
Scientists have discovered that psilocybin may have powerful anti-aging properties. New research provides the first experimental evidence that the compound from psychedelic mushrooms extends survival in aged mice and significantly delays the natural aging process in human cells.
Historically demonized and classified as dangerous substances, psychedelics have recently gained traction in the US from medicinal use to the decriminalization movement. Here's how it's going.

Wednesday, August, 6th, 2025 12:00 PM PST REGISTER HERE Do you wish you got into this event for free? Become a Chacruna member and receive free or discounted access to all Community […]

Psychedelic Science 2025 emphasized integration as a collective, cultural process amid post-FDA rejection reflection. Chacruna Institute grounded the conference in justice, ethics, and inclusion through community-driven dialogues, highlighting marginalized voices and decolonization. Intimate gatherings fostered solidarity, emphasizing co-creation, relational accountability, and a shared future that celebrates difference rather than erasing it.
How Blue Honey might just be the best way to consume magic mushrooms and prolong shelf life.

Can you feel your skin twitch, itch, crawl when you’re receiving a hunch? Can you feel the back of your neck tingle? Ears burning? Heart Pounding? Butterflies fluttering in your stomach? All these sensations are your fast twitch muscles communicating. Probably your felt sense-6th sense is your fast twitch muscles speaking. In my research, I’m... Continue Reading → The post Exercises for Strengthening Your Intuition. appeared first on Psychedelic Integration.

Researchers have discovered that psilocybin—but not ketamine—triggers widespread changes in neuropeptide-related genes in the rat hypothalamus. These findings may help explain how psychedelics influence mood, appetite, and stress responses through deep brain systems.

We invite you to join us for an inspiring conversation at the intersection of psychedelics, Black liberation, and collective transformation. This Community Forum will explore how entheogens can support movements for racial justice, community healing, and radical imagination.

People under the influence of psilocybin perform more slowly on tasks measuring attention and executive function. But a new study suggests the problem might not be the drug—it might be the traditional lab tests used to assess cognition.

Classical psychedelics like LSD, psilocybin, and mescaline are known for activating the 5-HT2A serotonin receptor, but a new study reveals their effects go far beyond. Researchers profiled 41 psychedelics against over 300 human receptors and found potent activity at serotonin, dopamine, and adrenergic sites.

Queering Psychedelics is a nine-week live online course (July 28–Oct 6, 2025) exploring queer contributions to psychedelic healing. Taught by diverse leaders, it centers LGBTQIA+, BIPOC, and Indigenous voices. With justice-informed pedagogy, it offers tools for inclusive practice, spiritual growth, and cultural transformation. Scholarships available; $700 tuition.
Forget everything you learned from D.A.R.E. Shrooms aren’t just trippy they’re brain-altering medicine. Here’s the neuroscience without the lab coat jargon.

Despite a smaller audience, the Denver (USA) event reaffirms the importance of psychotherapy in MDMA and psilocybin treatments for mental disorders. The FDA's August failure shook, but did not extinguish, faith in the potential of psychedelics for mental health, which is accumulating scientific evidence, legislative initiatives, and support from conservative politicians. Another positive sign was an openness to dialogue with Indigenous peoples.

Join us for a deep dive into the cultural, spiritual, and scientific legacy of the Eleusinian Mysteries, one of the most enduring ritual traditions of the ancient world.

Psilocybin, the active compound derived from psychedelic mushrooms, significantly delayed cellular aging and extended lifespan in a preclinical study. Researchers observed a 50% increase in the lifespan of human skin and lung cells and a 30% increase in survival in aged mice treated with psilocybin.

As the use of psychedelic plant medicines becomes increasingly visible within spiritual communities, this workshop offers a critical and timely exploration of both legal protections and ethical responsibilities for churches and communities that incorporate plant medicines into their ceremonial practices.

The Entheon Foundation granted $25,000 to Chacruna Institute’s Indigenous Reciprocity Initiative (IRI), supporting grassroots Indigenous projects across the Americas. The funding recognizes IRI’s ethical approach to reciprocity in the psychedelic field, emphasizing Indigenous knowledge, justice, and equity amid rising commercialization. Chacruna advocates for inclusive, ethical psychedelic practices and dialogue.

American chemist Jonathan Ott, who died on July 5th at 76, was a pioneering psychonaut. He coined "entheogen" and championed consciousness-altering plants like jurema-preta. A disciple of Schultes and Hofmann, he blended rigorous research with personal experimentation, profoundly influencing psychedelic studies and advocating for their spiritual and ecological significance.

Psychedelics hold revolutionary potential, but patriarchal systems distort them for profit and control. True healing demands feminist values—reciprocity, inclusion, respect for Indigenous wisdom, and resistance to exploitation. Without challenging patriarchal power, Clancy Cavnar argues, psychedelics risk becoming tools of oppression rather than liberation. Liberation requires reclaiming psychedelics from capitalism’s grasp.
Buckle up, bureaucracy. Magic mushrooms just scored a major legal win for the terminally ill and this time it's in Canada.

We are delighted to invite you to Chacruna’s upcoming Community Forum, which will explore the evolving landscape of cannabis use in today’s society.

July 28th – October 6th, 2025, 10:30am-12pm PDT / 1pm-3pm EST REGISTER HERE Price $700 USD CE Credits Pending Approval Scholarship Application Course Description Psychedelics have encompassed a colorful history of […]

Public acceptance of psychedelics as therapeutic tools has grown, shifting focus from legitimacy to integration, Brad Burge argues. Challenges include outdated healthcare frameworks, regulatory systems, and media oversimplification. Integration requires ethical, inclusive structures, cross-ideological coalitions, and responsible storytelling. The task now is embedding psychedelics within systems that were never designed to accommodate them.

The Chacruna Institute’s 16-week online course, Roots of Psychedelic Therapy, offers a justice-centered, interdisciplinary exploration of sacred plant medicines. Running July–October 2025, it includes 28 CE credits and features global experts on Indigenous traditions, ethics, and psychedelic therapy. Ideal for professionals seeking cultural fluency and ethical grounding.
Psychedelics aren’t a Silicon Valley innovation. While tech bros hawk $500 microdosing starter kits and venture capitalists race to patent molecules ripped from ancestral lands, Indigenous cultures have woven these substances into spiritual and communal survival for over 5,000 years.

At Psychedelic Science 2025, Rick Doblin acknowledged setbacks in MDMA therapy approval but remained optimistic. Despite MAPS' struggles, he emphasized continued progress. Experts like Rachel Yehuda defended the necessity of psychotherapy alongside psychedelics, warning that excluding it undermines treatment. Broad access remains limited by cost, policy, and regulatory challenges.

Music can make or break a psychedelic experience. It can soften the come-up, deepen the peak, or gently guide the return. In some sessions, music is performed live. In others, it’s pre-recorded playlists that shape the inner landscape. If you’re using playlists, you’ve got two options: 1. Use a pre-made playlist. 2. Build your own. […] The post Crafting Psychedelic Playlists: Music, Silence & the Flow of the Trip appeared first on Maps of the Mind.