention to the concept of psychedelic plant medicine conservation. But that’s about to change.

That’s because Kwasi Adusei, the founder of the Psychedelic Society of Western New York, has organized a new psychedelic-focused Earth Day event named Global Psychedelic Earth Day that is taking place worldwide that will allow psychonauts to gather together and celebrate the preservation of our natural environment. I recently caught up with Kwasi to learn more about the history behind this innovative event and how people can get involved. 


First of all, thank you for taking the time to chat with me about your event. To begin, could you tell me a little bit about what Global Psychedelic Earth Day is and how you came up with the idea?

In my personal psychedelic travels, the inward journey found three common themes: take better care of yourself, take better care of others, and take better care of the planet. These themes highlight for me a quintessential truth of life—that we are all one. Based on this philosophy, the psychedelic society I founded in Western New York placed a priority on community service. We began doing regular cleanups of city streets and parks, started a community garden open to the public to source fresh fruits and vegetables, and volunteered in soup kitchens and homeless shelters when help was needed.

Motivated by the practice of community service, I sought to encourage other groups to integrate this model. The encouragement presented itself through the Global Psychedelic Month of Service, which I led by reaching out to psychedelic group organizers around the world, and marketed to individuals through campaigns with The Third Wave, Psymposia, and Psychedelics Today.

The success of that project inspired me to revisit a topic which I was introduced to at Psychedelic Science 2017, the issue of psychedelic plant conservation. Mother Earth provides us with healing medicines that have impacted cultures and individuals for millennia, but due to the widespread use of psychedelics, some of these medicines are experiencing a conservation crisis, particularly with peyote and ibogaine. It was something I never truly considered. Issues of conservation are widespread in nature, even with potable water, so why wouldn’t this be the case with psychedelics?

The notion inspired the Global Psychedelic Earth Day Cleanup, where we encourage psychedelic groups around the world to honor Mother Earth by organizing a community cleanup on Earth Day. In doing so, the project will draw attention to, and support for, the issue of psychedelic plant conservation.

Part of the focus of this event is on psychedelic plant medicine conservation. What is this concept and why should psychonauts know about it?

Using the attention from the cleanup, our website provides brief information and resources for follow up on psychedelic plant conservation issues. We have also created an avenue to receive donations that will support organizations working on the problem.

Peyote's natural range of distribution is located in the Chihuahuan Desert. Native people in and around this region have used peyote for at least 6000 years for its rich alkaloid content, including mescaline. With as many as 57 alkaloids present in any given specimen, peyote has been a staple used medicinally as a panacea by natives. It is a “free medicine” Native Americans have traditionally used because it grows wild and is a rich source of many beneficial alkaloids. The market for peyote has expanded dramatically in recent years and the “free medicine” has been exploited on an industrial scale. As a result, peyote has been over-harvested and is now on the vulnerable species list with the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN). Follow for more information, visit the Cactus Conservation Institute webpage.

And now, on to iboga. Ibogaine is the naturally occurring psychoactive substance found in a number of plants, principally in a member of the Apocynaceae family known as iboga. The primary method of production of ibogaine is through extraction from this plant source, which is endemic to the tropical rainforests of the Congo Basin in Equatorial Africa, principally Gabon. Recently there have been reports that iboga may be threatened in this natural habitat, and that access has decreased for traditional knowledge holders. If these reports are verified, the ramifications could be far-reaching, including considerations for the future availability of some aspects of ibogaine therapy, as well as for Gabonese culture.

In your opinion, what do you think makes environmentally-friendly events like this one especially important in today’s day and age?

Participating in events like this increases our awareness of our behavior. Increased awareness can lead to a shift in habits. For example, after organizing cigarette butt cleanups on one of our downtown streets, one of the participants mentioned that ever since, he no longer throws his cigarette butts on the ground. The state of our home is progressively declining. Our government has put this issue to the back burner, but we as individuals can step up and do our part.

Is this the first-ever Global Psychedelic Earth Day? Do you plan to continue organizing it in the future?

As far as I know, this is the first, but I intend to make this an annual event. My hope is to have every habitable continent represented as the years go by.

Organizing an event like this must be a lot of work! Could you go into detail about what your team has done to turn your vision into a reality?

Including me, the team consists of 6 people. Chase Conatser is a graphic designer based in New York City who developed images for social media marketing. Eugene Zollinger is a student at the SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry and runs the Facebook page, sharing articles about conservation issues, psychedelic and more, to educate the people. Jason Palevsky designed the website, and manages submissions for events so organizations that participate will be seen on the map located on our website. Prudence Haze is a psychedelic artist and has been helping to spread the project to individuals in psychedelic oriented groups on social media sites. Duane David, who was influential in the carrying the initiative forward, is founder of an Atlanta based group called the Society for the Exploration of Altered States. He has been helping to get the word out on the project to psychedelic group organizers around the world. In leading this project, I’ve been doing a little bit of everything!

Some people may want to create a cleanup in their own area but may not know where to start. Do you have any suggestions that someone could use when brainstorming what type of cleanup effort to focus on?

If anyone wants to start a cleanup of their own, talk to friends who might be interested in being a part of it, find a street, park, or river that might need some care and attention, create an event through Facebook or Meetup.com, and see who may be interested in joining. Recommended supplies are bags of different colors, one for recycling and one for garbage, gloves, and a small plastic bin in the event that needles are found, something that we’ve run into at a past cleanup.

Where can people go to learn more about Global Psychedelic Earth Day and how can they help support this project?

If people want to get involved, visit our website. There, you will see a link to donate, find a cleanup near you, host one, and learn more about the problem of psychedelic conservation. Also, you can check out our Facebook page.


I am very grateful to Kwasi for speaking with me about this exciting event. To learn more or get involved, check out the Global Psychedelic Earth Day website. You can also donate via Bitcoin or Paypal to help support the cause.

Image by jplenio, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Weekend Thoughts - 4.21.18

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

1. Another week, another update on Facebook's latest scandal. You may recall that two weeks ago I sided with John Gruber's opinion that the total number of users that were affected was likely more than 87 million—Facebook second publicly-admitted figure. Well, it turns out we were right. Apparently, far more than 87 million people had their private data harvested out of Facebook by political consulting firm Cambridge Analytica. Color me not surprised.

2. Earth has a growing problem with pollution, but one group of scientists may have found one solution that may help resolve the issue—a mutant enzyme that eats plastic. The enzyme was found accidentally when the scientists started investigating a bacterium that was found in a Japanese waste dump in 2016. The discovery of this enzyme is important, and putting it to use may prove to be a completely new way of tackling the pollution crisis on our planet.

3. I thought this was pretty neat—a TL;DR for Terms of Service called ToS;DR. It's a crowdsourced database that houses website terms of service that proves a letter grade (from Grades A to E) for each site you visit, based off of things like data-retention and the rights the site can assert regarding your contributions.

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

Image by SatyaPrem, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

This Week in Psychedelics - 4.20.18

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Cannabis

  • Trump To Support Major Marijuana Legislation (Marijuana Moment)
  • Cannabis Component Found in Breast Milk, but Does It Harm Baby? (Medscape)
  • Greens propose full legalisation of cannabis (The Guardian)
  • Senator Sanders Co-Sponsors The Marijuana Justice Act (NORML)
  • 'Cannabis strengthened our bond': can pot make you a better parent? (The Guardian)
  • Cannabis harm to teenagers' brains 'overstated', finds study (The Independent)
  • How Smoking Pot May Hurt the Teenage Brain (TIME)
  • Marijuana-based seizure treatment gets positive review from FDA (Chicago Tribune)
  • The Plan to Save California's Legendary Weed From 'Big Cannabis' (WIRED)
  • Trump is backing off the marijuana fight. Jeff Sessions has not. (The Cannabist)
  • Republicans eye getting in front of marijuana legalization (Michigan Radio)
  • House GOP Blocks Another Marijuana Amendment (Marijuana Moment)
  • Meta-analysis: Cannabis Exposure Not Associated With Residual Adverse Impact On Cognitive Performance (NORML)
  • MassRoots reports net loss of $44 million in 2017 (The Cannabist)
  • Here's Where Your Colorado Marijuana Tax Dollars Go (Westword)
  • Meghan Markle's nephew developing special cannabis strain for royal wedding (The Independent)
  • Oregon Grew More Cannabis Than Customers Can Smoke. Now Shops and Farmers Are Left With Mountains of Unwanted Bud. (Willamette Week)
  • High Times Cannabis Cup 4/20 event rejected in Southern California (NBC)
  • Australia's Medicinal Cannabis Patients Will Get 48-Hour Access...In A Few Months (BuzzFeed News)
  • Legal highs: arguments for and against legalising cannabis in Australia (The Conversation)
  • Bipartisan Legislation Introduced To Facilitate Medical Cannabis Trials For Veterans (NORML)
  • Spliff, a film festival for stoners, by stoners (Boing Boing)
  • Black and Indigenous people are overrepresented in Canada’s weed arrests (VICE)
  • Exclusive analysis: Only one in seven California cities allow recreational marijuana stores (The Mercury-News)
  • The Philosopher's Stoned: An Interview with Liber 420 Author Chris Bennett (Reality Sandwich)
  • The new 4/20: Beyond legalizing it (CNN)
  • Metric Coffee Unveils Cannabis Cold Brew on 4/20 (Eater)
  • Why it can be okay to call it ‘marijuana’ instead of ‘cannabis’ (The Verge)
  • What John Boehner's Pivot On Cannabis Tells Us About The Legal Weed Boom (NPR)
  • Drug Made From Cannabis Plant Gets Backing From FDA Staff (Bloomberg)
  • Medical cannabis treatment: Mother starts a petition for her child (Sunday Express)
  • Pennsylvania to Make Whole-Plant Cannabis Flower Available to Patients (Leafly)
  • Medical cannabis access simplified under unified state agreement (Small Caps)

LSD

  • 75 Years After First LSD Trip, Psychedelic Science is Making a Comeback (Seeker)
  • What Do Blind People 'See' When They Take LSD? (Live Science)
  • The Strange History of Bicycle Day (Slate)
  • What was Project MKUltra? Inside the CIA's mind-control program (Big Think)

Psilocybin/Magic Mushrooms

  • We talked with a researcher using psilocybin to treat cocaine addiction in Alabama (Psymposia)
  • Would You Take Mushrooms With Your Mom? Meet One Woman Who Did and Made a Movie About It (PAPER)

MDMA/Ecstasy

Ayahuasca/DMT

  • Can Drinking Ayahuasca Really Change Your Life? (Chacruna)
  • Controversies Around the Toad Medicine (Chacruna)

Iboga/Ibogaine

  • Treatment utilizing psychedelic drug ibogaine significantly reduces opioid withdrawal and cravings (PsyPost)
  • Matthew Mellon was trying controversial addiction treatment before death (Page Six)

Dissociatives

  • Ketamine has 'fast-acting benefits' for depression (BBC News)
  • Ketamine Nasal Spray for Suicide Prevention Raises Serious Concerns (Inverse)

Opiates/Opioids

  • It's legal to manufacture cocaine and heroin for medical use — and Britain is the world's biggest exporter (Business Insider)
  • How France Cut Heroin Overdoses by 79 Percent in 4 Years (The Atlantic)
  • Drug users to soon have all-hours access to syringes in Ballarat (The Courier)
  • A Drug to End Addiction? Scientists Are Working on It. (The New York Times)
  • The War on Opioids Probably Helped Kill Prince (Reason)
  • U.S. has been quietly helping Mexico with new, high-tech ways to fight opium (Albuquerque Journal)
  • Medicaid Is Helping to Combat the Opioid Crisis, Despite Trump's Attacks (Truthout)
  • Did ancient Mesopotamians get high? Near Eastern rituals may have included opium, cannabis (Science Magazine)
  • As Opioid Prescriptions Fall, Opioid Deaths Rise (Reason)
  • Maine Lawmakers Clash With Governor Over Naloxone Access (The Wall Street Journal)
  • Naloxone-access programs miss many opioid users (Reuters)
  • The Surgeon General Wants More Naloxone, Now What (ModernMedicine)
  • Public Defender Foils Prosecutor’s Murder Charge in Drug Overdose (Injustice Today)

Kratom

Miscellaneous Psychedelics/Psychoactives/Drug Policy

  • Canada's Liberal party considers decriminalization of all illicit drugs (The Guardian)
  • Drug trafficking by Kiwis using dark web is booming - report (Newshub)
  • These Teens Are Taking A Class On Drugs That Is Definitely Not What Trump Had In Mind (BuzzFeed News)
  • Will psychedelics go corporate like cannabis? (Herb)
  • Beyond Psychedelics 2018: Interview with Eva Césarová (Psychedelic Times)
  • The case for decriminalizing drugs (The Star)
  • Will El Chapo’s Arrest Make the Drug Trade More Deadly? (Reason)
  • Tripping on drugs like ayahuasca and shrooms ‘might be cultural appropriation’ (Metro)
  • An Audio Harm Reduction Guide For Psychedelic Psychotherapy (Chacruna)

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.

Image by Dahtamnay, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Happy 420 from Think Wilder

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I just wanted to take a moment to wish all of my readers a Happy 420 this year! If you choose to use cannabis or any psychedelics to celebrate this year, make sure you are responsible. And you can click here to check out the 420 post I wrote a couple years ago that explains the origin behind the holiday a little bit.

Image by GDJ, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

75th Anniversary of Bicycle Day

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This blog post was originally published two years ago. It is being re-published in celebration of the 75th anniversary of Bicycle Day.

 

Happy Bicycle Day everyone! For those of you that are unaware, April 19th is a day of celebration in the psychedelic community because it signifies the day that Albert Hofmann, the creator of LSD, took his first intentional LSD trip back in 1943.

You see, Hofmann first synthesized LSD (lysergic acid diethylamide) on November 16, 1938 in the Sandoz laboratories in Basel, Switzerland. He was researching lysergic acid derivatives to obtain a respiratory and circulatory stimulant (an analeptic). The chemical was set aside for nearly five years until April 16, 1943, when Hofmann decided to revisit it. While re-synthesizing a new batch of LSD, he accidentally absorbed a small amount through his fingertips and found that it had powerful effects, which he described as being:

"... affected by a remarkable restlessness, combined with a slight dizziness. At home I lay down and sank into a not unpleasant intoxicated-like condition, characterized by an extremely stimulated imagination. In a dreamlike state, with eyes closed (I found the daylight to be unpleasantly glaring), I perceived an uninterrupted stream of fantastic pictures, extraordinary shapes with intense, kaleidoscopic play of colors. After about two hours this condition faded away."

Three days later, on April 19, he decided to intentionally increase the dose for a self-experiment, at a level that he thought would be a minuscule dose—250 micrograms (an actual threshold dose is 20 micrograms). This is a fairly large dose in actuality, and it hit him like a ton of bricks. Less than an hour later, he began experiencing abrupt and intense changes in perception, and asked his laboratory assistant to accompany him home. The personal use of motor vehicles was restricted because this was during World War II, and the pair had to make the journey by bicycle.

During the bicycle ride, Hofmann struggled with difficult emotions and thoughts, believing that his next-door neighbor was a malevolent witch, that he was going insane, that LSD had poisoned him, among other anxious thoughts. A house doctor was called for, who could find no physical abnormalities aside from Hofmann's extremely dilated pupils. This reassured Hofmann, who later wrote:

"... Little by little I could begin to enjoy the unprecedented colors and plays of shapes that persisted behind my closed eyes. Kaleidoscopic, fantastic images surged in on me, alternating, variegated, opening and then closing themselves in circles and spirals, exploding in colored fountains, rearranging and hybridizing themselves in constant flux..."

So how does one celebrate Bicycle Day? Well, there isn't really a defined method of celebration, but one could take LSD, ride a bicycle, check out Hofmann's book My Problem Child, donate to MAPS to support psychedelic research or to Erowid to support harm reduction and drug education, attend a local psychedelic dinner, or spread the word about any of these things. At any rate, be safe in whatever you do, and Happy Bicycle Day!

Image by lab604, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.