Monthly Psychedelic Recaps

The Roundups and Recaps Are Ending

Image by Dave Hoefler

I’ve been writing regular psychedelic news weekly link roundups and monthly/yearly recaps here at Think Wilder for more than 7.5 years (all the while without missing a single week) and today I’m announcing that last month’s “This Month in Psychedelics” post marks the official end of these roundups and recaps.

Originally I had hoped to write a “This Year in Psychedelics” post for 2022, but I never got around to it. Ultimately, it comes down to the fact that I’ve run out of steam. I’m pretty burnt out after consistently writing these roundups and recaps since the Spring of 2015.

You see, over the course of 2022 I struggled with two things:

  1. How to approach my work on this blog

  2. What I want to spend my personal time on

A while back—I’m not sure exactly when—I began to question whether I wanted to continue collecting links for the weekly roundups and recapping the most noteworthy psychedelic news at the end of each month and year, and I’ve decided that I need to drop these three columns to make room for something else. In fact, after thinking about it for a while I decided that I need a total break from Think Wilder for a while.

I hope to eventually come back and use this space to write, but I need to step away from it for the time being so I can focus on other things right now. If you are one of my Patreon supporters, I completely understand if you would like to cancel your membership while I am on hiatus, but if you are able to keep supporting me it is greatly appreciated. Until we meet again, keep thinking wilder!

This Month in Psychedelics - December 2022

Policy

There will be a handful of drug policy reforms attempted in 2023. For starters, California will once more try to decriminalize psychedelics statewide next year. Meanwhile, New York will try its hands at legalizing psychedelics.

When it comes to cannabis reform efforts, Oklahoma will hold a special election in March to decide on cannabis legalization and the governors of both Pennsylvania and Hawaii have signaled support, which means they could end up legalizing in 2023 as well.

Industry

A California jury found the Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies (MAPS) partially responsible for the death of a 20 year-old woman who died after being seen at Zendo Project (the nonprofit’s harm reduction organization) during the 2017 Lightning in a Bottle music festival. The MAPS employees were found to be negligent and that negligence was determined to be a significant factor in the death. The case verdict found MAPS to be 25% liable and ordered the association pay $1 million in damages to the victim’s mothers.

Following up on last month’s story about an above-ground shroom dispensary in Florida, the shop has stopped selling its amanita muscaria products after the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services put a stop to their operation.

Research

Working with cannabis to treat pain is a common use case, but a new research found that relief may simply come down to believing it will help. In fact, according to the study’s lead author “The placebo response amounted to 67% of the pain relief associated with genuine cannabinoids.” While this doesn’t completely rule out the efficacy of using cannabis to treat pain, it does throw some cold water on the fire.

Harm Reduction

In a surprising turn of events, the powerful deliriant datura stramonium was responsible for contaminating baby spinach, prompting a “hallucinogenic spinach recall”. The weed is also known as thornapple or jimsonweed, and it caused more than 160 people to experience delirium and hallucinations.

Miscellaneous

After spending the majority of 2022 behind bars in a Russian prison for allegedly “smuggling” a THC vape pen into the country, WNBA player Brittney Griner was released in a prisoner swap in exchange for a Russian arms dealer. While we can celebrate her release, it’s unfortunate that this drug war-induced traumatic experience will follow Griner along for the rest of her life.

That’s all for this month’s update. Remember to always test and weigh your drugs and until next time—keep thinking wilder.

Think Wilder is reader-supported. If you enjoyed this month’s update, please consider helping out by becoming a patron, making a one-time donation, or sharing this post with a friend. Thank you for your support.

This Month in Psychedelics - November 2022

Policy

The 2022 midterm elections caused November to be a monumental month for drug policy developments in the United States. While not every attempted effort was passed, many were successful. Kicking things off, Colorado voters approved a statewide measure to decriminalize natural psychedelics and create a model to legally purchase them. These changes will roll out gradually over the course of the next four years.

With nearly 70% of Americans in favor of legalizing cannabis, it’s no surprise that there were several victories in reforming cannabis policies across the country. Maryland and Missouri both legalized marijuana, becoming the 20th and 21st states to do so. Meanwhile, voters in Ohio, Wisconsin, and Texas approved a variety of cannabis-related drug policy reforms.

In addition to the midterm elections, bipartisan lawmakers in Congress formed a new first-of-its-kind “psychedelic caucus” which will “focus on exploring psychedelic research to alleviate the U.S. mental health crisis.” The congressional Psychedelics Advancing Clinical Treatments (PACT) caucus will not be advocating for drug policy reforms but will instead focus congressional conversations around the therapeutic potential of psychedelics and work toward educating lawmakers and the public.

Across the pond, the Netherlands is planning to ban nitrous oxide due to concerns that the drug will cause severe health issues in addition to the thousands of vehicular crashes the country has been experiencing between 2018 and 2021. The Dutch government is expected to confirm the ban on distribution, sale, and possession of nitrous oxide in January.

Industry

A psychedelic entrepreneur in Florida opened an above-board shroom dispensary. Well, sort of… rather than selling psilocybin mushroom products, the hemp dispensary is selling Amanita muscaria, the red-and-white dotted mushroom species that engenders psychoactive effects when consumed. This is yet another example of newly-formed businesses operating in legal gray areas involving psychoactive drugs, and it will be interesting to see if the shop is able to stay open now that word has spread about its trippy offerings.

Research

The final participant in the Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies (MAPS) Phase 3 trial of MDMA-assisted therapy for PTSD completed their last session in the clinical treatment protocol, bringing the study to a close. The next step in the process will be an FDA evaluation of the treatment’s safety and efficacy, which will take place next year. It’s been a long ride for MAPS, which started the work of obtaining FDA approval to use MDMA therapeutically 36 years ago!

Compass Pathways published results from its Phase 2 clinical trial of psilocybin-assisted therapy for depression, and they left a little to be desired. Although the treatment yielded rapid antidepressant effects for most patients, only about 20% of participants still showed significant improvement at 12 weeks. These results are roughly as effective as existing SSRIs or traditional therapeutic treatments for depression like cognitive behavioral therapy.

A couple studies looking into ayahuasca found that the South American brew causes adverse side effects, but the benefits still outweigh the risks. This seems to me to be common sense, because the use of practically all psychedelics involves some negative side effects but as they say, “the juice is still worth the squeeze” in my opinion.

Harm Reduction

A survey analyzed responses from about 250,000 festival attendees and found that drug checking services create a safer environment. The study focused on both positive and negative impacts of on-site drug checking and concluded that not only did the service not result in an increase of drugs at festivals, but about 61% of people who used them disposed of drugs they were intending to take if they were unsure what they contained. In addition, the seven festivals that provided drug checking services did not incur a single drug-related death.

Miscellaneous

The U.S. National Park Service (NPS) issued a warning asking people to not lick toads that secrete 5-MeO-DMT, a psychedelic alkaloid present in the Sonoran desert toad. This messaging appears to have been shared even though there hasn’t been a noted increase in toad-licking happening in national parks. Besides, every psychonaut worth their salt knows that you don’t lick the toad, you smoke the extracted secretion! Nonetheless, it’s entertaining to see the U.S. government attempt to communicate with the public about psychedelic drugs, even if they aren’t getting all of the details right.

Wrapping up this month’s recap is a study of ancient human remains that found that a Nazca child consumed San Pedro cactus prior to being sacrificed in a ritual ceremony more than a thousand years ago. This is not the first study to find a history of psychedelic use prior to ritual sacrifice, indicating that this may have been a more widespread practice than it was once thought to be.

That’s all for this month’s update. Remember to always test and weigh your drugs and until next time—keep thinking wilder.

Think Wilder is reader-supported. If you enjoyed this month’s update, please consider helping out by becoming a patron, making a one-time donation, or sharing this post with a friend. Thank you for your support.

This Month in Psychedelics - October 2022

Policy

Alberta will become the first province in Canada to regulate psychedelics for official therapeutic use. This move is intended to protect the public by ensuring safe access to high-quality substances and providing trained professionals who will help facilitate the therapy sessions. The new policy will go into effect in January 2023.

Germany approved a plan to legalize cannabis nationwide, but now the European Union will need to decide whether to allow the country to move forward. Assuming things go according to plan, cannabis could become legal in Germany by 2024.

President Joe Biden announced mass pardons for people who have committed federal cannabis possession offenses in the United States. This is a major development from Biden, who has been quiet on the issue of drug policy reform after campaigning on marijuana decriminalization, rescheduling, and expungements for low-level cannabis convictions. As a part of this recent announcement he also called on governors across the country to pardon simple possession cases in each state.

Next week is the U.S. midterm election, and several states will vote on cannabis and psychedelic drug policy reforms. Here is a guide that goes into detail on each proposal.

Industry

Beckley Psytech has entered into a definitive agreement to acquire clinical-stage life sciences company Eleusis Therapeutics, which will bring several novel psychedelic compounds under the Beckley Psytech umbrella of psychedelic-based candidates.

Research

A study found that MDMA-assisted psychotherapy may be effective at treating eating disorder symptoms in adults with severe PTSD. Although these are promising findings, they are still preliminary and more research will need to be conducted to verify the study’s results.

The DEA proposed significant increases in the production of cannabis and psychedelics for next year. This will allow more psychedelic research to be conducted, which will in turn provide an even better understanding of the safety and efficacy regarding psychedelic substances.

Harm Reduction

The Multi-Disciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies (MAPS) is getting ready for a trial involving a wrongful death civil lawsuit that began earlier this week. The case involves the death of a woman who attended the 2017 Lightning In A Bottle music festival. 20 year-old Baylee Ybarra Gatlin died while under care at the Zendo Project (MAPS’ harm reduction organization) and the lawsuit will determine whether MAPS is liable for financial damages incurred at the festival.

Miscellaneous

Unfortunately there were two criminal cases involving cannabis and psychedelics that did not turn out well. First, a Russian court upheld American basketball star Brittney Griner’s nine-year prison sentence. Earlier this year Griner was arrested in Russia for possessing less than one gram of cannabis oil. The U.S. government is attempting to work out a negotiation that may allow her to come back home sooner, but the details and result of that attempt are still to be determined.

And just a few countries over, a Polish couple was sentenced to eight years in prison for facilitating ayahuasca ceremonies at their home in the Czech Republic. This outcome, along with Brittney Griner’s loss at appealing her sentence, show that although the attitude toward psychedelics is loosening in some parts of the world, there are still places where you can be punished harshly for merely possessing or using these substances.

That’s all for this month’s update. Remember to always test and weigh your drugs and until next time—keep thinking wilder.

Think Wilder is reader-supported. If you enjoyed this month’s update, please consider helping out by becoming a patron, making a one-time donation, or sharing this post with a friend. Thank you for your support.

This Month in Psychedelics - September 2022

Policy

San Francisco’s Board of Supervisors unanimously approved a resolution to decriminalize psychedelics. In addition to decriminalizing possession of psychedelics, the resolution also allows for planting, cultivating, purchasing, transporting, distributing, and engaging in practices with them as well.

Research

A study from the University of Cambridge found that cannabis users do not fit the “lazy stoner” stereotype and actually do not lack motivation compared with non-users. In fact, the research showed that there was no difference in motivation for rewards, pleasure derived from rewards, or the brain’s response when seeking rewards, which helps support the idea that cannabis users can be just as motivated and productive as anyone else.

Yet another placebo-controlled microdosing study found that the benefits from taking sub perceptual doses of psychedelics may be ascribed to the placebo effect. In this experimental study, participants took microdoses of psilocybin and the expectations of both the participants and the study authors were controlled so as to not influence the results. While this doesn’t definitively prove that microdosing effects come down to placebo, it does add fuel to the growing fire that is questioning the practice’s efficacy.

Harm Reduction

Following what appeared to be a trend of people cooking chicken in NyQuil, the FDA may have unintentionally made the practice go viral on TikTok. The cough medicine contains the drug dextromethorphan, which can engender psychedelic effects, but cooking food in it can be dangerous. Inhaling the medication’s vapors during the cooking process can result in overdoses and even damage your lungs, so it’s best to stay away from this strange recipe. Thankfully it seems like most people already understood it was a meme joke though.

Miscellaneous

Years after the unfortunate and tragic death of Elijah McClain by the hands of police, the 23 year-old’s autopsy report had its cause of death changed to “ketamine administration”. The amendment reflects the coroner’s findings that the large dose of ketamine that was forcibly given to McClain was the primary factor in his death.

That’s all for this month’s update. Remember to always test and weigh your drugs and until next time—keep thinking wilder.

Think Wilder is reader-supported. If you enjoyed this month’s update, please consider helping out by becoming a patron, making a one-time donation, or sharing this post with a friend. Thank you for your support.