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Wednesday, June 10, 2026

The researchers focused on a woman in her 80s who had been living with Alzheimer's for 10 years and was given one oral dose of 5 grams of psilocybin-containing mushrooms.

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She was able to talk and walk for longer periods, recognize some of her family members, and regain bladder control after five years of wearing diapers.

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The Establishment is terrified of these drugs precisely because they allow us to temporarily evade the psyche's self-imposed walls limiting our consciousness and perception.

Society invested heavily in creating those mental constructs for us, and the builders don't want anyone peeking around them.

#1 | Posted by snoofy at 2026-06-10 04:10 PM | Reply

In college, we found Psilocybin 'shrooms in east TX pastures under dried cow patties; much calmer than acid, and my best comp is living in a Roger Rabbit movie.

And the cows didn't mind, but sometimes the farmers did!

Of course, I was just experimenting for my psych major... that's my story, and I'm sticking to it.

;;
Here's the original study for the article... it's not a, 'systematic investigation', but it tends to point towards one being warranted.

medicalxpress.com

And here's a more thorough look at some of the Alzheimer's and other medical/psychological uses:

pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov

#2 | Posted by Corky at 2026-06-10 04:46 PM | Reply

from the Nat Inst of Health study linked above:

"Conclusions and perspectives

Recent strides in utilizing psilocybin for the treatment of neuropsychiatric disorders exhibit considerable promise.

Psilocybin holds potential for conferring distinctive advantages in terms of neuroprotection and cognitive enhancement for individuals with Alzheimer's disease (AD) through mechanisms such as neuroplasticity, inflammation regulation, and enhanced neuropsychology.

Furthermore, the antidepressant and anti-anxiety effects of psilocybin may signify substantial advancements in addressing the mental well-being of patients with neuropsychiatric conditions associated with AD.

Nonetheless, it is imperative to recognize that a substantial journey lies ahead before psilocybin can be judiciously and efficaciously employed in AD patient care."

;;

One of the things they describe doing is to try to separate the hallucinatory effects from the effective therapeutic effects than tend to act like antidepressants which adjust levels of neurotransmitters like serotine; they act as the same 5-HT2A agonists or antagonists.

#3 | Posted by Corky at 2026-06-10 05:07 PM | Reply

They say Timothy Leary set back psychiatric research by 50 years.

#4 | Posted by Dbt2 at 2026-06-10 05:24 PM | Reply

My DIL has always wanted to microdose my wife, who has Alzheimer's.

I've told her to save it up for when this season ends.... I don't want microdosing, and I'll need reliable supervision.

#5 | Posted by Dbt2 at 2026-06-10 05:31 PM | Reply

They say Timothy Leary set back psychiatric research by 50 years.
#4 | Posted by Dbt2

Don't you mean Richard Nixon?

#6 | Posted by snoofy at 2026-06-10 05:38 PM | Reply

Corky, how much acid have you dropped? I ate some Green Gel acid on the Nooner once :)

I love magic mushrooms. Lasts about 3 hours, includes hilarity (everything is funny), tracers, and flying light illusions. Plus I got to stare through my hand once. Goes good with pizza but not exercise (when you get tired it feels like you are a ton of lead).

You would be fun to trip with.

#7 | Posted by HeliumRat at 2026-06-10 06:16 PM | Reply

#5

I would consider that in a controlled study or treatment center. Some of the success in small studies is impressive, but the process needs monitoring.

"Chronic neuroinflammation plays a significant role in Alzheimer's disease (AD) pathogenesis associated with a decline in cognitive and mood function. Currently, there are no effective therapies to alleviate the progression of brain dysfunction in AD.

Psilocybin, an FDA-approved drug for treating major depressive disorder, can restrain neuroinflammation and improve hippocampal neurogenesis. Therefore, the current study investigated the efficacy of psilocybin treatment in slowing down cognitive decline in 5x familial AD (5xFAD) mice."

Conclusions
Psilocybin treatment can maintain better brain function in an AD model without affecting amyloid-beta plaques. Improved brain function is likely due to psilocybin-induced reductions in neuroinflammatory signaling, enhanced hippocampal neurogenesis, and preservation of synapses."

more
alz-journals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com

"Tripping into old age: Can psychedelics protect the aging brain?

In a new study, UC Berkeley researchers are investigating whether psilocybin can support healthy aging by boosting plasticity in the brains of older adults".

news.berkeley.edu

UC Berkeley Center for the Science of Psychedelics.

"Psilocybin is Being Studied as a Potential Aid for Depression in Early Alzheimer's Disease"

www.hopkinspsychedelic.org

Perhaps you could find a volunteer study somewhere near you... or perhaps at some point there's nothing to lose to try to calm the inflammation with some shrooms, which apparently can be prescribed by a doctor.

#8 | Posted by Corky at 2026-06-10 06:20 PM | Reply

I love how the sky is so much closer when you're on acid.

#9 | Posted by HeliumRat at 2026-06-10 06:29 PM | Reply

#7

;p ha... I'm afraid I'm a bit out of practice, thought a couple of years ago I did try a psilocybin micro dose, which was, um, interesting, but nothing like back in the day.

- how much acid have you dropped?

I took one of my Finals psyche tests, a 400 multiple choice question test with paragraph long questions and answers, after I thought I had peaked on some Orange Barrels (or something) from the night before.

Walked in sat down, put my pencil to the paper, it flashed a bright light, and I said, "Rut-ro"! Looked at the first 4 questions, couldn't make heads or tails of the questions or the answers.

Then, next thing I knew I was coming down again for real, and handing in the test.

I just knew I had screwed up badly. A couple of days later the results were posted; I missed the first 4 questions and got all the rest right!

#10 | Posted by Corky at 2026-06-10 06:32 PM | Reply

We used to call it "Silly Simon" back in the day.

I enjoyed my sojourn into the world of psycidalia... it was all such an adventure!

Honestly... I thought there was too much fuss made over them. There were always far more dangerous hallucinogenic drugs out there... like alcohol... or things that keep you awake for too long... like amphetamines... which do cause induced psychosis.

Never once did I nor anyone around me experience anything close to a psychotic episode... giggly during... because life's absurdity became so obvious... then just a little sleepy and fuzzy-brained the following day.

I heard tell of people "tripping out" and going crazy etc... but the ones I knew were always one step away from nutso anyway.

Of course... when I experimented... There wasn't the bevy of psych drugs available... they were crude and often debilitating... or mass consumption of them like there is today... everyday... all the time... day in and day out... Holy crap ... today one in five are legally scarfing down the big pharma like there is no tomorrow... bawling about "crippling anxiety"... or whatever... like everything needs fixing.

We kept military personnel on long deployments.. in a war we weren't winning... they were propped up on Prozac...

Back in the day... when human life was really lived on the edge... all people had were molds... fungi... plants... insects... and licking the backs of desert toads... to cope with life's stresses... and they did it intermittently... collectively. The individual wasn't sent home with a prescription... guaranteeing a supply all to themselves.

#11 | Posted by RightisTrite at 2026-06-11 06:50 AM | Reply

6. Him too.

But you know what I'm saying. Tune in, turn on, drop out took a whole lot of seriousness out of the enterprise.

Richard Alpert (Ram Dass), Leary's peer in psychedelics research, had a bit more gravitas, even for those who think Eastern theology is goofy.

#12 | Posted by Dbt2 at 2026-06-11 07:11 AM | Reply

guaranteeing a supply all to themselves.

#11 | Posted by RightisTrite

"The more you use, the less you have, and the more you have, the more you use." (Wm. S. Burroughs)

#13 | Posted by Dbt2 at 2026-06-11 07:13 AM | Reply

"Psilocybin, an FDA-approved drug for treating major depressive disorder, can restrain neuroinflammation and improve hippocampal neurogenesis. Therefore, the current study investigated the efficacy of psilocybin treatment in slowing down cognitive decline in 5x familial AD (5xFAD) mice."

Not FDA approved yet and still officially Schedule 1. It has been fast tracked for study and two states currently have programs where it can be clinically used. It is labor and therapist intensive so if approved there will be a REMS and will require a lot of resources, so expensive and big medicine/pharma gets a cut.

I would love to try Psilocybin with an experienced Shaman. I've been offering Ketamine for about two years. It is also a cool experience and promising results for PTSD, TRD.

#14 | Posted by mattm at 2026-06-11 07:57 AM | Reply

A book for all interested.

Burroughs and Ginsberg, The Yage Letters.

www.amazon.com

#15 | Posted by Dbt2 at 2026-06-11 12:01 PM | Reply | Newsworthy 1

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