Ditto on all you wrote!
Posted by Katie Love on NC 2
Interesting article. I found this sentence interesting:
“While psychedelics often lead to a dissolution of ego and decreased self-referential processing […] lucid dreams may actually harness elements of self-awareness and control,” Demirel and his team said in the study.
My own experiences with psychedelics were never as visual and visionary as some other folk’s report, but everyone has their own process with these medicines. I saw a lot of colored fractals and occasionally a little bit of dream-like imagery, but not as much as other people report. I would, however, get downloads of information about my life - past , present and future things I should be working towards, and at higher doses, profound experiences of ego death and Oneness.
I still haven’t mastered real regular lucid dreaming (I continue to work on it) but dreaming for me is very visual. I also have trouble with the idea of striving to control the lucid dream. To me that seems like an ego trip. My goal is to have the dream speak to me and to be in a kind of conscious dialog with the dream figures and dream imagery, much like Jung’s notion of “Active Imagination.”
Interesting to think about. For me, it’s more controlling the daytime dream and having lucid control over things that are often unconscious, or habits. If I can do that in the dream, so much the better. But, similar to what you write, getting the dream to speak to me is a major focus.
Yes self-control over bad habits is a good thing (like my tendency to over-eat ). But being a control freak over everything in my reality - like trying to control everyone and everything around me - can be an ego trip. One problem I have with the “New Age manifestation” thing, is too often people are trying to manifest what their egos say they want, not what higher wisdom wants them to manifest. "See my vision board with a picture of my mansion, my zillion dollars and my Ferrari? I’m manifesting my dream! (i.e. “ego fantasy”)
https://www.nationalgeographic.com/science/article/100409-lightning-mushrooms-japan-harvest
" Lightning Makes Mushrooms Multiply
Lightning strikes can more than double some mushroom crops, according to ongoing experiments that are jolting fungi with electricity.
ByJulian Ryall
April 9, 2010
•4 min read
Lightning makes mushrooms more plentiful, according to ongoing research that offers a solid scientific basis for Japanese farming lore.
For generations, Japanese farmers have welcomed storms over their fields based on the belief that lightning strikes provoke plentiful harvests of mushrooms, which are staples of Japanese cuisine. (Related: “New Lightning Type Found Over Volcano?”)
Currently, mushroom demand is so high that dealers are increasingly turning to foreign suppliers. Japan imports about 50,000 tons of mushrooms a year, mainly from China and South Korea.
As part of a four-year study, scientists in northern Japan have been bombarding a variety of mushrooms in lab-based garden plots with artificially induced lightning to see if electricity actually makes the fungi multiply.
(See pictures of Brazilian mushrooms that glow in the dark.)
The latest results show that lightning-strength jolts of electricity can more than double the yield of certain mushroom species compared with conventional cultivation methods.
“We have tried these experiments with ten types of mushroom so far and have found that it is effective in eight species,” said Koichi Takaki, an associate professor in engineering at Iwate University.
“We saw the best effects in shiitake and nameko mushrooms, while we also tested reishi mushrooms, which are not edible but are used in certain types of traditional Chinese medicine,” he said.
Don’t Fry the Mushrooms
Takaki’s team has been applying high-voltage pulses to logs seeded with mushroom spores to try to stimulate mushroom growth.
Naturally occurring lightning can carry up to a billion volts of electricity, which get carried through the ground during a lightning strike. (Related: “‘Upside Down’ Lightning as Strong as Earth-bound Bolts.”)
A direct hit with that much energy would fry the mushrooms. Instead, it’s more likely mushrooms near the strike zone grow after being exposed to a weakened charge traveling through the soil, so the researchers have been using gentler bursts of electricity.
Repeated tests have shown that the fungi react best when they’re exposed to between 50,000 and 100,000 volts for one ten-millionth of a second.
Given the right amount of electricity, the shiitake crop yielded double the amount harvested from logs not exposed to an energy burst. The amped-up nameko logs produced 80 percent more mushrooms.
“The reaction of the mushrooms to this sudden burst of energy is initially to decrease the proteins and enzymes secreted by their hyphae, followed by a sudden increase,” Takaki said.
Hyphae are elongated cells that act like roots for mushrooms, anchoring the spores in the ground and taking in nutrients. The hyphae also give rise to new fruiting bodies, the fleshy, capped structures that produce spores and are harvested as crops.
The reason for the hyphae’s reaction to lightning is still being studied. But it’s possible the mushrooms are giving themselves a reproductive boost in response to danger, said Yuichi Sakamoto, chief researcher at the Iwate Biotechnology Research Center, who has been working with Takaki’s team.
“For mushrooms, a lightning strike would be a very serious threat that could easily kill them off,” Sakamoto said.
“I think they have the need to regenerate before they die, and when they sense lightning, they automatically accelerate their development” and produce more fruiting bodies, he said.
Lightning Also Sparks Radish Buds?
Based on the successes so far, Takaki and Sakamoto think machines for delivering lightning-like bursts could become a boon to commercial farmers—although first the team needs to make the technology more user-friendly.
“Right now, the equipment that we use to grow these mushrooms is very specialized and complicated, so I want to improve the design to make it easy to operate,” Takaki said.
“We want to collaborate with commercial mushroom farmers and eventually commercialize this technology.” (Related: “My Neighbor Totoro Farming Ecosystem Declining in Japan.”)
Takaki’s team has also started similar experiments on daikon radishes, with early tests indicating that the species tends to bud earlier when exposed to artificial lightning.
Lightning tests are being conducted at other institutions on rapeseed plants, beans, and some varieties of lily, Takaki added.
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Someday when magic mushrooms become legal, we may have “magic electrified mushrooms!”
cant get much more electric than they already are
Marketing
Yeah I can see it now: “Turn on with Edison’s Electrified Shrooms.”
I prefer the bobble-head dolls given out at the Edison Lighthouse (if there was one)
Whatever works to “Turn you on and Tune you in . . . and if you’re retired, I guess you can now Drop Out.” Unless you’re “Leary” of such altered states.
A fun little interview with R.Crumb, the great hippie cartoonist of the 60’s.
He also had a musical side. This is a little band he played in. He was a collector of old 78’s from the early 20th century.
This Bill would bring psychedelic therapy into the VA system!
This would be a breakthrough for Vets and for psychedelic therapy!