"We wanted to give people access to the psilocybin experience - to confirm, or not - that all these things that had happened to us were really happening to us"
The film's illustration of fungi’s resilience is dazzling on both a visual and intellectual level, while affirming with matter-of-fact clarity that we, as a...
Updates: Field Trip Psychedelics, Inc. Charts Course to Public Market; Colorado Ballot Initiative; New Wave Holdings; MindMed & NeonMind add DMT to Portfolio
Decriminalize Nature Oakland called the plants “entheogenic” instead of hallucinogenic or psychedelic in the ordinance because those words have a stigma.
A growing body of research shows that plant medicines could be a safe alternative to conventional medicine for treating depression, anxiety, PTSD and addiction.
People who have been taking antidepressants for several years sometimes hit a wall, a point when that treatment no longer seems to ease their symptoms.
A recent meta-analysis published in Psychiatry Research provides tentative support for psilocybin in the treatment of depression and anxiety.
Our findings move us one step closer to understanding mechanisms underlying how psilocybin works in the brain.