• Psychedelic Drugs Welcome Guest
    View threads about
    Posting RulesBluelight Rules
    PD's Best Threads Index
    Social ThreadSupport Bluelight
    Psychedelic Beginner's FAQ
  • PD Moderators: Esperighanto | JackARoe |

Pharmacokinetics and Phenomenology of Inhaled Salvinorin A in Humans

webbykevin

Bluelighter
Joined
Oct 29, 2010
Messages
1,719
New maps talk just uploaded.

[video=youtube_share;mKVYzytVpFc]http://youtu.be/mKVYzytVpFc[/video]
 
I know this rocked my world this afternoon and made me very curious about S.D. and how it affects the MGS brain post iboga. Hmmmmmm

/me laughs an evil grin and tries to remember which box it is in.
 
I'm very glad to see this, especially for potential future legal reasons. Salvia represents the freakiest curve-ball ever to be thrown psychiatry's way. I imagine the sympathy evoked by the report of the woman participant who alluded to a laughing goddess reflects a neurological truth. Looking to blood pressure and plasma readings as reflective measures of the salvia state is like measuring the tide and assuming from it that you've surfed a tsunami. Of course they know this. It had to be done. Thank you.
 
I know this rocked my world this afternoon and made me very curious about S.D. and how it affects the MGS brain post iboga. Hmmmmmm

/me laughs an evil grin and tries to remember which box it is in.
I can't say it's a good idea or not but I have some confidence in saying salvia is probably the safest psychoactive drug to experiment with for a person who has had addiction issues. It's not really recreational and is so radically different as to not risk association with past drug states. There is however a component of novelty seeking to drug addiction -- and salvia is definitely novel -- though I don't think satisfying that drive is necessarily involved in slipping back into problems. Learning to crochet would be novel for me but wouldn't make me want to chronically use a drug, for instance, though at the same time an orgy with super models would also be novel for me and would make me want to take amphetamines and viagra beforehand, hmm ... I suppose it depends on the intent of the user.
 
Last edited:
I would like to see Salvia divinorum studies making some bolder conclusions. The conclusions of this study are pretty banal/obvious.

How bout some trials on parkinson's or alzheimer's patients?
 
THe place to start would be to examine other kappa agonists like ketazocine and pentazocine....if those have medical potential than S-A probably would too. There are a few S-A analogues...one said to be 10X as potent...a fascinating area to research.
 
she will show you what you can do/fix in your life, kick your ass, or tickle you. :)
 
Thanks to iboga...my life has been 'fixed' as much as one can say that without coming off sounding like an ego trip....don't need SD to tickle me....I can ask other humans for that....so I will take the ass kicking. I am sure my ego does need that.
 
I'm very glad to see this, especially for potential future legal reasons. Salvia represents the freakiest curve-ball ever to be thrown psychiatry's way. I imagine the sympathy evoked by the report of the woman participant who alluded to a laughing goddess reflects a neurological truth. Looking to blood pressure and plasma readings as reflective measures of the salvia state is like measuring the tide and assuming from it that you've surfed a tsunami. Of course they know this. It had to be done. Thank you.

Your eloquency is always a real treat, P.

Thanks for posting this video: Matt's both a great guy and an excellent scientist and he really does explain the topic well. Nice watch.
 
Top