Acacea Lewis delivered (she always does!) a dynamic, insightful, and excellent presentation about high psilocybin doses at the Psanctum Psychedelic Conference. IG: https://www.instagram.com/acacealewis/ Website: https://www.acacealewis.com/
NuInfomation World Series Lecture on Origins of African Martial Arts and the Spiritual Science of the Magic Mushroom.
A short excerpt from a series of 13 interviews with Baba Kilindi Iyi conducted by Oyi Sun. Subscribe to stay up to date one the next curated clip and much more from The Street Gospel [More]
During the program of Psymposia at Beyond Psychedelics 2016 conference Kilindi Iyi joined the stage and shared his own psychedelic story. Kilindi Iyi is the head instructor and technical advisor of Tamerrian Martial Art Institute. [More]
Watch Baba Moudou Baqui and Ayize Jamma Everett (Producer of Table of Our own) talk about the idea that birthed the A table of out own movement. This discussion was right before the Detroit screening [More]
Title: Moudou Baqui, Student of Kilindi Iyi High Dose Psilocybin Magic Mushrooms, Breaking Convention 2015 Release Date: 16-Dec-2016 Runtime: 00h 22m 33s (1353s)
Acacea Lewis is the founder of The Divine Master Alchemy School for Entheogenic Cultural Literacy and Ethnobotanical Neuropathy and student of Ahati Kilindi Iyi. Filmed in the Nova Southeastern University Mako Hall multipurpose room on [More]
Reason’s Nick Gillespie talked with MAPS founder Rick Doblin about the imminent FDA approval of MDMA- and psilocybin-assisted therapy at the Psychedelic Science. https://reason.com/video/2023/08/23/rick-doblin-welcome-to-the-psychedelic-20s/ ____________ “Welcome to the psychedelic ’20s!” Rick Doblin, founder of the Multidisciplinary [More]
Psychedelics might interact with the brain by turning off the brain’s default mode network and affecting a thin sheet of gray matter called the claustrum. This could shake up communication between different regions of the [More]
Panelists for this discussion: Dr. Joanna Kempner is a professor of sociology at Rutgers University, where she studies the overlap of science, medicine, technology, and inequality. Julia Bornemann and James Close are leading PsiloPain, a [More]