the World Stumbles Again to Respond As Coronavirus Mutates

Author : amitjoy571122
Publish Date : 2021-01-11 22:08:51


 the World Stumbles Again to Respond As Coronavirus Mutates

http://staff.ift-aft.org/vox/video-g-v-k9.html
http://staff.ift-aft.org/vox/video-g-v-k8.html
http://staff.ift-aft.org/vox/video-g-v-k7.html
http://staff.ift-aft.org/vox/video-g-v-k6.html
http://staff.ift-aft.org/vox/video-g-v-k5.html
http://staff.ift-aft.org/vox/video-g-v-k4.html
http://staff.ift-aft.org/vox/video-g-v-k3.html
http://staff.ift-aft.org/vox/video-g-v-k2.html
http://staff.ift-aft.org/vox/video-g-v-k1.html
http://staff.ift-aft.org/vox/video-g-v-k.html
http://staff.ift-aft.org/vox/video-f-v-k9.html
http://staff.ift-aft.org/vox/video-f-v-k8.html
http://staff.ift-aft.org/vox/video-f-v-k7.html
http://staff.ift-aft.org/vox/video-f-v-k6.html
http://staff.ift-aft.org/vox/video-f-v-k5.html
http://staff.ift-aft.org/vox/video-f-v-k4.html
http://staff.ift-aft.org/vox/video-f-v-k3.html
http://staff.ift-aft.org/vox/video-f-v-k2.html
http://staff.ift-aft.org/vox/video-f-v-k1.html
http://staff.ift-aft.org/vox/video-f-v-k.html
https://www.ruskin.com/new/video-g-v-k9.html
https://www.ruskin.com/new/video-g-v-k8.html
https://www.ruskin.com/new/video-g-v-k7.html
https://www.ruskin.com/new/video-g-v-k6.html
https://www.ruskin.com/new/video-g-v-k5.html
https://www.ruskin.com/new/video-g-v-k4.html
https://www.ruskin.com/new/video-g-v-k3.html
https://www.ruskin.com/new/video-g-v-k2.html
https://www.ruskin.com/new/video-g-v-k1.html
https://www.ruskin.com/new/video-g-v-k.html
https://www.ruskin.com/new/video-f-v-k9.html
https://www.ruskin.com/new/video-f-v-k8.html
https://www.ruskin.com/new/video-f-v-k7.html
https://www.ruskin.com/new/video-f-v-k6.html
https://www.ruskin.com/new/video-f-v-k5.html
https://www.ruskin.com/new/video-f-v-k4.html
https://www.ruskin.com/new/video-f-v-k3.html
https://www.ruskin.com/new/video-f-v-k2.html
https://www.ruskin.com/new/video-f-v-k1.html
https://www.ruskin.com/new/video-f-v-k.html

 

Ten of us sit in a semicircle around a makeshift altar. In front of us lies a small statue of Buddha, various rocks and crystals, some pine cones, a carved mushroom, a small chemists’ weighing scale, and a wooden bowl filled with psychedelic ‘truffles’.

We’re in a lodge on the outskirts of Amsterdam overlooking woodland and a picturesque pond. A tall man called Chi calls us forward one by one, eldest to youngest. First up is Debbie, a sprightly American in her early 50s. She kneels before the truffles – similar in appearance to the ones you might grate over a bowl of pasta, but lacking any discernible smell – weighs pieces on the scale and transfers them into her own, smaller bowl.

Chi performs a short ‘blessing’, asking that the truffle spirit guide Debbie on her journey, and taps her on the head with the wooden mushroom. Nervous like the rest of us, she tips all 20g into her mouth, and is hastily advised to spit it back out. “Take your time,” cautions Chi. “These are living creatures, an intelligent species. Commune with the medicine.”


 
Debbie’s faux-pas is a welcome distraction. People have travelled from all around the world for this moment, and an anxious energy has settled over the room. Our group includes a Brazilian couple in their late 40s, a mother and daughter from New York City and a former US Marine. Two days of meditation, talking circles and ‘sound therapy’ have led towards this moment, when we will consume a bowlful of psychoactive truffles and, with any luck, embark upon a spiritual journey deep into our own subconscious.

When my name is called, I pick out half a dozen walnut-sized chunks and a handful of smaller pieces. Chi taps me on the head with the mushroom and it’s time to eat. I gingerly bite into a piece the size of my thumbnail. It’s nutty, not unpleasant, but is soon met with an intense acidic backwash that lingers at the base of your tongue. I immediately start to feel nauseous. We eat our way through our bowls in silence, alternating mouthfuls of truffle with squares of chocolate to mask the taste.

Then we unroll duvets, slip on blackout goggles (encouraging us to “look within”), lie back, and…


 
Truffles Therapy is the brainchild of Mitsuaki Chi, a charismatic American in his early 30s who made his money as a semi-professional poker player. He’d hit the casinos at night and spend his days in an existential funk, battling addiction and depression. “Poker was the only way I knew how to earn,” he says, “But it was dirty money.” So he left the city and travelled the well-trodden hippy trail around India, South America and South East Asia. He enrolled at Buddhist monasteries, once spending 16 months on a silent retreat, before making a life-changing discovery: magic mushrooms.

He says his first trip was transformative. He sobbed for hours, and when he woke the next day, he felt like a new man. On the Truffles Therapy website he says his goal is “to surrender fully to psilocybin [the active compound in magic mushrooms] intelligence, with no regard to my own life.”

He started to organise informal ‘retreats’ with friends, during which they would take turns to ‘trip-sit’, providing a safe space for each other to ride out their psychedelic experiences. Around this time he met his partner Leti Passemier, who had been equally unhappy working in a corporate job in Paris. They hit upon the idea for Truffles Therapy, a business combining group therapy, luxury ‘wellbeing’, and psychedelic drugs.

Rarely seen without his magic mushroom hoodie and matching socks, Chi may not look like your traditional entrepreneur, but the business plan is sound. The retreats take place in luxury chalets in countryside around Amsterdam; mine was in a hunting lodge in a village called Beekbergen, an hour’s drive from Schiphol airport.

It’s exactly the kind of experience you can imagine bored investment bankers and people who enjoyed Eat Pray Love seeking out for an ‘alternative’ holiday to brag about at dinner parties, although Chi insists his target audience is people seeking genuine spiritual healing (in fairness, if one wanted to simply get high, there are cheaper ways of going about it).

 
The retreats – which start from €1,200 per person for a group or €5,900 for a private experience – are fully booked for the next six months. The company is expanding fast, advertising for new trip-sitters (there were two first-time members of staff on my retreat) and sounding out overseas investors.

Part of the appeal is that, thanks to a technicality, the business is completely legal. Magic mushrooms were criminalised in Holland in 2008 after a 17-year-old French girl died jumping from one of Amsterdam’s canal bridges (not that the law is enforced; you can still buy them in most of the city’s ‘head shops’). But the law only applies to the parts of the mushroom that grow above ground. The mushroom ‘truffle’, the store of energy that grows beneath the soil, is fair game (there’s debate over whether the ‘oversight’ may have been intentional).

Truffles Therapy has also benefitted the renewed interest in psychedelic research. Psychedelics were hailed as potential wonder drugs when they were ‘discovered’ in the West in the 1950s and 60s (indigenous peoples across the world have been using them for millennia), but a hyperbolic backlash led to them being banned across most of the world. It wasn’t until the late 90s that scientists began experimenting again, albeit in small pockets.

Today there’s a powerful lobby in the US for laws to be relaxed. In April, the world’s first centre for psychedelic research opened at Imperial College London, and psychedelic therapy involving magic mushrooms is expected to be approved in Australia within the next few years. Studies suggest psychedelic experiences can help the terminally ill come to terms with their mortality and may be of use in the treatment of other mental illnesses including depression and anorexia.

High-profile authors including Michael Pollan have also helped to bring psychedelics into the mainstream (everyone on the retreat had read his book, How to Change Your Mind: The New Science of Psychedelics). There’s a near-unanimous consensus among researchers, he argues, that psychedelics are amongst the safest category of drugs. Which is just as well…

•••

A decidedly un-hippyish Mercedes people carrier picked me up from the airport, along with Debbie, a teacher at an international school, and Adrian, a writer from Lisbon. Within 10 minutes we were discussing everything from philosophy to our parents, sharing personal anecdotes I wouldn’t usually dream of telling strangers. Debbie was hoping to gain insight into her relationships with her family. Adrian, a lyrical “spiritual atheist”, wanted to experience “total dissolution of the ego”.

When we pulled into the retreat, we were met by Harry, a young Syrian man who lives in Amsterdam. He was topless and told us the airport had lost his luggage, which was true, although they hadn’t lost his T-shirt; that was more about showing off his abs. Harry is a regular Buddha of Suburbia, speaking almost exclusively in metaphors, as if he’s reading a never-ending fortune cookie, or forever composing a haiku. During one “talking circle” he regaled us with a story about Kintsugi, the centuries-old Japanese art of repairing broken pottery using golden glue, creating something beautiful out of something broken. That’s how he was feeling. I was feeling a bit tired.
Roger, meanwhile, is a former Marine – he has the USMC tattoos to prove it – who arrived wearing a Metallica T-shirt. I liked Roger. He was hoping to work through the fallout from his time in Iraq. Also pr


 
esent were Olivia, a New York City investment banker, and her mum Anna, both of whom had become interested in psychedelics through meditation. Fi



Category : general

Trump Effect is hurting Paris Agreement, says report

Trump Effect is hurting Paris Agreement, says report

- <br><br>The US presidents policies are "acting against the momentum which the Paris Agreement on c


Pros and Cons Of Oracle 1Z0-821 Certification In 2021

Pros and Cons Of Oracle 1Z0-821 Certification In 2021

- The whole point of certification is that it independently and impartially verifies that you are complying to a standard. Irrespective of regardless


New Tips For Passing ACFE CFE-Fraud-Prevention-and-Deterrence Certification Exam In 2021

New Tips For Passing ACFE CFE-Fraud-Prevention-and-Deterrence Certification Exam In 2021

- Education researching just isnt really brief and its going to just take time and dedication so acquiring some pleasurable with


COVID-19: 358 new infections, 6 deaths reported in Saskatchewan

COVID-19: 358 new infections, 6 deaths reported in Saskatchewan

- Elemental published an extremely thorough guide to the Covid-19 vaccine, answering every possible question. The FAQ is being updated and added to adsafdsfs