Understanding Harm Reduction: From Set and Setting to Policy
Harm reduction is a crucial part of psychedelic experiences to ensure safety. Read this guide to learn about set and setting.
Harm reduction is a crucial part of psychedelic experiences to ensure safety. Read this guide to learn about set and setting.
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 …
Ayahuasca Retreats 101: Everything You Need to Know About Retreat Centers Read More »
The collective unconscious has pulled the Trump Card on us from the shadowy bottom of the deck and we need to understand it as an oracular splinter in our mind.
Most of what is today labeled as supernatural is but the residue of the sacred which is inherent in humankind and the world, no matter how we ignore or discard it.
In this interview, Reality Sandwich & Evolver co-founder Daniel Pinchbeck discusses the ideas laid out in his new book, “How Soon is Now?” for tackling the impending ecological mega-crisis that threatens all life on earth.
If we can identify the transition or trigger points when the mode of consciousness changes, we can learn to utilize the positive states according to our conscious intention.
There is a systemic psycho-spiritual disease—a true madness—that pervades the body politic of humanity, and what is happening at Standing Rock is an acute localized outbreak of this disease.
Each of us, as a human soul, incarnates by choice with a purpose, an intention or vision for this life – what we came here to do and to be.
Genesis P-Orridge, perhaps the most enigmatic artist of our time, discusses synchronicity, human evolution, the responsibility of a creative artist, and how life in Kathmandu influenced h/er current exhibition at the Rubin Museum in NYC.
Just as the folklore-fueled punk of the Pogues obliterated boundaries of time and distance for me, the D. I. Y. movement tore down the walls I’d assumed stood between pro and amateur, between artist and audience.