Psilocybe cubensis doesn't look particularly
magical. In fact, the scientific name of this little brown-and-white
mushroom roughly translates to "bald head," befitting the fungus's
rather mild-mannered appearance. But those who have ingested a dose of P. cubensis say it changes the user's world.
At first glance,
The mushroom is one of more than 100 species that contain compounds
called psilocybin and psilocin, which are psychoactive and cause
hallucinations, euphoria and other trippy symptoms. These "magic
mushrooms" have long been used in Central American religious ceremonies,
and are now part of the black market in drugs in the United States and
many other countries, where they are considered a controlled substance.
How does a modest little mushroom upend the brain so thoroughly? Read on for the strange secrets of 'shrooms.
1. Mushrooms hyperconnect the brain
boosts the brain's connectivity,
according to an October 2014 study. Researchers at King's College
London asked 15 volunteers undergo brain scanning by a functional
magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) machine. They did so once after
ingesting a dose of magic mushrooms, and once after taking a placebo.
The resulting brain connectivity maps showed that, while under the
influence of the drug, the brain synchronizes activity among areas that
would not normally be connected. This alteration in activity could
explain the dreamy state that 'shroom users report experiencing after
taking the drug, the researchers said.
2. Slow it down
'Shrooms act in other strange ways upon the brain. Psilocybin works by
binding to receptors for the neurotransmitter serotonin. Although it's
not clear exactly how this binding affects the brain, studies have found
that the drug has other brain-communication-related effects in addition
to increased synchronicity.
In one study, brain imaging of volunteers who took psilocybin revealed decreased activity
in information-transfer areas such as the thalamus, a structure deep in
the middle of the brain. Slowing down the activity in areas such as the
thalamus may allow information to travel more freely throughout the
brain, because that region is a gatekeeper that usually limits
connections, according to the researchers from Imperial College London.
3. Magic mushrooms go way back
Central Americans were using psilocybin mushrooms before Europeans
landed on the New World's shores; the fantastical fungi grow well in
subtropical and tropical environments. But how far back were humans
tripping on magic mushrooms?
It's not an easy question to answer, but a 1992 paper in the
short-lived journal, "Integration: Journal of Mind-Moving Plants and
Culture," argued that rock art in the Sahara dating back 9,000 years depicts hallucinogenic mushrooms.
The art in question shows masked figures holding mushroomlike objects.
Other drawings show mushrooms positioned behind anthropomorphic figures —
possibly a nod to the fact that mushrooms grow in dung. (The mushroom
figures have also been interpreted as flowers, arrows or other plant
matter, however, so it remains an open question whether the people who
lived in the ancient Sahara used 'shrooms.)
4. Magic mushrooms explain Santa … maybe
On the subject of myth, settle in for a less-than-innocent tale of
Christmas cheer. According to Sierra College anthropologist John Rush,
magic mushrooms explain why kids wait for a flying elf to bring them
presents on Dec. 25.
Rush said that Siberian shamans used to bring gifts of hallucinogenic
mushrooms to households each winter. Reindeer were the "spirit animals"
of these shaman, and ingesting mushrooms might just convince a
hallucinating tribe member that those animals could fly. Plus, Santa's
red-and-white suit looks suspiciously like the colors of the mushroom
species Amanita muscaria, which grows — wait for it — under evergreen trees. However, this species is toxic to people. [8 Ways Magic Mushrooms Gave Us Christmas]
Feeling like you've just taken a bad trip? Not to worry. Not all
anthropologists are sold on the hallucinogen-Christmas connection. But
still, as Carl Ruck, a classicist at Boston University, told Live Science in 2012: "At first glance, one thinks it's ridiculous, but it's not."
5. 'Shrooms may change people for good
Psychologists say that few things can truly alter someone's personality
in adulthood, but magic mushrooms may be one of those things.
A 2011 study found that after one dose of psilocybin, people became more open to new experiences
for at least 14 months, a shockingly stable change. People with open
personalities are more creative and more appreciative of art, and they
value novelty and emotion.
The reason for the change seems to be psilocybin's effects on emotions.
People describe mushroom trips as extremely profound experiences, and
report feelings of joy and connectedness to others and to the world
around them. These transcendent experiences appear to linger. (In the
experiments, the researchers took great pains to assure their
participants did not experience "bad trips," as some people respond to
psilocybin with panic, nausea and vomiting. Volunteers were kept safe in
a room with peaceful music and calming surroundings.)
6. Mushrooms kill fear
Another strange side effect of magic mushrooms: They destroy fear. A 2013 study in mice found that when dosed with psilocybin,
the animals became less likely to freeze up when they heard a noise
they had learned to associate with a painful electric shock. Mice that
were not given the drug also gradually relaxed around the noise, but it
took longer.
The mice were given a low dose of psilocybin, and the researchers said
they hope this animal study will inspire more work on how mushrooms
might be used to treat mental health problems in people. For example,
small doses of psilocybin could be explored as a way to treat
post-traumatic stress disorder, the researchers said.
7. They make their own wind
Mushrooms don't just exist to get people high, of course; they have
their own lives. And part of that life is reproduction. Like other
fungi, mushrooms reproduce via spores, which travel the breeze to find a
new place to grow.
But mushrooms often live in sheltered areas on forested floors, where
the wind doesn't blow. To solve the problem of spreading their spores,
some 'shrooms (including the hallucinogenic Amanita muscaria)
create their own wind. To do this, the fungi increase the rate that
water evaporates off of their surfaces, placing water vapor in the air
immediately around them. This water vapor, along with the cool air
created by evaporation, works to lift spores. Together, these two forces
can lift the spores
up to 4 inches (10 centimeters) above the mushroom, according to a
presentation at the 2013 meeting of the American Physical Society's
Division of Fluid Dynamics.
8. Many mushrooms
International Journal of Medicinal Mushrooms.
Latin America and the Caribbean are home to more than 50 species, and
Mexico alone has 53. There are 22 species of magic mushroom in North
America, 16 in Europe, 19 in Australia and the Pacific island region, 15
in Asia, and a mere four in Africa.
At least 144 species of mushroom contain the psychoactive ingredient psilocybin, according to a 2005 review in the
9. Experimenting with 'shrooms
Recently, researchers have begun to experiment with psilocybin as a potential treatment for depression, anxiety and other mental disorders.
This line of research was frozen for decades and is still difficult to
pursue, given psilocybin's status as a Schedule I substance. This means
the drug is classified by the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) as
having no accepted medical use and a high potential for abuse.
25-year follow-up
in 1991 found that participants who got the psilocybin remembered
feeling even more unity and sacredness than they said they'd felt six
months after the fact. Many described the experience as life altering.
"It left me with a completely unquestioned certainty that there is an
environment bigger than the one I'm conscious of," one told the
researchers in 1991. "I have my own interpretation of what that is, but
it went from a theoretical proposition to an experiential one. …
Somehow, my life has been different knowing that there is something out
there."
10. The counterculture cultivator
Leary's psychedelic experiments are part of hippie lore, but the man
who did the most to bring magic mushrooms to mainstream U.S. drug
culture was a writer and ethnobotanist named Terence McKenna. He had
been experimenting with psychedelics since his teen years, but it wasn't
until a trip to the Amazon in 1971 that he discovered psilocybin
mushrooms — fields of them, according to a 2000 profile in Wired magazine.
In 1976, McKenna and his brother published "Psilocybin: Magic Mushroom
Grower's Guide," a manual for cultivating psilocybin mushrooms at home.
"What is described is only slightly more complicated than canning or
making jelly," McKenna wrote in the foreword to the book.
11. Animals feel the effects
Psilocybin 'shrooms grow in the wild, so it's perhaps inevitable that
nonhuman animals have sampled these trippy fungi. In 2010, the British
tabloids were abuzz with reports that three pygmy goats at an animal
sanctuary run by 1960s TV actress Alexandra Bastedo had gotten into some
wild magic mushrooms. The goats reportedly acted lethargic, vomited and staggered around, taking two days to fully recover.
Siberian reindeer also have a taste for magic mushrooms,
according to a 2009 BBC nature documentary. It's unclear whether the
reindeer feel the effects, but Siberian mystics would sometimes drink
the urine from deer that had ingested mushrooms in order to get a
hallucinogenic experience for religious rituals.
No comments:
Post a Comment