Wednesday, February 29, 2012

How to Connect with Your Spirit Guide

How to Connect with Your Spirit Guide: Consciousness Visionary Ralph Metzner to Teach Guided Alchemical Divinations to Turn the Inner Adversary into an Ongoing Ally

Published 08:01 a.m., Wednesday, February 29, 2012
  •  Photo: PRWeb / SL
    Photo: PRWeb / SL

To learn how to connect with and benefit from the spirit guide, EarthRise Retreat Center at the Institute of Noetic Sciences is offering a unique opportunity to learn guided alchemical divinations from consciousness science visionary Dr. Ralph Metzner. During Integrating with Your Shadow, Connecting with Your Guide, a weekend workshop April 13 to 15, 2012, Dr. Metzner will lead rhythmic rattling and drumming, practices of light-fire yoga, chanting and drawing.
Petaluma, CA (PRWEB) February 29, 2012
The shadow is the name given in Jungian psychology to a complex of unacceptable feelings and impulses that function as an inner opponent, blocking growth and full expression of one’s true self. By recognizing and integrating this inner adversary, however, people have the potential to also use it as an ongoing ally – a spirit guide - to self-discovery and personal growth.
To learn how to connect with and benefit from the spirit guide, EarthRise Retreat Center at the Institute of Noetic Sciences is offering a unique opportunity to learn guided alchemical divinations from consciousness science visionary Dr. Ralph Metzner. DuringIntegrating with Your Shadow, Connecting with Your Guide, a weekend workshop April 13 to 15, 2012, Dr. Metzner will lead rhythmic rattling and drumming to support the process of concentration and tracking as well as practices of light-fire yoga to help purify and clarify perceptions and dissolve energy-blockages. He also will include chanting and drawing for aural-vocal and visual-spatial integration and application.
Early bird registration for the workshop is $295 available through March 19, 2012. Thereafter, the regular fee is $325. Fees include the program and 6 freshly prepared meals. Onsite lodging is $75 per person per night for a shared room or $99 per night for a single room. For more information and to register, visit the EarthRise registration page or call Jan Fischer at 707-779-8202
Thirteen continuing education credits are available for marriage and family therapists, licensed clinical social workers, and nurses for a processing fee of $25.
Ralph Metzner, PhD, is a psychotherapist, Professor Emeritus at the California Institute of Integral Studies and founder/president of the Green Earth Foundation. His books include The Unfolding Self, The Well of Remembrance, Alchemical Divination, MindSpace and TimeStream and, with Ram Dass,Birth of a Psychedelic Culture. http://www.greenearthfound.org
About EarthRise
Located just 35 minutes north of San Francisco, EarthRise Retreat Center is a full service conference facility that caters to transformation learning experiences. Nestled among 194 acres of rolling hills and ancient oak trees, the center provides an environment to explore consciousness, ancient wisdom traditions, experiential learning, and modern scientific inquiry. At EarthRise at IONS, psychologists, educators, philosophers, frontier scientists, and spiritual masters lead transformational learning and lifestyle programs. For more information, visit the EarthRise website or contact Jan Fischer at (707) 779-8202 or workshops(at)noetic(dot)org.
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Read more: http://www.seattlepi.com/business/press-releases/article/How-to-Connect-with-Your-Spirit-Guide-3369503.php#ixzz1nomRgp9y

Tuesday, February 14, 2012

Timothy Leary advocates LSD

Boy who committed suicide at school left note, authorities say

Los Angeles Times

Tue Feb 14 2012 5:30 AM


The 15-year-old boy who committed suicide at Crescenta Valley High School last week left a note explaining his actions, authorities said Monday, though they declined to elaborate on its contents.

Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Lt. John Corina told the Glendale News-Press that the note was found on sophomore Drew Ferraro’s body and was addressed to several family members and friends.

While declining to reveal the contents of the note, Corina did dispel rumors that Drew's suicide was prompted by bullying. “I know there has been a lot of speculation about bullying -- it had nothing to do with that,” Corina said.

A Los Angeles County coroner’s official said Monday that the death had officially been ruled a suicide.

Sheriff’s officials said that Drew got a running start before jumping from a three-story school building Friday and landing in a courtyard filled with students and staff members during the lunch break.

A representative for Crippen Mortuary said a funeral service is scheduled for 10 a.m. Wednesday at Our Lady of Lourdes Church in Tujunga.

-- Megan O'Neil, Times Community News

Photo: Parents arrive at Crescenta Valley High School to pick up their children Friday after a boy jumped to his death from a campus building. Credit: Raul Roa / Times Community News

Sunday, February 12, 2012

Magic Mushrooms Expand the Mind By Dampening Brain Activity


A new brain-scan study helps explain how psilocybin works — and why it holds promise as a treatment for depression, addiction and post-traumatic stress.
Albert Klein / Getty Images
ALBERT KLEIN / GETTY IMAGES
(UPDATED) More than half a century ago, author Aldous Huxley titled his book on his experience with hallucinogens The Doors of Perception, borrowing a phrase from a 1790 William Blake poem (which, yes, also lent Jim Morrison’s band its moniker).
Blake wrote:
If the doors of perception were cleansed, every thing would appear to man as it is, infinite. For man has closed himself up, till he sees all things through narrow chinks of his cavern.
Based on this idea, Huxley posited that ordinary consciousness represents only a fraction of what the mind can take in. In order to keep us focused on survival, Huxley claimed, the brain must act as a “reducing valve” on the flood of potentially overwhelming sights, sounds and sensations. What remains, Huxley wrote, is a “measly trickle of the kind of consciousness” necessary to “help us to stay alive.”
A new study by British researchers supports this theory. It shows for the first time how psilocybin — the drug contained in magic mushrooms — affects the connectivity of the brain. Researchers found that the psychedelic chemical, which is known to trigger feelings of oneness with the universe and a trippy hyperconsciousness, does not work by ramping up the brain’s activity as they’d expected. Instead, it reduces it.
Under the influence of mushrooms, overall brain activity drops, particularly in certain regions that are densely connected to sensory areas of the brain. When functioning normally, these connective “hubs” appear to help constrain the way we see, hear and experience the world, grounding us in reality. They are also the key nodes of a brain network linked to self-consciousness and depression. Psilocybin cuts activity in these nodes and severs their connection to other brain areas, allowing the senses to run free.
“The results seem to imply that a lot of brain activity is actually dedicated to keeping the world very stable and ordinary and familiar and unsurprising,” says Robin Carhart-Harris, a postdoctoral student at Imperial College London and lead author of the study published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
Indeed, Huxley and Blake had predicted what turns out to be a key finding of modern neuroscience: many of the human brain’s highest achievements involve preventing actions instead of initiating them, and sifting out useless information rather than collecting and presenting it for conscious consideration.
For the study, the authors recruited 15 brave volunteers to receive injections of psilocybin or placebo, in alternate sessions, while being scanned in an fMRI machine. Taken intravenously, psilocybin alters consciousness in a mere 60 seconds, as opposed to the 40 minutes it normally takes when administered orally. And the high lasts a half an hour, not the five hours that typical users experience.
Provisions were made for the possibility that the participants might panic while high in the noisy, claustrophic setting of the scanner, but none of the volunteers did so. In fact, once they’d become accustomed to the noise and small space, “they quite liked being enclosed and felt secure,” Carhart-Harris says. All of the participants had previously been, as Jimi Hendrix put it, “experienced.”
Researchers had assumed that the hallucinations and bizarre sensations caused by psilocybin would have at least one part of the brain working overtime. But instead they found the opposite.
“The decline in activity was the most surprising finding,” says Carhart-Harris, “and anything that’s of surprise is usually important.”
Reducing the brain’s activity interfered with its normal ability to filter out stimuli, allowing participants to see afresh what would ordinarily have been dismissed as irrelevant or as background noise. They described having wandering thoughts, dreamlike perceptions, geometric visual hallucinations and other unusual changes in their sensory experiences, like sounds triggering visual images.
Indeed, if we always paid attention to every perceptible sensation or impulse like this, we’d be incapable of focusing at all. This is why it’s difficult to sit still and try to tune in all the feelings and perceptions we normally tune out, but why also, like psychedelic drugs, meditation can make the world seem strange and new.
The particular brain regions that were silenced or disconnected from each other by the drug also provided insight on the nature of psychedelic experience and the therapeutic potential of psilocybin. Two regions that showed the greatest decline in activity were the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) and the posterior cingulate cortex (PCC).
The mPFC is an area that, when dysfunctional, is linked with rumination and obsessive thinking. “Probably the most reliable finding in depression is that the mPFC is overactive,” says Carhart-Harris.
All antidepressant treatments studied so far — from Prozac, ketamine, electroconvulsive therapy and talk therapy to placebo — reduce activity in the mPFC when they are effective. Since psilocybin does the same, Carhart-Harris and his colleagues plan to study it as a treatment for depression. “It shuts off this ruminating area and allows the mind to work more freely,” he says. “That’s a strong indication of the potential of psilocybin as a treatment for depression.”
The PCC is thought to play a key role in consciousness and self-identity. “The most intriguing aspect was that the decreases in activity were in specific regions that belong to a network in the brain known as the default network,” notes Carhart-Harris. “There’s a lot of evidence that it’s associated with our sense of self — our ego or personality, who we are.”
“What’s often said about psychedelic experience is that people experience a temporary dissolution of their ego or sense of being an independent agent with a particular personality,” he says. “Something seems to happen where the sense of self dissolves, and that overlaps with ideas in Eastern philosophy and Buddhism.” This sense of being at one with the universe, losing one’s “selfish” sense and vantage point, and feeling the connectedness of all beings often brings profound peace.
The researchers also looked for an effect on the language-processing areas of the brain, since users so often report that their experience is difficult to put into words. “There wasn’t any correlation between people saying that the experience was ineffable and any change in brain activity,” Carhart-Harris says. “It may just be because the way we symbolize the world with language is a constrained function. It has a degree of precision to it, really, and these drug experiences are so unusual we don’t have words to describe them.”
Carhart-Harris and his colleagues did find support for claims made by sufferers of painful cluster headaches that psilocybin reduces the frequency of their attacks. These headaches are known to involve overactivity of a brain area called the hypothalamus, and psilocybin calmed this region.
Interestingly, Nature‘s Mo Costandi reports that another study of the effects of psilocybin on the brain found the opposite effect of Carhart-Harris’ group:
“We have completed a number of similar studies and we always saw an activation of these same areas,” says Franz Vollenweider at the University of Zurich in Switzerland. “We gave the drug orally and waited an hour, but they administered it intravenously just before the scans, so one explanation is that [their] effects were not that strong.”*
Another neuroscientist told Nature that some studies find that lowered activation of the mPFC is associated with anticipatory anxiety rather than calmness or overall lack of depression. The researcher theorizes that the brain images in the current study picked up the participants’ fear, rather than their mystical experiences. But that conflicts with participants’ reports: they said their trips were mainly positive.
Carhart-Harris cautions against using psilocybin outside of a well-monitored therapeutic setting, however, particularly for patients with depression. “What we found was in healthy volunteers,” he says. “They liked the experience and didn’t have negative reactions, but during depression people are more sensitive to having a negative response to psychedelic drugs.”
In fact, that may help explain why psychedelic drugs are rarely addictive and why some of them may even have potential to treat other addictions. Unlike addictive drugs, which typically allow users to escape, psychedelic drugs have the opposite effect: instead of allowing users to avoid negative emotions, they magnify the painful feelings. Researchers believe this may help patients address their problems instead of fleeing them — in the context of an empathetic therapeutic setting — but it can also exacerbate distress. (Psilocybin is illegal in the U.S. and is considered a Schedule 1 drug, a class of substances that “have a high potential for abuse and serve no legitimate medical purpose in the United States,” according to the Department of Justice. Other Schedule 1 drugs include marijuana, heroin and LSD.)
Indeed, the new research bolsters the idea of “psychedelic” as an accurate label for these drugs. The word was originally coined by Huxley, from the Greek “psyche” for mind or soul and “delos” for manifest. A growing body of literature suggests that these drugs can indeed help scientists understand the workings of the mind and brain, by revealing some of the underpinnings of consciousness.
Some have argued, for example, that the geometric visual hallucinations commonly seen by people on psychedelics (and by some sufferers of migraines) help reveal the architecture of the brain’s visual processing mechanism. “One hypothesis is that what you’re actually seeing is the functional organization of the visual cortex itself. The visual cortex is organized in a sort of fractal way [it repeats the same patterns in different sizes]. It’s the same way that fractals are everywhere in nature. Like tree branches, the brain recapitulates [itself],” says Carhart-Harris. “You’re not seeing the cells themselves, but the way they’re organized — as if the brain is revealing itself to itself.”
*Updated to correct quote.
Maia Szalavitz is a health writer for TIME.com. Find her on Twitter at @maiasz. You can also continue the discussion on TIME Healthland‘s Facebook page and on Twitter at @TIMEHealthland.
Related Topics: hallucination drugshallucinationshallucinogenmagic mushroomsmushroomspsilocybinpsychedelic drugpsychedelic mushroomspsychedelicsDrugs


Read more: http://healthland.time.com/2012/01/24/magic-mushrooms-expand-the-mind-by-dampening-brain-activity/?iid=hl-article-mostpop1#ixzz1mBKvWH00