Alcohol and psilocybin paint two very different pictures in the brain. While one disrupts and diminishes, the other heals and enhances.
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Alcohol and psilocybin paint two very different pictures in the brain. While one disrupts and diminishes, the other heals and enhances.
Often, athletes get ‘stuck’ in an unhelpful habit or movement pattern – a wonky golf swing, a knee-jarring run stride, a lifting plateau, and on and on. With the increased neuroplasticity from psilocybin, people are able to break out of those well-worn neural pathways and build new, optimized pathways in the brain for the movement pattern they’d like to adapt. Small changes become magnified as they’re quite literally rewired into the brain.
Your main role is to “hold space” – being there as a supportive, calm, and non-judgemental presence without interfering or getting involved.
Psychedelic therapy challenges medical norms, urging holistic healing. Subjective experiences foster spiritual awakenings, highlighting therapy’s mystical potential. Join TheraPsil for a webinar on May 21, 2024 with Challian Christ to explore this transformative terrain.
Psilocybin actually reshapes pathways in the brain, which researchers hope can treat the cause of chronic pain rather than just the pain itself.
A singe dose of psilocybin creates rapid and lasting fear extinction effects – the main mechanism believed to be disrupted in PTSD patients.
Emerging evidence suggests that psychedelic-assisted therapy holds promise as a valuable treatment approach to alleviate symptoms of end of life distress in palliative care patients.
Psilocybin, the active compound in magic mushrooms has been shown to be a potential powerful, immediate, and long-lasting treatment for anxiety, depression, post traumatic stress disorder, addiction, obsessive compulsive disorder, and other mental health disorders.
“Compared to standard antidepressants, which must be taken for long stretches of time, psilocybin has the potential to enduringly relieve the symptoms of depression with one or two treatments,” says Roland Griffiths, Ph.D., Professor and founding director of the Johns Hopkins Center for Psychedelic and Consciousness Research.
Developed by Paul Stamets, the Stamets Stack pairs psilocybin (the active ingredient in magic mushrooms) with lion’s mane and niacin (vitamin B3) for a powerful, brain-boosting microdose formula.