The Other Magic Mushroom: Why a Canadian Startup Is Suddenly Interested in the Fungus From Super Mario

The Other Magic Mushroom: Why a Canadian Startup Is Suddenly Interested in the Fungus From Super Mario
The Other Magic Mushroom: Why a Canadian Startup Is Suddenly Interested in the Fungus From Super Mario
Shroom Terrain by David Geitgey Sierralupe is licensed under CC BY 2.0

Around two years ago, a former high school science teacher was walking in the woods near Atlanta, Georgia when she came across a common, yet striking mushroom. Many folks are familiar with this fungus, with its distinctive firetruck-red cap speckled by white dots, called the fly agaric or Amanita muscaria. It’s technically poisonous, but while very rarely deadly, it can cause uncomfortable nausea and seizures. It’s also psychoactive, triggering a range of hallucinations that can be stimulating or sedating, depending on the person.

The teacher, who uses the pseudonym Amanita Dreamer, had been planning for this walk to be her last. After years of struggling on prescription benzodiazepines, she made a plan to end her life. But intrigued by this strange toadstool, she took it home, researched it online and then took about 15 grams in a tea after dehydrating it.
“That was probably that natural substance I had been looking for my whole life,” Dreamer tells Discover. “I woke up the next morning, my life was just completely different. I didn't have panic and anxiety probably for the first time in my life. And I never took another benzo, I had no more pain, no more withdrawals, no more nothing.”
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Psychedelics