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Magic Mushrooms: Study Says They Help Some See Their Spiritual Side

MALCOLM RITTER   07/ 1/08 09:59 AM ET   AP

Fear And Loathing

NEW YORK — In 2002, at a Johns Hopkins University laboratory, a business consultant named Dede Osborn took a psychedelic drug as part of a research project.

She felt like she was taking off. She saw colors. Then it felt like her heart was ripping open.

But she called the experience joyful as well as painful, and says that it has helped her to this day.

"I feel more centered in who I am and what I'm doing," said Osborn, now 66, of Providence, R.I. "I don't seem to have those self-doubts like I used to have. I feel much more grounded (and feel that) we are all connected."

Scientists reported Tuesday that when they surveyed volunteers 14 months after they took the drug, most said they were still feeling and behaving better because of the experience.

Two-thirds of them also said the drug had produced one of the five most spiritually significant experiences they'd ever had.

The drug, psilocybin, is found in so-called "magic mushrooms." It's illegal, but it has been used in religious ceremonies for centuries.

The study involved 36 men and women during an eight-hour lab visit. It's one of the few such studies of a hallucinogen in the past 40 years, since research was largely shut down after widespread recreational abuse of such drugs in the 1960s.

The project made headlines in 2006 when researchers published their report on how the volunteers felt just two months after taking the drug. The new study followed them up a year after that.

Experts emphasize that people should not try psilocybin on their own because it could be harmful. Even in the controlled setting of the laboratory, nearly a third of participants felt significant fear under the effects of the drug. Without proper supervision, someone could be harmed, researchers said.

Osborn, in a telephone interview, recalled a powerful feeling of being out of control during her lab experience. "It was ... like taking off, I'm being lifted up," she said. Then came "brilliant colors and beautiful patterns, just stunningly gorgeous, more intense than normal reality."

And then, the sensation that her heart was tearing open.

"It would come in waves," she recalled. "I found myself doing Lamaze-type breathing as the pain came on."

Yet "it was a joyful, ecstatic thing at the same time, like the joy of being alive," she said. She compared it to birthing pains. "There was this sense of relief and joy and ecstasy when my heart was opened."

With further research, psilocybin (pronounced SILL-oh-SY-bin) may prove useful in helping to treat alcoholism and drug dependence, and in aiding seriously ill patients as they deal with psychological distress, said study lead author Roland Griffiths of Johns Hopkins.

Griffiths also said that despite the spiritual characteristics reported for the drug experiences, the study says nothing about whether God exists.

"Is this God in a pill? Absolutely not," he said.

The experiment was funded in part by the National Institute on Drug Abuse. The results were published online Tuesday by the Journal of Psychopharmacology.

Fourteen months after taking the drug, 64 percent of the volunteers said they still felt at least a moderate increase in well-being or life satisfaction, in terms of things like feeling more creative, self-confident, flexible and optimistic. And 61 percent reported at least a moderate behavior change in what they considered positive ways.

That second question didn't ask for details, but elsewhere the questionnaire answers indicated lasting gains in traits like being more sensitive, tolerant, loving and compassionate.

Researchers didn't try to corroborate what the participants said about their own behavior. But in the earlier analysis at two months after the drug was given, researchers said family and friends backed up what those in the study said about behavior changes. Griffiths said he has no reason to doubt the answers at 14 months.

Dr. Charles Grob, a professor of psychiatry and pediatrics at the Harbor-UCLA Medical Center, called the new work an important follow-up to the first study.

He said it is helping to reopen formal study of psychedelic drugs. Grob is on the board of the Heffter Research Institute, which promotes studies of psychedelic substances and helped pay for the new work.

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09:01 PM on 07/06/2008
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So all those people locked up for mushrooms, that was a mistake?
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The Federal government was wrong?
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Oopsie.
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RTIII
Poster of over 0.0135% of all HufPost comments
04:50 PM on 07/08/2008
Duh!
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01:09 PM on 07/06/2008
I wouldn't go as far to say that mushrooms facilitate a "spiritual" awakening, but they certainly can help to reveal one's most harmonious inner landscape and to release one's mind from endless chatter and distracting noise. Mushrooms taken in a peaceful natural outdoor setting combined with focused, rhythmic breathing (pranayama) can produce a deeply calming, energizing experience and mental and emotional cleansing effect that will last for months. Try this with a partner you appreciate and trust -- no sex, just embrace and breathe in unison -- and you will experience a Tantric session that will blow any notion of separation of you and 'the other.'
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12:08 PM on 07/05/2008
i always need a babysitter with mushrooms or any hallucinogenic.

if not, i end up running through town naked.... (well, 2 times out of three, one of which was in amsterdam in february at night!)
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09:45 PM on 07/03/2008
On this 4th of July we should all honor the heritage of our founding fathers.

For what it's worth, I guess you had to be tripping to risk life and limb and stand up
to the tyranny of King George.
02:43 PM on 07/03/2008
Duh I found that out when I was 16 years old, gimme a break.
12:26 PM on 07/03/2008
"I feel much more grounded (and feel that) we are all connected.""

precisely why psychedelics are illegal.

when the barriers of the self are broken down and you see that we really are all the same, that all beings are all connected, it contradicts most everything we have been taught by authority.

and how will society function without the control of authority? authority - monotheistic religious authority, governmental authority - can't have people finding out the truth. authority would not exist if people knew the truth.
RTIII
Poster of over 0.0135% of all HufPost comments
04:52 PM on 07/08/2008
Yours should be flagged a HufPick!
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09:24 PM on 07/02/2008
Have done E during shamanic therapy with a licensed professional and had similar results. Amazing relaxation and euphoric experiences! Just the best feeling thus far. Have been afraid to try shrooms, though. I really want to make sure they are absolutely pure and legit. Would LOVE to do them.
08:29 PM on 07/02/2008
Who needs these 'spiritual' experiences? I'll just drink a pint of vodka because then I'm not a 'drug user.'
02:12 PM on 07/02/2008
Really, I had no idea...
09:52 AM on 07/02/2008
Throughout history people have always used entheogens to experience that intense bliss of the clear light oneness.
11:50 AM on 07/02/2008
George Washington's chair.
About 15 years ago I discovered a letter in the Library of Congress [personal correspondences by the founding fathers] which contained references to native American shaman practices including the consumption of magic mushrooms. Washington and Jefferson were so intrigued by this they not only tried it but went through a ritual with American Indian shamans. Afterward Washington had his famous chair made with the curious design on the back of a rising sun topped with a psilocybin mushroom. Of course these were the days before the ONDCP lies and distortion which have since demonized this practice. The Native Americans still use the mushrooms in their rituals as well as peyote.

Here is Washington's chair:http://www.ushistory.org/more/sun.htm

Here is some info on the mushroom:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psilocybin_mushrooms
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bbrecht
"pray for the dead, fight like hell for the liv
06:14 PM on 07/02/2008
Is this for real??????
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BurtR
08:59 AM on 07/02/2008
This all goes back to Ram Dass and his experiments. Leary too.
I have had my experiences with psychedelics. They have their place.
The most profound experience I have had was a 10 day silent Vipassana retreat, Goenka style. Beyond neural pathways, beyond chemistry.
03:41 AM on 07/02/2008
Whatever you take you will still need to touch down on solid earth.
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Brettster
02:35 AM on 07/02/2008
Shrooms have little to no adverse effects on your health, especially with moderate use. Once you trip, you don't even WANT to trip again for a long time because it's such a journey. The ONLY danger is doing something stupid while you're on them, which I find hard to even fathom because if anything, you're intensely aware of what you're doing and who is around.

Shrooms really are a life-changing, mind-opening, enlightenment drug that most people should experience.
12:34 AM on 07/02/2008
The most amazing experience of my life, bar none.

But not as part of a loud party with alcohol and out of control people.
Because you can lose your mind forever and I know people who never ever
recovered from their one and only experience.

But with controls and the proper environment, you will encounter
the force of the creator, whatever you conceive that being to be.

An amazing, amazing experience. But NOT for everyone.
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glasgal
09:41 PM on 07/01/2008
Doesn't surprise me.In the early 70's a book "The sacred mushroom and the cross" puported that the magic mushroom was actually the blessed sacrament and support the theory through linguist studies. Might blow some of those diehard christians types out of the water wouldn't it,