..Soon I had eaten
25 of the tiny mushrooms...
Gradually I became aware of a strange sensation in my stomach, a sort of buzzing
vibration that grew slowly in intensity. It was not at all unpleasant, and I
knew at once it was the mushrooms. Over the next ten minutes this unusual feeling
became stronger, filling my abdomen. Then it began to invade the rest of my
body, pushing outward through the muscles to the extremities. I was distinctly
aware of a subtle but powerful energy vibrating through the musculature of my
whole body. It made me feel warm and strong. As it reached my head, my senses
sharpened, and I found myself admiring qualities of the wet pasture I had ignored
until then. The green of the grass was of glowing intensity, highlighted by
tones of brown and red. The smell of the earth and rain was overpowerin. I had
no desire to move. If the ground had been dry, I would have stretched out and
rolled on the grass.
Our little group slowly drew together. Obviously, we were all feeling the effects
of the mushrooms. We moved slowly and gracefully, swinging our arms and laughing
at each other. The laughter seemed to bubble up from inside, and the sound of
it echoed inside my chest. I was also very conscious of the taste of mushrooms.
It was as strong as if fresh in my mouth but was diffused through my whole body.
I felt the taste in my muscles.
......to be cont.
........ so there!!
Newsgroups: alt.psychoactives
From: ao613@FreeNet.Carleton.CA (Jeff Heeney)
Subject: Andrew Weil (cont.)
Message-ID: Cn9EH9.Mpv@freenet.carleton.ca
Date: Sat, 26 Mar 1994 06:39:09 GMT
The rain picked
up in intensity. Clearly we could not stay out in the field much longer. It
was late afternoon and turning colder. Slowly we wended our way out of the pasture,
across the fence, and up a steep bank to the car. I curled up in a corner of
the back seat as we started to move. It was an hours drive south along the caost
to Greg and Susan's house.
The mushroom energy continued to course around my body. And now it began to
pull me away from ordinary awareness into a realm that bordered on sleep but
was not sleep. It was an effort to maintain awareness of the car and my fellow
passen- gers, let alone the scenery outside. Instead, I closed my eyes and began
to see visions that were somewhere between images in the mind's eye and actual
movies projected on the inside of my eyelids. At first there were shadowy patterns
that tended to multiply themselves in infinite regressions, but these soon resolved
themselves into very clear images of mushrooms. The mushrooms that appeared
to me were of one type, not Liberty Caps. They grew in clustered bunches, the
stipes arising from a common point, and lacked the Liberty Cap's distinct peak.
They also seemed fleshier and bigger. I had never seen them before. Bunches
of these visionary mushrooms appeared out of nowhere, springing up at odd angles,
swirling and receding. They occupied my attention completely.
"Are you all right?"someone in the front seat asked.
"Yes, I'm seeing mushrooms." I opened my eyes for a moment, surprised by the
brightness of the outside light. I closed them quickly and was instanly back
in the comfortable night world of visions. I felt sorry for the driver and other
front-seat riders who were attending to the road and could not watch the interior
show.
We arrived at the house without difficulty just as it was growing dark.
"Are you still seeing mushrooms?"Greg asked me.
I closed my eyes to make sure."Yes, they're still there."
"A number of people who eat these things see mush- rooms,"Greg said.
"The ones I'm seeing aren't the ones we ate. I wonder if I'll ever meet up with
them."
I told Greg and Susan that Liberty Caps more than lived up to my expectations
and thanked them for introducing me to them. Hallowe'en seemed an especially
fitting day on which to meet them.
It was now a stormy Hallowe'en night, and a long ride through the mountains
lay between us and Eugene. The visions were subsiding, and I volunteered to
drive. It took some concentration to follow the tortuos road through the rain,
but we arrived home without incident. I could still feel the vibrational energy
in my muscles, though it was fading rapidly. About six hours after I had eaten
the mushrooms, I was back to normal, feeling tired. I fell asleep and awoke
the next morning refreshed and ready to leave Oregon for the south.
........ so there!!
Newsgroups: alt.drugs
From: ao613@FreeNet.Carleton.CA (Jeff Heeney)
Subject: Andrew Weil (conclusion)
Message-ID: Cn9Fzz.98@freenet.carleton.ca
Date: Sat, 26 Mar 1994 07:11:59 GMT
Excerpt from "Mushroom Hunting..." by Andrew Weil in the Journal of Psychedelic Drugs. Vol.7(1)Jan.-Mar.,1975.
I did not return
to the state until April. When I got back I made an effort to find out more
about Liberty Caps and eventually got in touch with Jerry, the Oregon state
student who had introduced Greg and Susan to the mushrooms. Jerry gave me much
useful information about them. He said they appeared to be a species called
Psilocybe semelanceata, that like all Psilocybes they had purplish brown spores,
and like all psychoactive Psilocybes they tended to stain blue on handling or
drying, although less so than other varieties.(I had seen no tinges of blue
on the ones I ate.) Jerry said further that they appeared only after the Autumn
Equinox and continued to grow until the Winter Solstice, despite low temperatures.
Thier range extended from the California border north into British Columbia,
from the ocean east to the crest of the coastal mountains. Of the active species
he had tried, Jerry said Liberty Caps were his favourites.
I have found reference to this species in one European handbook and in no American
one. The European book called Psilocybe semilanceata a poisonous species. And,
no doubt, persons who ate it unawares, without the proper set, would interpret
the dramatic changes as mushroom poisoning.
Andrew Weil writes again in the Journal of Psychedelic Drugs Vol.8(2)Apr-Jun.,1976.
........ so there!!
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