Ahh, beautiful words, thank you.
It's great to know I might have actually read this somewhere, though my - sorry, my friend's - experience wasn't actually caused by kava-like compounds, but were only perceived as similar to a kava experience.
Add. - Wikipedia turned this up:
"This mushroom has subspecies which contain the hallucinogen psilocybin. Specimens found in Korea or the eastern part of US are more likely to contain psilocybin than similar mushrooms found in the western part of the US or Europe.
This mushroom contains bis-noryangonin and hispidine, which are structurally related to alpha-pyrones found in kava.[5]"
^ Hatfield, G.M.; Brady, L.R. (1969). "Occurrence of bis-noryangonin in Gymnopilus spectabilis". Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences 58 (10): 1298–1299. doi:10.1002/jps.2600581039. PMID 5388695.
Additional research(internet search) on the chemical bis-noryangonin led me to find this, at
http://www.entheogenrevi...mple%20Issue%20small.pdf , pages 3 and 4,
Gymnopilus Chemistry"...STAMETS points out that, with some of the species in the genus
Gymnopilus, “There may be compounds other than psilocybin, but
closely related, that potentiate the experiences of the consumer”
(STAMETS 1996). Small amounts of the active compound baeocystin
(.02% to .05%) have been found in G. purpuratus (GARTZ 1996). Of
G. spectabilis, STAMETS (citing TANAKA et al. 1993) notes that recent
studies of Japanese mushrooms detected no psilocybin, “but identified a new hallucinogen, which they described as belonging to a
group of ‘neurotoxic’ oligoisoprenoids, with depolarizing activity that
was demonstrated on rodent neurons. (No human bioassays were
conducted.)” (STAMETS 1996).
OTT notes that bis-noryangonin (a
chemical apparently structurally similar to the active pyrones found
in Piper methysticum) has been found in G. spectabilis (OTT 1996,
citing HATFIELD & BRADY 1969; HATFIELD & BRADY 1971; and OTT
1976). However, JOCHEN GARTZ points out that this compound is
inactive (GARTZ 1996)..."
I believe in freedom for everyone.
'movies are for people who lack real drugs.' -anne halonium