Book Review - Living Buddha, Living Christ

When you are a truly happy Christian, you are also a Buddhist. And vice versa.
— Thich Nhat Hanh

I first added Thich Nhat Hanh’s book Living Buddha, Living Christ to my “Want to Read” list on Goodreads ten years ago but didn’t actually get around to reading it until earlier this year. I’m not sure exactly what enticed me about the book the first time I came across it, but something in me knew that I needed to eventually read it. I’m glad I followed that calling and gave it a try, even if it took me a decade to finish.

Living Buddha, Living Christ provides a high-level overview of the similarities and differences between Buddhism and Christianity. The book certainly isn’t a deep dive into either tradition, so if that is what you’re looking for then you should move on and continue your search.

But if you want to read a respectful, highly-digestible, thought-provoking take on the two spiritual paths, then look no further.

In the book, Hanh (the bestselling author of Peace Is Every Step) explores the teachings and practices brought to us by two of the most influential figures in the history of humankind. Jesus Christ and the Buddha have helped shape the lives of people and cultures for two millennia. Yet their followers do not always agree. Have you ever wondered what Buddha and Jesus would say (or do) to each other if they met on the road?

Something tells me that they wouldn’t kill each other, despite the sage advice from Zen master Linji Yixuan that is often repeated in Buddhist centers and temples throughout the world:

If you meet the Buddha on the road, kill him.

Instead, it’s likely that the two would engage in a friendly discussion similar to the one that Hanh has been having with Christians for several decades, where he has tried to build a bridge between the two contemplative traditions. Thankfully, the wisdom from that discussion has been skillfully translated for readers in Living Buddha, Living Christ.

The book explores several striking similarities between Buddhism and Christianity, like how the Buddhist idea of reincarnation lines up perfectly with “pre-incarnation”, a teaching from the third-century Christian theologian Origen that you’ve probably never even heard of. Or the ways that Buddhism’s notion of nirvana echo the sentiment of Jesus’ description of the Kingdom of God.

This book will help you see both Buddhism and Christianity in a different light, but also more clearly than you ever have before.

My completion of Living Buddha, Living Christ marks the 10th book by Thich Nhat Hanh that I have read. His books are incredibly simple yet they serve as powerful guides to live a better life, and this book is no exception. If you want to learn more about the intersections where Buddhism and Christianity overlap as well as where they diverge, I can honestly recommend that you give this book a read.

However, as one last note, I wouldn’t suggest Living Buddha, Living Christ as your introduction to Thich Nhat Hanh. Personally I think that Peace Is Every Step, The Art of Communicating, Being Peace, and Anger: Wisdom for Cooling the Flames are much better places to start. But if you’re really into the concept behind Living Buddha, Living Christ, then you surely won’t be disappointed.

Either way, be sure you check out Hanh’s body of work; it has the potential to change your life.

Click here to buy the book.

Disclaimer: Think Wilder is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to amazon.com. I may earn a small commission for my endorsement, recommendation, testimonial, and/or link to any products or services from this website.

A Special Coronavirus Message from the Dalai Lama

Solid advice from His Holiness the 14th Dalai Lama:

No matter how difficult the situation may be, we should employ science and human ingenuity with determination and courage to overcome the problems that confront us. Faced with threats to our health and well-being, it is natural to feel anxiety and fear. Nevertheless, I take great solace in the following wise advice to examine the problems before us: If there is something to be done—do it, without any need to worry; if there’s nothing to be done, worrying about it further will not help.

The entire message is well thought-out and concise, and it is certainly worth a read. I hope everyone is staying safe and healthy out there.


This Week in Psychedelics - 4.3.20

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Cannabis

  • New York drops legalization from budget, likely ending 2020 push (Leafly)

  • Lack of protective gear at cannabis labs could threaten weed supply (The London Free Press)

  • Scientists Sue DEA Over Alleged ‘Secret’ Document That Delayed Marijuana Research Expansion (Marijuana Moment)

  • Idaho Activists Suspend Campaign To Legalize Medical Marijuana Due To Coronavirus (Marijuana Moment)

  • Boise startup reworks CBD and THC testing technology to test for COVID-19 in minutes (KTVB)

  • Missouri Marijuana Legalization Campaign In Jeopardy Due To Coronavirus (Marijuana Moment)

  • Cannabis users, shops suffer high anxiety after Massachusetts shuts down recreational sales (NBC News)

  • FDA Warns Former NFL Player To Stop Claiming CBD Can Cure Coronavirus (Marijuana Moment)

  • More Than 90% of Legal Marijuana Products Too Strong for Chronic Pain Relief (SciTechDaily)

  • Virginia Groups Push Governor To Amend Marijuana Decriminalization Bill On His Desk (Marijuana Moment)

  • Cannabis Scientists Are Chasing the Perfect High (The New York Times)

  • Senate Housing Bill Would Prevent Evictions For State-Legal Marijuana Extraction (Marijuana Moment)

  • Review Paper: Clinical Evidence Lacking in Support of CBD as an Anti-Viral Agent (NORML)

  • Large international study finds cannabis use is linked to lower physical activity levels in adolescents (PsyPost)

  • Cannabis license application deadline extended due to COVID-19 pandemic (WLS-TV)

  • Study sheds light on common adverse reactions to cannabis (News Medical)

  • How cannabis and humans evolved together (Leafly)

  • Teen Weed Smokers May Have Trouble Falling Asleep as Adults, New Study Says (MERRY JANE)

  • New Medicinal Cannabis Rules Launch in New Zealand (The Cannabis Exchange)

  • Washington Governor Signs Bill To Diversify State’s Marijuana Industry (Marijuana Moment)

  • Study indicates vaporized cannabis creates drug-seeking behavior (Brinkwire)

  • Feds Funding Research On How Marijuana Consumers Are Impacted By Coronavirus (Marijuana Moment)

  • Arbitrary & excessive: Marijuana trafficking sentences in Alabama (Southern Poverty Law Center)

LSD

  • This New York City Pharma Startup Wants To Turn LSD Into An FDA-Approved Medicine For Anxiety Disorder (Forbes)

  • MindMed Acquires Exclusive License to Eight Clinical Trials of LSD, Partners with World-Leading Psychedelic Research Laboratory at University Hospital Basel (Yahoo! Finance)

  • From Aldous Huxley to the Beatles: how LSD has inspired art (The Guardian)

Magic Mushrooms

  • Psilocybin Mindfulness Negatively Correlated with 5-HT2A Binding, Study Finds (Psychedelic Science Review)

  • Champignon Brands To Acquire Psilocybin Research Firm Tassili Life Sciences (The Deep Dive)

  • As Health-Conscious Consumers Seek Fresh Nutritional Avenues, Artisanal Mushrooms Step Into the Light (PR Newswire)

  • Psilocybin Kitchen: The Basics of Cooking with Mushrooms (DoubleBlind)

  • Understanding the Buzz About Magic Mushrooms (Psychology Today)

MDMA

Ayahuasca

  • Drinking Ayahuasca Without DMT is Powerful and Traditional (Kahpi)

Peyote

  • Why are some Native Americans fighting efforts to decriminalize peyote? (Los Angeles Times)

Iboga

  • Clear Sky Recovery Featured in the Documentary Ibogaine: Cure for a Crisis (PRWeb)

  • How psychedelic medicine is being used in the fight to end opioid addiction (EPM Magazine)

Ketamine

Miscellaneous

  • Coronavirus Upends Marijuana, Psychedelics And Drug Reform Ballot Measures (Forbes)

  • A New Breed of Drug Dealer Has Turned Buying Drugs into a Treasure Hunt (VICE)

  • DC Activists Have A New Plan To Get Psychedelics Decriminalization On The Ballot Despite Coronavirus (Marijuana Moment)

  • People with low psychological well-being more likely to report positive outcomes after psychedelic use (PsyPost)

  • Coronavirus, Drugs, and the Future of Festivals (DanceSafe)

  • Understanding Drug Potency and Its Importance in Psychedelic Research (Psychedelic Science Review)

  • Ehave, Inc. Appoints Dr. Mark Braunstein as Chief Psychedelic Officer (Yahoo! Finance)

  • Comparing Aeruginascin and Bufotenidine (Psychedelic Science Review)

  • Ease rules on research into psychedelic drugs, urges David Nutt (The Guardian)

  • An Insight into Drug Testing Facilities in the Netherlands (Volteface)

  • The Structure and Function of the Serotonin 5-HT2B Receptor (Psychedelic Science Review)

  • Ex-Cheerleader Jackee Stang Just Launched the ‘Goop of Psychedelics’ (The Daily Beast)

  • Can psychedelic therapy reduce the mental health impacts of the coronavirus pandemic? (The Sacramento Bee)

  • Revisiting the potential of using psychedelic drugs in psychiatry (Medical Xpress)

Think Wilder is reader-supported. If you enjoyed this week’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.

Disclaimer: "This Week in Psychedelics" does not censor or analyze the news links presented here. The purpose of this column is solely to catalogue how psychedelics are presented by the mass media, which includes everything from the latest scientific research to misinformation.

This Month in Psychedelics - March 2020

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Although COVID-19 was first discovered in December, it took a few months for the pandemic to finally spread to North America, Europe, and Australia. Now that it has officially arrived, people all across the globe are feeling its impact. Social distancing, sheltering-in-place, quarantines, job loss, financial instability, sickness, death… these are just some of the ways that this virus is rapidly forcing society to change.

The pandemic has had an enormous influence on the world of psychedelics too. In this month’s recap you will learn about what COVID-19 is doing to the cannabis industry, drug policy reform efforts, and the mysterious world of drug dealing.

While the virus has certainly taken the spotlight, there was also plenty of non-pandemic news this month too: sexual abuse in psychedelic research, tripping on placebos, breeding bad trips out of magic mushrooms, and much more.

Here is a slimmed-down video recap version that is available for those who prefer an easier-to-digest option:

Without further ado, let’s get into the news:

The Cannabis Industry Meets Coronavirus

American cannabis businesses had some big wins this month due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Several American states deemed cannabis access to be “essential” or made it easier to access cannabis in other ways. So while you may not be able to go to dinner and a movie, if you live in a state with a medical or recreational cannabis market you should check your local laws to see if you can still buy a bag or two of your favorite bud to survive your extended stay at home.

Across the pond in the Netherlands, Dutch coffee shops were initially planning to close their doors due to the coronavirus, sparking long lines of people stocking up before hunkering down at home. Fortunately the government changed its mind and shops were later told that they could offer take-home deals similar to the takeout options restaurants are offering at a time when everyone is being asked to stay put.

But not everything went well for the cannabis industry. Medical marijuana doctors in Colorado were told they can’t use telemedicine due to Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment regulations, which is putting staff and patients at heightened risk. And a federal agency (the Small Business Administration) informed cannabis businesses that they are not eligible for coronavirus disaster relief since cannabis is still federally illegal. The only silver lining is that this limitation does not apply to business that produce or sell hemp or hemp-derived products, which were legalized under the 2018 Farm Bill.

Drug Policy Reform Efforts Are Struggling

Drug policy reform efforts hit a snag as well. What was once shaping up to be a year of massive cannabis reform may turn out to be a lackluster year after all is said and done. The pandemic has affected cannabis legalization bills in several U.S. states, which has made them seem a lot less likely to be successful this year.

Psilocybin reform movements in California and Oregon are being forced to adapt too. California’s psilocybin legalization activists have requested the ability to collect signatures online. And in Oregon, a campaign to legalize psilocybin mushrooms for therapeutic use has implemented an option for potential signees to fill out an electronic form to request an official ballot petition by mail, which can then be printed, signed, and sent back. An Oregon drug decriminalization campaign is also now offering a printable option.

A psychedelic decriminalization campaign in Washington DC delayed its signature gathering effort out of concern for COVID-19 and is considering a new “micro-scale petition signature collection” approach in order to try and make the November ballot.

The Emergence of Remote Psychedelic Therapy

Two new psychedelic medicine clinics providing ketamine therapy opened up this month: Field Trip Health in Toronto and Mindbloom in New York City. That was before the pandemic spread to North America.

After the spread of COVID-19, Mindbloom adapted by offering a remote option for its ketamine therapy service. Now patients can experience a virtually administered psychedelic therapy session from the comfort and safety of their own homes instead of needing to go into the clinic for treatment.

Sexual Abuse in Psychedelic Research

One of the most distressing stories last month involved allegations of sexual abuse that may have taken place between a therapist and his patient during a sanctioned MDMA research study. Additional accounts of abuse involving psychedelic therapists have been reported during the last few years, indicating that there may be a dark problem brewing within the field of psychedelic therapy.

If you or someone you know has suffered from abuse you can call the National Sexual Assault Telephone Hotline (800.656.HOPE) for help.

Tripping on Placebos

There’s always that one friend who always claims they’re really feeling the effects of a psychedelic even though they didn’t take a large enough dose to match their exuberant claims.

So it shouldn’t come as too much of a surprise that this phenomenon was replicated in the scientific literature last month when a study found that participants reported experiencing psychedelic effects even though they weren’t really given psychedelics at all—they actually received placebos.

Breeding the Bad Trip Out of Magic Mushrooms

One company is attempting to redesign magic mushrooms so that they will never again cause a bad trip.

Instead of trying to increase the amount of psilocybin in mushrooms, the company is studying a compound that the fungi possess called aeruginascin that may act similarly to the way CBD behaves in cannabis, which could possibly reduce or eliminate the potential for challenging or traumatic psychedelic experiences.

COVID-19 Is Impacting Drug Dealing

One thing you might not think of when it comes to the coronavirus is the impact that the pandemic has had on the black market for illegal drugs. But just like everything else, COVID-19 has also played a role in changing drug dealing too.

Similar to restaurants and grocery stores that can drop food off at your door so you don’t have to leave your house, dealers who deliver drugs are reporting that business is booming. As one dealer put it, “When you have people at home all day, what else are they going to do?”

All that demand—plus added risks for dealers—has led to price increases.

Innovative dealers in Russia have changed the game by turning the act of buying and selling drugs into a treasure hunt. Instead of meeting up in-person with clients, the dealers stash the drugs in geotagged locations for online buyers, avoiding any risk of being detected or coming into contact with the coronavirus.

Tripping During A Pandemic

With plenty of extra time on their hands, many psychonauts have been taking advantage of the opportunity to trip. But it may not be the best time to take psychedelics, considering the setting that we all find ourselves in and the set that many people have at the moment. If you’re suffering from anxiety, depression, grief, or trauma then perhaps now isn’t the best time to trip.

Cannabis Reform Wins in Africa and the U.S.

Two countries in Africa relaxed their grip on marijuana prohibition this month. Both Malawi and Ghana legalized cannabis for health and industrial purposes in hopes of benefiting from rising global demand for medicinal cannabis products.

The Oglala Sioux Tribe on the Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota passed a referendum to legalize medical and recreational cannabis, making it the first and only Native American tribe to establish a legal market in a state where cannabis is otherwise prohibited.

Just in the nick of time, Virginia lawmakers approved a decriminalization bill and sent it to the governor’s desk before the pandemic spread to North America. Governor Ralph Northam is in favor of decriminalization and is expected to sign the bill into law.

Native American Church Requests Peyote Not Be Included in Decriminalization Initiatives

Not everyone is excited about decriminalizing psychedelics. The Native American Church (NAC) released a statement requesting that peyote not be mentioned explicitly in any future decriminalization initiatives in order to preserve their sacred cacti.

Now instead of calling out peyote specifically in its list of psychedelic plants and fungi, organizations like Decriminalize Nature will need to advocate for decriminalizing “mescaline-containing cacti”, a phrase that does not directly implicate peyote. The NAC hopes that removing the cacti from decriminalization initiatives will help ensure that they don’t go extinct.

Ayahuasca Healings’ Trinity de Guzman Calls Coronavirus A “Necessary Purge”

The founder of the Ayahuasca Healings retreat center in Washington, Trinity de Guzman, is no stranger when it comes to controversy. A few years back Guzman falsely claimed that he was founding the first legal ayahuasca church even though that wasn’t the case. Now he has made headlines again by claiming that the coronavirus is “a necessary purge” for the human race.

Drug Possession Defelonized in Colorado

Coloradans have yet another reason to celebrate now that the state has officially defelonized the possession of small amounts of all drugs, which means that offenders will not be incarcerated in the majority of cases.

But that doesn’t mean drugs are now legal or even decriminalized; those convicted for small-time drug possession will still end up with a misdemeanor on their criminal record.

Corporadelic: A Psymposia Series About Psychedelic Capitalism

One of the most thought-provoking pieces I read this month was actually a six-part series called “Corporadelic” that Russell Hausfeld wrote for Psymposia. The series explores the potential issues what we might see with psychedelic capitalism, and its one that every psychonaut should read so we can avoid preventable mistakes as the for-profit psychedelic industry and framework bursts on the scene and continues to evolve.

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.

Five-Year Blogiversary!

Today Think Wilder turns five.

It some ways it seems like just yesterday that I had the idea to start a blog, but in fact it was many moons ago. And technically it wasn’t just “a blog”—it was another blog. There were two starter blogs before this one that I eventually shut down after they ran out of steam. The first focused on reviewing cigars at a time in my life when I was obsessed with cigars. The second blog had loads of book reviews, mostly in the science fiction and what I dubbed “psychedelic literature” genres. But something told me I should give blogging a third try, and I listened.

And I’m glad I did. This blog (and later, my YouTube channel) have been a much-needed creative outlet for me. I’ve learned a lot over the years by:

  • Providing 252 weekly link roundups and 7 monthly/yearly recaps chock-full of psychedelic news

  • Giving my two cents on plenty of books and films

  • Getting comfortable with being vulnerable by sharing bits and pieces of my personal life

And things are just now starting to heat up. I’ve got plenty of things that I am working on and I am looking forward to being able to share them with you as they become ready.

Every year I celebrate my blogiversary by announcing improvements to the site. Here’s what I did to celebrate the first four blogiversaries at Think Wilder:

This year’s site improvement is something that I’ve wanted to do for a long time. It’s a navigational enhancement that builds on last year’s Link Posts archive page. In addition to that archive, there are now five brand-new category archive pages:

They are located under the Categories menu in the navigational bar at the top of the site. These archive pages make it super easy to locate the entire catalog of posts in each category without having to page through them manually at a snail’s pace (five posts at a time).

For the last few years I kept putting off this project until I made a final decision about whether or not to continue covering all psychoactive drugs in my roundups and recaps, which I just decided against recently. That’s partially because I knew that it would lock me into an organizational structure for the blog and I didn’t want to paint myself into a corner that I might want to escape from in the future. And it’s partially because I knew that it was going to take forever to build the Weekly Psychedelic Links archive page. Which turned out to be true.

But these archive pages are finally done, and I’m really happy with them. I hope you are too.

In addition to completing my category archive pages project I also separated the Psychedelics, Spirituality, and Technology topics from the Categories menu in the top navigational bar and put them under a new menu option called Topics. I think that makes it the blog’s main areas of focus a bit more obvious than before, and it looks better too.

So here’s to five years. I can’t wait to see what the next five bring. And I hope you’ll join along for the ride. Until next time, keep thinking wilder y’all.