Salvia divinorum - Diviner's Sage
Salvia divinorum is a perennial labiate used for curing and divination by the Mazatec Indians of Oaxaca, Mexico. The psychotropic effects the plant produces are compared to those of the other hallucinogens employed by the Mazatecs, the morning glory, Rivea corymbosa L., Hallier F. and the psilocybin-containing mushrooms. A discussion of the role of ska María Pastora in the "native pharmacopoeia" is based on previous reports and fieldwork by the authors with a Mazatec shaman.

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  • Why Entheology.org?
    Our simple and concise mission statement including information regarding submissions. We pay you for reprint rights on any research paper we'd like to include here at Edoto...just click for details.

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  • Plants of the Gods
    Absolute essential read for anyone interested in sacred entheogens. Includes detailed history and preparation of 97 psychoactive and/or sacred plants.

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  • Annual Causes of Death in America
    The REAL truth is the most sobering statistic.

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  • Annual Causes of Death in America
    The REAL truth is the most sobering statistic.

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  • Extracting Salvinorin from Salvia Divinorum
    This is a concise extraction method for educational purposes only.

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  • Monoamine Oxidase Inhibitors
    Extremely important information regarding MAOI's, complete with Diet Card.

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  • Traditional Quid Preparation
    Information regarding the traditional praparation of Salvia divinorum for divination by the Mazatecs.

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  • Pharmacology of Bufotenine
    Exhaustive case study regarding Bufotenine, 5-MEO-DMT, and related substances.

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  • Study on Calea Zacatechichi (Dream Herb)
    Calea zacatechichi is a plant of extensive popular medicinal use in Mexico. An infusion of the plant is has been reported to have psychotropic properties that have been clinically-proven to induce dreaming, and increase the frequency of dreams as well.

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  • In Depth Report Regarding DMT
    In this article I wish to draw attention to a strange property of DMT which sets it apart from other psychedelics, namely, it's ability to place users in touch with a realm that is apparently inhabited by discarnate entities of an intelligent nature.

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  • The Science of Ethnobotany
    Ethnobotanists share two decades of experience living with the indigenous peoples of Central and South America, the Caribbean, and Southeast Asia.

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  • Entheogens and the Future of Religion
    The book should prove to be a welcome complement to other serious studies in mysticism (including those that take a fundamentally different tack).

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  • Tukanoans
    The Tukanoans are one of the most known cultures that utilize ayahuasca as their sacrament. They are one of about 70 tribes who share this practice.

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  • Ayahuasca, shamanism, and curanderismo in the Andes
    The term ayahuasca comes from the Quechua, meaning literally "the vine of souls," although it is also called "the visionary vine" or the "vine of death." The folk term refers to the botanical species of liana known as Banisteriopsis Caapi , which is also

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  • The Santo Daime Religion
    In this paper, the reader will be introduced to the sect of Santo Daime, a Brazilian religion which combines Christianity with the indigenous practice of using ayahuasca, a native entheogenic plant.

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  • Santo Daime Church Wins Court Case
    Freedom of Religion versus the Psychotropic Substance Treaty - The Verdict

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  • Ayahuasca: Human Consciousness and the Spirits of Nature
    Anything with the name Ralph Metzner even remotely attached to it is a safe buy. An elder statesman responsible for dramatic shifts in consciousness within this nation and throughout the world...

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  • DMT: The Spirit Moecule
    Covering a groundbreaking psychedelic substance that is actually found in human cerebrospinal fluid, Rick Strassman tells a first-person story of his research on the profoundly mysterious substance dimethltryptamine (DMT).

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  • The World As You Dream It: Shamanic Teachings from the Amazon and Andes
    John has done a lot to honor and preserve the indigenous teachings and the ethnobotanical environment.

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  • Shapeshifting: Shamanic Techniques for Global and Personal Transformation
    John has done a lot to honor and preserve the indigenous teachings and the ethnobotanical environment.

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  • Canada to Decriminalize Cannabis
    The Liberal government is preparing to move ahead in the new year with legislation to decriminalize marijuana, Justice Minister Martin Cauchon said yesterday.

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  • Solubility of Active Components – Quick Guide
    Brief discussion on active components of plants and whether they were traditionally extracted into alcohol, water, or other solvents.

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  • Argyreia nervosa - Hawaiian Baby Woodrose
    Hawaiian Baby Woodrose seeds are perhaps one of the least understood of modern-day entheogens and exotic botanicals. There is much controversy in regards to its true place in Shamanic and traditional history outside of its native culture and home; India.

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  • Argyreia nervosa - Hawaiian Baby Woodrose
    Hawaiian Baby Woodrose seeds are perhaps one of the least understood of modern-day entheogens and exotic botanicals. There is much controversy in regards to its true place in Shamanic and traditional history outside of its native culture and home; India.

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  • Duboisia hopwoodii - Pituri Bush
    The pituri plant had enormous economic value to the Aborigines. Pituri roads existed with extensive trade networks that extended from northern to southern desert areas, which permitted Aborigines to trade the plant.

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  • Epithelantha micromeris - Hikuli Mulato
    Considered a "false peyote" which is often called "hikuli mulato," the "dark skinned peyote".

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  • Galbulimima belgreveana - Agara
    The use of Galbulimima belgraveana in Papua New Guinea has been reported in several popular books on psychoactive plants. The chewing of Galbulimima belgraveana bark and Homalomena sp. leaves (ereriba) has been reported to induce visions and a dream-like

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  • Heimia salicifolia - Sinicuichi (Sinicuiche)
    The natives believe that sinicuichi (sinicuiche) has sacred or supernatural qualities, since they hold that it helps them recall events which took place many years earlier as if they had happened yesterday; others assert that they are able, with sinicuich

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  • Hyoscamus niger - Black Henbane
    Black Henbane was used as a ritual plant by the pre-Indo-European peoples of central Europe. In Australia, handfuls of henbane seeds were discovered in a ceremonial urn along with bones and snail shells, dating back to the early Bronze Age. During the Pal

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  • Ipomoea violacea - Morning Glory
    Regardless of what you’ve read anywhere else; Morning Glory has a rich place in the history of psychedelic and visionary use in historical traditions across multiple cultures, including the Chontal Indians of Oaxaca, Mexico, and the highly evolved Aztec C

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  • Kaempferia galanga - Galanga
    Beyond the high content of essential oil in the rhizome, little is known of the chemistry of the plant. Hallucinogenic activity might possibly be due to constituents of the essential oils.

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  • Leonotis leonurus - Lion's Tail
    Smoked by the Hottentot tribes smoke the resinous flowering tops and leaves from this plant as a euphoriant.

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  • Leonurus sibiricus - Siberian Motherwort
    Under construction.

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  • Botany of Peyote (Lophophora williamsii)
    The peyote cactus is a flowering plant of the family Cactaceae, which is a group of fleshy, spiny plants found primarily in the dry regions of the New World.

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  • Lycoperdon mixtecorum - Bovista
    PUFFBALLS (Lycoperdon mixtecorum and L. marginotum) are used by the Mixtec Indicins Of Oaxaca, Mexico as auditory hallucinogens.

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  • Mandragora officinarum - Mandrake
    Under construction.

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  • Maquira sclerophylia - Rapa dos Indios
    In the Pariana region of the central Amazon in Brazil, the indians formerly prepared a hallucinogenic snuff of the dried fruits. The snuff was taken in tribal ceremonials, but encroachment of civilization has obliterated it's use.

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  • Mimosa hostilis - Jurema Tree
    The preparation of the brew from fresh Jurema root bark for trance possession rituals, is, in itself, a complex ritual of the Atikum tribe.

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  • Mitragyna speciosa - Kratom
    Kratom is traditionally only used in Thailand, although some use in Malaysia has been reported. Use dates far enough back that its beginning can't be determined. It is often used as a substitute for opium when opium is unavailable, or to moderate opium ad

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  • Mucuna pruriens - Cowhage
    M. pruriens is a leguminous climbing plant, with long, slender branches, alternate, lanceolate leaves on hairy petioles, 6 to 12 inches long, with large, white flowers, growing in clusters of two or three, with a bluish-purple, butterfly-shaped corolla.

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  • Nymphaea caerulea - Blue Lily / Blue Lotus
    Creating a feeling of well being, euphoria and ecstasy, Nymphaea caerulea (blue lotus) is a water plant growing on the shores of lakes and rivers.

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  • Oncidium ceboletta - Hikuri Orchid
    Oncidium longifolium is known as a peyote replacement among the Tarahumara.

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  • Macropiper Excelsum - Maori Kava
    This subspecies from the New Zealand mainland is the variety used by the Maori in their medicines and rituals and belongs to the kava family.

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  • Panaeolus spinctrinus - Hoop-Petticoat
    Under construction.

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  • Panaeolus subbalteatus
    Under construction.

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  • Pandanus
    Natives of New Guinea employ the fruit of an unidentified species of Pandanus for hallucinogenic purposes, unfortunately little is known of this use.

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  • Peganum harmala - Syrian Rue
    The seeds, as well as the roots, of P. harmala contain a mixture of the harmala alkaloids, armine and harmaline. When admnstered to humans, the harmala alkaloids are serotonin antagonists, CNS stimulants, hallucinogens and extemely potent, short term MAO

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  • Pelecyphora aselliformis - Peyotillo
    P. aselliformis is a well known medicinal peyote sold in the markets of San Luís Potosí, Mexico, and is used as a remedy for fevers and rheumatic pains. Extracts have also been shown to have antibiotic activity.

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  • Pernettya furens - Hierba loca
    The fruit of tagili, of Ecuador, is well recognized as poisonous, capable of inducing hallucinations and other psychic alterations as well as affecting the motor nerves.

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  • Petunia violaceae - Shanin
    SHANIN (Petunia violacea) is one of the most recently reported hallucinogens. It is taken by the Indians in Ecuador to induce the sensation of flight.

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  • Petunia violaceae - Shanin
    SHANIN (Petunia violacea) is one of the most recently reported hallucinogens. It is taken by the Indians in Ecuador to induce the sensation of flight.

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  • Phalaris arundinacea - Red Canary Grass
    The plant contains DMT, beta-carbolines, 5-MEO-demethyltryptamine, and trace amounts of bufotenine.

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  • Phragmites australis - Common Reed
    A perenniel grass with a long association with humans, the common reed is native to Eurasia and Africa but has spread all over the world with people, even though it has practically never been cultivated.

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  • Psilocybe cubensis - San Isidro
    Under construction.

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  • Psilocybe cyanescens - Wavy Cap
    Under construction.

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  • Psilocybe mexicana - Teonanacatl
    Few plants of the gods have ever been held in greater reverence than the sacred mushrooms of Mexico. So hallowed were these fungi that the Aztecs called them Teonancatl ("divine flesh") and used them only in the most holy of their ceremonies. Even though,

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  • Psilocybe semilanceata - Liberty Cap
    Under construction.

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  • Psychotria viridis - Chacruna
    The classical principle admixtures of Ayahuasca and Yagè commonly employed throughout Amazonian Peru, Ecuador and Brazil. Related to the coffee plant in a large genus of over 700 species, Psychotria viridis is a small glabrous tree or shrub reaching 14 fo

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  • Rynchosia phaseoloides - Piule
    The beautiful red and black beans of several species of Rhynchosia may have been eployed in ancient Mexico as an hallucinogenic.

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  • Sceletium tortuosum - Kanna
    The family Mesembryanthemaceae contains many pharmacologically active species. One of the most utilized by native peoples in South Africa was the genus Sceletium(Kanna), for which whole tribes would travel hundreds of miles to pick a years supply.

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  • Scirpus atrovirens - Bakana
    One of the most powerful herbs of the Tarahumara of Mexico is apparently a species of Scirpus.

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  • Scopolia carniolica - Scopolia
    Under construction.

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  • Solandra grandiflora - Chalice Vine
    Under construction.

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  • Tabernaemontana - Sanango
    Under construction.

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  • Tabernatnthe Iboga - Iboga
    Iboga is basic to the Bwiti cult and other secret societies in Gabon and the Congo.

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  • Tanaecium nocturnum - Koribo
    Under construction.

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  • Teltrapteris methystica - Caapi-pinima
    ANOTHER KIND OF CAAPI is prepared from Tetrapteris methistica, a forest vine also belonging to the family Malpighioceae.

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  • Trichocereus pachanoi - San Pedro Cactus
    The San Pedro Cactus, or Trichocereus pachanoi, was in use at the very beginning of Andean civilization when it was highly prized as the “materia prima” (raw material) of the shamans of that era. In the central Andes district of Peru, as well as in the su

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  • Turbina corymbosa - Ololiuqui
    Ololiuqui is the Aztec name for the seeds of certain convolvulaceous plants which have been used since prehispanic times by the Aztecs and related tribes, just as the sacred mushrooms and the cactus peyotl have been used in their religious ceremonies for

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  • Virola theiodora - Cumala Tree
    Most, if not all, species of Virola have a copious red "resin" in the inner bark. The resin from a number of species is prepared as an hallucinogenic snuff or small pellets.

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  • Vocanga - Vocanga
    Voacanga africana is one of the well guarded secrets of the African Magic Healers. Little is know about the actual use of the seeds and the bark of several Voacanga species (including V.africana), other than that the plant is held in high esteem for ritua

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  • How to Germinate Seeds
    Great article from a great online seed vender; Alchemy Works.

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  • To Save the Forest, the Trees Must Go
    In the name of science, the United States Forest Service has proposed the experimental logging of half a million acres in two forests in the Sierra Nevada...

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  • The Bwiti Religion and Tabernanthe iboga
    The use of vegetable hallucinogens by humans for religious purposes is very ancient, probably even older than its use for healing, magic or teaching purposes. The profound alterations in one's state of consciousness brought about by the use of a hallucino

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  • Mao Inhibitor Recipe Simplified
    This is a powerful MAO inhibitor, and should be treated VERY carefully!

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  • Studies of Salvia divinorum (Lamiaceae),
    Salvia divinorum Epling & Játiva-M. is one of the vision-inducing plants used by the Mazatec Indians of central Mexico. The present status of research is summarized.

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  • Piper methysticum - Kava Kava
    Kava Kava is also known by the names Ava, Ava Pepper, Intoxicating Pepper, Kawa Awa, Kawa Kawa, Wati, Yogona, and Waka. This herb, a member of the pepper family, grows as a bush in the South Pacific.

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  • Piper methysticum - Kava Kava
    Kava Kava is also known by the names Ava, Ava Pepper, Intoxicating Pepper, Kawa Awa, Kawa Kawa, Wati, Yogona, and Waka. This herb, a member of the pepper family, grows as a bush in the South Pacific.

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  • Modern Day Shamanism in Hawaii
    Serge is doing his part to save the shaman traditions of his culture when he formed Aloha International; a world-wide network of people studying and practicing the Hawaiian shamanic traditions.

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  • Use of Psychoactive Snuff in Pre-Columbian Chile
    One notable feature of the Pre-Columbian San Pedro culture is the high incidence of snuffing implements. The most common of the snuffing kits found in San Pedro de Atacama consists of a woolen bag containing a wooden rectangular snuff tray, a snuffing tub

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  • Native Hallucinogen Piptadenias
    From very remote times, the indigenous inabitants of various parts of South America have been aware of the hallucinogenic properties of diverse species of the genus Piptadenia. The purpose of the present study is to bring out the salient facts concerning

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  • Argemone mexicana (Prickly Poppy)
    This is an extraodinarily interesting psychoactive plant, which is just now being rediscovered by psychonauts everywhere. Rich in history with the Aztecs, this poppy plant is presently legal worldwide.

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  • Wormwood (Artemisia absinthium)
    Wormwood is an ancient plant who’s roots can be traced back to ancient times. Most don’t think about this one fact, but the Greek goddess; Artemis is where this plant gets its name from. Most scholars believe that this was a name attributed to all Artem

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  • Lactuca virosa - Wild Lettuce, Green Endive, Lettuce Opium
    The Hopi smoked the dried resin, or sap, obtained from the plant. The Hopi believe that induced dream states contain more information about reality than the conscious waking state. Wild lettuce, aka lettuce opium, is said to enhances the vividness of dre

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  • FDA Makes False Claims About Marijuana
    Last Friday, 24 members of Congress demanded that the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) account for its disingenuous April 20 statement claiming that “no sound scientific studies” support the medical use of marijuana.

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  • FDA Makes False Claims About Marijuana
    Last Friday, 24 members of Congress demanded that the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) account for its disingenuous April 20 statement claiming that “no sound scientific studies” support the medical use of marijuana.

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  • FDA Makes False Claims About Marijuana
    Last Friday, 24 members of Congress demanded that the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) account for its disingenuous April 20 statement claiming that “no sound scientific studies” support the medical use of marijuana.

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  • Backlash from FDA's Bogus Marijuana Report
    The FDA’s claim, of course, is patently false. Numerous credible scientific studies document marijuana’s medical benefits, most notably a 1999 Institute of Medicine (IOM) report commissioned by the White House drug czar’s office.

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  • Backlash from FDA's Bogus Marijuana Report
    The FDA’s claim, of course, is patently false. Numerous credible scientific studies document marijuana’s medical benefits, most notably a 1999 Institute of Medicine (IOM) report commissioned by the White House drug czar’s office.

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  • Supreme Court Sides With Church in Ayahuasca Case
    In a UNANIMOUS RULING Tuesday, the Supreme Court decided that O Centro Espirita Beneficiente Uniao do Vegetal (UDV), a religious congregation based in New Mexico, can use ayahuasca, a hallucinogenic tea, in its ceremonies.

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  • Supreme Court Sides With Church in Ayahuasca Case
    In a UNANIMOUS RULING Tuesday, the Supreme Court decided that O Centro Espirita Beneficiente Uniao do Vegetal (UDV), a religious congregation based in New Mexico, can use ayahuasca, a hallucinogenic tea, in its ceremonies.

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  • Papaver somniferum - Opium Poppy
    Ancient peoples considered this a sacred medicinal plant and a source of powerful shamanic potions. The opium poppy was a magical ritual plant among the Germanic tribes. The opium poppy is one of the most significant plants in history, having had consider

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  • Acorus Calamus var. Americanus
    Calamus was originally noted to have hallucinogenic properties through ethnobotanical research dating back to the 1960s. However, sweet flag, also known as muskrat root or “sinke tawote” (Lakota for “food of the muskrat”), has been held in high esteem by

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  • Berkeley Declares Itself Sanctuary For Medical Pot
    The City of Berkley, CA, resolves to guarantee continued access to medical marijuana, under increasing pressure from the DEA.

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  • States Must Tackle Medical-Marijuana Issue
    Workplace Safety is made key issue in Northwest States' Medical Marijuana Initiatives

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  • Making Pot Legal: We Can Do It -- Here's How
    Changing public opinion about pot isn't easy. Changing America's anti-pot laws is even harder -- here's a blueprint to get it done.

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  • Making Pot Legal: We Can Do It -- Here's How
    Changing public opinion about pot isn't easy. Changing America's anti-pot laws is even harder -- here's a blueprint to get it done.

  •  
  • Moses High On Drugs: Isreali Researcher
    New study examines the possible use of psychoactive plants by Moses on Mt. Sanai, and in the religious rites of biblical times.

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  • Moses High On Drugs: Isreali Researcher
    New study examines the possible use of psychoactive plants by Moses on Mt. Sanai, and in the religious rites of biblical times.

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  • Ira Glasser Remembers William F. Buckley, Jr.
    William F. Buckley, Jr., conservative intellectual--and supporter of drug policy reform--passed away February 27, 2008. He is remembered by Ira Glasser, president of DPA's board and former executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union.

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  • Narcotics Control Board Destroying Coca Cultures
    In a culturally insensitive and irrational move, the International Narcotics Control Board (INCB) has called for the governments of Bolivia and Peru to abolish all uses of the coca leaf, including coca leaf chewing.

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  • Narcotics Control Board Destroying Coca Cultures
    In a culturally insensitive and irrational move, the International Narcotics Control Board (INCB) has called for the governments of Bolivia and Peru to abolish all uses of the coca leaf, including coca leaf chewing.

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  • Outrageous Anti-Pot Lies: Media Uses Cancer Scare Tactics
    Headlines suggested a study proved pot is a greater cancer risk than tobacco -- but the media didn't even wait for the report to be released.

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  • Peyote (Lophophora williamsii)
    Peyote (Lophophora williamsii grows in South-Eastern America and in northern regions of Mexico. In Mexico, peyote has been used for divination in shamanic rituals and in the treatment of ailments for at least 10,000 years.

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  • Tagetes lucida - Marigolds
    Tagetes lucida, widely identified as a powerfully psychoactive strain of the marigold flower, was first documented by the Aztecs. They used Tagetes lucida in their ritual incense they referred to as yyauhtl. This name was derived from the Aztecan word uja

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  • Salvia Divinorum Creates Catch-22
    Florida follows the lead of eight other states and considers ban on Salvia divinorum.

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  • White Lotus - Nymphaea ampla
    The effects of the flower when prepared as a tea or decoction and ingested are said to be much like the opiate apomorphine. White lotus actually contains aporphine, which is closely related to apomorphine, differing only in the lack of two hydroxyl group

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  • Passiflora - Passion Flower
    The psychoactive properties of the Passiflora genus as a whole is still awaiting thorough ethnopharmacological study, however there are several species that have a rich history as entheogens.

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  • Yohimbe - Pausinystalia yohimba
    In addition to its sexual stimulant and aphrodisiac qualities, the bark of the yohimbe tree has been reported to also be hallucinogenic when smoked. The psychoactive effects are primarily due to the main active constituent yohimbine. Yohimbine has sympath

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  • Withania somnifera - Ashwagandha
    Widely used back in Mesopotamia for its medicinal and narcotic properties, this member of the Nightshade Family, was well known in ancient Egypt and characterized and classified as a sakrân intoxicant in Old Arabic.

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  • Massachusetts Aims For Marijuana Decriminalization in November
    Thanks to a carefully-crafted initiative campaign by the Committee for Sensible Marijuana Policy (CSMP), Massachusetts may be the next state to take the step to decriminalize marijuana.

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  • Santo Daime: The Drug-Fuelled Religion
    A new religion is spreading to Britain - its central sacrament the consumption of a hallucinogenic ayahuasca. This report is from inside the faith's heartland, the rainforests of the Amazon.

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  • Santo Daime: The Drug-Fuelled Religion
    A new religion is spreading to Britain - its central sacrament the consumption of a hallucinogenic ayahuasca. This report is from inside the faith's heartland, the rainforests of the Amazon.

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  • Ken Kesey's Mexico - On the Lam With Ken Kesey
    Journalist Lawrence Downes goes down Mexico way in an attempt to conjure the trail blazed by Ken Kesey, novelist, psychedelic prophet and hero of “The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test, along with his band of Merry Pranksters in the 1960s.

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  • Ancient Shamanic Solutions
    Cultural anthropologist and author, Dr. John Broomfield, studies ancient shamanic cultures and applies ancient wisdom to modern-day solutions.

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  • Ancient Shamanic Solutions
    Cultural anthropologist and author, Dr. John Broomfield, studies ancient shamanic cultures and applies ancient wisdom to modern-day solutions.

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  • LSD, Ketamine & Cannabis Could Treat Headaches to Diabetes
    Doctors and researchers in the US and across Europe are studying legitimate therapeutic applications of psychedelic drugs with new science set to prove their case.

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  • LSD, Ketamine & Cannabis Could Treat Headaches to Diabetes
    Doctors and researchers in the US and across Europe are studying legitimate therapeutic applications of psychedelic drugs with new science set to prove their case.

  •  
  • Marijuana May Prevent Cancer, Not Cause It
    Clinical research begins to demonstrate a link between Cannabinoids and halting the spread of a wide range of cancers.

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  • LSD Helped Forge Alex Grey's Spiritual, Artistic and Love Lives
    Interview with artist Alex Grey explores his use of psychotropic drugs and their influence on his art, his spirituality, and his life.

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  • Ayurvedic 'Viagra' To Be Tested On Humans
    Researchers in India are studying the effects of Ayurveda herbal medicines for treatment of erectile dysfunction and premature ejaculation.

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  • Salvia Divinorum: Old Psychedelic Drug, New Appeal
    The hallucinogenic herb Salvia divinorum can be purchased online or at a local head shop. While the DEA and others want to limit its use, scientists say making it a controlled substance would hinder research.

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  • Salvia Divinorum: Old Psychedelic Drug, New Appeal
    The hallucinogenic herb Salvia divinorum can be purchased online or at a local head shop. While the DEA and others want to limit its use, scientists say making it a controlled substance would hinder research.

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  • Brain's Reaction To Potent Hallucinogen Salvia Explored
    U.S. Department of Energy is conducting new brain-imaging studies on animals, documenting the effects of Salvia divinorum on the brain.

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  • Brain's Reaction To Potent Hallucinogen Salvia Explored
    U.S. Department of Energy is conducting new brain-imaging studies on animals, documenting the effects of Salvia divinorum on the brain.

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  • Trip Of A Lifetime: How LSD Rocked The World
    A comprehensive overview of the life and work of Albert Hoffman, the bicycling Swiss chemist who created LSD - it explores the trailblazing, mind-altering legacy he left behind after his death on Tuesday, April 29, 2008, at the age of 102.

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  • Trip Of A Lifetime: How LSD Rocked The World
    A comprehensive overview of the life and work of Albert Hoffman, the bicycling Swiss chemist who created LSD - it explores the trailblazing, mind-altering legacy he left behind after his death on Tuesday, April 29, 2008, at the age of 102.

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  • New Medical Trials Study Therapeutic Uses of LSD
    A new Swiss research study of LSD as a therapy is the first in 36 years. The clinical trials are to determine its usefulness in easing anxiety and relieving pain in patients suffering from illnesses such as cancer and multiple sclerosis.

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  • The Future of Psychedelics
    Author Daniel Pinchbeck discusses the 2008 World Psychedelic Forum held recently in Switzerland, and the potential for studying psychedelic therapies in the shifting world political climate.

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  • The Shroom Tragedy
    Magic mushrooms are on the verge of being outlawed by the Dutch government for the usual sensationalized reasons as everywhere else.

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  • The Shroom Tragedy
    Magic mushrooms are on the verge of being outlawed by the Dutch government for the usual sensationalized reasons as everywhere else.

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  • Brazil Appeals Court Rules Drug Possession Not a Crime
    At the end of March, a Brazilian appeals court in São Paulo declared that possession of drugs for personal use is not a criminal offense. Several lower courts had previously ruled in the same way, but the ruling from the São Paulo Justice Court's 6th Crim

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  • How the Internet Fuels the Global Psychedelic Community
    This year and the next, the United Nations will evaluate the War on Drugs. Since its official start in 1998 we have been bombed with official statistics on drug use, drug addiction, drug trafficking, street prices, courtcases and all the like. But what do

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  • US Leads World in Substance Abuse, WHO Finds
    The United States leads the world in rates of experimenting with marijuana and cocaine despite strict drug laws, World Health Organization researchers said on Tuesday. Countries with looser drug laws have lower rates of abuse, the researchers report in t

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Buy Salvia divinorum HERE

Ethnopharmacology of Ska María Pastora
by
Leander J. Valdés III, José Luis Díaz* and Ara G. Paul

Summary

Salvia divinorum
is a perennial labiate used for curing and divination by the Mazatec Indians of Oaxaca, Mexico. We purchase all of our Salvia plants, extracts and leaf from only source we trust to BUY SALVIA DIVINORUM online. The psychotropic effects the plant produces are compared to those of the other hallucinogens employed by the Mazatecs, the morning glory, Rivea corymbosa L., Hallier F. and the psilocybin-containing mushrooms. A discussion of the role of ska María Pastora in the "native pharmacopoeia" is based on previous reports and fieldwork by the authors with a Mazatec shaman.

Introduction

Salvia divinorum (Epling and Játiva-M.) is a perennial herb in the Labiatae (mint family) native to certain areas in the Sierra Mazateca of Oaxaca, Mexico (Fig. 1). It is one of about 500 species of Salvia in the New World subgenus Calosphace (Epling and Játiva-M.. 1962). The plant grows in large clones to well over 1 m in height and its large green leaves, hollow square stems and white flowers with purple calyces are characteristic taxonomic features. This sage has been found only in forest ravines and other moist humid areas of the Sierra Mazateca between 750 m and 1500 m altitude (Díaz, 1975a). Carl Epling, who first described S. divinorum, reported the flower as having a blue corolla, and it has been illustrated this way in the literature (Epling and Játiva-M, 1962; Schultes, 1976). However, this description has been shown to be an error, as all living specimens of the plant have had blossoms with white corollas and purple calyces (Díaz, 1975a; Emboden, 1979).

S. divinorum
is one of several vision-inducing plants employed by the Mazatec Indians, one of the native peoples living in the mountains and upland valleys of northeastern Oaxaca. Unlike other Mexican tribes, there is little information concerning their existence before the arrival of the conquering Spanish, who reduced the Mazatecan population through exploitation and disease (Weitlaner and Hoppe, 1964). The 1970 census estimated their number at 92,540 (Córtes, 1979) and the language, of the Mazatec-Popoloca family, is one of the many non-Spanish dialects spoken throughout Mexico (Weitlaner and Hoppe, 1964). The Mazatecan ritual use of hallucinogens, such as mushroom containing psilocybin and morning glory seeds containing lysergic acid amide, has been widely publicized through the investigations of R. Gordon Wasson and Albert Hofmann, among others (Wasson and Wasson, 1957; Wasson, 1963; Hoffman, 1964; Hoffman, 1980).

Review of literature

Although the use of the mushrooms and morning glories was documented by the Spanish conquistadores and chroniclers who arrived in Mexico during the Sixteenth Century (Wasson, 1963), the literature on S. divinorum is relatively recent. Wasson originally proposed that this Salvia was the plant known to the Spanish by the Nahuatl (Aztec) name of pipiltzintzintli, but new investigations suggest that the Mexican name probably refers to Cannabis sativa L. (Díaz, 1979).

There are a number of common names for S. divinorum and nearly all are related to the plant's association with the Virgin Mary. It is known to the Mazatecs as ska María or ska Pastora and the sage is also known by a number of Spanish names including hojas de María, hojas de la Pastora, hierba (yerba) María or la María. The Mazatecs believe this Salvia to be an incarnation of the Virgin Mary, and care is taken to avoid trampling on or damaging it when picking the leaves, which are used both for curing and in divination (Fig. 2).

Attempts at the identification of ska María Pastora were carried out in conjunction with anthropological expeditions led by one of Mexico's leading anthropologists, the former Austrian engineer, Roberto G. Weitlaner, who rediscovered native use of hallucinogenic mushrooms among the Mazatecs in 1936 (Wasson, 1963). On a field trip in 1938, Weitlaner's future son-in-law, the American anthropologist, Jean B. Johnson learned that the Mazatecs employed a "tea" made from the beaten leaves of a "hierba Maria" for divination. The preparation was used in a manner similar to the "narcotic" mushrooms and the semillas de la Virgen, which were later identified as morning glory seeds (Johnson, 1939). Blas P. Reko, who knew Weitlaner well, referred to a "magic plant" employed by the Cuicatec and Mazatec Indians to produce visions. It was known as the hoja de adivinación (leaf of prophecy) and although Reko could not identify the plant, it was probably S. divinorum (Reko, 1945).

In 1952 Weitlaner reported the use of a yerba (hierba) de María by the Mazatecs in Jalapa de Díaz, a small Oaxacan village. According to his informant the leaves of this plant were gathered by curanderos (shamans or healers), who went up into the mountains and harvested them after a session of kneeling and prayer. For use in "curing" the foliage was rubbed between the hands and an infusion of from 50 to 100 leaves was prepared, the higher dose being used for alcohol "addicts". Around midnight the curandero, the patient and another person went to a dark quiet place (perhaps a house) where the patient ingested the potion. After about 15 min the effects became noticeable. The subject would go into a semi-delirious trance and from his speech the curandero made a diagnosis and then ended the session by bathing the patient in a portion of the infusion that had been set aside. The bath supposedly ended the intoxicated state. In addition to such "curing", the yerba María also served for divination of robbery or loss (Weitlaner, 1952).

Five years later the Mexican botanist, A. Gómez Pompa, collected specimens of a Salvia known as "xka (sic) Pastora". He noted that the plant was used as an hallucinogen (alucinante) and a dose was prepared from 8 to 12 pairs of leaves. Since flowering material was not available, the sage could not be identified past the generic level (Gómez Pompa, 1957). The holotype specimen of S. divinorum was acquired by Wasson and Hofmann in 1962 while they were traveling with Weitlaner. Flowering plants were brought to them in the village of San José Tenango, as they were not permitted to visit the locality in which ska María Pastora grew. This collection was sent to Epling and Játiva-M. who described it as a new species of Salvia, S. divinorum (Wasson, 1962; Epling and Játiva-M., 1962).

Wasson was the first to personally describe the effects of ska Pastora, relating the experiences he and member of his party had on ingestion of different doses of a beverage prepared from the plant's foliage. At a session in July 1961 in which he participated, a curandera (female shamans are very common among the Mazatecs and other Mexican peoples) squeezed the juice of 34 pairs of leaves by hand into a glass and added water. Wasson drank the dark fluid and wrote that although the effects came on much faster than those of the mushrooms, they lasted a much shorter time. He saw only "dancing colors in elaborate, three-dimensional designs" (Wasson, 1962). Summing up the experience, he later stated (pers. comm):

A number of us (including me) had tried the infusion of the leaves and we thought we experienced something, though much weaker than the Psilocybe species of mushroom.

Hofmann and his wife, Anita, who accompanied Wasson on an expedition the following year, took an infusion prepared from five and three pairs of S. divinorum leaves, respectively. Mrs. Hofmann "saw striking, brightly bordered images" while Hofmann found himself "in a state of mental sensitivity and intense experience, which, however, was not accompanied by hallucinations" (Hofmann, 1980).

María Sabina, the Mazatec shaman made famous by Wasson, and who lives in the Mazatec highland town of Huautla, in Oaxaca, briefly mentioned her use of the plant in her autobiography (Estrada, 1977):

If I have a sick person during the season when the mushrooms are not available, I resort to the hojas de la Pastora. Crushed (molido) and taken, they work like the "children" (i.e., the mushrooms). Of course, the Pastora doesn't have as much strength.

Roquet and Ganc reported that the Mazatecs prepared a dose of S. divinorum from 120 pairs of crushed leaves and used the plant only when the mushrooms and morning-glory seeds were not available. Roquet and his associates used the plant twice in their psychiatric investigations of Mexican hallucinogenic plants and stated that they had difficulties in working with it (Roquet, 1972).

José Luis Díaz and his coworkers studied the use of ska María Pastora in the Mazatec highlands during the 1970's. Díaz himself took the Salvia infusion under the supervision of a shaman, Doña J., on six different occasions, noting an increased awareness of the plant's effects each time. The first changes he perceived were a series of complex and slowly changing visual patterns that occurred only in complete quiet with closed eyes. There were no colored geometric patterns which characteristically occur with ingestion of other hallucinogens nor were there auditory images. After a short time he noticed peripheral phenomena, such as a feeling of lightness in the extremities and odd sensations in the joints. The climax of effects, accompanied by dizziness or nausea (mareo), lasted about 10 min and disappeared about 0.5 h after ingestion of the infusion. Other, more subtle, effects seemed to persist for a few hours (Díaz, 1975a).

Hofmann (Hofmann, 1964) and Díaz (Díaz, 1975a) each investigated S. divinorum chemically without isolating and identifying any active principle. As noted above, the descriptions in the literature emphasize the mildness of the plant's effects. There are many ways to achieve visions other than by ingestion of classically defined "hallucinogens" such as mescaline, LSD and psilocybin. Among these are meditation, prayer, mental illness, disease (especially when accompanied by fever), poisoning, experiences of dying, and suggestion (placebo effect). Therefore, prior to conduction chemical and animal studies, we decided to attempt to clarify the role of S. divinorum as a vision inducer among the Mazatec Indians.

Mazatec healing

The following report is based on fieldwork with a Mazatec curandero, or healer, living near the Alemán Reservoir in the Mexican state of Oaxaca, about 100 km from the port of Veracruz. Although a study based on information from a single source is open to criticism, the jealous and secretive nature of native shamans works against statistical methods of survey. Visiting many shamans in a single are can actually lessen the amount of information gathered, as each curandero may fear the visitor is telling their secrets and giving their "power" to a rival. To them magic can hurt or kill. Wasson and Richard E. Schultes have both commented on the difficulty of making contacts with the curanderos of this region (Wasson and Wasson, 1957; Schultes, 1941).

Don Alejandro, the informant, spoke only a Mazatecan dialect. One of his sons served as an interpreter, translating from the native tongue to Spanish. The information they provided the authors was gathered in fragments over many visits during the summer of 1979 and spring of 1980.

Mazatec healing and religion are united in a manner common to traditional cultures. This is somewhat foreign to western scientific medicine which is isolated from religion except for the times when it no longer serves to cure. A brief description of Mazatec healing, based mainly on the work with Don Alejandro should help to explain the use of ska María Pastora and its relationships to other healing plants. The Mazatecs (the name, taken from the city of Mazatlan was actually imposed on the natives by the Spanish) are nominally Catholic Christians, but they have incorporated many features of their traditional beliefs into their conceptions of God and the Saints, whom they consider to have been the first healers. The most prominent among them is San Pedro, or Saint Peter, who is said to have cured a sick and crying infant Jesus through the ritual use of tobacco (Nicotiana spp.). Tobacco is considered to be a health problem in the United States and many other countries, and its acute pharmacological effects are due to the alkaloid nicotine (Larsen et al, 1961). Yet for the Mazatecs, as well as for almost all Mesoamerican Indians, it is the most important curing tool in the "pharmacopeia". The fresh tobacco leaf is dried, ground and mixed with line to form a powder known to the Mazatecs as San Pedro (Saint Peter); the "best" is prepared on the Saint's day, June 29th (Incháustegui, 1977). The preparation is more familiarly known by its Nahuatl name picietl (piciete). It is worn in charms and amulets as a protection against various "diseases" and witchcraft, but its most important use is in limpias, or ritual cleansings. It may be used alone with a prayer and copal (an incense prepared from the resin of Bursera spp.) (Díaz, 1975b), or in conjunction with such herbs as basil (Ocimum spp.) or marijuana (Cannabis sativa)*, eggs, or various other substances. Anyone who comes to Don Alejandro to be treated usually gets a limpia. This ritual cleansing may be the cure itself, or it may be accompanied by other "medicines". The patient is given a pinch of the San Pedro powder (wrapped in paper) to carry with them and use during the healing period.
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*Don Alejandro does not use marijuana, as it is illegal.

One learns to become a shaman through an informal apprenticeship, although the Mazatecs will insist they are taught by a progression of visions from and of heaven, rather than by people. Psychotropic plants are intimately associated with this training, which can last up to two years or longer. In this area of Oaxaca, as well as the highland region visited by Díaz, the vision inducers are taken systematically at intervals of a week to a month. Once one becomes a healer the hallucinogenic plants are ingested much less frequently. The process begins by taking successively increasing doses of S. divinorum for a number of times to become acquainted with the "way to heaven". Next comes mastery of the morning glory (Rivea corymbosa (L.), Hallier, f.) seeds and finally one learns to use the sacred mushrooms. There is a rigid dieta, or diet, to follow during this time. "Hot" foods such as garlic and chili peppers are restricted and there must be abstinence from sex and alcohol for extended periods. However, many Mazatec shamans incorporate alcohol into their training and drink during their ceremonies (Wasson and Wasson, 1957). Breaking from this dieta, or ritual diet, could make one crazy according to Don Alejandro and since such obligations require maturity, one should be at least 30 years old before becoming a curandero.

A comparison of Mazatec hallucinogen

Ska María Pastora is, pharmacologically, the weakest of the three hallucinogenic plants. Following its ingestion the Virgin Mary is supposed to speak to the individual, but only in absolute quiet and darkness. The relatively mild experience is readily terminated by noise (such as a loud voice) or light. Don Alejandro says the effects of tu-nu-sho, the flower seeds (R. corymbosa), are similar to the of the María (S. divinorum) as both plants are siblings (son hermanos) under the protection of the Virgin Mary and San Pedro. A "dose" he provided weighed 9.6 g and consisted of about 350 R. corymbosa seeds. A brief report on another morning glory (Ipomoea purpurea Roth) noted that ingestion of a large number of seeds produced effects similar to LSD, but with an additional narcotic component characterized by drowsiness and torpor (Savage et al., 1972). Humphrey Osmond also noted a narcotic effect on dosing himself with R. corymbosa seeds (Hoffer and Osmond, 1967). The activity of morning glories appears to be due to d-lysergic acid amide (ergine) and related alkaloids (Schultes and Hofmann, 1980). Interestingly, the authors discovered a woodrose (Argyreia spp.) growing in the vicinity of the village where Don Alejandro lived. Argyreia spp. contain LSD-like compounds (Chao and der Marderosian, 1973). When asked whether he used the plant, Don Alejandro said that he did not, since it caused people to become crazy. The curandero also had several horticultural specimens of Coleus spp. growing near his house. Wasson has noted that the Mazatecs believe Coleus to be a medicinal or hallucinogenic herb related to S. divinorum (Wasson, 1962). However, Don Alejandro said the plants were not medicinal and his daughter had bought them at the market because they were pretty.

According to Don Alejandro ni-to, or the mushrooms-that-one-takes (hongos para tomar, probably not a literal translation, see Wasson, 1980) are unlike the other two plants. The fungi are delicado (delicate), nervioso (nervous), una cosa de envidia (a thing of envy). Unfortunately the English translations of these terms do not convey the Indian-Spanish concept of magic that has a dangerous and sinister side. Santa Ana and San Venanzio, the Saints the curandero associates with the mushrooms, were not as good at healing as San Pedro and the Virgén María, the patrons of the Salvia and the morning glory. Eating too many of the fungi can "leave one crazy" and the visions are often trucos (tricky). Other Mazatec informants have attributed such characteristics to the visions, saying that one has to separate the true form the false (Incháustegui, 1977). Wasson has reported that misuse of the mushroom can lead to madness (Wasson and Wasson, 1957). Munn and Wasson have given complementary descriptions of shamanic use of mushrooms among the Mazatecs (Munn, 1979; Wasson, 1980). Psilocybin and psilocin, the vision-inducing compounds in the fungi, were isolated by Hofmann, who used himself as a subject for their activity. He reported that a dose of 2.4 g of dried Psilocybe mexicana Heim (an average amount for a curandero) produced effects he could not control or resist. A colleague "was transformed" into an Aztec priest and at the height of the experience Hofmann felt he "would be torn into this whirlpool of form and color and would dissolve" (Hofmann, 1980). This experience was quite unlike the mild one produced by S. divinorum. As Don Alejandro stated it, "The María, on the other hand accepts you (la María, en cambio, te acepta)."

Remedial uses of S. divinorum

From the shaman the investigators learned that the plant could be used as a "medicine" as well as for the induction of visions. A low dose serves as what the investigators interpreted to be a "tonic " or "panacea" as well as for "magical" healing (Don Alejandro did not use such terms). An infusion prepared from 4 or 5 pairs of fresh or dry leaves may be taken by the glass (vaso) or tablespoonful (cucharada) as needed. It is used to cure the following "illnesses", although there may be other possible uses:

  1. It helps one defecate and urinate. It stops diarrhea (the plant apparently is believed to regulate eliminatory functions).
  2. It is given to the sick, old or dying to revive them oralleviate their illness. People who are pale, white and almost ready to die (they have "anemia") may recuperate on taking la María.
  3. It may be taken to relieve headaches and rheumatism (however, when taken in the high doses that induce visions, it often leaves one with a headache the following morning, according to the curandero).
  4. There is a semi-magical disease known as panzon de barrego (sic), or a swollen belly, which is supposedly caused by a curse from a brujo, or evil sorcerer. The victim's midsection swell up due to a "stone" that has been put inside them. Taking the Salvia causes elimination of this "stone" and the belly shrinks down to size. The researchers met an old shaman who showed them his wrinkled middle and said he had cured himself of the "disease" by the use of "la María". Don Alejandro confirmed the "illness" and the "cure".

Divination with S. divinorum

S. divinorum may be prepared as an infusion from 20 (about 50 g) to 80 (about 200 g) or more pairs of fresh leaves to induce visions and may be taken by the curandero, the patient (or apprentice) or both, depending on the situation. Only fresh foliage will serve for divination. At this dosage level, the Salvia is used to foretell the future, find the causes and cures of illnesses and obtain answers to questions about friends, enemies and relatives. In shamanic training, the future healer takes la María to learn the ways of healing and the identification and use of medicinal plants (there is supposedly a tree in Heaven with all such herbs in it and one talks to God and the Saints about them under the influence of the hallucinogens). After preliminary sessions in the company of the master, who takes the infusion along with the apprentice to watch him on the journey, the future healer may continue to study on his own until it is time for the next plant in the series. Don Alejandro told the investigators that the Salvia, the morning glory seeds and the mushroom each told their own historia (story or history) and ska María was the best teacher of the ways of curing, as one learned the most from it. During the course of the visits, the researchers were able to participate in two sessions under the shaman's guidance. As the hallucinogens are never taken without a valid purpose and since the researchers were from "the University", the ceremonies were oriented to teach them about healing and especially the uses of the María and other medicinal plants. Don Alejandro said they would have to follow the dieta, or ritual diet for 16 days, although they could bathe and drink beer (after the first time, the dieta for S. divinorum is only 4 days in length).

The preparations for the two ceremonies were essentially the same. As Dark came (about 19:30 to 20:00 h) the curandero began making the Salvia infusion. The leaves were first counted out in pairs to arrive at each person's dose and put neatly into piles with their petioles aligned. Then Don Alejandro picked up part of a pile and crushed it by hand into a small bowl partially filled with water (Fig. 3). As more foliage was squeezed and added, the liquid turned dark green from the chlorophylls. After the potion was prepared, it was poured through a sieve into a glass which was topped off with water (Fig. 4). During the preparations for the second session a head of foam formed on the glasses and the curandero laughed. He explained through his son that the foam (espuma) was an indication of strength and the María would be very potent that evening. The glasses were covered with inverted cups to "prevent the escape of the humor (que no salga el humor)". Although the foliage of S. divinorum could reportedly be kept fresh for a week or longer when wrapped in the large leaves of Xanthosoma robustum Schoff, the prepared infusion was said to be stable for a day. The spent leaves were set aside to be discarded in an out of the way location where they wouldn't be defiled by people or animals. However, Don Alejandro said they could still be used by putting them on a subject's head to refresh them after the session. The curandero picked up a glass of the María and began an oration. The Holy Trinity, Saint Peter, the Virgin Mary and other Saints were called on to watch over the participants and teach the visitors the ways of curing:

In nomine Spiritu Santo (this "Latin" phrase was always
translated into the vernacular as:
In the name of the Father, the Son and the Holy Ghost) Most
Holy Lord Saint Peter
In the name of Leandros (the subject)

In nomine Spiritu Santo
María
, show Leandros,
that he may see what there is in the world
For he wishes to study all the classes of medicines
Lord Jesus Christ, show him
May he learn
May he see all the classes of medicinal plants
You, who know all, show him
I want you to show him all the different kinds
of illnesses and remedies that exist in the world
In a short time he must learn your story

In nomine Spiritu Santo
Most Holy sainted Rosary
Set him free, that he may see it
Show him as you have shown me
May he recognize all that is the Universe
All that is your History
He wishes to learn out of love and sincerity
I want you to show him, as I am asking your favor
You, María and Lord Jesus Christ, amen
If there is bad or good, save him
Help him out of sincerity or love

In nomine Spiritu Santo

Most Holy Lord Saint Peter
You, too, María, show him
Set him free that he may see it
Do not be deceptive
This day, on this very date
he is going to take it (the Salvia infusion)

In nomine Spiritu Santo
Most Holy Lord Saint Peter
Help this Leandros
May he grow more
May he learn things
Show him all that there is in the world
All that is good
All that is medicinal

In nomine Spiritu Santo
Most Holy Lord Saint Peter
Lord Saint Anthony, Lord Saint Peter, Jesus Christ
You are the only three who know about la María
You must show him all that is medicinal
All that is the Universe
All that is your History
Show him, do not be bad

In nomine Spiritu Santo
Holy Sanctuary, Lord Santa Ana
You who are good, You must help him
so that he becomes acquainted with our Universe
You must teach him what I ask
so that it will be to the Lord Saint Peter's pleasure
Let Leandros take it (la María)
In nomine Spiritu Santo
Most Holy Lord Saint Peter

Two to four hours passed in conversation and telling of stories. The shaman repeatedly emphasized that it was important to describe one's visions, "If you are going to learn or if you are going to understand what it is all about, you must speak." Finally it was time for ingestion of the infusions (between 21:00 and 23:00 h). Following Mazatec custom, at least one person didn't participate, in order to watch over the rest (Wasson et al., 1974). As a last protection against any dangers during the visionary "travels", Don Alejandro performed limpias, or ritual cleansings on the visitors (Fig. 5),

In nomine Spiritu Santo
Most Holy Lord Saint Peter
This is a limpia for Leandros (subject)
Arise, listen, as it is now the time

In nomine Spiritu Santo
Most Holy Lord Saint Peter
I ask Your favor for Leandros
Heal him, care for him
For I am going to cleanse him now
Help him at this moment that he may be cleansed
Strike out the bad illnesses that he may have
Lord (Saint Peter) attend him
That he may see the Universe
What there is in the world
Everything
Help him, raise him
May he see what there is
All that he wishes to know
Save him, care for him

In nomine Spiritu Santo
Most Holy Lord Saint Peter
Reclaim this man
That he live well, live better
For this man is known by all the children of God
Heal him, as you will
Heed his messages the moment you heal him
Take care of him, help him
That is what I am saying

In nomine Spiritu Santo
Most Holy Lord Saint Peter
Lord Jesus Christ
You know how to save him, how to cleanse him
Cure him, no matter what badness has fallen on him
Heal him, care for him
I want You to heal him and save him from all bad things
Being in my hands, I can help him,
having faith and will.

In nomine Spiritu Santo
Most Holy Lord Saint Peter
Sainted trinity, care for him
Help him, let no evil befall him

As the oration was being recited, Don Alejandro anointed the subject with a piece of copal dipped in the San Pedro. The Curandero then gave him a pinch of the San Pedro to carry for protection if he felt danger during or after the session. After a final benediction (Fig. 6), the potions were drunk and the light was turned out.

Session 1, August 18, 1979

The participants were Díaz, Valdés and Don Alejandro, who sat on a bench and watched over the others during the proceedings. The curandero and Díaz, who had taken la María several times previously, each had doses prepared from 50 pairs of leaves. Valdés received a beginner's dose prepared from 20 pairs. They took the Salvia preparations around 22:30 h. The visitors shared a large cot while the shaman lay on a petate, or sleeping mat which was unrolled on the floor.

Díaz sat quietly on the side of the cot after the lights went out. About 15 min after ingestion of the infusion he began to see subtle visions, constricted like columns of smoke in the total darkness. It made no difference whether his eyes were opened or closed. Deciding to speak out, he saw a light which disappeared as he began to describe it. The images increased in intensity. He saw a large mountain made of ice, as though he were at the base of a cliff formed from large ice columns. The vision slowly changed into Cerro Rabón, a nearby mountain intimately associated with Mazatec legends (Incháustegui, 1977). About 2300:h the flow of images changed into lights of various shades of blue, indigo and purples, scattered as if in a spatial vacuum. Depending on his perspective, he was either traveling through them or else they were being projected toward him. He saw a cross being encircled by a light and a mantle. As he described the imagery in words, it seemed to be fixed more clearly in his memory and he felt it would aid in later recall of the experience.

Some 45 min after the lights went out, Don Alejandro began to speak in a monotone. His son did not interrupt to translate from the Mazatec. As the shaman spoke, Valdés (who had only experienced a few brief visions which he hadn't described) saw a black sky with brightly-colored objects floating in it. He suddenly found himself speeding toward one and actually felt he was accelerating through space past the rest. The light turned out to be a Mazatec village similar to that of the curandero. Valdés saw it from above, as if he were on a hill. Shapes, like kaleidoscopic pillars of smoke, were at the sides of some of the houses. Then he was suddenly in space, receding away from the vision.

Don Alejandro stopped speaking, turned on the light and went out to look for a "spy" he had heard outside the house. He found nothing, but forced himself to vomit, which he said would end his visions. The session had lasted about 1 h, and the following hour was spent in discussion of what had been seen. The curandero told the two visitors that he had watched over them during the session and ascertained what they needed to know. The old man said that after a few more experiences Díaz would learn to heal and use the medicinal plants. He mentioned a woman, a doctor like Díaz, who would try to interfere with or get involved in his work. Don Alejandro emphasized to Valdés, who had remained quiet throughout the night, that it was necessary to speak out about the visions and he would need many sessions before he would learn how to heal. Everyone then went to sleep and rose early the next morning.

Session 2, March 6, 1980

During this much less formal session Díaz and Valdés took the infusion of S. divinorum and were monitored by Don Alejandro and his son, as well as by Paul, who tape recorded events throughout the afternoon and evening. The researchers arrived at the village around 17:00 h and the shaman spent the entire afternoon and early evening talking with them about his visions of "Heaven" and the office (escritorio) he had there, near God and Jesus. He recounted many tales and legends, including one about the origins of healing. It was a very enjoyable afternoon which provided an excellent set and setting (Weil, 1972) for the visitors' experience with la María.
Díaz and Valdés received infusions prepared from 60 and 50 pairs of fresh S. divinorum leaves, respectively. They drank the prepared potions at 21:00 h and lay down in Don Alejandro's bedroom while the curandero's son and Paul sat on a bed next to them. Don Alejandro remained in the other room. The two researchers spoke in turn and were questioned by the younger Mazatecan whenever there was a lull in their speech:

Paul - Nine o'clock, Leander and José Luis are drinking (the Salvia infusion)...
--------- (indicates a pause in the recording)
Díaz - Nueve doce (he looked at his lighted watch). Empiezo a sentir algunos de los, de los efectos de la planta. Me siento muy relajado. Y he tenido en los últimos momentos muchas imágenes de plantas y flores. Mucha, muchos tipos de flores diferentes... algunos de ellos desconocidos para mí... De muchos colores. Siento mi cuerpo muy suave, como ligero. En los últimos momentos empezaba a se... a ver algunas imágenes como puntos de luz. (Nine-twelve. I am beginning to feel some of the, the effects of the plant. I feel very relaxed. And I have had, in the past minutes, many images of plants and flowers. Many, many different kinds of flowers... some of them unknown to me... Of many colors. My body feels very mellow, as if it were light. In the past moments I began to see some images like points of light.) That's all for now.
--------------------------
Valdés - ...plants and flowers. I think they were what people call eidetic images, 'cause I saw them when I first closed my eyes. They've disappeared. I feel like I'm being twisted around inside of my body. Very, very strange sensations, like I'm being... twisted. Boy, like I'm spinning.
--------------------------
Díaz - Nueve veinte. Las... la sensación de ligereza del cuerpo es más intensa. En un momento dado sentá como... como que sea (¿quisiera?) atravesar a un techo y las imágenes de plantas han cambiado y ahora he tenido sensaciones como estar flotando en la noche llena de estrellas y me doy cuenta que no es... no es fácil (dog barks) tener... de que no es fácil tener la fe que se (dog), que se nos pide. Que se me pide. Me siento muy... muy, como muy emocionado. Todas estas cosas (dog). Es todo por ahora. (Nine-twenty. The... the sensation of lightness of the body is more intense. In a given moment I feel as though... as though I were floating through a roof and the images of plants have changed and now I have had sensations like floating in the night full of stars and I realize that it isn't... it isn't easy to have... that it isn't easy to have the, the faith that he... that he asks of us. That he asks of me. I feel very... very, like very moved. All these things. That's all for now.)

Son - ¿José Luis?

Díaz - ¿? (Yes?)

Son - ¿Ya no ve más imágens(sic)? (Do you see any more images?)

Díaz - Sí, un poco. Tengo algunas más, pero no ha sido muy... muy intenso, ¿no? He visto... como si estuviera flotando en el cielo, como si hubiera entrado a... a... pues, como a una gran nave o algo así. Y... y como si fuera las cosas muy mecánicas adentro como una máquina... muy precisa e (sic) muy géometrica. Y en... y curiosamente, como si en algunos casos hubiera otra vez flores dentro de este lugar. Y volví otra vez a ver como muchas flores, pero como si fueran mecánicas, como si no fueran de... de verdad. (Yes, a little. I have seen more, but it has not been very intense, no? I have seen... as though I were floating in the sky, as though I had entered a large boat, or something like that. And.. and as if all the things inside were very mechanical like a machine that was very... very precise and geometric. And in... and curiously, as if in some cases there were again flowers inside the place. And again I began to see like many flowers, but as if they were all mechanical, as if they were not... real.)

Son - Cristo? ¿No lo viste? (Christ? Didn't you see him?)

Díaz - Pues... no. A veces me acordé de él, pero no, no sé presentó en una imagen, ¿no? A veces también pensé en unas imágenes de las que nos dijo..., nos dijo Don Alejandro. De los escritorios y... Pero, pero nada más. (Well... no. At times I thought about him, but he didn't appear as an image, no? At times I thought about some of the images which... which Don Alejandro described to us. Of the offices and... But, but nothing else.)

Son - No te enseñaron completo. (They didn't show you everything.)
--------------------------
Valdés - ...down. It's very hard for me to talk. Like something's pushing me down into the bed. My arms are very, very sore. (Dog barks) I see things, but there's no, no (lost to dog barking). They just overwhelm me. Very hard to describe. I see things that look like fruits. Very strange, I can see the seeds. I can see the (dog barks) oranges and yellows and colors. Strange. Like giant fruit.
--------------------------
Son - ¿Qué dice Leandros? ¿Qué fué lo que vi (sic)? (What is Leandros saying? What did he see?)

Díaz - Dice que le cuesta... le cuesta más trabajo hablar. Que siente su cuerpo muy pesado (dog barks throughout this section of the recording). (He says that it is hard... it is hard for him to talk. That his body feels very heavy.)

Son - Mm-hmm.

Díaz - Que los imágenes no son.. son sutiles, ¿no? No son muy... no son muy intensas, ¿no? (dog continues). A veces logra... logra a ver algunos colores. Describe algunas flores, y como frutos. (That the images are not... they are weak, no? they aren't very... they aren't very intense, no? At times he succeeds... he succeeds in seeing some colors. He describes some flowers, and like fruit.)

Son - Sí.

Díaz - Pero no hay... no hay imágenes así que son muy... muy... (But there aren't... there aren't images that are very... very...)

Valdés - Hay muchas de semillas, ¿no? Esas... de melones, ¿no? (There are many of seeds, no? Those of melons, no?)

Son - Sí.

Díaz - ¿Se sie... te sientes muy contento, no? (You fee... You feel very content, no?)

Valdés - Muy pesedo (sic). (Very heavy.)

Son - ¿No viste algo más? (Didn't you see anything else?)

Valdés - Cosas, pero no puedo descreberlas (sic; sounded somewhat intoxicated at this time.) (Things, but I can't describe them.)
-------------------------
Valdés - ... parece que está quemando, ¿no? Que tiene dos rayas (cross with two arms) en vez de una, ¿no? (...it seems to be burning, no? That it has two rays instead of one, no?)

Son - Mm-hmm.

Valdés - Pa'ece (parece) este tiene fuego. (This thing seems to have fire.)

Son - Mm-hmm.

Valdés - Que hay como un cuerpo envuelto (dog barked throughout). (That there is like a wrapped body.)

Son - Mm-hmm.
-------------------------
Valdés - ... de cruz (dogs barked throughout). Ya, ya había muchas cosas pero ya están des'pareciendo. Todo está como un (lost to dogs) muy negrosa. (...of a cross. Now, now there were many things but now they are disappearing. Everything is like a very black...)

Son -

Valdés - Parece como una pintura, pero todo en blanco y negro. (It looks like a picture, but everything in black and white.)

Son - Mm-hmm.

Díaz - Ví... ví que con la flor de la... de la... de la semilla de la Virgen. Bastante claramente con su color morado. I... Ipomoea violacea, ¿no? Yo tengo muchos, muchas imágenes si... si me fijo en ellas, ¿no? Se mueven bastante, ¿no? (I saw, I saw something like the flower of the... the flower of the... of the seed of the Virgin. Quite clearly with its purplish color. I... Ipomoea violacea, no? I see many, many images if... if I concentrate on them, no? They move a lot, no?)

Son - Sí.

Díaz - Pero la... el estado de estar muy contento ya hace rato ya se me quitó. (However, the... the state of feeling content left me a while ago.)

Son - Mm-hmm.
------------------------------
(the dogs quieted down for a while)

Son - ¿Ya puede explicar mi 'apa? (Can my father explain now?)

Díaz - Sí. Fíjate, tenía... Creo que es... es importante tambíen que le digas que... que no se siente mal porque, porque nosotros no... no... vemos lo que él vió... ( Yes. Look, I had... I think it is... it is also important that you tell him that... that he shouldn't feel bad because, because we... didn't... didn't see what he saw...)

Son - Mm-hmm.

Díaz - ...examente, porque nosotros venimos de... de una forma de... del ver el mundo... muy distinta, ¿no? (...exactly, because we come from... from a very different manner of... of looking at things, no?)

Son - Mm-hmm.

Díaz - Entonces por eso es que tenemos más dificultades para... para ponernos en... en contacto con Cristo. (Then, because of this we have more difficulties in order to... in order to put ourselves in... in contact with Christ.)

Son - Con Cristo (With Christ.)

Díaz - Y con lo Sagrado, ¿no? (And with sacred things, no?)

Son- Mm-hmm.

Díaz - Nos... nos pasan otras cosas, ¿no? O s'an (¿sean?) que no vea él qu'eso es como una falla, ¿no? De Uds. o de la planta ni mucho menos, ¿no? (To us... to us other things happen, no? He shouldn't see this as a failure, no? Yours or even less, of the plant, no?)

Son - Mm-hmm.

Díaz - Sino que nuest'a experiencia es muy distinta porque..., pues, vemos las cosas de otra forma, ¿no? (Only it's that our experience is very different because... well, we see things differently, no?)

Son - .

Díaz - Es importante para él que... para Uds. que se den cuenta de eso, ¿no? (It is important for him that... for you both that you understand this, no?)

Son - Mm-hmm.

Díaz Yo me siento muy contento, ¿no? Por... por la experiencia así como está, ¿no? (I feel very content, no? For... for the experience just as it is, no?)

Son -.

Díaz - Pues, nada más eso. (Well, that's all.)

Son - Ah-ah. ¿Tu, Leandros, ve más imagen? ¿O ya con ese es lo mucho que viste? (You, Leandros, do you see more images? Or is that all you have seen?)

Valdés - Veo imagenes y parecen un poco pero... como los imagenes de la iglesia pero no tienen caras, ¿no? (I see images and they look a little but.. like the images of the church but they don't have faces, no?)

Son -
Mm-hmm.

Valdés - Tienen.. se, se ve este, los vestidos, ¿no? De, de oro y todo pero no hay imagen. No hay de caras, ¿no? Que se reconoce los...(They have... one sees this, their clothing, ¿no? Of, of gold and everything, but there is no image. There aren't any faces, no? That one recognizes the...)

Son - Mm-hmm.

Valdés - Tienen los manos así como... como tienen...(lost; figures were praying).(they have their hands like this.. like the...)

Son - ¿Ese es todo lo que viste? (Is that all you saw?)

Valdés - Estoy viéndololo ahorita, ¿no? Ya... ya estoy viéndolo. (I am looking at it know, no? I still.. still am looking at it.)

Díaz - Yo sigo también viendo, si me fijo, sigo teniendo imágenes. (I continue to see, if I pay attention, I continue seeing images.)

Son - Mm-hmm.

Díaz - Como flores otra vez, muy luminosas, ¿no? Como si tuvieron una luz interior. (Like flowers again, very luminous, no? As if they had an interior light.)

Son - Sí.

Díaz - Creo que tiene mucho que ver con el... con el cielo que nos... que nos explicaste hace rato, ¿no? De comó es el cielo (I think it has a lot to do with the... with the Heaven that... that you described to us a while ago, ?no? Of how Heaven is.)

Son - Mm-hmm.

Díaz - Lleno de música. Lleno de flores, ¿no? (Full of music, full of flowers, no?)

Valdés - Veo algo ent'e... entre cruz y espada que es my dorado, muy... tiene muchas joyas? (I see something between... between a cross and a sword which is all covered with gold, very... it has many jewels.)

Son - Mm-hmm... ¿Sigue la imagen, todas, o ya se está allí? (Do all the images continue, or is it still there?)

Valdés - Si, sí, sí... sigue, sigue. Pero cambia, ¿no? Sigue y cambia, ¿no? (Yes, yes, yes... it continues, it continues. But it changes, no? It continues and it changes, no?)

Son - .

Valdés - Ya es... ya es seguro que sea una, una espada... ya se des'pareció (Now it is... now it is surely a sword... Now it has disappeared.)

Díaz - Ya tení como una luz... como una luz. Estas, estas flores que decía que tenían como una... como muy iluminados en el centro. Se ha convertido ahora como en una luz.. fuerte, ¿no?
(Now I saw like a light... like a light. Therés flowers that I said had like a... like very illuminated in the middle. Now it has changed into a light... strong, no?)

Son -
Mm-hmm.

Díaz - Que viene como de arriba. (Which comes as if though from above.)

------------------------------
Valdés - (lost to truck noise)... es... es forma entre cruz pero tiene todo adentro. Tiene de todo... luces y animales... de... de gente, de plantas. Todo. (lost)... de muchos colores, como una pintura. Colores muy, muy vivos. De animales. (It is... it is a shape between a cross but it has everything inside. It has everything... lights and animals... of... of people, of plants. Everything of many colors, like a picture. Very, very vivid colors. Of animals.)

Valdés - ...to collect this... this image of a cross I could seem to be able to, when I really concentrate on it, pull it back out. It disappears and recedes into things around it, and if I'd lose it in... in all the things that are happening. But if I work at it I can concentrate and bring it back. Es que puedo... Yo, yo pierdo el imagen de la cruz. Pero si pienso en esta cosa, este que me vuelve otra vez, ¿no? (It's that I can... I, I lose the image of the cross. But if I think about this thing, it comes back to me again, no?)

Son - .

Valdés - Me vuelve otra vez y puedo fijar en esto y concentrar en esto. Pero es bastante difícil. Pero que... se puede... mantener esta cosa. (It returns to me again and I can pay attention to it and concentrate on it. But it is fairly difficult. But that... one can... maintain this thing.) I that's something about this state that you learn to work around in. Pull images out as you need them.
------------------------------
Díaz - ...images of... like flying from a certain... De al... de volar como en una cierta altura. Y ten (sic) como los campos sembrados de... y llenos de plantas. Sembrados de todas las planta que producen... producen granos que se usa para comer. Campos muy bien trabaja'os (lost to noise). (Of... of flying as though at a certain altitude. And there are fields planted with... and full of plants. Planted with all the plants that produce... produce grain that is used for food. Fields that are very well cared for.)

------------------------------
Valdés - ...que parece entre un castillo, o como un... una iglesia Bizantina. Estoy bastante lejos de esta cosa. No está a su lado, ¿no? No está cual (sic) debe estar. Parece un poco, ¿cómo se dice? "tilted on its side"? Estoy muy lejos y como de estoy muy arriba de esta cosa (dog starts again) Ya parece más como castillo. Lo veo desde del... desde muy lejos como está de allá. Como esta debajo de mí. Pero no veo nada de ge... de gente. No hay nadie. Hay banderas. De todas colores. (...which seems to be between a castle, or like a... a Byzantine church. I'm quite far from this thing. Not at its side, no? It isn't as it should be. It seems to be a little, how does one say, "tilted on its side"? I am very far away and as though I'm very high above this thing. Now it looks more like a castle. I see it from the... from very far away as though it is from there. As though it is below me. But I don't see anybody of peo... of people. There isn't anybody. There are banners. Of all colors.)

Díaz - es interesante. Cuando mencionaste castillo yo también empecé a ver. (That's interesting. When you mentioned a castle I also began to see one.)

Son - Un castillo. (A castle.)

Valdés - ya... ya lo veo. Veo como sombras, formas, pero no tienen... No veo caras en estas cosas, ¿no? Son como... ¿como se dice, "just covered by robes"? Hacen... y marchan pero son muy, muy serios estas cosas. (Still... I see it. I see like shadows, shapes, but they don't have... I don't see faces on these things, no? They are like... how does one say "covered by robes"? They make... and march but these things are very serious.)

Son - ¿Es todo lo que ves? (Is that all you see?)

Valdés - Todavía estoy mirándolo,¿no? Es nuevo para mí, esto. Esta cosa. (I'm still looking at it, no? This thing is new to me. This thing.)

Fifty minutes had elapsed. The curandero's son cut the session short, saying that the village noises, especially the dogs, were too loud for worthwhile experiences. As Díaz and Valdés left the bedroom they staggered and stumbled. Although they said their minds felt clear, the tape recording showed their speech to be slurred and their sentence patterns to be awkward and broken. Díaz commented, "it is as the body is intoxicated (borracho) and the mind isn't." Don Alejandro spent the next hour discussing their visions in detail with them, saying that with more experience what they saw would become clearer and more meaningful. He told the visitors that Paul should drive when they left, as the effects of la María would last the entire night.

As the car traveled through the late Oaxacan darkness, Valdés saw more icon-like images. Among them was the Virgin of Guadalupe amidst red, white and green streaming banners. Whenever the image began to fade, he found that he could recall it at will. Arriving at their destination the three researchers ate a light meal. Díaz wrapped himself in a sarape(poncho), for he had a chill. He remarked that this had happened to him on previous occasions when he had taken the Salvia infusion. His heart rate, when measured by Paul, had slowed from its normal 60 beats per minute to about 50. Earlier at the shaman's house, Paul had shone his flashlight into the subject's eyes and both had a normal pupillary response. Valdés felt "heavy" and "sore", especially in the shoulders and upper arms. After a shower, all went to bed.

When the lights went out (about 23:30 h or 2.5 h after ingestion of la María), Valdés began to have more visions. He saw a purplish light that changed into a bee or mothlike shape which became a pulsating sea-anemone. The imagery expanded into desert landscape full of moving prickly pear (Opuntia spp.) shapes. During the first session the previous summer and throughout the evening Valdés felt the visions appear to be like looking at a cross between a moving cartoon and a silent motion picture. Suddenly, however, he found himself standing in a bizarre, colored landscape talking to a man who was either shaking or holding on to his hand. Next to them was something that resembled the skeleton of a giant stick-model airplane made from rainbow-colored inner tubing. The "reality" of what he was seeing amazed him. After a brief instant, the desert scene reappeared and Valdés then slowly drifted off to sleep. The three researchers rose early the next morning and all were in good spirits.

Discussion and conclusions: ethnopharmacology of S. divinorum

Remedial uses
It is beyond the scope of this paper to comment on the efficacy of S. divinorum in treatment of the various "folk ailments". There is not enough information available to make a scientific decision. More fieldwork at this time would be more practical and certainly more useful than trying to screen for ant-inflammatory, cathartic, analgesic, diuretic, tonic and magical properties in the laboratory. However, it should be noted that many Salvia species are used medicinally throughout the world, and the genus name itself comes from the Latin salvare, to save. The Middle English name for sage was save or saue, from the Latin Salvia via Old English Saluie) (Oxford English Dictionary, 1971), and Chaucer mentions it as a cure for wounds and broken limbs in "The Knightes Tale" (Chaucer, 1927). Common sage, S. officinalis, and Clary sage, S. sclarea, have had a long history of use in treatment of numerous maladies (Grieve, 1971). S. miltiorrhiza, or tan-shen, is one of the five astral remedies in Chinese medicine, as is jen-shen or ginseng (Panax spp.). This sage is credited with many tonic properties in the Pen T'sao, published in 1578 (Smith and Stuart, 1973), and is listed in "A Barefoot Doctor's Manual" (Anon., 1974). Siri Altschul has collected information on a number of medicinal Salvia from specimens at the Harvard Herbaria (Altschul, 1973) and Díaz lists nine species as being used medicinally in Mexico (Díaz, 1976).

Use in Divination
During the two sessions with S. divinorum, the investigators noted the following:

  1. Various sensations were reported by the subjects while lying or sitting down in quiet darkness. These included flying or floating and traveling through "space," twisting and spinning, heaviness and lightness of the body and "soreness."
  2. Physical effects also accompanied the experience. There was an intoxication that produced dizziness and a lack of coordination on trying to move about. The recording of the second session revealed slurred speech and awkward sentence patterns. Díaz had a decrease in heart rate accompanied by a chill. Both subjects had a normal pupillary response to a light shined into their eyes.
  3. Even though the subjects were aware of the sensations and the physical incoordination produced by the Salvia infusion, they claimed there minds seemed to be in a state of acute awareness. The experience was not like intoxication from alcoholic beverages.
  4. Previous reports of S. divinorum ingestion emphasized the mildness of the effects, and the shortness of their duration. It has been shown, however, that under the appropriate conditions of quiet and darkness it was possible to experience effects which lasted for hours. The visions produced were readily terminated by light or noise.
  5. There is apparently an aspect of the Salvia intoxication that leaves the subject's mind in a receptive state. This was well documented in the second session when both subjects spoke out fairly continuously. Díaz began by describing plants and flowers. After he finished speaking Valdés began with a similar vision. When Díaz lamented his inability to see the religious figures as described by the curandero, he apparently triggered off Valdés, who saw such imagery for the rest of the session and during the ride in the car. As Valdés described a castle, Díaz began to see one also.

Don Alejandro's son translated the shaman's explanation of how S. divinorum worked in humans,

What happens to the i-nyi-ma-no (the soul, the heart, or life, all three concepts are contained in a single Mazatec word) when one drinks the María is that the María has so much liquor (licor) that one is left as in a faint. For this reason a person becomes intoxicated (borracho) when they have been entered by the María, the oration my father prays and the words of Christ, also. But it really isn't liquor, I tell you, you go into a "delicate" state (delicado vayas). Do not worry, do not be afraid of what is happening to the i-nyi-ma-no; something does happen, but it is small and unimportant. At times one who takes the María becomes half-drunk, but with the result that what they are taking will be engraved on their mind.

Among Mazatec healers who use the three divinatory plants (the mushrooms, the morning glory seeds and the Salvia), S. divinorum is the first to be employed in shamanic training. Leary and Alpert have been credited with being the first to discover the importance of what they called set("a person's expectation of what a drug will do to him") and setting ("the environment, both physical and social, in which a drug is taken") to an individual's experiences under the influences of an hallucinogen (Weil, 1972). In traditional cultures, like that of the Mazatecs, the purpose of plants like ska María Pastora is to induce visions, and shamans, such as Don Alejandro, are masters at the manipulation of set and setting to such ends. Although reportedly only weakly psychotropic, the Salvia infusion will induce powerful visions under the appropriate conditions. Two ritual orations, which heighten the mystery of what is to follow, are performed on the subject or apprentice, who then takes la María with the curandero himself. As the shaman reveals his visions in the silent darkness, the subject (whose mind has been into a receptive state by the María and the ceremonial settings) is able to "see" it also. By having a sober person monitor the session any difficulties that arise will be observed, and if the experience becomes too terrifying, it can readily be terminated by a few words or producing a light. Mastering S. divinorum and learning to use the morning glory seeds before employing the mushrooms probably makes an apprenticeship much less traumatic than it would be by use of the fungi alone, in addition to giving the future shaman wider insights into the varieties of hallucinogenic experiences.

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ORIGINAL ARTICLE: College of Pharmacy, The University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 (U.S.A.) and *Departamento de Neurobiología, Instituto de Investigaciones Biomédicas, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de Mexico, Apartado Postal 70228, Ciudad Universitaria 20, D.F. (México).

(Accepted July 10, 1982) [J. Ethnopharmacology, 7 (1983) 287-312]

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