Research Summary:
Psilocybin & Mystical Experience
14-Month Follow-up
Nov 2008
See also: Practical Data from Psilocybin Research: on Dose, Mystical Experience, and Personality
In July 2008 the Journal of Psychopharmacology published results of the 14-month follow-up evaluation of 36 volunteers who took part in a 2006 psilocybin study conducted at Johns Hopkins University. The study was designed to determine whether psilocybin experiences—provided via a double-blind experiment to drug-naïve, mentally healthy adults who had an ongoing spiritual practice—resembled spontaneous mystical experiences.
Follow-up testing measured the persistence of the sessions' effects related to mysticism, spirituality, and personality. The main finding of this follow-up study was that the remarkable gains in several domains were robust and were still reported or measured more than a year after the original experience. At the 14-month follow-up, a large proportion of volunteers still seem to have received substantial benefits from participating in the study.
Fifty-six percent of volunteers rated the psilocybin experience as being among the five most personally meaningful experiences of their lives, 67% rated it as one of the five most spiritually significant experiences of their lives, and 64% indicated that the experience increased their sense of well-being or life satisfaction moderately or very much. Of the 22 subjects who were originally scored as having a "complete mystical experience" during their session, 21 continued to fulfill the criteria. A significant correlation was found between whether or not a mystical experience was scored during the psilocybin sessions and the high or low ratings of personal meaning and spiritual significance during the follow-up. The follow-up study represents an important extension of the original findings from 2006.
Two of the study participants have now spoken to the media about their experiences in the study. Dede Osborn, 66, participated in the study in the aftermath of a divorce and the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001. She describes her psilocybin session beginning with a feeling of taking off, followed by "brilliant colors and beautiful patterns, just stunningly gorgeous, more intense than normal reality."2 During the session she experienced both euphoria and difficult sensations:
Sandy Lundhal, 55, became interested in the research after learning of it from an acquaintance who was involved with the study. The Baltimore Sun reports:
Other subjects describe experiences of a spiritual character:
In July 2008 the Journal of Psychopharmacology published results of the 14-month follow-up evaluation of 36 volunteers who took part in a 2006 psilocybin study conducted at Johns Hopkins University. The study was designed to determine whether psilocybin experiences—provided via a double-blind experiment to drug-naïve, mentally healthy adults who had an ongoing spiritual practice—resembled spontaneous mystical experiences.
"These appear to be life-altering experiences that have much in common with classical mystical experiences described throughout the ages. The persistence and salience of the effects didn't diminish by 14 months, and that is noteworthy. It's one thing to have a meaningful experience, but 14 months later, you might be hard-pressed to remember it. But in this case, you have an eight-hour session in a lab, and 14 months later you have 60 percent of them saying it's among the five most personally meaningful experiences of their lives."
— Dr. Roland Griffiths 1
Fifty-six percent of volunteers rated the psilocybin experience as being among the five most personally meaningful experiences of their lives, 67% rated it as one of the five most spiritually significant experiences of their lives, and 64% indicated that the experience increased their sense of well-being or life satisfaction moderately or very much. Of the 22 subjects who were originally scored as having a "complete mystical experience" during their session, 21 continued to fulfill the criteria. A significant correlation was found between whether or not a mystical experience was scored during the psilocybin sessions and the high or low ratings of personal meaning and spiritual significance during the follow-up. The follow-up study represents an important extension of the original findings from 2006.
Study Participant Comments
Two of the study participants have now spoken to the media about their experiences in the study. Dede Osborn, 66, participated in the study in the aftermath of a divorce and the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001. She describes her psilocybin session beginning with a feeling of taking off, followed by "brilliant colors and beautiful patterns, just stunningly gorgeous, more intense than normal reality."2 During the session she experienced both euphoria and difficult sensations:
I felt like my heart was being torn open ... Once I got by the sensory titillation, the colors and the sounds - the pain was a very strong physical pain, but it was nothing I was afraid of. It was a combination of sweet and painful. There is so much joy in being alive and there is so much pain in being alive. We usually don't feel it because we are so armored."2Osborn reports lasting positive effects from the experiment, saying "I became more aware of when I was afraid or when my heart would become closed up," she said. "I began asking myself what I would do if I wasn't afraid. When I felt myself tensing up, I would breathe a little deeper."2 She also stated "I feel more centered in who I am and what I'm doing. I don't seem to have those self-doubts like I used to have. I feel much more grounded [and feel that] we are all connected."3
Sandy Lundhal, 55, became interested in the research after learning of it from an acquaintance who was involved with the study. The Baltimore Sun reports:
"At first I saw these figures that looked like little harlequins opening a curtain, trying to show me all these colorful things," she said, "but they weren't really important." As the effects of the drug became stronger, she said, she wrestled with emotions rooted in her personal relationships and sadness about her father's death. "I had no idea what I had been repressing with regards to my father's death," she said. "I had to process the truth about it."2The 14-month follow-up report includes several anonymous comments by study participants. Like Osborn and Lundhal, some of the quotes suggest a crisis that gave way to deep and lasting insight. One subject recounts "The experience of death, which initially was very uncomfortable, followed by absolute peace and being in the presence of God. It was so awesome to be with God that words can't describe the experience."4 Another says, "I remember feeling a profound sense of loss of [my family]... I remember after I resolved my fears, the shift then went to joy."4
Other subjects describe experiences of a spiritual character:
"A non-self self held/suspended in an almost tactile field of light."
"The utter joy and freedom of letting go -- without anxiety -- without direction --beyond ego self"
"The experience expanded my conscious awareness permanently. It allows me to let go of negative ideas faster. I accept 'what is' easier."
"My conversation with God (golden streams of light) assuring me that everything on this plane is perfect; but I do not have the physical body/mind to fully understand."4
News Coverage#
- Council on Spiritual Practices Page: Psilocybin Research
- Study finds long benefit in illegal mushroom drug -- AP, includes discussion with study participant Dede Osborn.
- Psilocybin Study Hints at Rebirth of Hallucinogen Research -- Wired, with commentary by David Nichols.
- A medical use for magic mushrooms -- LA Times, with commentary by Charles Grob. Emphasizes potential medical use and relates to a study to psilocybin therapy with cancer patients.
- Hallucinogen test is praised -- Baltimore Sun, Includes discussion with two participants, Dede Osborn and Sandy Lundahl.
- Long Trip: Magic Mushrooms' Transcendent Effect Lingers -- Scientific American, with criticsm by Herbert Kelber and Charles Schuster
- A Really Long Strange Trip -- Newsweek, comments by David Nichols
- "Magic" Mushroom Surprise: Study Finds Lasting Benefit -- CNN (archived on YouTube), "Maybe the hippies of the 1960s weren't just on something, maybe they were on to something."
- "Spiritual" effects of mushrooms last a year: study -- Reuters
- Spiritual effects of hallucinogens persist -- UPI
- Magic mushrooms can change your life for good, study says -- Pravda, incorrectly states "The psychedelic drug was offered to 14 volunteers....", the actual number was 36.
- Magic mushrooms -- power cord connecting to the transcendent? Researchers say 'maybe.' -- Dallas Morning News
- Spiritual effects of "sacred mushrooms" last more than a year -- The Cheers Org
- Spiritual effects of hallucinogens persist, researchers report -- ScienceDaily, based heavily on press release
- Psychedelic Mushrooms Can Boost Mental Health, Researchers Say -- Discover
Related References #
- Keim B. "Psilocybin Study Hints at Rebirth of Hallucinogen Research". Wired. Jul 1, 2008.
- Emery C. "Hallucinogen test is praised". Baltimore Sun. Jul 1, 2008.
- Unattributed. "Magic mushrooms can change your life for good, study says". Pravda. Jul 1, 2008.
- Griffiths RR, Richards WA, Johnson MW, McCann UD, Jesse R. "Mystical-type experiences occasioned by psilocybin mediate the attribution of personal meaning and spiritual significance 14 months later". Journal of Psychopharmacology. e-pub July 2008.
- Griffiths RR, Richards WA, McCann U, Jesse R. "Psilocybin can occasion mystical-type experiences having substantial and sustained personal meaning and spiritual experience". Psychopharmacology. 2006;187(3):268–83.
- Johnson MW, Richards WA, Griffiths RR. "Human hallucinogen research: guidelines for safety". Journal of Psychopharmacology. Jul 1 2008.