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Weekend Thoughts - 8.6.16

Image by Radosław Kut, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Image by Radosław Kut, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

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

1. When flossing was first introduced as a dental care technique, there was no proof required when suggesting remedies. As a result, the majority of us in the Western world have been taught by our parents (who learned from our dentists and the mainstream media) that flossing is an essential technique. However, it turns out that an analysis of the scientific evidence did not find that flossing prevents gum disease and cavities. Due to this finding, the federal government's "Dietary Guidelines for Americans" will no longer list suggestions for flossing, much to the dismay of the American Dental Association, which still advocates for the practice. This simply means that the recommendation has been removed from the guidelines due to a lack of scientific evidence. But it doesn't mean that flossing doesn't actually help prevent gum disease and cavities—there is just currently a lack of scientific evidence, so the government has to remove the recommendation unless a new body of evidence is presented that will back up the claim.

2. As a young nerd, I had a subscription to the video game magazine Nintendo Power for several years. I gave away my collection of magazines a few years ago in an ongoing attempt to lessen my physical possessions and assumed I would never see them again. However, the first 13 years of the magazine have now been added to Archive.org. Fellow nerds can take a trip down memory lane (or explore them for the first time) by perusing the Archive.org collection.

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

This Week in Psychedelics - 1.1.16

Image by Dahtamnay, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Image by Dahtamnay, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Cannabis

  • A Look Back at 2015; and Ahead to 2016 (NORML)
  • Marijuana Legalization 2016: Which States Will Consider Cannabis This Year? (International Business Times)
  • Best Marijuana Moments of 2015 (ATTN:)
  • California Gets Ready for Legal Marijuana (Reason)
  • FDA Weighs in on Rescheduling Cannabis (Leafly)
  • The 10 States Where It's Easiest to Get Weed (ATTN:)
  • Exchanging Pot Brownies for 'Donations' Is Still a Crime in D.C. (Reason)
  • Parents find success treating kids' epilepsy, autism with cannabis oil (Vancouver Sun)
  • Colorado Cannabis Credit Union Demands Access to the Federal Reserve System (Reason)
  • Nonprofit gives out A THOUSAND free joints to homeless stoners for Christmas in Denver (Daily Mail)
  • Kosher Marijuana: New York Company Says Medical Cannabis Conforms To Jewish Dietary Law (International Business Times)
  • Congress Did Not Legalize Medical Marijuana (Reason)
  • Should Grandma Smoke Pot? (Reset.me)
  • 2015: The Year In Review – NORML's Top 10 Events That Shaped Marijuana Policy (NORML)
  • Crossing the green line: The first cannabis company on Wall Street (The Telegraph)
  • Colorado Settlement Suggests RICO Nuisance Suits Will Hinder Legal Pot Industry (Reason)
  • Colleges Ease Athlete Punishments for Cannabis (Leafly)
  • Now You Can Buy Kosher Marijuana (TIME)
  • The Difference Between Indica and Sativa (ATTN:)
  • 5 Ways Cannabis Creams Help You Chill (Civilized)
  • After 6 months, stakeholders assess Minnesota medical cannabis program (Twin Cities)
  • Indoor farming: Good for cannabis, not so good for food (Gigaom)
  • Six Resolutions for the Cannabis Community in the New Year (Willamette Week)
  • Cannabis Can Gives Free Pot to the Homeless on Christmas Eve (Westword)
  • Mentor Capital Has Five Best Congressional Cannabis Resolutions (Business Wire)
  • NORML's Weekly Legislative Round Up (NORML)
  • World's first kosher cannabis will let Jewish people enjoy medical marijuana (Mirror)
  • Doctors urge cannabis caution for children with chronic diseases (The Vancouver Sun)
  • Summer sun prompts police warning about cannabis growers (Manawatu Standard)
  • Latest: Trio charged for possession of over $10M worth of cannabis (Antigua Observer)
  • ChocoHigh! Chocolate with cannabis goes on sale in Siberia for $3 a bar (RT)
  • Boy, eight, 'kept locked in a tiny shed on illegal cannabis farm was left there forgotten for THREE WEEKS with just chips and a box of muesli bars' (Daily Mail)

LSD

  • Animator dropped acid while creating 'Return of the Jedi' (New York Post)
  • An Interview with the Author of Psychedelic Psychiatry: LSD From Clinic to Campus (Slice Today)
  • Oscar-winning Star Wars animator admits he took LSD while working on 'Return Of The Jedi' (Raw Story)
  • Phil Tippet Took LSD While Animating 'Return of the Jedi' (Inverse)
  • A 'Star Wars' Animator Admits He Took LSD While Working On 'Return Of The Jedi' (Maxim)

MDMA/Ecstasy

  • Ask the Lawyer: Drug penalties depend on what member knows about drug (Military Times)
  • Five youths rushed to hospital after taking ecstasy at Aberdeenshire house party (Press and Journal)
  • MDMA warning to Southport's clubbers (Southport Visiter)
  • Nigerian Sentenced To Death For Drugs Smuggling In Malaysia (NAIJ)
  • 16-year-old using a wheelchair after taking Ecstasy (The San Fransisco Globe)
  • Teen accused of intending to supply ecstasy at Field Day music festival granted strict bail (Courier Mail)
  • The new party drug threat you NEED to know about (LOOK)
  • Police issue warning amid fears of dangerous batch of ecstasy (The Independent)
  • Teenager charged over supplying ecstasy at Boxing Day races at Broadmeadow (Newcastle Herald)

Ayahuasca/DMT

  • Ayahuasca: a Possible Cure for Alcoholism and Depression (Motherboard)
  • Effects of Long-Term Ayahuasca Administration on Memory and Anxiety in Rats (PLoS)
  • Portland Fuckboy in Band Called 'Black Pussy' Says Psychedelic Drug DMT Will Cure 'PC Culture' (The Muse)

Synthetic Cannabinoids/Psychoactive Research Chemicals

Dissociatives

  • Ketamine To Be Helpful in Depression And Overeating (Capitalberg)
  • Rat Study IDs Brain Circuit Activated By Ketamine (PsychCentral)
  • An Anthem for Ketamine (EMSWorld)
  • Why overeating tends to make us depressed (Free Malaysia Today)
  • Man on PCP gets on KCATA bus, says he's been shot (KMBC)
  • Ketamine May Aid Antidepressant Development (Pharmacy Times)
  • Ketamine worth Rs 2.5 crore seized in Bhiwadi factory raid (The Times of India)
  • Vet office burglarized for second time in month (Daily Journal)
  • Powerful anesthetic drugs stolen in Indiana animal hospital burglaries (WTTV)

Opiates/Opioids

  • FDA Comments on Nasal Naloxone Dose Concerns (MedPage Today)
  • Good and Bad News on the Heroin Front (Patch)
  • Heroin for the Holidays (Reason)
  • Portraits Of Those Killed By Heroin Bring Healing And Awareness (NPR)
  • Law freeing drug antidote for public use has saved hundreds of lives (The News & Observer)
  • Cape Cod: America's Heroin Hot Spot (The Daily Beast)
  • 'I have been reborn': Recovering young addict offers hope to others (Today)
  • HBO's 'Heroin' Is a Harrowing, Necessary Documentary About Addicted Teens (Flavorwire)
  • Fentanyl suspected cause of dozens of overdoses in BC (The Globe and Mail)

Absinthe

  • Five things you thought you knew about absinthe (Los Angeles Times)
  • Vom Fass sells absinthe, liqueurs and flavored oils on the Plaza (The Pitch)

Kratom

  • Rapid Use of Kratom in Western Countries (Kratom Guides)
  • Kratom Being an 'Organic' Opiate Withdrawal Solution – 100% Works (Kratom Guides)

Kava

Khat

  • Tanzania: Police Destroy Khat Farms in Operation (All Africa)
  • Bids to smuggle khat, marijuana foiled; five persons arrested (Muscat Daily)

Miscellaneous Psychedelics/Psychoactives/Drug Policy

  • The Year's Best Drug Scares (Reason)
  • Music Fesivals, Drugs And Pill Testing (The Huffington Post)
  • The best psychedelic videos of 2015 (The Daily Psychedelic Video)
  • The Puzzling Persistence of Pee Tests (Reason)
  • Beyond Zero and One: Machines, Psychedelics, and Consciousness by Andrew Smart review - inside the minds of computers (The Guardian)
  • Toad venom on filmmaker's menu (Echo Net Daily)
  • Skateboarders and Artists Totally Flipped an Abandoned Church Into a Psychedelic Skatepark (RYOT)
  • Psychedelic Themed Nintendo is The New Trend (Clapway)
  • Why NASA released this psychedelic, technicolor video of Pluto (The Washington Post)
  • See: NASA's New Horizons paints Pluto in psychedelic Christmas colors (IBNLive)
  • NASA releases psychedelic new footage of Pluto, capture by New Horizons (Blastr)

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.

A Very Mushroom Christmas

Image by JLS Photography - Alaska, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

There has been an intriguing and controversial Christmas origin story popping up on the Internet for the past few years that I wanted to share with the Think Wilder audience—could it be that several Christmas traditions are actually based on the experience of eating amanita muscaria (also commonly referred to as "fly agaric", "Mario", or "toadstool") psychedelic mushrooms? Please note that although this theory is interesting and seemingly plausible, there isn't really any solid scientific evidence or historical consensus, so please take this information with a grain of salt!

Amanita Muscaria: An Introduction

Most people are able to recognize the amanita muscaria mushroom in the wild—it has a white-gilled stalk and a (usually) red cap with white polka dots. In the Nintendo Entertainment System platform game Super Mario Bros., it is the mushroom that Mario eats to grow bigger. The mushroom is sometimes classified as poisonous, but reports of human deaths from eating amanitas are extremely rare. It is also known for its psychedelic properties, with the primary psychoactive chemical being a substance called muscimol. This is a completely different chemical that the one found in traditional psychedelic "magic mushrooms", which contain the psychoactive chemical psilocybin.

There is a clear historical use of amanitas by the people of Siberia, who used the fungi as an intoxicant and entheogen. It is speculated that people in other regions, such as the Middle East, Eurasia, North America, and Scandinavia, also consumed these fungi. There is a wide range of classifications that can be attributed to these fungi: depressant, sedative-hypnotic, dissociative, and deliriant. Perceptual phenomena such as macropsia and micropsia, which are the feelings of growing larger or shrinking in size, have also been observed, similar to Alice's experience in the famous Lewis Carroll novel Alice's Adventures in Wonderland.

Regarding toxicity, a fatal dose of amanitas is estimated to be around 15 caps. Poisoning has occurred with young children and people who attempted to consume the mushroom for a psychedelic experience. Older books sometimes warn that amanitas are "deadly", but this is in error and implies the mushroom is more toxic than it is in reality—according to the North American Mycological Association, there were no reliably documented fatalities from eating this mushroom during the 20th century and modern medical treatment is able to assist with the accidental ingestion of this mushroom. The vast majority (90% or more) of mushroom poisoning comes from eating the greenish to yellowish "death cap" or one of several white amanita species which are known as "destroying angels".  However, I do wish to be clear here—do not attempt to consume wild mushrooms without the assistance of a mycologist, or someone who has experience with identifying mushrooms.

Following this introduction to the amanita muscaria mushroom, now we can explore the many reasons people believe it is directly related to Christmas:

Flying Reindeer

Siberian reindeer consume various types of mushrooms throughout the year, but during the winter months they seem to enjoy eating amanitas and prancing around, wandering aimlessly and twitching their heads.  It is said that packs of reindeer search for hours to locate the mushrooms under the snow. Upon finding one, a reindeer will consume the mushroom and allow the other reindeer to drink his urine in an effort to share the psychedelic experience. Amanitas supposedly have a more pleasant psychedelic effect after they have been processed through the body once, as they carry a heavy body load and take a lot of work for the body to break down. It is very common to consume amanitas by drinking the urine of someone else who has already consumed them, and it is possible for the psychedelic properties to be passed through multiple rounds of urine before they are completely gone.

The people of Siberia most likely observed this typical reindeer behavior and followed suit by consuming the yellow snow cones that the reindeer create on the ground with their urine. Later, the shamans learned to eat the mushrooms themselves and drink the urine of those who have already consumed the mushrooms. Throughout history, humans have learned to use medicinal and psychoactive plants by observing wild animals and imitating their behavior.

The Siberian people revered these mushrooms for their ability to attract the reindeer, which were used to make clothing, shelter, and weapons (made from antlers), and were also consumed for sustenance. The hunters may have even learned to intentionally place the mushrooms in hunting locations to use as bait.

Santa Claus

There are several connections between Santa Claus and the amanita muscaria mushroom, starting with his name. Saint Nicholas (or "Old Saint Nick", as he is often called) is the patron "saint of children" in Siberia and supplanted the indigenous shamans who used these mushrooms. The red and white colors of Santa's suit matches the color of the mushroom's cap. However, critics of this point have pointed out that the color of Santa's suit has not always been red and white. Regardless, Siberian shamans traditionally wore red and white clothing to symbolize their relationship with these mushrooms.

Beyond the history of Saint Nicholas and the color of his suit, Santa is said to come down the chimney, similar to the mushroom-eating Siberian shamans, who also entered the medieval peasants' yurts from the top (a yurt's door and chimney became one in the same when snow piled up past the front door). The shamans even traditionally carried the mushrooms in a sack (like Santa's bag of toys) and brought them into peasants' homes through the "smoke hole" for others to enjoy. In addition, the mushrooms themselves sprout out of a white oval sack.

Santa's jolly cheer, "Ho ho ho!" is similar to the ecstatic laugh of someone who is under the influence of a psychedelic substance, and his ruddy complexion could be attributed to someone who has consumed an amanita muscaria mushroom, since it causes the skin to be flushed and glowing. Or perhaps Santa has just been drinking a fair amount of spiked egg nog? Either way, maybe he shouldn't be driving that sleigh!

Speaking of the sleigh, its origin may have come from a hallucination of flight caused by when humans consumed these mushrooms at the same time as the reindeer and noticed them prancing around in front of them. It is also possible that the sleigh is simply a metaphor for the shaman's "trip" to a celestial realm that occurs after ingesting the mushrooms. After all, Santa lives at the North Pole, which scientists claim is magnetically drifting to the area of the globe where Siberia is located.

The Christmas Tree and Decorations

Amanita muscaria mushrooms have a symbiotic relationship with pine trees and are often found growing directly beneath them. The ancient lore of Northern Europe describes them as "red presents under the tree". It makes sense that we would place our actual gifts under the tree nowadays, to memorialize (albeit mostly subconsciously) the gifts from the Earth in the form of these mushrooms.

In addition to placing gifts under a Christmas tree, other Christmas decorations also have a historical connection to these mushrooms. Typically the red and white mushrooms were strung on the hearth of the fireplace or on nearby pine trees to dry—today we similarly hang Christmas stockings, ornaments, and tinsel as seasonal decorations.

Amanita Muscaria: The Recap

As you can see, there are many tangible connections between amanita muscaria mushrooms and the Christmas holiday we celebrate today. Keep this theory in mind as you enjoy today's celebrations and let your friends and family know that the origins of flying reindeer, Santa Claus, and even the decorations they hang may in fact be directly inspired by psychedelic mushroom trips, taken long ago by shamans in Siberia!