When you look at the world today what do you see? What kind of world are we creating? What kind of problems do we face? And why do we face them?
The western world faces a mental health epidemic. In the United States, close to 1 in 4 Americans suffer a form of mental illness. Suicide is the 2nd leading cause of death among our kids.
because we don't invest in our minds the same way we invest in our bodies.
For decades, western researches studied the body. They learned about the physiology of the and today we are on the course for mastering its' biology. Israeli scientists now claim the ability to reverse the human aging process. We know that the recipe to maintaining physical health is consistent exercise and a healthy diet. Our schools - no matter your feelings about the quality of public education - require students to take PE, physical education. However; we don't have the same zealotry towards our mental health which is arguably more important than physical health once you understand some quantum physics.
Perhaps this mental health epidemic goes deeper than the level of the mind. Perhaps it goes deep into our hearts and our souls.
In 2012, Dinah Bazer was recovering from cancer and afraid that her life was on the precipe of death. She enrolled in a study at John Hopkins University that was trying to learn if psilocybin, the active ingredient in magic mushrooms, could ease depression and anxiety in cancer patients.
Before her experience with psilocybin, Dinah would say "I'm an athiest. I don't believe there is a God."
According to the findings of the randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial published in respected Journal of Psychopharmacology, 70% of patients rated their one and only dose of psilocybin as either the most meaningful experience of their entire lives, or among the top five.
Dinah's experience with psilocybin changed her views: "I began to feel this love. Just overwhelming, all-ecompassing love...and the way I describe it is being bathed in God's love because I find no other way to describe it. I felt that I belonged, that I was part of everything and had the right to be here. How else do I describe it? Maybe what you mother's love felt like when you were a baby. This feeling of love was suffusing the entire experience." [1]
The outcome of the study is characterized as "unprecedented within the field of psychiatry".
Imperial college klongdon, John hopkins, NYU, Yale University, UCLA medical center are investigating addition, PTSD, eating disorders, autism, anxiety, depression, creative
Over 700 million souls suffer from the debilitating mental illnesses like depression, anxiety, PTSD and addiction. Luckily, psychedelic medicine is fueling a revolution in mental health. Once deemed dangerous and illegal, psychedelic compounds rediscovered by the scientific communities have the medical field wondering: are psychedelics the future of treating mental health? The FDA has designated psilocybin a breakthrough therapy and is fast tracking it’s development. New research shows psilocybin therapy is found to be 4 times more effective than antidepressants. This renaissance is leading to a wave of new psychedelic biotech companies like Compass Pathways and MindMed.
there are too many soul who have served in the armed services of the United States and other democracies across the Earth. too many souls who have Been trapped in the throes of depression, anxiety, PTSD and addiction.