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- From: aga@qedbbs.com (Peter Dilley)
- Newsgroups: alt.drugs
- Subject: Mushrooms and man
- Message-ID: <J7uiLc2w165w@qedbbs.com>
- Date: 29 Apr 94 02:23:54 GMT
-
- Taken from GROWING GOURMET & MEDICINAL MUSHROOMS, Paul Stamets:
- [A work not centered on Psychoactives but in order to have the most complete
- compendium of mycological knowledge included a little chapter]
-
- Humanity's use of mushrooms extends back to Paleolithic times. Few peope-even
- anthropologists-comprehend how influential mushrooms have been in affecting
- the course of human evolution. Musrhooms have played pivotal roles in ancient
- Greece, India and Mesoamerica. Try to their beguiling nature, fungi have
- always elicited deep emotional responses: from adulation by those who
- understand them to outright fear by those who do not.
-
- The historical record reveals that mushrooms have been used for less than
- beneign purposes. Claudius II and Pope Clement VII wer both killed by enemies
- who poisoned them with deadly Amanitas. Buddha died, according to legend, from
- a mushroom that grew underground. Buddha was given the mushroom by a peasant
- who believed it to be a delicacy. In ancient verse, that mushroom was linked
- to the phrase "pig's foot" but has never been identified. (Although truffles
- grow underground and pigs are used to find them, no deadly poisonous species
- are known.)
-
- The oldest archeaological of mushroom use discovered so far is probably a
- Tassili image from a cave which dates back 3,500 years before the birth of
- Christ. The artist's intent is clear. Mushrooms with electrified auras are
- depicted outlining a dancing shaman. The spiritual interpretation of the image
- transcends time and is obvious. No wonder that word "bemushroomed" has evolved
- to reflect the devout mushroom lover's state of mind.
-
- In the winter of 1991, hikers in the Italian Alps came across the well
- preserved remains of a man who died over 5,300 years ago, approximately 200
- years later than the Tassili cave artist. Dubbed the "Iceman" by the news
- media, he was well equipped with a knapsack, flint axe, a string of dried
- Birch Polypores (Piptoporus betulinus) and another yet unidentified mushroom.
- The polypores can be used as tinder for starting fires and as medicine for
- treating wounds. Further, a rich tea with immuno-enhancing properties can be
- prepared by boiling these mushrooms. Equipped for traversing the wilderness,
- this intrepid adventurer had discovered the value of the noble polypores. Even
- today, this knowledge can be life-saving for anyone astray in the wilderness.
-
- Fear of mushroom poisoning pervades every culture, sometimes reaching phobic
- extremes. The term mycophobic describes those individuals and cultures where
- fungi are looked upon with fear and loathing. Mycophobic cultures are
- epitomized by the English and Irish. In contrast, mycophilic societies can be
- found throughout Asia and eastern Europe, especially amongst Polish, Russian
- and Itialian peoples. These societies have enjoyed a long history of mushroom
- use, with as many as a hundred common names to decribe the mushroom varieties
- they loved.
-
- The use of mushrooms by diverse cultures was intensively studied by an
- investment banker named R. Gordon Wasson. His studies concentrated on the use
- of mushrooms by Mesoamerican, Russian, English, and Indian cultures. With the
- French mycologist, Dr. Roger Heim, Wasson published research on Psilocybe
- mushrooms in Mesoamerica, and on Amanita mushrooms in Euro-Asia/Siberia.
- Wasson's studies spanned a lifetime marked by a passionate love for fungi. His
- publications include: Mushrooms, Russia, & History;The Wondrous
- Mushroom;Mycolatry in Mesoamerica;Maria Sabina and her Mazatec Mushroom
- Velada;and Persephone's Quest: Entheogens and the Origins of Religion. More
- than any other individual of the 20th century, Wasson kindled interest in
- ethnomycology to its present state of intense study. Wasson died on Christmas
- Day in 1986.
-
- One of Wasson's most provocative findings can be found in Soma: Divine
- Mushroom of Immortality (1976) where he postulated that the mysterious SOMA in
- the Vedic literature, a red fruit leading to spontaneous enlightenment for
- those who ingested it, was actually a mushroom. The Vedic symbolism carefully
- disguised its true identity: Amanita muscaria, the hallucinogenic Fly Agaric.
- Many cultures portray Amanita muscaria as the archetypal mushroom. Although
- some Vedic scholars disagree with his interpretation, Wasson's exhaustive
- research still stands. (See Brough (1971) and Wasson (1972)).
-
- Aristotle, Plato, and Sophocles all participated in religious ceremonies at
- Eleusis where an unusal temple honored Demeter, the Goddess of Earth. For over
- two milennia, thousands of pilgrims journeyed fourteen miles from Athens to
- Eleusis, paying the equivalent of a month's wage for the privilege of
- attendind the annual ceremony. The pilgrimgs were ritually harassed on their
- journed to the temple, apparently in good humor.
-
- Upon arriving at the temple, the gathered in the initiation hall, a great
- telestrion. Inside the temple, pilgrims sat in rows that descended step=wise
- to a hidden, central chamger from which fungal concoction was served. An odd
- feature was an array of columns, beyond any apparent structural need, whose
- designed purpose escaped archaeologists. The pilgrims spend the night together
- and reportedly came away forever changed. In this pavilion crowded with
- pillars, ceremonies occurred, known by historians as the Eleusian Mysteris. No
- revelation of the ceremony's secrets could be mentioned under the punishment
- of imprisonment or death. These ceremonies continued until repressed in the
- early centuries of the Christian era.
-
- In 1977, at a mushroom conference on the Olympic Peninsula, R. Gordon Wasson,
- Albert Hoffman, and Carl Ruck first postulated, that the Eleusinian mysteries
- centered on the use of psychoactive fungi. Their papers were later published
- in a book entitled The Road the Eleusis: Unveiling the Secret of the Mysteries
- (1978). That Aristotle and other founders of western philosophy undertook such
- intellectual adventures, and that this secret ceremony persisted for neary
- 2,000 years, underscores the profound impact that fungal rites have had on the
- evolution of western conciousness.
-
- *Side Note: Amanitas in general are poisonous. Fly Agaric kills the constant
- * User in approximately 20 years. If you take the responsability
- * of religous quests with psychoative mushrooms and not recreational
- * use. Stropharia cubensis is what you must seek. ---- A.G.A.
-
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