What is magic mushrooms and what is psilocybin? Worldwide, more than 180 species of mushrooms produce psilocybin, likely as a defense strategy.
This is the map of a typical human brain, and this is the map of a brain on psilocybin, the psychoactive compound in magic psilocybin mushrooms.
All those new connections you can see don't just make people trip. They're also the reason that psilocybin is one of today's most talked-about drugs in certain medical circles. Scientists believe that psilocybin may dampen the appetite of predatory insects like ants so that they feel full long before eating their way through the entire mushroom. Humans, on the other hand, well, they trip. Psilocybin is a so-called classic psychedelic, so it's in the same category as drugs like LSD and works in the brain in basically the same way. When you take psilocybin, your gut converts it into another chemical, known as psilocin, which binds to serotonin receptors called 2A, and experts think that's what triggers what they call neuronal avalanching. It's essentially a domino effect of different changes in the brain.
You've got increased activity in the visual cortex, which leads to changes in your perception, and then decreased network activity in the default mode network, which leads to a loss of ego. And that may be why people often report at high doses a profound sense of unity, transcending beyond themselves. But perhaps most importantly, psilocybin increases connectivity among different regions of the brain. Because of that receptor activation, there is a profound change in the way that different areas of the brain synchronize with each other. Think of it like an orchestra. Normally, the brain has different musical groups that each play independently. A sextet there, here's a quartet there. This one's playing jazz. This one's classical, and a number of other ones. But once psilocybin enters, it's like you suddenly have a conductor. So there is this communication between areas that are normally kind of compartmentalized and doing their own thing. Scientists believe that it's a combination of these effects that make psilocybin so useful for combating depression and addiction. When new areas in the brain start talking to each other, for example, you might have new insights into old problems. And that's why some experts describe tripping as a condensed version of talk therapy. And then dissolving your ego, Can be profoundly healing.
GOOD EFFECT OF PSILOCYBIN IN MAGIC MUSHROOMS
And
there's actually an increasing amount of research to prove it. In two studies
published in 2016, researchers gave cancer patients with depression a large
dose of psilocybin, and even six months later, at least 80% of them showed
significant decreases in depressed mood. And research on addiction is equally promising. In a study led by Johnson, 15
volunteers took psilocybin to quit smoking, and after six months, 80% of them
had kicked the habit, compared to a rate of about 35% for the drug varenicline,
which is widely considered the best smoking-cessation drug out there. Yet
despite these results, psilocybin is still listed as a Schedule I drug, a
category reserved for compounds that have no currently accepted medical use and
a high potential for abuse. Now, taking magic mushrooms recreational does
come with some risks. So a dramatic example would be driving under the
influence of psilocybin or using it in a way that interferes with your job, or
your family relations, or your schoolwork, for example. But as far as scientists
know, long-term use doesn't damage the brain in the way that other drugs can,
and according to at least one study, it's actually the safest drug out there.
In 2018, for example, just 0.3% of people who reported taking them needed
medical emergency treatment, compared to 0.9% for ecstasy and 1.3% for alcohol.
Taken altogether, that's why some states across the country have campaigned to
decriminalize psilocybin, including Denver, which, in May of 2019, became the
first ever to succeed.
Psilocybin as a treatment for
depression
Discussions are on-going about
whether psychological specialists can use psilocybin and similar hallucinogens
as a treatment for depression.
Two very recent studies have looked
at psilocybin as a treatment. One study examined the ability of psilocybin to
reduce depression symptoms without dulling emotions, and the other assessed the
relationship between any positive therapeutic outcomes and the nature of
psilocybin-induced hallucinations.
While some researchers are
looking into some therapeutic uses for psilocybin, they still, at present,
regard psilocybin as unsafe and illegal.
Risks of using psilocybin in magic mushrooms
People who have taken
psilocybin in uncontrolled settings might engage in reckless behavior, such as
driving while intoxicated.
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When taking magic mushroom, while hallucinating under the effect of magic mushroom, is the person operating with his full brain (in other words fully aware where he/she is, and that this is an effect) or just under the control of his subconscious brain?
In other words, does the Magic Mushroom give a lucid dream effect?? if so, how much awareness?? 50%? 70%? 90%?
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