anrchy said:I think the art is amazing, but it reeks too much of "heaven is for real" and the family that is capitalizing on it.
Is his art for sale? How is he capitalizing on his story? I haven't seen it anywhere besides his flickr account.
anrchy said:I think the art is amazing, but it reeks too much of "heaven is for real" and the family that is capitalizing on it.
It's peripheral and cranial, I don't know which effect is more profound, but it is thought that cranial vasoconstriction caused by 5-HTR agonism that makes psychedelics such effective treatments of migraines and cluster headaches. The current working theory is that these headaches are caused when blood vessels press down on sensitive nerves in the head -- taking a psychedelic causes those veins to constrict and relieves the pressure.Cognitive Heart said:Ah, good point. My mistake..so in other words shrinkage. Also, it must mostly be peripheral vasoconstriction, no?=Nathanial.Dread]
Most psychedelics are vasoconstrictors, so intracranial pressure drops when under the influence.
Bancopuma said:As far as I'm aware, there is no evidence yet to show the occurrence of DMT in human pineal glands. Going on the assumption that one would likely need to measure it in situ in a living human pineal gland (like they did with the rat study), I'm not sure how they will be able to achieve this, let alone get it past an ethics committee! Still, its presence in rat pineal, including supposed evidence for its synthesis there, is definitely intriguing, as on a cellular, biochemical level there is a great deal of similarity between us and rats. What I also found intriguing from that rat pineal study was the complete lack of pinoline there, this supposedly being another compound produced in the pineal.