“I don’t understand why we can’t let grown adults make grown-adult decisions for their bodies,” Brooke Lark said, “and just make sure that the rules, the best practices, are clear.”
It’s an acknowledgement that serious mental health issues are impacting millions of Americans, and that answers could be found in medicines the country has historically demonized. Claire Petersen gives a tour of one of the rooms used for psychedelic research at Numinus.
“I don’t see it as going to be the panacea that is going to cure society’s ills, and I don’t see it as being a cure for mental illness,” Lewis said. Coleman runs ketamine clinics in both Utah and California, and said interest in these therapies is far outpacing what people know about them. Sometimes, she fields calls from people asking her to take them on psilocybin “journeys.” That alone shows a serious lack of understanding.She’s spoken with people who take these drugs with no idea how much they took, where it came from, or how it might interact with other medications they may be taking.
“I don’t understand why we can’t let grown adults make grown-adult decisions for their bodies,” Lark said, “and just make sure that the rules, the best practices, are clear.” “Psychedelic spirituality has been more, ‘I want to tell you what you are, and give you permission to grow fully into whatever you want to create from that,’” she said.former Republican representative Steve UrquhartThe church, which uses psilocybin as its sacrament, grew out of Utah’s “f----- up soil,” Urquhart said, where a “critical mass” of people are getting older and may be“And you come out of that kind of jaded, and you don’t really trust authorities.
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