TERRAFORMING TERRA
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A model farm template is imagined as the central methodology. A broad range of timely science news and other topics of interest are commented on.
Wednesday, November 14, 2018
‘Microdosers’ of LSD and magic mushrooms are wiser and more creative
We have several natural substances which are clearly mind altering. Micro dosing has been indicated as a useful clinical methodology to assist the brain to make beneficial changes.
Recall that the brain evolves slowly to stimulus such as education. Even memory evolves inside the brain. Thus the case for micro dosing is compelling as we can monitor those changes far better that way.
A PTSD patient has pretty specific issues that are readily observed and identified. Applying small doses of CBD and mapping those changes is a far better strategy than simply going for it. You will arrive at the same destination, but the brain will have the time to make all the internal alterations.
The same applies for LSD and THC and even alcohol.
A significant take home here is that this all needs to become mainstream to support mind development generally even with the clearly healthy and successful.
‘Microdosers’ of LSD and magic mushrooms are wiser and more creative
Books such as Ayelet Waldman’s A Really Good Day and Michael Pollan’s How to Change Your Mind have drawn popular attention to the practise of ‘microdosing’ psychedelics.
(Shutterstock) https://theconversation.com/microdosers-of-lsd-and-magic-mushrooms-are-wiser-and-more-creative-101302
PhD student in Clinical Psychology, York University, Canada
Disclosure statement
The authors do not work for, consult, own shares in or
receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from
this article, and have disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their
academic appointment.
We just ran the first ever pre-registered scientific study on the microdosing of psychedelics and found some very promising results.
We compared people who microdose — that is, who take a psychedelic
substance such as LSD (lysergic acid diethylamide) or “magic” mushrooms
(psilocybin) in very small quantities — with those who don’t, and
found that microdosers had healthier scores on key mental health and
well-being measures.
No matter the substance, microdosing implies a dose so low that the
individual experiences only subtle changes, not hallucinations. People
are not “tripping” on a microdose; they just go about their regular day,
whether that means studying at school, going to work or taking care of
the kids at home. Microdosers score higher on
‘wisdom,’ meaning the ability to consider multiple perspectives, be in
tune with their emotions and feel a sense of connection.(Shutterstock)
There has been no published science on whether microdosing works, but
despite this, microdosing for self-enhancement and mental health has
hit the media.
For example, a 2016 article in Wired magazine
described young professionals in San Francisco and Silicon Valley
microdosing to enhance their creativity and focus, and to gain a
competitive advantage.
No experimental study has evaluated psychedelic microdosing, and neither did we.
Randomized placebo-controlled trials
are needed to talk definitively about the effects of microdosing. In
the meantime, we investigated the experiences of people who already
microdose.
Our survey investigated the relationship between microdosing
psychedelics and mental health. We recruited participants online,
especially from Reddit’s microdosing community.
We asked our study participants about their microdosing patterns by having them fill in some questionnaires. As firm believers in Open Science, we have openly shared all our materials and you can find them here. Our findings are soon to be published in Psychopharmacology and you can access the preprint here.
They were also more creative and open. If wisdom is tricky, creativity is even more so. In this case, creativity meant finding unusual uses
for regular household objects: A brick and a knife. Microdosers came up
with more useful, unusual and unique uses for these objects. This is a
well-validated measure of divergent thinking, though certainly not the be-all and end-all of creativity. Microdosing could involve the placebo effect. We need randomized placebo-controlled trials to test its safety and efficacy.(Shutterstock) Microdosers also scored lower on measures of dysfunctional attitudes and negative emotionality. What does that mean?
Microdosers endorsed less of these unhealthy beliefs. Likewise, high
negative emotionality means a higher likelihood of having a mental health disorder, and microdosers had lower negative emotionality.
An exciting future for clinical science
Our results are promising. As promising as they seem, we don’t know whether microdosing actually caused any of these differences.
Maybe people with better mental health were more likely to experiment
with microdosing, or perhaps there is some unknown cause that made
people both more likely to microdose and to be creative.
At this point, we simply don’t know what caused the differences
between the groups — just that these differences existed. We need to
run controlled lab studies to actually find out.
Our preliminary work also shows that people report downsides
to microdosing. For example, some people found microdosing increased
anxiety and mood-instability; increased aches, pains and
gastrointestinal distress were also relatively common.
The most common drawback was that microdosing is illegal. Did we forget to mention that? Yes, psychedelics are totally illegal!
LSD and psilocybin were made illegal in the 1971 UN Convention on Psychotropic Substances and remain so today.
The exact laws differ depending on where you live, and using analogue
substances can sometimes be a legal grey area but, for the most part,
microdosing makes you a criminal.
What we need now are controlled lab experiments — randomized placebo-controlled trials of psychedelic microdosing to test safety and efficacy. Microdosing research, alongside full-dose psychedelics, promises an exciting future for clinical science and the study of human flourishing.
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