Pantheistic Insights: Vegetarianism in Psychedelic Culture

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“With sufficient exposure, the psychedelic experience offers a crash course in what the Buddhists call sila, or right livelihood.” –Patrick Lundborg

When looking into the subject of psychedelics and their influence on dietary choices, one soon finds a recurring thread in psychedelic culture: vegetarianism. From a historical perspective, several groups and individuals in the psychedelic movement of the 1960s and onwards have adopted plant-based diets. Notable examples include the ‘acid church’ the Brotherhood of Eternal Love and the counterculture commune the Farm. In addition, the 1971 book Be Here Now by Ram Dass clearly influenced many people to become vegetarians. This essay opens with a history of vegetarianism in psychedelic culture, followed by a discussion on the ethical and spiritual insights that the psychedelic experience may lead to.

Before discussing the various vegetarian groups and individuals in psychedelic culture that have been active from the 1960s until today, a few words should be said about some of their forerunners. Notable examples are found in the Lebensreform (“life reform”) movement in late 19th century and early 20th century Germany and Switzerland. Besides vegetarianism, this back to nature social movement of proto-hippies emphasised nudism, sexual liberation, organic farming and alternative medicine. Among the hundreds of groups dedicated to the concepts of Lebensreform was the Monte Verità colony. Starting in 1900, various artists, writers and anarchists moved to a hill named Monte Verità in Ascona, Switzerland. Novelist Hermann Hesse, psychiatrist Carl Jung and dancer and choreographer Mary Wigman were just some of the people that were attracted to the place.

Some of the practitioners of Lebensreform moved to California where they and their followers became known as the Nature Boys. One of them, American songwriter eden ahbez (spelled with lower-case letters) became an unlikely celebrity in the late 1940s after writing the song Nature Boy for Nat “King” Cole, which became a number one hit on Billboard for eight weeks in 1948. Just like many of the hippies of the 1960s counterculture, eden ahbez had long hair and beard and slept outdoors, studied Oriental mysticism and was a vegetarian.

Although several of the Beats were greatly inspired by Eastern philosophy, they are generally not associated with vegetarianism. In the 1958 novel The Dharma Bums by Jack Kerouac, the character Japhy Ryder, which is based on Beat writer Gary Snyder, talks about his hero Han Shan, a poet, mountain man, Buddhist and vegetarian. With regards to Shan’s diet, Ryder says, “I haven’t got on that kick from figuring maybe in this modern world to be a vegetarian is to split hairs a little since all sentient beings eat what they can.”[1] When asked to comment on vegetarianism in an interview with The Paris Review, Snyder described himself as “a very low-key omnivore.” However, despite choosing not to abstain from eating meat, he clearly had a Buddhist attitude towards food, saying that, “The key is still the first precept: ‘Cause least harm.’”[2] Furthermore, in his legendary essay Buddhist Anarchism, which incidentally also advocates issues such as the right to use peyote and cannabis, he states that the “refusal to take life in any form has nation-shaking implications.”[3]

When it comes to the Beats, the one that is probably mostly associated with vegetarianism is Allen Ginsberg. Although he is occasionally included on lists of famous vegetarians, it is debatable if he adopted the diet on a long-term basis. He is quoted as saying that he was “eating vegetarian diets”[4] in his younger years, yet he appears to have been an omnivore later in life. For example, at the age of nine, writer Tyler Stoddard Smith shared a bucket of fried chicken with the Beat poet when he was staying at Smith’s parents.[5] In addition, shortly before his death Ginsberg served his friends fish soup.[6] With these examples in mind, defining him as a vegetarian would be erroneous.

Moving on to the counterculture of the 1960s, many of that era’s spiritual communes adopted vegetarianism. One of them was the Brotherhood of Eternal Love. Before the group turned into a large-scale drug smuggling organisation, it actually started out as a psychedelically minded spiritual collective fuelled by LSD. According to William “Skip” Costley, a man who was part of the Brotherhood in its embryonic phase, the group hoped to be able to use acid as a legal religious sacrament: “We were aware that they were in the process of making it illegal to use LSD, and we were truly on a quest for religious enlightenment.”[7] In October 1966, only days after the drug was banned in California, the Brotherhood of Eternal Love formed a legally registered church.

During the period when the Brotherhood was living at a ranch in Idyllwild, California, the women cooked, baked and taught the children while the men grew vegetables. The inhabitants were mostly self-sufficient when it came to food. “There are no phones, gas or electric bills to worry about. We are all vegetarians and grow most of the food we need in our own gardens,” said a woman living at the ranch when interviewed by a local news reporter.[8] For a time, ex-Harvard psychologist Timothy Leary lived with the Brotherhood of Eternal Love at the ranch, which presumably also meant that he ate the group’s veggie dishes. However, the “High Priest” of the 1960s counterculture was an omnivore. In 1980, when asked if he eats meat, Leary replied: “I’ll eat anything!”[9]

In addition to Idyllwild, the Brotherhood of Eternal Love was active in Laguna Beach where the group set up a head shop called Mystic Arts World, which also functioned as their headquarters. Incidentally, the seaside resort was also home to a man named Curtis Reed. With the assistance of his friends in the Brotherhood, Reed started the brilliantly named vegetarian restaurant Love Animals, Don’t Eat Them.[10]

The largest and probably most well-known commune to come out of the counterculture movement was the Farm. Founded in 1971, the Tennessee based commune not only has an important place in the history of psychedelia but also in the history of vegetarianism. Besides adopting a plant-based diet, the Farm was instrumental in the popularisation of tofu and soymilk, and the commune has been acknowledged as pioneers of vegan cookery.[11] One of the prime movers in the commune when it comes to vegan cooking was Louise Hagler. Already before moving to the Farm in 1971, she was trying to recreate her favourite dishes by replacing meat, cheese and eggs with plant-based protein forms. At the Farm, she and other community members experimented with developing soy-based food that was economically friendly and healthy. Living in converted school buses and vans, they made their own tofu on wood stoves. As the Farm developed the members established their own “soy dairy” (called The Farm Soy Dairy) to make tofu, soymilk and tempeh. In addition, the Farm also created a soy-based ice cream called “Ice-Bean.”

In the mid-1970s the community started publishing their own cookbooks via their publishing enterprise The Book Publishing Company. The first of these was The Farm Vegetarian Cookbook, which contained recipes from various community members. Among the recipes are Beatnik Baked Beans, Ellen’s Good for Ya Noodle Soup and Elizabeth’s Double Dutch Chocolate Ice Bean.

The cookbook has become a classic and a revised late 1980s edition edited by Hagler and Dorothy R. Bates, titled The New Farm Vegetarian Cookbook, is still available for purchase. Nearly all the recipes in the book are vegan, i.e. not containing any meat, fish, egg, cow’s dairy or honey. (The only non-vegan ingredient used is honey, which is included in a handful of the recipes.) Interestingly, even though the vast majority of the dishes are vegan, they are simply described as “vegetarian.” This may be explained by the fact that in the 1970s the word vegan, which was coined in 1944 by Donald Watson, was not as established and widely spread as it is today.

Besides recipes, The Farm Vegetarian Cookbook contains some lovely psychedelic illustrations made by various community members. Motifs include flying pressure cookers, Art Nouveau style floral patterns and abstract shapes. Clearly not an average cookbook, The Farm Vegetarian Cookbook obviously has its roots in the counterculture of the 1960s. In addition to the illustrations, it includes several photographs of smiling community members. Also, the back cover of the original 1975 edition contains the following opening sentences: “We are a large, longhair spiritual community in Tennessee. We came together through open meetings in San Francisco with Stephen. We have 750 people, including 250 kids, living on 1,750 acres.”[12]

“Stephen” is of course the late legendary counterculture figure Stephen Gaskin. An orator and acidhead, Gaskin started his career as a speaker in Haight-Ashbury in the late 1960s before co-founding the Farm where he served as a “spiritual guide.” He was also a writer and went on to write books such as Amazing Dope Tales (1980) and Cannabis Spirituality (1996).

Although LSD was a huge influence on Gaskin’s life, as well as many of his followers, the drug was actually banned on the Farm. Seeing that the community members had become role models, Gaskin did not see any place for acid at the commune. It should also be remembered that there was a shift in attitude in the hippie movement during the 1970s when it came to man-made drugs. Instead of LSD, a semi-synthetic drug created in a laboratory, organic and naturally grown drugs coming from Mother Nature were starting to be preferred by hippies. When it comes to the Farm, the drug of choice was cannabis, which was viewed as a spiritual sacrament. As for the use of other drugs, Gaskin once said that while they did not do acid in the commune peyote and mushrooms were “a matter of personal conscience.”[13] It should be said that despite the ban on LSD Gaskin did not fail to acknowledge the importance of the drug for him and his commune. When participating in a panel discussion during the 1977 conference “LSD: A Generation Later,” Gaskin stated that thousands of people on the Farm felt they owed their lives to Albert Hofmann, the Swiss scientist who discovered LSD.[14]

Another vegetarian commune that merits a mention is the Source Family. Led by Jim Baker a.k.a. Father Yod, a former follower of Yogi Bhajan, this robe-wearing utopian group based in Los Angeles shunned western medicine in favour of natural health. Before forming the commune, Baker had experimented with LSD. This was presumably also the case with many other members of the Source Family. However, the drug of choice in the collective was cannabis, which was smoked every morning in connection with various spiritual exercises. A dubious character with a history of violence, Baker owned several restaurants, which were set up using money from a series of bank robberies.[15] In 1969, Baker founded a health food restaurant on Sunset Strip called The Source, which became a great success visited by various celebrities, including John Lennon and Yoko Ono. The restaurant was also featured in a scene in Woody Allen’s Annie Hall, which of course is another testament to its popularity. Thanks to the restaurant, which was very profitable, the commune could move to a mansion in Hollywood Hills. The Source is usually described as “vegetarian,” but this was actually not the case, at least not by today’s standards. While it is true that most dishes on the menu were lacto vegetarian, some of their sandwiches contained chicken or fish.[16] Even so, it is fair to say that the Source Family had an important hand in generating interest in vegetarian food in 1970s Los Angeles and beyond.

The Source Family had all the characteristics of a cult. Sporting a big beard and long grey hair, Baker was looked upon as a father figure by his followers. Most of the members were a great deal younger than their patriarchal middle-aged leader. Baker, whose motto was “Just be kind,” clearly had a taste for young girls and despite the strong disapproval of his heartbroken teenaged wife Robin a.k.a. Ah-Om, he eventually had 13 wives. In 1974, the Source Family sold their health food restaurant and left LA for a rural life in Kauai, Hawaii. On the Island, the financially struggling commune faced tough resistance from neighbours, which involved a shooting at the commune’s house.[17] But things would get even worse for the group. The following year Baker died in a hang-gliding accident, and without their charismatic “father” the commune was soon disbanded.

While the spiritual communes of the 1960s counterculture clearly deserve credit for spreading the word on vegetarianism, they were not alone in promoting vegetarian food in the psychedelic movement of the time. A very important event when it comes to getting people interested in plant-based food was the release of Be Here Now by Harvard academic turned spiritual teacher Richard Alpert a.k.a. Ram Dass. Published in 1971, the book became very popular among aging members of the counterculture and has sold an incredible 2 million copies.[18] Among the people who were captivated by it was journalist and author Sara Davidson, who went on to interview Alpert on many occasions. “In Manhattan, most people I knew were carrying dog-eared copies of Be Here Now, reading other spiritual books, becoming vegetarians, and going off on silent retreats,”[19] she wrote in her 2006 article The Ultimate Trip. During the 1960s, movements such as psychedelia, yoga and vegetarianism had started to overlap, and it is no exaggeration to say that Be Here Now strengthened the links among the three.

In order to understand what made Alpert take an interest in vegetarianism, it is necessary to take a look at how his life developed during the decade leading up to the release of Be Here Now. In the early 1960s, Alpert had landed a position as an assistant professor of education and psychology at Harvard. The son of a wealthy lawyer, Alpert drove a sports car, wore cashmere sweaters and was determined to have a successful career in academia. This was not going to be the case though. Key to Alpert’s transformation from a safe, upper middle-class life to eventually become a spiritual leader was his encounter with psychedelics. In March 1961, Alpert took his fist trip on psilocybin at Harvard psychologist Timothy Leary’s home with a group that included Leary and poet Allen Ginsberg. The early 1960s was extremely eventful for Alpert, and besides taking psychedelics himself, he worked with Leary on his psilocybin research project. The activities of Leary and Alpert eventually led to their expulsion from Harvard, and in 1963, they and their followers continued their psychedelic explorations on a large estate in Millbrook, New York.

During the following years, however, it became clear that psychedelics were not the path forward for Alpert. Despite intense psychedelic explorations Alpert never managed to reach the permanent higher consciousness he was trying to obtain with the use of psychedelics, and by 1967 he had become depressed. There was no way to resume an academic career and he had no desire to keep taking psychedelics. After the death of his mother, he travelled to India and in a temple in the Himalayas he met his guru Neem Karoli Baba a.k.a. Marahaji, who gave Alpert the name Ram Dass (meaning “servant of God”). In addition to changing his name, Alpert also kept a strict vegetarian diet during his four months at the temple.[20]

Although Be Here Now was written after Alpert stopped taking psychedelics, the book has remained one of the classics in psychedelic literature and it has been mandatory reading for psychonauts and students of the psychedelic movement since it came out. In his richly illustrated book Alpert tells the story about his personal transformation, which has contained three stages, namely the social science stage, the psychedelic stage and the yogi stage. His own account of his very first trip is classic trip lit, and so is the story of how he gave his guru about 900 micrograms of LSD, a huge dose, and yet he (supposedly) remained unaffected by the drug. In a chapter titled Cookbook for a Sacred Life, Alpert discusses subjects such as food, sleeping, sexuality, money and meditation, as well as various yoga exercises. When it comes to the topic of food, the reader is advised to eat easily digestible and unadulterated foods. Furthermore, it is clear that the diet suggested by Alpert had both spiritual and ethical aspects. For example, those who have done sadhana find it obvious that, “Any food which entails violence (killing) in its source is not to be taken,”[21] he writes.

One may get the impression that Alpert has been a vegetarian ever since he first set foot in India, but this has actually not been the case. When Sara Davidson interviewed him in 2004 he was “eating whatever he pleased.” However, when she met him for another interview in 2006 he had adopted a vegetarian diet. In addition, he had given up sugar as well as the medical marijuana that he was constantly smoking when she met him in 2004. “I’ve learned that Ram Dass is perpetually transforming, like the Trickster in mythology who changes form and breaks the rules to free people from their habitual perceptions.”[22]

In sharp contrast to the vegetarian ideals of the groups and individuals so far discussed stand those of legendary acid chemist and Grateful Dead sound engineer Owsley Stanley. Owsley was a “total carnivore” for most of his adult life. At 72 he had applied his diet for 48 years, and – disregarding the fact that he had been treated for throat cancer as well as having suffered a heart attack – he claimed to have the same body as when he was 30. Owsley’s diet followed a set of rules. The fundamental one of course being: Eat only food from animals. Liquid milk was to be avoided though, except for butter and cheese. The remaining rules amounted to: Limit liver intake; eat as much fat as you like; do not cook your food much; avoid salt; and, obviously, eat no vegetables. Furthermore, one should not think about food since “it is merely a way to stay alive.”[23]

Described by former Rolling Stone journalist Charles Perry as an “anti-vegetarian,” Owsley believed that the digestive system of humans is designed for meat and that vegetables are poisonous. Perry once shared a house in Berkeley with Owsley. However, since he was a carnivore he never ate dinner with his roommates (who presumably where vegetarians). At one point in his youth Owsley actually adopted vegetarianism for six months. During this time he claims that he started to lose his hair, which grew back when he shunned vegetables.[24] Owsley’s feelings towards vegetarianism and its adopters were outright hostile: “There is only one true, inevitable, and defining characteristic which is connected with vegetarians, and that is: They ALL are compulsive liars.”[25] Owsley’s ‘zero carb’ diet was most likely perceived as something of an oddity in the vegetarian-friendly counterculture movement. Still, despite the many vegetarians in the Deadhead scene he must have come across over the years, Owsley stayed true to his conviction about eating only food from animals. “Even during the years I was soundman for Grateful Dead, I stuck to my guns and remained totally carnivorous,”[26] he wrote in a low-carb forum in 2006.

While presumably rare, outspoken anti-vegetarians can also be found in contemporary psychedelic culture. For example, stand up comedian, former Fear Factor host and psychedelics advocate Joe Rogan is firmly set against veganism and has publicly shared his contempt against vegans on several occasions. Clearly, “non-masculine” movements such as veganism (where the majority are women) stand out as the very opposite to the ideals of macho psychonauts such as Rogan.

It is likely that vegetarianism was fairly big in the Deadhead culture. “When people think vegetarian, they think deadheads stirring vegan chili, smoking pot, and chanting,” said vegan chef Rich Landau in a 2012 article published in Men’s Health.[27] While his comment reveals prejudice attitudes towards fans of the Grateful Dead as well as vegetarians, there is no denying there were links between the two, not least if one takes into account other indicators such as the 1995 vegetarian cookbook Cooking With the Dead: Recipes and Stories From Fans on the Road by Elizabeth Zipern, which, according to its cover, contains various “kynd (sic) and caring vegetarian recipes prepared with love.” As for the members of the Grateful Dead, the International Vegetarian Union lists Bob Wier, Phil Lesh and Jerry Garcia as vegetarians. According to the organisation, Wier “seems to have been vegetarian the longest” while Lesh became a vegetarian in 1991. Garcia was a vegetarian from 1993 until his death in 1995.[28]

Most of the examples of vegetarianism in psychedelic culture in this essay have their origin in the counterculture movement of the 1960s, the reason of course being that this is where most known examples of vegetarian groups and individuals in psychedelia are to be found. When it comes to the 21st Century, vegetarianism is certainly still present in psychedelic culture. However, unlike the 1960s and early 1970s there are no large, prolific communes such as the Farm, eccentric cults such as the Source Family, or spiritual manuals such as Be Here Now. Vegetarianism in the contemporary psychedelic movement is decidedly low-key. However, that may very well change, especially seeing that veganism is on the rise, which most likely will be reflected in psychedelic culture as well. Just like in the 1960s, vegetarianism is often spotted where there are people influenced by Eastern philosophy, even if the location happens to be the Amazon, as in the case of Karuna Vine. An organiser of ayahuasca workshops, Karuna Vine describe themselves as mostly raw food vegans. “Meat is not only inhumane but also very acidic, aiding in bacterial growth in the colon as well as increasing significantly risk for cancers, high blood-pressure and other diseases,”[29] they write on their website.

Vegetarianism is also present in forums on psychedelics such as the DMT-Nexus. In a discussion on psychedelics and food, member Guyomech describes his transition to vegetarianism, which by the time of writing (2012) occurred 18 years ago together with his wife: “It was a gradual transition: first red meat, then chicken, then fish. During this time (and to this day) we researched and experimented a lot to keep our diets both balanced and enjoyable. At the time of the transition, psychedelics were a huge part of the picture for both of us. Developing a stronger sense of connection to the whole world, animals included, was part of what led us to this decision,”[30] he writes. Undoubtedly, numerous psychonauts have done similar dietary journeys.

Since hardly anything has been written about vegetarianism in psychedelic culture, it is sometimes hard to determine what motivate specific groups and individuals in the movement to become vegetarians. However, seeing that non-violence has been a common ideal in psychedelic culture since the 1960s, it is likely that many psychonauts who adopt vegetarianism do so mostly on ethical and spiritual grounds. Historically, hippies have opposed violence not only against fellow humans, but also against non-human animals and the environment. This was seen in the 1960s counterculture with its interest in Eastern philosophy and its message of peace and love, as well as during the back to the nature (rural) era of the 1970s. Furthermore, if one looks close enough, the non-violence ethos can also be spotted in today’s ayahuasca centred, yoga and raw food savvy psychedelic movement, whose main concern appears to be the ongoing environmental destruction.

* * *

Let us now take a moment and look at psychedelic culture from the perspective of non-human animals. As history has repeatedly shown, when entheogens are put in the hands of western science the sacredness of these medicines tends to go out the window and instead of diminishing the suffering on our planet they may very well be used to increase it. Obviously huge amounts of animals have been used in scientific experiments with psychedelics where they have been put in gruesome situations and subsequently been killed. Species include monkeys, rabbits, elephants, mice, rats, dolphins and cats (just to name a few), many of which, ironically, are the very same animals that are often reverently depicted in psychedelic and visionary art. Clearly, when the White Rabbit that accompanies us humans into the rabbit hole – to use a reference from psychedelic mythology – is captured, tortured and killed by various mind-altering substances, psychedelia is faced with a serious spiritual dilemma.

One of the more notorious experiments took place at the University of Oklahoma in 1962 when an elephant named Tusko, described as an “extremely valuable zoo animal,”[31] was injected with a huge dose of LSD. After only five minutes Tusko collapsed. During the experiment other drugs were also injected into him and one hour and 40 minutes after he had been given the initial injection of LSD he died.[32] Needless to say, the mainstreaming of psychedelics that is underway may lead to numerous highly questionable experiments on non-human animals, and therefore it is of utmost importance to discuss ethical aspects of experimenting with mind-altering substances on species other than our own. Discussions on troublesome and problematic subjects – be it animal testing, ayahuasca tourism or gender or race imbalance – are very often avoided in contemporary psychedelia. It appears that no one wants to ruin the “positive vibes.” Yet for a movement to develop in a healthy direction and to be taken seriously outside of its confines these issues obviously must be dealt with.

Interestingly, some scientists actually change their minds about doing tests where non-human animals are given psychedelics. As a young, budding neuroscience researcher, American author David Jay Brown did experiments on rabbits. However, after tripping on the very same ketamine that he used as an anaesthetic prior to surgery on the animals, the drug made him see the experiments from their perspective. After Brown’s experience, there was no way for him to keep doing his research: “I felt way too much empathy with the test subjects.”[33]

Besides animal testing, there is reason to discuss the working methods of filmmaker Alejandro Jodorowsky. Captivating and intriguing, his films are a melting pot of surrealism, occultism and a solid dose of psychedelia. However, anyone concerned with how animals are treated will find his films hard to digest. For example, in El Topo (1970) a great number of rabbits are killed. Animal abuse was also seen in Jodorowsky’s 1973 film The Holy Mountain. In one of its scenes a group of soldiers are parading down a street carrying crosses with crucified four-legged animals (possibly lambs). Another scene shows a number of lizards and toads dressed up in armours, which are bathed in blood before being burst to pieces. Furthermore, a scene set on a mountain slope features slaughtered chickens hanging in a tree and brutal dog fighting. At one point during the production the actors were actually tripping on psilocybin mushrooms.[34] Seeing that so many ethical and spiritual violations were made during the making of The Holy Mountain, Jodorowsky’s decision to bring psychedelics into the mix was of course highly dubious and foolhardy.

Jodorowsky has been met with very little criticism from researchers, writers and artists in psychedelic culture. There is one important exception though. Filmmaker Conrad Rooks, director of the psychedelic underground film classic Chappaqua (1966), was very critical of Jodorowsky’s working methods: “He got too much into Black Magic for me. I think El Topo was a very interesting film. But I think the Devil got him, finally,” said Rooks in a rare interview with Swedish writer Carl Abrahamsson. “If you’re playing with these things, you’re playing with fire. Jodorowsky made Holy Mountain an adaption of Thomas Mann, and then there was the other one where he was butchering elephants. That’s a huge sin. That will condemn you forever. He’s lucky he’s still alive,”[35] Rooks continued.

The vast majority of writers and researchers in psychedelic culture do not show any interest in ethical questions relating to non-human animals, at least not publicly. One of the very few to have written about the subject is Israeli writer and journalist Ido Hartogsohn. In his excellent and refreshingly bold article Psychedelics and Nutrition, published in Reality Sandwich, Hartogsohn argues that serious users of psychedelics will eventually start to receive messages about their dietary choices. When boiled down to their essentials, these messages can be phrased in two simple sentences. The first one deals with our own bodies: “Stop destroying your body with harmful nutrition.” The second message deals with the non-human animals we share this planet with: “Stop taking the lives of others.” Meat-eating psychonauts may of course choose to ignore these messages, but these explorers will nevertheless remain aware of the fact that they have not yet fully dealt with the ethical dilemma of eating other sentient beings. “Although many might disagree, the use of psychedelics is – in my eyes – incompatible with eating meat,”[36] he writes.

Hartogsohn is highly critical of today’s industrialised meat production, where meat is produced in “cattle concentration camps.”[37] In addition, the writer defines our contemporary consumer society as “meat addicted.” Interestingly, he sees psychedelic mushrooms as a possible way to decrease the unparalleled quantities of meat currently consumed on our planet. Seeing that psychedelics have proved to be an effective addiction interrupter when it comes to severe social problems such as opiate addiction and alcoholism, Hartogsohn’s advocacy of psychedelic mushrooms as an antidote against the obsession of meat is actually quite sensible. Needless to say though, for it to work it is presupposed that those experimenting with psychedelics are willing to listen to and act upon the messages received while in the altered state.

The late Swedish writer and psychedelic researcher Patrick Lundborg argued that, “With sufficient exposure, the psychedelic experience offers a crash course in what the Buddhists call sila, or right livelihood.”[38] In his 2014 essay Note Towards the Definition of a Psychedelic Philosophy, published in the anthology The Fenris Wolf 7 right before his death, Lundborg offers a possible explanation to why there is a connection between psychedelics and vegetarianism:

“In the psychedelic state there will come a passage where you seem able to see through present organisms and discover their true core. If this occurs, the discovery is usually that all these living things are alike at the core; animated by the same drive, or energy, or spirit or god. This is usually a humbling experience as the subject realizes the arrogance of his assumed human superiority over animals and plants, and questions his or her right to dominate organisms whose principle of life is the same as one’s own. It is no coincidence that many acid-heads become vegetarians… The pantheistic insight brings an important ethical dimension to Psychedelia.”[39]

From proto-hippie movements such as the Monte Verità in the early 20th Century via the counterculture communes of the 1960s to today’s ayahuasca-drinking raw food vegans, it is safe to say that vegetarianism is a recurring thread that runs through the history of psychedelia. Hopefully, this thread will become much more prominent in the near future as more people become aware of – through pantheistic or other insights – the detestable way non-human animals are treated in the meat and dairy industry, and the massive environmental and spiritual damage it causes to our planet.

Image by quentin00 s’è perso, courtesy of Creative Commons license.

Notes

    1. Kerouac, Jack,The Dharma Bums (London: Penguin Classics, 2000) 22.
    2. Weinberger, Eliot, “Gary Snyder, The Art of Poetry No. 74,” The Paris Review,http://www.theparisreview.org/interviews/1323/the-art-of-poetry-no-74-gary-snyder
    3. Snyder, Gary, “Anarchist Buddhism,” Bureau of Public Secrets (originally published inEarth House Hold, 1969), http://www.bopsecrets.org/CF/garysnyder.htm
    4. “When Worlds Collide” (originally published in Harper’s Magazine, 1990),http://jig.joelpomerantz.com/otherwriters/ginsberg.html
    5. Smith, Tyler Stoddard, “A Beat in the House,” Identity Theory (2006),http://www.identitytheory.com/beat-house/
    6. Silberman, Steve, “Ginsberg’s Last Soup,” The New Yorker (2001),http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2001/03/19/ginsbergs-last-soup
    7. Dahl, Henrik and Costley, William “Skip,” “Skip’s Story: The Beginnings of the Brotherhood of Eternal Love,” The Oak Tree Review (2009),http://www.theoaktreereview.com/skip.html
    8. Schou, Nicholas,Orange Sunshine: The Brotherhood of Eternal Love and Its Quest to Spread Peace, Love and Acid to the World (New York: Thomas Dunne Books, 2010) 189.
    9. “Inkwell: Authors and Artists – Topic 466: R.U. Sirius, Timothy Leary’s Trip Through Time,” The WELL,http://www.well.com/conf/inkwell.vue/topics/466/R-U-Sirius-Timothy-Leary-s-Trip-page01.html
    10. Schou, Nicholas, cit. 233.
    11. Niman, Michael I., “Out to Save the World: Life at the Farm,” The Farm (originally published in High Times, 1995),http://www.thefarm.org/general/hightime.html
    12. “Meet Louise,” Louise Hagler,http://www.louisehagler.com/meetlouise.html
    13. Langer, Emily, “Stephen F. Gaskin, Founder of the Farm Commune in Tennessee, Dies at 79.” The Washington Post (2014),http://www.washingtonpost.com/national/stephen-f-gaskin-founder-of-the-farm-commune-in-tennessee-dies-at-79/2014/07/03/5bc44a1a-02c0-11e4-b8ff-89afd3fad6bd_story.html
    14. Lee, Martin A. and Shlain, Bruce,Acid Dreams: The Complete Social History of LSD: The CIA, The Sixties, and Beyond (New York: Grove Press, 1992) xix.
    15. The Source Family, dir. Demopoulos, Maria and Wille, Jodi, Drag City (2012).
    16. Blackmore, Willy, “When Health Food Was a Cult”, TakePart (2013),http://www.takepart.com/article/2013/05/21/source-cult-restaurant
    17. The Source Family, cit.
    18. Davidson, Sara, “The Ultimate Trip,” Tufts Magazine (2006),http://www.tufts.edu/alumni/magazine/fall2006/features/ultimate-trip.html
    19. Ram Dass,Doing Your Own Being (London: Neville Spearman, 1973) 17.
    20. Ram Dass, “Cookbook for a Sacred Life,” inBe Here Now. (San Cristobal, New Mexico: Lama Foundation, 1971) 18.
    21. Davidson, cit.
    22. “My Almost-Not-Quite Interview With ‘The Bear,’” Jimmy Moore’s Livin’ La Vida Low-Carb Blog (2006),http://livinlavidalowcarb.com/blog/my-almost-not-quite-interview-with-the-bear/1309
    23. Perry, Charles, “Owsley and Me” (originally published in Rolling Stone, 1982),http://chanceofrain.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/03/Owsley-Me%C2%A0.htm
    24. “Owsley and His Dietary Fantasies,”http://ecologos.org/owsley.htm
    25. “The Real Human Diet is a Totally Carnivorous One,” Active Low-Carber Forums (2006),http://forum.lowcarber.org/showthread.php?t=287013
    26. Shortsleeve, Cassie, “The Best Food to Grill,” Men’s Health (2012),http://www.menshealth.com/nutrition/grill-vegetables
    27. “The Grateful Dead (1965-95),” International Vegetarian Union (IVU),http://www.ivu.org/people/music/grateful-dead.html
    28. “Our View on Nutrition,” Karuna Vine,http://karunavine.com/ayahuasca/diet/
    29. “Psychedelics and Food,” DMT-Nexus (2012),https://www.dmt-nexus.me/forum/default.aspx?g=posts&m=396693
    30. “LSD Related Death of an Elephant,” Erowid (2012),https://www.erowid.org/chemicals/lsd/lsd_history4.shtml
    31. Brown, David Jay,The New Science of Psychedelics: At the Nexus of Culture, Consciousness and Spirituality (Rochester, Vermont: Park Street Press, 2013) 112, 325.
    32. Azoury, Philippe, “Naked Bloody Corpses, Charros, Shrooms, and Those Who Made Them Monsters,” Vice (2009),http://www.vice.com/read/naked-bloody-corpses-charros-shrooms-and-those-who-made-them-monsters
    33. Abrahamsson, Carl,Reasonances (Scarlet Imprint, 2014) 116.
    34. Hartogsohn, Ido, “Psychedelics and Nutrition: Carnivorous Cultures vs. Fungal Cultures,” Reality Sandwich (2009),https://realitysandwich.com/psychedelics_and_nutrition/
    35. Lundborg, Patrick,Psychedelia: An Ancient Culture, A Modern Way of Life (Stockholm: Lysergia, 2012) 353.
    36. Lundborg, Patrick, “Note Towards the Definition of a Psychedelic Philosophy,” inThe Fenris Wolf 7 (Stockholm: Edda, 2014) 87-88.

Psychedelic Resources

A Foraging Trip: Where Do Magic Mushrooms Grow?
Eager to learn more about the origin of psilocybin species? Read this article to find out where magic mushrooms grow and more!

How to Make Shroom Tea: Best Recipe and Dosage
A step by step guide on how to brew shroom tea, and why entheogenic psilocybin tea is a preferred method for psychedelic connoisseurs.

R. Gordon Wasson: Author and Mushroom Expert
Learn about R. Gordon Wasson, the “legendary mushroom expert” and popular figure within the psychonaut community.

Shrooms vs Acid: Differences and Similarities Explained
Ever wondered what the differences are between shrooms vs acid, or if you can take both together? This guide explains what you need to know.

Quantum Mechanics, Reality, and Magic Mushrooms
Scientist and author Dr. Chris Becker takes an in-depth approach in understanding how we perceive reality through magic mushrooms and quantum mechanics.

Psilocybin Guide: Effects, Common Uses, Safety
Our ultimate guide to Psilocybin has everything you want to know about this psychedelic fungi from its uses to its legal status.

The Psilocybin Experience: What’s the Deal With Magic Mushrooms?
From microdoses to macrodoses, the psilocybin experience has been sought after both medicinally and recreationally for millennia.

Psilocybin and Magic Mushroom Resources
Curious to learn more about psilocybin? This guide is a comprehensive psilocybin resource containing books, therapeutic studies, and more.

Paul Stamets Profile: Mushroom Guru, Filmmaker, Nutritionist, Scientist
Learn about Paul Stamets, read his thoughts on psilocybin mircodosing, the future of psilocybin, and his recent film “Fantastic Fungi”.

Microdosing Psilocybin & Common Dosage Explained
Microdosing, though imperceivably, is showing to have many health benefits–here is everything you want to know about microdosing psilocybin.

Psilocybin Nasal Spray: Relief for Anxiety, PTSD, and Depression
Microdosing nasal spray with psilocybin, is that possible?! Oregan a start-up Silo Wellness believes so and has created this new option for PTSD treatment.

Mazatec Mushroom Usage: Notes on Approach, Setting and Species for Curious Psilonauts
A look at traditional Mazatec psilocybin mushroom usage, and a comparison to the cliniical therapeutic approach, with an examination of the Mazatec setting and species used in veladas.

María Sabina: The Mazatec Magic Mushroom Woman
Magic mushrooms are incredibly popular today. How they became introduced to into American culture isn’t usually a topic discussed while tripping on psilocybin fungi. We all may have María Sabina to thank for exposing the Western world to the healing properties of the psilocybin mushroom.

Guide to Magic Mushroom Strains
Are there different types of psilocybin? Read our guide to learn about the different magic mushroom strains and their individual effects.

Kilindi Iyi: Mycologist, Traveler, Teacher
Learn about traveler and mycologist Kilindi Iyi known in the psychedelic community for his research and exploration of psilocybin.

How to Store Shrooms: Best Practices
How do you store shrooms for optimal shelf life? Learn how and why the proper storage method is so important.

Shroom Chocolate Recipes: How to Make Magic Mushroom Chocolates
This recipe provides step by step directions on how you can make mushroom chocolates with the necessary ingredients. Read to learn more!

Why Do People Use Psilocybin? New Johns Hopkins Study
Johns Hopkins University School of Medicines has just published a new study on psychoactive effects of psilocybin. Read here to learn more.

How-To Lemon Tek: Ultimate Guide and Recipe
This master guide will teach you how to lemon tek, preventing the onset of negative effects after consuming psilocybin. Read to learn more!

How to Intensify a Mushroom Trip
Learn about techniques like Lemon tekking, or discover the right time to consume cannabis if you are looking to intensify a mushroom trip.

How to Grow Magic Mushrooms: Step-by-Step
This step-by-step guide will show you how to grow magic mushrooms at home. Read this guide before trying it on your own.

How to Dry Magic Mushrooms: Best Practices
Read to learn more about specifics for the best practices on how to dry magic mushrooms after harvesting season.

How to Buy Psilocybin Spores
Interested in psilocybin mushrooms? We’ll walk you through all you need to know to obtain mushroom spores. Nosh on this delish How To guide.

Hippie Flipping: When Shrooms and Molly Meet
What is it, what does it feel like, and how long does it last? Explore the mechanics of hippie flipping and how to safely experiment.

Having Sex on Shrooms: Good or Bad Idea?
Is having sex on shrooms a good idea or an accident waiting to happen? Find out in our guide to sex on magic mushrooms.

Gold Cap Shrooms Guide: Spores, Effects, Identification
Read this guide to learn more about the different characteristics of gold cap mushrooms, and how they differ from other psilocybin species.

Guide to Cooking with Magic Mushrooms
From cookies to smoothies and sandwiches, we cover various methods of cooking with magic mushrooms for the ultimate snack.

2020 Election: The Decriminalize Psilocybin Movement
Are you curious if mushrooms will follow in marijuana’s footsteps? Read to learn about how the U.S. is moving to decriminalize psilocybin.

Oregon’s Initiative to Legalize Mushrooms | Initiative Petition 34
Oregon continues to push ahead with their initiative to legalize Psilocybin in 2020. The measure received its official title and now needs signatures.

Canada Approves Psilocybin Treatment for Terminally-Ill Cancer Patients
Canada’s Minister of Health, Patty Hajdu approved the use of psilocybin to help ease anxiety and depression of four terminal cancer patients.

Mapping the DMT Experience
With only firsthand experiences to share, how can we fully map the DMT experience? Let’s explore what we know about this powerful psychedelic.

Guide to Machine Elves and Other DMT Entities
This guide discusses machine elves, clockwork elves, and other common DMT entities that people experience during a DMT trip.

Is the DMT Experience a Hallucination? 
What if the DMT realm was the real world, and our everyday lives were merely a game we had chosen to play?

How to Store DMT
Not sure how to store DMT? Read this piece to learn the best practices and elements of advice to keep your stuff fresh.

What Does 5-MeO-DMT Show Us About Consciousness?
How does our brain differentiate between what’s real and what’s not? Read to learn what can 5-MeO-DMT show us about consciousness.

How to Smoke DMT: Processes Explained
There are many ways to smoke DMT and we’ve outlined some of the best processes to consider before embarking on your journey.

How to Ground After DMT
Knowing what to expect from a DMT comedown can help you integrate the experience to gain as much value as possible from your journey.

How To Get DMT
What kind of plants contain DMT? Are there other ways to access this psychedelic? Read on to learn more about how to get DMT.

How DMT is Made: Everything You Need to Know
Ever wonder how to make DMT? Read our guide to learn everything you need to know about the procedures of how DMT is made.

Having Sex on DMT: What You Need to Know
Have you ever wondered about sex on DMT? Learn how the God Molecule can influence your intimate experiences.

Does the Human Brain Make DMT? 
With scientific evidence showing us DMT in the brain, what can we conclude it is there for? Read on to learn more.

How to Use DMT Vape Pens
Read to learn all about DMT vape pens including: what to know when vaping, what to expect when purchasing a DMT cartridge, and vaping safely.

DMT Resources
This article is a comprehensive DMT resource providing extensive information from studies, books, documentaries, and more. Check it out!

Differentiating DMT and Near-Death Experiences
Some say there are similarities between a DMT trip and death. Read our guide on differentiating DMT and near-death experiences to find out.

DMT Research from 1956 to the Edge of Time
From a representative sample of a suitably psychedelic crowd, you’d be hard pressed to find someone who couldn’t tell you all about Albert Hofmann’s enchanted bicycle ride after swallowing what turned out to be a massive dose of LSD. Far fewer, however, could tell you much about the world’s first DMT trip.

The Ultimate Guide to DMT Pricing
Check out our ultimate guide on DMT pricing to learn what to expect when purchasing DMT for your first time.

DMT Milking | Reality Sandwich
Indigenous cultures have used 5-MeO-DMT for centuries. With the surge in demand for psychedelic toad milk, is DMT Milking harming the frogs?

Why Does DMT Pervade Nature?
With the presence of DMT in nature everywhere – including human brains – why does it continue to baffle science?

DMT Substance Guide: Effects, Common Uses, Safety
Our ultimate guide to DMT has everything you want to know about this powerful psychedelic referred to as “the spirit molecule”.

DMT for Depression: Paving the Way for New Medicine
We’ve been waiting for an effective depression treatment. Studies show DMT for depression works even for treatment resistant patients.

Beating Addiction with DMT
Psychedelics have been studied for their help overcoming addiction. Read how DMT is helping addicts beat their substance abuse issues.

DMT Extraction: Behind the Scientific Process
Take a look at DMT extraction and the scientific process involved. Learn all you need to know including procedures and safety.

Microdosing DMT & Common Dosages Explained
Microdosing, though imperceivable, is showing to have many health benefits–here is everything you want to know about microdosing DMT.

DMT Art: A Look Behind Visionary Creations
An entire genre of artwork is inspired by psychedelic trips with DMT. Read to learn about the entities and visions behind DMT art.

Changa vs. DMT: What You Need to Know
While similar (changa contains DMT), each drug has its own unique effect and feeling. Let’s compare and contrast changa vs DMT.

5-MeO-DMT Guide: Effects, Benefits, Safety, and Legality
5-Meo-DMT comes from the Sonora Desert toad. Here is everything you want to know about 5-Meo-DMT and how it compares to 4-AcO-DMT.

4-AcO-DMT Guide: Benefits, Effects, Safety, and Legality
This guide tells you everything about 4 AcO DMT & 5 MeO DMT, that belong to the tryptamine class, and are similar but slightly different to DMT.

How Much Does LSD Cost? When shopping around for that magical psychedelic substance, there can be many uncertainties when new to buying LSD. You may be wondering how much does LSD cost? In this article, we will discuss what to expect when purchasing LSD on the black market, what forms LSD is sold in, and the standard breakdown of buying LSD in quantity.   Navy Use of LSD on the Dark Web The dark web is increasingly popular for purchasing illegal substances. The US Navy has now noticed this trend with their staff. Read to learn more.   Having Sex on LSD: What You Need to Know Can you have sex on LSD? Read our guide to learn everything about sex on acid, from lowered inhibitions to LSD users quotes on sex while tripping.   A Drug That Switches off an LSD Trip A pharmaceutical company is developing an “off-switch” drug for an LSD trip, in the case that a bad trip can happen. Some would say there is no such thing.   Queen of Hearts: An Interview with Liz Elliot on Tim Leary and LSD The history of psychedelia, particularly the British experience, has been almost totally written by men. Of the women involved, especially those who were in the thick of it, little has been written either by or about them. A notable exception is Liz Elliot.   LSD Guide: Effects, Common Uses, Safety LSD, Lysergic acid diethylamide, or just acid is one of the most important psychedelics ever discovered. What did history teach us?   Microdosing LSD & Common Dosage Explained Microdosing, though imperceivable, is showing to have many health benefits–here is everything you want to know about microdosing LSD.   LSD Resources Curious to learn more about LSD? This guide includes comprehensive LSD resources containing books, studies and more.   LSD as a Spiritual Aid There is common consent that the evolution of mankind is paralleled by the increase and expansion of consciousness. From the described process of how consciousness originates and develops, it becomes evident that its growth depends on its faculty of perception. Therefore every means of improving this faculty should be used.   Legendary LSD Blotter Art: A Hidden Craftsmanship Have you ever heard of LSD blotter art? Explore the trippy world of LSD art and some of the top artists of LSD blotter art.   LSD and Exercise: Does it Work? LSD and exercise? Learn why high-performing athletes are taking hits of LSD to improve their overall potential.   Jan Bastiaans Treated Holocaust Survivors with LSD Dutch psychiatrist, Jan Bastiaans administered LSD-assisted therapy to survivors of the Holocaust. A true war hero and pioneer of psychedelic-therapy.   LSD and Spiritual Awakening I give thanks for LSD, which provided the opening that led me to India in 1971 and brought me to Neem Karoli Baba, known as Maharajji. Maharajji is described by the Indians as a “knower of hearts.”   How LSD is Made: Everything You Need to Know Ever wonder how to make LSD? Read our guide to learn everything you need to know about the procedures of how LSD is made.   How to Store LSD: Best Practices Learn the best way to store LSD, including the proper temperature and conditions to maximize how long LSD lasts when stored.   Bicycle Day: The Discovery of LSD Every year on April 19th, psychonauts join forces to celebrate Bicycle Day. Learn about the famous day when Albert Hoffman first discovered the effects of LSD.   Cary Grant: A Hollywood Legend On LSD Cary Grant was a famous actor during the 1930’s-60’s But did you know Grant experimented with LSD? Read our guide to learn more.   Albert Hofmann: LSD — My Problem Child Learn about Albert Hofmann and his discovery of LSD, along with the story of Bicycle Day and why it marks a historic milestone.   Babies are High: What Does LSD Do To Your Brain What do LSD and babies have in common? Researchers at the Imperial College in London discover that an adult’s brain on LSD looks like a baby’s brain.   1P LSD: Effects, Benefits, Safety Explained 1P LSD is an analogue of LSD and homologue of ALD-25. Here is everything you want to know about 1P LSD and how it compares to LSD.   Francis Crick, DNA & LSD Type ‘Francis Crick LSD’ into Google, and the result will be 30,000 links. Many sites claim that Crick (one of the two men responsible for discovering the structure of DNA), was either under the influence of LSD at the time of his revelation or used the drug to help with his thought processes during his research. Is this true?   What Happens If You Overdose on LSD? A recent article presented three individuals who overdosed on LSD. Though the experience was unpleasant, the outcomes were remarkably positive.

The Ayahuasca Experience
Ayahuasca is both a medicine and a visionary aid. You can employ ayahuasca for physical, mental, emotional and spiritual repair, and you can engage with the power of ayahuasca for deeper insight and realization. If you consider attainment of knowledge in the broadest perspective, you can say that at all times, ayahuasca heals.

 

Trippy Talk: Meet Ayahuasca with Sitaramaya Sita and PlantTeachers
Sitaramaya Sita is a spiritual herbalist, pusangera, and plant wisdom practitioner formally trained in the Shipibo ayahuasca tradition.

 

The Therapeutic Value of Ayahuasca
My best description of the impact of ayahuasca is that it’s a rocket boost to psychospiritual growth and unfolding, my professional specialty during my thirty-five years of private practice.

 

Microdosing Ayahuasca: Common Dosage Explained
What is ayahuasca made of and what is considered a microdose? Explore insights with an experienced Peruvian brewmaster and learn more about this practice.

 

Ayahuasca Makes Neuron Babies in Your Brain
Researchers from Beckley/Sant Pau Research Program have shared the latest findings in their study on the effects of ayahuasca on neurogenesis.

 

The Fatimiya Sufi Order and Ayahuasca
In this interview, the founder of the Fatimiya Sufi Order,  N. Wahid Azal, discusses the history and uses of plant medicines in Islamic and pre-Islamic mystery schools.

 

Consideration Ayahuasca for Treatment of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder
Research indicates that ayahuasca mimics mechanisms of currently accepted treatments for PTSD. In order to understand the implications of ayahuasca treatment, we need to understand how PTSD develops.

 

Brainwaves on Ayahuasca: A Waking Dream State
In a study researchers shared discoveries showing ingredients found in Ayahuasca impact the brainwaves causing a “waking dream” state.

 

Cannabis and Ayahuasca: Mixing Entheogenic Plants
Cannabis and Ayahuasca: most people believe they shouldn’t be mixed. Read this personal experience peppered with thoughts from a pro cannabis Peruvian Shaman.

 

Ayahuasca Retreat 101: Everything You Need to Know to Brave the Brew
Ayahuasca has been known to be a powerful medicinal substance for millennia. However, until recently, it was only found in the jungle. Word of its deeply healing and cleansing properties has begun to spread across the world as many modern, Western individuals are seeking spiritual, mental, emotional, and physical well-being. More ayahuasca retreat centers are emerging in the Amazon and worldwide to meet the demand.

 

Ayahuasca Helps with Grief
A new study published in psychopharmacology found that ayahuasca helped those suffering from the loss of a loved one up to a year after treatment.

 

Ayahuasca Benefits: Clinical Improvements for Six Months
Ayahuasca benefits can last six months according to studies. Read here to learn about the clinical improvements from drinking the brew.

 

Ayahuasca Culture: Indigenous, Western, And The Future
Ayahuasca has been use for generations in the Amazon. With the rise of retreats and the brew leaving the rainforest how is ayahuasca culture changing?

 

Ayahuasca Guide: Effects, Common Uses, Safety
The Amazonian brew, Ayahuasca has a long history and wide use. Read our guide to learn all about the tea from its beginnings up to modern-day interest.

 

Ayahuasca and the Godhead: An Interview with Wahid Azal of the Fatimiya Sufi Order
Wahid Azal, a Sufi mystic of The Fatimiya Sufi Order and an Islamic scholar, talks about entheogens, Sufism, mythology, and metaphysics.

 

Ayahuasca and the Feminine: Women’s Roles, Healing, Retreats, and More
Ayahuasca is lovingly called “grandmother” or “mother” by many. Just how feminine is the brew? Read to learn all about women and ayahuasca.

What Is the Standard of Care for Ketamine Treatments?
Ketamine therapy is on the rise in light of its powerful results for treatment-resistant depression. But, what is the current standard of care for ketamine? Read to find out.

What Is Dissociation and How Does Ketamine Create It?
Dissociation can take on multiple forms. So, what is dissociation like and how does ketamine create it? Read to find out.

Having Sex on Ketamine: Getting Physical on a Dissociative
Curious about what it could feel like to have sex on a dissociate? Find out all the answers in our guide to sex on ketamine.

Special K: The Party Drug
Special K refers to Ketamine when used recreationally. Learn the trends as well as safety information around this substance.

Kitty Flipping: When Ketamine and Molly Meet
What is it, what does it feel like, and how long does it last? Read to explore the mechanics of kitty flipping.

Ketamine vs. Esketamine: 3 Important Differences Explained
Ketamine and esketamine are used to treat depression. But what’s the difference between them? Read to learn which one is right for you: ketamine vs. esketamine.

Guide to Ketamine Treatments: Understanding the New Approach
Ketamine is becoming more popular as more people are seeing its benefits. Is ketamine a fit? Read our guide for all you need to know about ketamine treatments.

Ketamine Treatment for Eating Disorders
Ketamine is becoming a promising treatment for various mental health conditions. Read to learn how individuals can use ketamine treatment for eating disorders.

Ketamine Resources, Studies, and Trusted Information
Curious to learn more about ketamine? This guide includes comprehensive ketamine resources containing books, studies and more.

Ketamine Guide: Effects, Common Uses, Safety
Our ultimate guide to ketamine has everything you need to know about this “dissociative anesthetic” and how it is being studied for depression treatment.

Ketamine for Depression: A Mental Health Breakthrough
While antidepressants work for some, many others find no relief. Read to learn about the therapeutic uses of ketamine for depression.

Ketamine for Addiction: Treatments Offering Hope
New treatments are offering hope to individuals suffering from addiction diseases. Read to learn how ketamine for addiction is providing breakthrough results.

Microdosing Ketamine & Common Dosages Explained
Microdosing, though imperceivable, is showing to have many health benefits–here is everything you want to know about microdosing ketamine.

How to Ease a Ketamine Comedown
Knowing what to expect when you come down from ketamine can help integrate the experience to gain as much value as possible.

How to Store Ketamine: Best Practices
Learn the best ways how to store ketamine, including the proper temperature and conditions to maximize how long ketamine lasts when stored.

How To Buy Ketamine: Is There Legal Ketamine Online?
Learn exactly where it’s legal to buy ketamine, and if it’s possible to purchase legal ketamine on the internet.

How Long Does Ketamine Stay in Your System?
How long does ketamine stay in your system? Are there lasting effects on your body? Read to discover the answers!

How Ketamine is Made: Everything You Need to Know
Ever wonder how to make Ketamine? Read our guide to learn everything you need to know about the procedures of how Ketamine is made.

Colorado on Ketamine: First Responders Waiver Programs
Fallout continues after Elijah McClain. Despite opposing recommendations from some city council, Colorado State Health panel recommends the continued use of ketamine by medics for those demonstrating “excited delirium” or “extreme agitation”.

Types of Ketamine: Learn the Differences & Uses for Each
Learn about the different types of ketamine and what they are used for—and what type might be right for you. Read now to find out!

Kitty Flipping: When Ketamine and Molly Meet
What is it, what does it feel like, and how long does it last? Read to explore the mechanics of kitty flipping.

MDMA & Ecstasy Guide: Effects, Common Uses, Safety
Our ultimate guide to MDMA has everything you want to know about Ecstasy from how it was developed in 1912 to why it’s being studied today.

How To Get the Most out of Taking MDMA as a Couple
Taking MDMA as a couple can lead to exciting experiences. Read here to learn how to get the most of of this love drug in your relationship.

Common MDMA Dosage & Microdosing Explained
Microdosing, though imperceivable, is showing to have many health benefits–here is everything you want to know about microdosing MDMA.

Having Sex on MDMA: What You Need to Know
MDMA is known as the love drug… Read our guide to learn all about sex on MDMA and why it is beginning to makes its way into couple’s therapy.

How MDMA is Made: Common Procedures Explained
Ever wonder how to make MDMA? Read our guide to learn everything you need to know about the procedures of how MDMA is made.

Hippie Flipping: When Shrooms and Molly Meet
What is it, what does it feel like, and how long does it last? Explore the mechanics of hippie flipping and how to safely experiment.

How Cocaine is Made: Common Procedures Explained
Ever wonder how to make cocaine? Read our guide to learn everything you need to know about the procedures of how cocaine is made.

A Christmas Sweater with Santa and Cocaine
This week, Walmart came under fire for a “Let it Snow” Christmas sweater depicting Santa with lines of cocaine. Columbia is not merry about it.

Ultimate Cocaine Guide: Effects, Common Uses, Safety
This guide covers what you need to know about Cocaine, including common effects and uses, legality, safety precautions and top trends today.

NEWS: An FDA-Approved Cocaine Nasal Spray
The FDA approved a cocaine nasal spray called Numbrino, which has raised suspicions that the pharmaceutical company, Lannett Company Inc., paid off the FDA..

The Ultimate Guide to Cannabis Bioavailability
What is bioavailability and how can it affect the overall efficacy of a psychedelic substance? Read to learn more.

Cannabis Research Explains Sociability Behaviors
New research by Dr. Giovanni Marsicano shows social behavioral changes occur as a result of less energy available to the neurons. Read here to learn more.

The Cannabis Shaman
If recreational and medical use of marijuana is becoming accepted, can the spiritual use as well? Experiential journalist Rak Razam interviews Hamilton Souther, founder of the 420 Cannabis Shamanism movement…

Cannabis Guide: Effects, Common Uses, Safety
Our ultimate guide to Cannabis has everything you want to know about this popular substances that has psychedelic properties.

Cannabis and Ayahuasca: Mixing Entheogenic Plants
Cannabis and Ayahuasca: most people believe they shouldn’t be mixed. Read this personal experience peppered with thoughts from a procannabis Peruvian Shaman.

CBD-Rich Cannabis Versus Single-Molecule CBD
A ground-breaking study has documented the superior therapeutic properties of whole plant Cannabis extract as compared to synthetic cannabidiol (CBD), challenging the medical-industrial complex’s notion that “crude” botanical preparations are less effective than single-molecule compounds.

Cannabis Has Always Been a Medicine
Modern science has already confirmed the efficacy of cannabis for most uses described in the ancient medical texts, but prohibitionists still claim that medical cannabis is “just a ruse.”

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