Psychedelics

Field Trip and MAPS to Study Treating Eating Disorders With MDMA

Psilocybin Alpha:

Field Trip expects its Toronto location will be used as a trial site for the Anorexia Nervosa arm of MAPS’ Eating Disorder Study, which has been approved by Health Canada.

During the study, Field Trip would host MAPS-trained therapists who would provide MDMA-assisted therapy.

Although I can see MDMA being helpful for eating disorders, something tells me that a classical psychedelic like psilocybin mushrooms, ayahuasca, or LSD would be more effective for this particular condition. Still encouraging to see more research being conducted though. Hopefully through studies like this we will eventually figure out which psychedelics are best for which applications.


Study Finds Ketamine Can Reduce Severity of PTSD Symptoms

Newswise:

Repeated intravenous (IV) ketamine infusions significantly reduce symptom severity in individuals with chronic post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and the improvement is rapid and maintained for several weeks afterwards, according to a study conducted by researchers from the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai. The study, published January 5 in the American Journal of Psychiatry, is the first randomized, controlled trial of repeated ketamine administration for chronic PTSD and suggests this may be a promising treatment for PTSD patients.

Mount Sinai sure isn’t wasting any time.

The real question is: what’s better for treating PTSD—MDMA, ketamine, or a different psychedelic drug altogether?


Best Music Playlists for Psychedelic Therapy Explored in Johns Hopkins Study

Ben Adlin, writing for Marijuana Moment:

Analyzing a 10-person trial involving the use of psilocybin therapy to help people quit smoking tobacco, the Johns Hopkins team compared sessions featuring classical music with those involving overtone-based music, featuring instruments such as gongs, Tibetan singing bowls or the didgeridoo, among others.

“Although we found no significant differences between the two musical genres studied here,” the team wrote, “several trends suggested that the overtone-based playlist resulted in somewhat better outcomes and was preferred by a larger portion of this small sample of participants.”

In other words, while the results don’t prove that overtone-based music yields better outcomes than classical, the findings nevertheless “call into question whether Western classical music typically played in psychedelic sessions holds unique benefit.”

For a long time many people have held the opinion that classical music is optimal for psychedelic therapy. This new study out of Johns Hopkins didn’t find evidence to support that claim.

In my own psychedelic practice I have experimented with a wide variety of musical genres, including classical, jazz, ambient, electronic, hip hop, metal, bluegrass, and many more. I have found some of them to be more capable of engendering a therapeutic experience than others, especially those that have little-to-no lyrical content. It’s definitely worth experimenting with different types of music during your psychedelic journeys in my opinion, and if you’re not up for curating your own music then there are a ton of psychedelic therapy music playlists out there to check out.


The Psychedelic Guru Who Stormed the Capitol

Brian Pace, writing for Psymposia:

In the 2009 Canadian film Wild Hunt, a live action role-playing game (LARP) goes wrong when a character playing Murtagh, a Viking shaman-king, abandons his real identity and takes psychedelic mushrooms with his companions, descending from play-fighting into into an orgy of real violence. Proving once again that life imitates art, those long-dismissed as right-wing patriot LARPers took over the United States Capitol building, resulting in the evacuation of legislators assembled to certify the election of President-elect Joe Biden, and four confirmed deaths at the time of writing.

Among the insurgents was a man dressed as an approximation of a patriot Viking shaman, wearing a horned headdress, red, white, and blue face paint, and sporting large black tattoos. He postured like a conqueror on the rostrum of the Senate chamber, in a fleeting moment of symbolic power. His name is Jake Angeli (born Jacob Anthony Angeli Chansely), also known as Yellowstone Wolf, Loan Wolf, and sometimes “The Q Shaman.” While Angeli was just one member of the group that stormed the Capitol, he is unique for being the only known self-ordained psychedelic guru of the bunch. His shamanic cosplay wasn’t just an act—it’s another example of the dangerous consequences of mixing psychedelics and far-right ideology.

There’s no denying that people all up and down the political spectrum use psychedelics, and Angeli’s just the latest example of the fact that right-wingers are also down to dose.

Having followed Psymposia’s previous work about the phenomenon of psychedelic use by the far-right, I can’t say I was too surprised to see this news, but it certainly doesn’t make it any less depressing.


Mount Sinai Launches Center for Psychedelic Research

Psilocybin Alpha:

The Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai has launched a new center for psychedelics research. The Center for Psychedelic Psychotherapy and Trauma Research pursues a multipronged clinical and research approach to discovering novel and more efficacious therapies for post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), depression, anxiety, and other stress-related conditions in the veteran and civilian population. The Center will focus on studying MDMA, psilocybin, and other psychedelic compounds.

This is exciting news. The more psychedelic research centers the better, as far as I’m concerned.