https://tripsafe.org/shrooms/ TripSafe.org Psychedelic education and guides. * Guides * Pages * RollSafe.org Shrooms: What You Need to Know Learn what you need to know about shrooms. The safety and therapeutic uses might surprise you. Contents * + Quick info + 1. Shrooms are a psychedelic drug, with psychedelic effects + 2. The safety profile of shrooms might surprise you + 3. If you're going to take shrooms, you need to read this guide o Read the guide on how to take shrooms. + 4. Bad trips do happen, though research suggests they can be substantially minimized or avoided + 5. Shrooms are being researched medically and show promise for depression, anxiety, general well-being, eating disorders, behavior change, addictions and more + 6. Shrooms and LSD are decently similar in effects + 7. If you have specific medical conditions, you might be able to enroll in government-supported research using magic mushrooms + 8. Shrooms are really popular + 9. Mushroom usage was associated with improved mental health, contrary to any myths + 10. Mushrooms can have powerful long-term benefits + 11. Shrooms may help treat addiction + 12. Psilocybin is legal in some countries, and companies offer paid retreats for therapeutic psychedelic sessions + Read next + References Quick info Topic Info Safety in lab Excellent safety track record to date in lab studies studies ^1 Active Psilocybin, psilocin ingredients Street names Shrooms, magic mushrooms, psychedelic mushrooms, mushies, liberties 1. ~8 hour stressful bad trip 2. Doing something unsafe due to impaired perception or judgement Risks 3. Psychotic reaction particularly in individuals with schizophrenic relatives 4. Visual changes that in extremely rare cases can last for weeks or years Temporary desirable Joy/intense happiness, peace/harmony^2 effects (~6 hours) Long term In therapeutic settings: Increased well-being, desirable increased self-confidence, reduced addiction^3^4^2 effects Temporary side effects (~6 Anxiety, impaired judgement hours) In combination with therapy, as treatment for Medical cancer-related emotional distress, general emotional potential distress, and addictions (e.g. smoking addiction, alcoholism) 1. Shrooms are a psychedelic drug, with psychedelic effects The word shrooms refers to magic mushrooms. Magic mushrooms are a kind of mushroom that contain psilocybin. Psilocybin is a psychedelic compound found in certain mushrooms. In the US, most people eat them dried. People dry them so that they can maintain their potency when stored. Dried shrooms look something like this: Dried Shrooms What does it mean that Shrooms are psychedelic? In the case of shrooms, it means that they alter your mindstate for around ~6 hours. Users in psilocybin research often describe the state as being dreamlike, or as if the world is not real. Psilocybin can make you feel both positive mood, and negative moood. Moods can change rapidly.^5 "People describe being in touch with awe-inspiring elements, with something sacred. They describe a sense of infinite love, a sense of peace, humility, being transported back into their lives," said Ross, an associate professor in the NYU Department of Psychiatry. "They described a sense of internal and external oneness."^4 Psilocybin has also been shown to produce mystical or peak experiences, which may be involved in the medical uses.^5 "To my utter amazement," he would later recall. "I soon discovered in my visual field the emergence of an exquisitely beautiful, multidimensional network of intricate, neon-like geometric patterns ... I recognized life within the undulating designs and began to feel as though I somehow could enter into the energy flowing between them ... My awareness was flooded with love, beauty, and peace beyond anything I ever had known or wildly imagined to be possible."^4 2. The safety profile of shrooms might surprise you "Since the early 1990s, approximately 2000 doses of psilocybin (ranging from low to high doses) have been safely administered to humans in the United States and Europe, in carefully controlled scientific settings, with no reports of any medical or psychiatric serious AEs, including no reported cases of prolonged psychosis or HPPD (Studerus et al., 2011)."^1 "Hallucinogens generally possess relatively low physiological toxicity, and have not been shown to result in organ damage or neuropsychological deficits (Strassman, 1984; Gable, 1993, 2004; Halpern and Pope, 1999; Hasler, et al., 2004; Nichols, 2004; Halpern, et al., 2005)."^6 "This finding is consistent with a US population (2001-2004 data from the National Survey on Drug Use and Health) based study that found no associations between lifetime use of any of the serotoninergic psychedelics (including psilocybin) and increased rates of mental illness (Krebs and Johansen, 2013)."^1 "There is no evidence of such potential neurotoxic effects with the prototypical classical hallucinogens (i.e. LSD, mescaline and psilocybin)."^6 "Cohen (1960) reported that only a single case of a psychotic reaction lasting more than 48 hours occurred in 1200 experimental (non-patient) research participants (a rate of 0.8 per 1000). Notably, the individual was an identical twin of a schizophrenic patient and thus would have been excluded under the proposed guidelines." The key methods to minimize this risk are the medical condition guidlines below.^6 It is not a good idea to take any psychedelics, including mushrooms, if you or any of your first or second-degree relatives have a current or past history of psychotic disorders including schizophrenia, Bipolar I or II disorder.^6 A research paper ranked psilocybin mushrooms as the third safest drug (Nutt et al). All drugs can still be harmful under certain circumstances.^7 A separate study also found that magic mushrooms were the drug with the lowest rate of emergency room visits after use, lower than alcohol, and even marijuana.^8 Relative side effects of LSD and Shrooms 3. If you're going to take shrooms, you need to read this guide Follow the steps on TripSafe to be as safe as possible, and have the best, most rewarding mushroom experience. Remember, no drug use is perfectly safe. But you can take shrooms in a safer manner. We do not endorse the acquisition and use of illegal drugs. If you make the choice to use psychedelic drugs, please do your research. A risk of mushrooms is doing something unsafe to yourself or someone else while you're under the influence. The risk of this is reduceable to near zero by only taking shrooms ("tripping") with a trusted and sober guide who has experience supporting psychedelic sessions. Read the guide on how to take shrooms. 4. Bad trips do happen, though research suggests they can be substantially minimized or avoided The rates of fear and anxiety ("bad" trips) in research are surprisingly low at certain dosages. This indicates that by following certain guidelines for who should take mushrooms and how they take them, we can significantly reduce the incidence of bad trips. At a dosage of 1.6 grams^9 in a therapeutic clinical environment, we might expect 0% of people to experience some extreme fear,^10 for an average of around 1 minute of strong anxiety^11, and we might expect around ~45% to report a persisting positive increase in mood from this dosage At a dosage of ~3.2 grams^9 in a therapeutic clinical environment, we might expect 14% of people to experience some extreme fear,^10 for an average of around ~2 minutes of strong anxiety ^11 At a dosage of ~4.8 grams of mushrooms^9 in a therapeutic clinical environment, we might expect 86% of people to experience some extreme fear,^10 for an average of around ~11 minutes of strong anxiety^11 From the page on how to take shrooms. 5. Shrooms are being researched medically and show promise for depression, anxiety, general well-being, eating disorders, behavior change, addictions and more Shrooms in the New York Times Read our page on psychedelic therapy for info on: * What does psychedelic therapy look like? * Why does psychedelic therapy seem to work? * Where can I do psychedelic therapy? * The research on psychedelic therapy for depression, anxiety, personal growth * How to become a psychedelic therapist * MDMA therapy vs psilocybin therapy * Other beneficial resources Psychedelic Therapy: Beneficial Things To Know Read the research: Rapid and sustained symptom reduction following psilocybin treatment for anxiety and depression in patients with life-threatening cancer: A randomized controlled trial. Psilocybin produces substantial and sustained decreases in depression and anxiety in patients with life-threatening cancer: A randomized double-blind trial 6. Shrooms and LSD are decently similar in effects This redditor puts it well: "LSD is electric, mushrooms are spiritual. Both are trippy. Your mood and mindset is more stable on LSD, but you are able to wade into greater emotional depths with shrooms." Note that: Dosage has a much greater impact on effects than substance does - 100 micrograms of LSD is roughly equivalent to 2.4g of shrooms, and 100 micrograms of LSD will feel more similar to 2.4g of shrooms than it would feel to 300 micrograms of LSD. LSD lasts longer, typically around 10-14 hours. The effects of shrooms tends to last for 4-6 hours.^5 On the graph, magic mushrooms = psilocybin. Effects of Shrooms Over Time 7. If you have specific medical conditions, you might be able to enroll in government-supported research using magic mushrooms See active psilocybin studies here. There may be studies for smoking addiction, alcohol addiction, cocaine addiction, and anxiety. 8. Shrooms are really popular According to US government statistics, magic mushrooms have been used by 22.8 million Americans at least once.^12 9. Mushroom usage was associated with improved mental health, contrary to any myths "Lifetime classic psychedelic use was associated with a significantly reduced odds of past month psychological distress (weighted odds ratio (OR)=0.81 (0.72-0.91)), past year suicidal thinking (weighted OR=0.86 (0.78-0.94)), past year suicidal planning (weighted OR=0.71 (0.54-0.94)), and past year suicide attempt (weighted OR=0.64 (0.46-0.89))"^13 10. Mushrooms can have powerful long-term benefits The sophisticated psychological assessments Griffiths conducted at two and fourteen months following the psilocybin sessions backed up the claims. In an article in Scientific American Griffiths coauthored with his fellow Heffter board member, Grob, he reported that "the data showed that participants experienced increased self-confidence, a greater sense of inner contentment, a better ability to tolerate frustration, decreased nervousness and an increase in overall well-being. Ratings of their behavior by friends, family members and work colleagues uninformed about the drug experience were consistent with the participants' self-ratings. More than 70 percent of the participants self-rated the experience as one of the five most important in their lives. Perhaps even more astoundingly, nearly a third rated it the single most important experience.^3 More info here. 11. Shrooms may help treat addiction "In addiction medicine, the name of the game has been to somehow block the addictive drug's effects at the brain's receptor sites by substituting or antagonizing at the receptor-to reduce specific cravings for one drug. So you have a medication that seems to work for this drug or that drug." "What's really exciting about psychedelics is that we are talking about addiction-rather than just alcohol addiction or nicotine addiction. It's not about a particular drug."^4 More info here. 12. Psilocybin is legal in some countries, and companies offer paid retreats for therapeutic psychedelic sessions It is our understanding that magic truffles are legal in the Netherlands, and in Jamaica magic mushrooms are either outright legal or the laws don't seem to be enforced. You can find a list of legal psychedelic retreats and legal psychedelic therapy providers on TripSafe here. Read next Drug Harm Reduction: A List of What You Should Know If You're Considering Using Other Drugs, like Salvia, Tobacco, Alcohol, etc. Psychedelic Therapy: Beneficial Things To Know References --------------------------------------------------------------------- 1. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5367551/ ^[return] 2. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5367557/ ^[return] 3. Book: Acid Test ^[return] 4. Book: Changing Our Minds ^[return] 5. http://www.maps.org/research-archive/psilo/psilo_ib.pdf ^[return] 6. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3056407/ ^[return] 7. Nutt, D. J., King, L. A., & Phillips, L. D. (2010, November 01). Drug harms in the UK: A multicriteria decision analysis. The Lancet, 376(9752), 1558-1565. doi:10.1016/s0140-6736(10)61462-6 ^ [return] 8. https://www.theguardian.com/society/2017/may/23/ study-hallucinogenic-mushrooms-safest-recreational-drug-lsd ^ [return] 9. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27578767 ^[return] 10. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3308357/ ^[return] 11. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3308357/table/T1/ ^ [return] 12. https://www.samhsa.gov/data/sites/default/files/ NSDUH-DetTabs-2015/NSDUH-DetTabs-2015/NSDUH-DetTabs-2015.htm# tab1-1a ^[return] 13. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25586402 ^[return] Recent Guides Psychedelic Therapy Centers If you're looking for a legal way to do psychedelic therapy in the meantime before psilocybin is approved by the FDA, here's a list of psychedelic retreat providers and psychedelic therapy centers. Psychedelic Society in the Netherlands Truffles Therapy in the Netherlands Synthesis Retreat in the Netherlands Conscious Bachelorette in the Netherlands Inward Bound in the Netherlands New Moon in the Netherlands Psychedelic Exploration in the Netherlands Tips if you're having a bad trip An interactive website to feel better during a bad trip Having a bad (challenging) trip? Click here for an interactive way to feel better. Thanks to cyrilio. Human assistance for challenging trips Fireside support service Fireside Project offers free, confidential peer support during or after a psychedelic experience - call or text 6-2FIRESIDE (623-473-4733). TripSit Please visit tripsit chat if you'd like assistance from another person. "Say hi, tell us your substance and dose, and describe your issue. Edibles Dosage Effects of Edibles by Dosage and Tolerance This shows how strong edibles of a given THC mg dosage are, in relation to your tolerance to cannabis. Desired effect level1 Minimal tolerance Some tolerance (smoke 1-3x/week) Tolerance (daily smoker) Mild 2-4 mg 3-7 mg 4-10 mg Medium 3-8 mg 4-12 mg 6-15 mg Strong 5-15 mg 10-20 mg 15-30 mg Edibles Dosage Guide Tolerance THC mg2 Users with no tolerance 1. More How Long Do Edibles Last? How Long Do Edibles Take to Kick In? Opioid Epidemic Solutions DMT Guides All Guides This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License. Have more questions, or want more resources and info? Visit /r/ PsychedelicTherapy or /r/Psychedelics. (c) 2021 TripSafe.org