![]() These are the findings of a new analysis of brain scans from close to 60 people receiving treatment for depression, led by Imperial College London’s Centre for Psychedelic Research. Psilocybin, the psychedelic compound found in magic mushrooms, helps to “open up” depressed people’s brains, even weeks after use, a study has found. ![]() Interestingly, a compound in these mushrooms (psilocybin ) is also being looked at for medicinal use in treating various psychological issues. Also, city people have long been conditioned to be wary of picking mushrooms because so many are poisonous, and wouldn't be able to identify the 'magic ones' from those that would injure them, which would play a big part.Īlso, I think back home they don't take them 'recreationally' as an 'experience' like many middle class whites seem to do in the west, but rather to numb themselves from reality? I agree with imho though, if people back home insist on taking substances, they'd be better off taking cannabis than a lot of the other harder stuff they take. I know when I have encountered some of these native pendu types, some of them have mentioned using these mushrooms like it was part of growing up where they lived. But that might be the situation in the cities? I don't know how the indigenous pendus of the UK treat these or if they use them more? I suspect they do.
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