• @ickplantOPM
    link
    48 months ago

    That’s a very fair comment, and I know we need a lot more research on this. Anecdotal evidence, it seemed to give me some relief from the mind chatter, but it’s based on very limited usage so far.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      3
      edit-2
      8 months ago

      Cool! And honestly, psychedelics have helped me in more ways than I can count. (I believe you and I have chatted about this on several occasions in the past, actually.)

      Still, I believe that honesty about what helps and what doesn’t is a good start for psychedelics. What I don’t want to see happen is see these to fall into the same “miracle cure-all” category like we saw with marijuana legalization.

      While I personally believe the benefits outweigh the cons in many circumstances, that doesn’t negate the fact that these are some powerful substances. One of the last papers I read hinted that psilocin was about 100x more powerful than your standard SSRI and it works more efficiently than serotonin itself. (Serotonin, psilocin, DMT, 5-MeO-DMT, etc, are all closely related tryptamines, for those who were curious.)

      Edit: Oh, I should also add that I have a skeptical bias about microdosing but you aren’t going to hear me talk shit about it. Even if the placebo effect turns out to be a heavy factor but if it still works effectively, then that is awesome. Why complain about something trivial if it works effectively in highly complex situations?

      • @ickplantOPM
        link
        28 months ago

        It will inevitably be billed as a “cure-all,” I’m already seeing it happen in my field (psychotherapy). That’s why research is so crucial. I can’t wait until it’s all legal, and we can find out what it can and can’t do!