Bancopuma wrote:...this is a pretty nifty example of a "simple" organism wresting control of a much more complex organism and bending it to its own whims through psychoactive manipulation. In the case of psilocybin, found in magic mushrooms as well as this parasitic fungus, it also calls into its question its role in the various fungal species it is found in. If it simply acts as a deterrent, as some hypothesise, one would expect it to be concentrated in the vulnerable fungal mycelium, where it is only found in trace amounts. Perhaps it has a more interesting and mysterious role to play in these fungi, and I think this may add some credence to Paul Stamet's hypothesis that psilocybin in mushrooms may be acting as an attractant to other organisms (such as us), and so aid the mushroom in spreading its spores.
Well I guess either way Paul's hypothesis is true now if it wasn't always with how ubiquitous mushroom growing for the purpose of spiritual/recreational pursuits is. I wonder if the amount of home grown cubensis could surpass the amount found in the wild at any given time.
Loveall wrote:I do wonder sometimes if I grow mushrooms subtly directed by the mushroom itsel, imagined free will a veil of illusion.
burnt wrote:I used to think mushrooms tricked me into growing them when I grew them. Makes sense. Great articles thanks.
Damn clever fungi
Next article in the alien nature magazine:
Fungus Discovered in the Milky Way Galaxy That Tricks Its Planet’s Dominant Species Into Cultivating It via Instilling a Pseudo Religious ZealWould give a whole new meaning to conscious 'plant spirits' haha. Guess I can't blame them for having their own self preservational agenda. That's simply nature. And maybe I don't care if all in all it ends up as a mutually beneficial transaction. You heal us and string us along with the mystery, we grow and spread you far and wide.
That's kind of how I see most of the plant spirit stuff anyway. If it was real, they would probably have something they want (safety of the planet, themselves, and their homes), and we can choose to have a relationship with the plant and work towards a common goal. It really does feel like I have a relationship with the plants sometimes, they can have quite the personality, especially the harmala containing ones. These articles make me wonder if some of the spirits might be tricker than others though
. Might it be more advantageous for the plant and the spreading of its seed both literally and memetically through our cultural mind to sing some pretty songs, paint some beautiful pictures, or give a pleasant high rather than deliver often uncomfortable spiritual truths that some may run from?
I think we are interacting with a plant consciousness on some level. Something that just can't be replicated with synthetic human creations. Today I heard there are 8 types of vitamin E, many supplements contain only 1, and too much of that 1 can block absorption of the other 7 and actually be negative. Nature keeps all of its bounties in a certain nutritional/chemical balance, and that goes for food as well as drugs. And that balance can be deceptively simple yet wildly complex, look at this beetle brain controlling super AIDs fungus that makes them gay. Even the subtle ratios of psychoactive compounds in the plants could be quite important and descriptive of an intelligence in a way we don't yet understand. I think much of it is experiencing that plant's consciousness/'personality' running through our human mind. Caapi feels a lot like an equanimious psychologist and it always gives me a fresh calm perspective, it's amazing how the chemicals in it and the psychological effect can make me feel like I'm sitting in the room with the best therapist ever lol. That much seems obvious to me but the waters start to get murky when you start throwing in very high doses and collective unconscious stuff.