A Single Dose Of Psilocybin Appears To Safely Treat Cocaine Addiction, New Study Published By American Medical Association Study Shows: The psychedelic "appeared to be safe and efficacious for treating cocaine use disorder."
https://t.co/JQYn8QroGv
CAMBRIDGE 1969 (FOR JOHN)
Yoko Ono: I was asked to visit Cambridge University to perform my vocal work. As the date approached, they called me asking if I was still coming, since they knew that I had recently got married and didn't know if my plans had changed or not. "Tell him you're coming with a band," John whispered loudly from the side. John and I thought it was a riot, but we didn't know how they would take it at the other end of the phone. Was it alright to bring a rocker? But the guy held his ground well. It was Cambridge, so the greeting committee was cordial but cool. John took that in, of course. He joined me on the stage and played underneath my vocal. Maybe 'I Wanna Hold Your Hand'? That would have been cute. But instead he went in for the kill and played an incredibly creative avant-garde guitar that nobody in the world had ever heard before or since. The audience didn't react to it. I was probably the only musician who was totally impressed by it. But did I express my appreciation? John loved 'Cambridge 1969'. So for awhile, he always asked for it to be played when we were in the car. I just thought "Oh, not that one again!" "How about 'Yesterday'?" (a joke). And when I tried to play something else he wouldn't hear of it.
Yoko Ono: vocal
John Lennon: guitar
Mal Evans: Watch
John Tchicai: saxophone
John Stevens: percussion
Produced by John Lennon & Yoko Ono
From the John & Yoko album Unfinished Music No. 2: Life With The Lions.
Live at 'A Natural Music Nothing Doing In London' Concert, Lady Mitchell Hall, Cambridge University, Cambridge, UK, 2 March 1969.
Her biography in the programme read: YOKO ONO performed with her voice with Ornette Coleman at the Royal Albert Hall last year and with John Stevens at the Arts Laboratory in London. Her own concerts include Music of the Mind at the Saville Theatre in 1967. She contributed to Nothing Doing in London Two and published a book including music pieces called Grapefruit in Tokyo in 1964. Her Unfinished Music is on Apple Track Records.
DARE taught an entire generation that weed and heroin were basically the same thing.
Then they grew up, tried weed, and realized they'd been lied to.
Then they stopped believing anything the government said about drugs.
New pilot study shows two doses of psilocybin reduced symptom burden by ~40% in people with post-treatment Lyme disease (PTLD), with improvements in pain, fatigue, sleep, and mood lasting up to 6 months. Findings are still very preliminary, but suggests psilocybin may be a new avenue for treating PTLD and possibly similar illnesses.
https://t.co/gDhvY0zH56
When you start a chess game, you have 20 moves available (16 for pawn and 2 for one knight). After completing the first movement you have more than 40 different possibilities. And 8900 in the third and 197740 in the fourth. In the 40s there will be 10 puissance 40 possibilities. Number corresponds to the number of atoms in the universe. This is what make chess more magical.
The real takeaway here is that the elites at the very top are beyond morality. The only language they understand is power. Everyone says they're satanic and Luciferian (which is true) but that's literally just a meme for them. It's their entertainment. It's about power in the end
Happy Birthday to Daniel Johnston would've turned 65 today. 🕊️🩵
In the early ’80s, a young Daniel Johnston was working at a McDonald’s in Austin, Texas. Instead of just handing out fries, he was handing out cassette tapes, sometimes slipping his homemade albums into customers’ to-go bags. After Johnston’s appearance on MTV’s 'The Cutting Edge,' label executives started calling almost immediately, but McDonald’s was the only place he had reliable access to a phone. Word spread fast around Austin and soon people were coming in not for the Big Macs, but for Daniel Johnston.