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How to Change Your Mind: What the New Science of Psychedelics Teaches Us About Consciousness, Dying, Addiction, Depression, and Transcendence Paperback – May 14, 2019
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A #1 New York Times Bestseller, New York Times Book Review 10 Best Books of 2018, and New York Times Notable Book
A brilliant and brave investigation into the medical and scientific revolution taking place around psychedelic drugs--and the spellbinding story of his own life-changing psychedelic experiences
When Michael Pollan set out to research how LSD and psilocybin (the active ingredient in magic mushrooms) are being used to provide relief to people suffering from difficult-to-treat conditions such as depression, addiction and anxiety, he did not intend to write what is undoubtedly his most personal book. But upon discovering how these remarkable substances are improving the lives not only of the mentally ill but also of healthy people coming to grips with the challenges of everyday life, he decided to explore the landscape of the mind in the first person as well as the third. Thus began a singular adventure into various altered states of consciousness, along with a dive deep into both the latest brain science and the thriving underground community of psychedelic therapists. Pollan sifts the historical record to separate the truth about these mysterious drugs from the myths that have surrounded them since the 1960s, when a handful of psychedelic evangelists inadvertently catalyzed a powerful backlash against what was then a promising field of research.
A unique and elegant blend of science, memoir, travel writing, history, and medicine, How to Change Your Mind is a triumph of participatory journalism. By turns dazzling and edifying, it is the gripping account of a journey to an exciting and unexpected new frontier in our understanding of the mind, the self, and our place in the world. The true subject of Pollan's "mental travelogue" is not just psychedelic drugs but also the eternal puzzle of human consciousness and how, in a world that offers us both suffering and joy, we can do our best to be fully present and find meaning in our lives.
- Print length464 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherPenguin Books
- Publication dateMay 14, 2019
- Dimensions5.4 x 1 x 8.4 inches
- ISBN-100735224153
- ISBN-13978-0735224155
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Editorial Reviews
Review
"Deeply reported and disarmingly personal." —San Francisco Chronicle
“Pollan keeps you turning the pages . . . cleareyed and assured.” —New York Times
“Michael Pollan’s How to Change Your Mind: The New Science of Psychedelics changed my mind, or at least some of the ideas held in my mind. . . . Whatever one may think of psychedelics, the book reminds us that the mind is the greatest mystery in the universe, that this mystery is always right here, and that we usually dedicate far too little time and energy to exploring it.” —Yuval Noah Harari, author of Sapiens and 21 Lessons for the 21st Century
“A deep dive into the history of psychedelics . . . . Deliciously trippy.” —NY Post
“Amid new scientific interest in the potential healing properties of psychedelic drugs, Pollan . . . sets about researching their history—and giving them a (supervised!) try himself. He came away impressed by their promise in treating addiction and depression—and with his mind expanded. Yours will be too.” —People
“Astounding.” —Andrew Sullivan, New York Magazine
“Sweeping and often thrilling . . . . It is to Pollan’s credit that, while he ranks among the best of science writers, he’s willing, when necessary, to abandon that genre’s fixation on materialist explanation as the only path to understanding. One of the book’s important messages is that the therapeutic benefits of psychedelics, for the dying or seriously ill, can’t be separated from the mystical experiences to which they give rise.” —The Guardian
“Makes a compelling case for the potential value of psychedelic experiences.” —Pittsburgh Post Gazette
“Journalist Michael Pollan explored psychoactive plants in The Botany of Desire (2001). In this bold, intriguing study, he delves further…Pollan even ‘shakes the snow globe’ himself, chemically self-experimenting in the spirit of psychologist William James, who speculated about the wilder shores of consciousness more than a century ago.” —Nature, International Journal of Science
“Revelatory . . . Immensely fascinating . . . Pollan approaches his subject as a science writer and a skeptic endowed with equal parts rigorous critical thinking and openminded curiosity.” —Maria Popova, Brainpickings
"Pollan, Cooked, 2013, has long enlightened and entertained readers with his superbly inquisitive and influential books about food. He now investigates a very different sort of comestible, psychedelics (from the Greek: “mind manifesting”), and what they reveal about consciousness and the brain. Pollan’s complexly elucidating and enthralling inquiry combines fascinating and significant history with daring and resonant reportage and memoir, and looks forward to a new open-mindedness toward psychedelics and the benefits of diverse forms of consciousness.” —Booklist (starred review)
“Pollan, Cooked, shifts his focus to other uses of plants in this brilliant history of psychedelics across cultures and generations, the neuroscience of its effects, the revival of research on its potential to heal mental illness—and his own mind-changing trips . . . . This nuanced and sophisticated exploration, which asks big questions about meaning-making and spiritual experience, is thought-provoking and eminently readable.” —Publishers Weekly (starred review)
“A trip well worth taking, eye-opening and even mind-blowing.” —Kirkus (starred review)
“Known for his writing on plants and food, Michael Pollan . . . brings all the curiosity and skepticism for which he is well known to a decidedly different topic . . . How to Change Your Mind beautifully updates and synthesizes the science of psychedelics, with a highly personalized touch.” —Science Magazine
“I've never regretted my adolescent use of LSD, but reading this fascinating, lucid, wise and hopeful book did make me wonder if those drug experiences weren't another example of youth wasted on the young. Michael Pollan, who waited until he was a grownup to experiment, is the perfect guide to today’s dawning psychedelic renaissance.” —Kurt Andersen, author of Fantasyland
“Michael Pollan masterfully guides us through the highs, lows, and highs again of psychedelic drugs. How to Change Your mind chronicles how it’s been a longer and stranger trip than most any of us knew.” —Daniel Goleman, co-author Altered Traits: Science Reveals How Meditation Changes Your Mind, Brain and Body
“Very few writers, if any, have the gravitas and journalistic cred to tackle this explosive subject—from both the outside and the inside—extract it from its nationally traumatic and irrationally over reactive past, and bring both reason and revelatory insight to it. Michael Pollan has done just that. This is investigative journalism at its rigorous and compelling best—and radically mind opening in so many ways just to read it.” —Jon Kabat-Zinn, founder of mindfulness-based stress reduction, and author of Full Catastrophe Living and Coming to Our Senses
“Michael Pollan assembles a great deal of information here on the history, science, and effects of psychedelics. I found his frank recounting of his recent experiences with LSD, psilocybin, and toad venom most revealing. They appear to have softened his materialistic views and opened him to the possibilities of higher consciousness. He did, indeed, change his mind.” —Andrew Weil, author of The Natural Mind and 8 Weeks to Optimum Health
"Do psychedelics open a door to a different reality, or is it just the same-old, same-old reality seen through a different set of lenses? I quickly became engrossed in Pollan’s narrative—the intersection of science, consciousness-enhancing, and government prohibition. But at the center of Pollan’s story is the greatest conundrum of all—why should substances that have been so beneficial to so many people, be the focus of crazy criminal penalties? Why, indeed.” —Errol Morris
“Michael Pollan has applied his brilliant mind and fastidious prose to the Mind itself, specifically the modes by which psychedelic substances temporarily obliterate the ego and engender deep spiritual connectedness to the universe. Michael walks the tight-rope between an objective ‘reporter’ and a spiritual pilgrim seeking insight and sustenance from psychedelics, and his innocence and integrity serve as a balance bar between cynicism and partisan affirmation. His success here places these drugs and what they do at the center of a potential revolution in medicine. It’s an extraordinary achievement, and no matter what you may think you know about psychedelics, if you even know the word, you should read this book.” —Peter Coyote, author and Zen Buddhist Priest
“After 50 years underground, psychedelics are back. We are incredibly fortunate to have Michael Pollan be our travel guide for their renaissance. With humility, humor, and deep humanity, he takes us through the history, the characters, and the science of these “mind manifesting” compounds. Along the way, he navigates the mysteries of consciousness, spirituality, and the mind. What he has done previously for gardeners and omnivores, Pollan does brilliantly here for all of us who wonder what it means to be fully human, or even what it means to be." —Thomas R. Insel, MD, former director of National Institute of Mental Health and co-founder and president of Mindstrong Health
“A rare and utterly engrossing exposition that will most certainly delineate a fundamental change in the understanding of the human mind and the mystery of consciousness. Pollan previously reshaped our knowledge of earthly landscapes in his writings. With this book, he transforms our understanding of the innerscape, the unbounded world we occupy every conscious second of our life experienced by thoughts, suffering, awareness, joy, and reasoning. This is more than a book—it is a treasure." —Paul Hawken, author of Blessed Unrest
About the Author
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Prologue
Midway through the twentieth century, two unusual new molecules, organic compounds with a striking family resemblance, exploded upon the West. In time, they would change the course of social, political, and cultural history, as well as the personal histories of the millions of people who would eventually introduce them to their brains. As it happened, the arrival of these disruptive chemistries coincided with another world historical explosion—that of the atomic bomb. There were people who compared the two events and made much of the cosmic synchronicity. Extraordinary new energies had been loosed upon the world; things would never be quite the same.
The first of these molecules was an accidental invention of science. Lysergic acid diethylamide, commonly known as LSD, was first synthesized by Albert Hofmann in 1938, shortly before physi- cists split an atom of uranium for the first time. Hofmann, who worked for the Swiss pharmaceutical firm Sandoz, had been looking for a drug to stimulate circulation, not a psychoactive compound. It wasn’t until five years later when he accidentally ingested a minus- cule quantity of the new chemical that he realized he had created something powerful, at once terrifying and wondrous.
The second molecule had been around for thousands of years, though no one in the developed world was aware of it. Produced not by a chemist but by an inconspicuous little brown mushroom, this molecule, which would come to be known as psilocybin, had been used by the indigenous peoples of Mexico and Central America for hundreds of years as a sacrament. Called teonanácatl by the Aztecs, or “flesh of the gods,” the mushroom was brutally suppressed by the Roman Catholic Church after the Spanish conquest and driven un- derground. In 1955, twelve years after Albert Hofmann’s discovery of LSD, a Manhattan banker and amateur mycologist named R. Gordon Wasson sampled the magic mushroom in the town of Huautla de Jiménez in the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca. Two years later, he published a fifteen-page account of the “mushrooms that cause strange visions” in Life magazine, marking the moment when news of a new form of consciousness first reached the general public. (In 1957, knowledge of LSD was mostly confined to the com- munity of researchers and mental health professionals.) People would not realize the magnitude of what had happened for several more years, but history in the West had shifted.
The impact of these two molecules is hard to overestimate. The advent of LSD can be linked to the revolution in brain science that begins in the 1950s, when scientists discovered the role of neu- rotransmitters in the brain. That quantities of LSD measured in mi- crograms could produce symptoms resembling psychosis inspired brain scientists to search for the neurochemical basis of mental dis- orders previously believed to be psychological in origin. At the same time, psychedelics found their way into psychotherapy, where they were used to treat a variety of disorders, including alcoholism, anxi- ety, and depression. For most of the 1950s and early 1960s, many in the psychiatric establishment regarded LSD and psilocybin as miracle drugs.
The arrival of these two compounds is also linked to the rise of the counterculture during the 1960s and, perhaps especially, to its particular tone and style. For the first time in history, the young had a rite of passage all their own: the “acid trip.” Instead of folding the young into the adult world, as rites of passage have always done, this one landed them in a country of the mind few adults had any idea even existed. The effect on society was, to put it mildly, disruptive.
Yet by the end of the 1960s, the social and political shock waves unleashed by these molecules seemed to dissipate. The dark side of psychedelics began to receive tremendous amounts of publicity— bad trips, psychotic breaks, flashbacks, suicides—and beginning in 1965 the exuberance surrounding these new drugs gave way to moral panic. As quickly as the culture and the scientific establishment had embraced psychedelics, they now turned sharply against them. By the end of the decade, psychedelic drugs—which had been legal in most places—were outlawed and forced underground. At least one of the twentieth century’s two bombs appeared to have been defused.
Then something unexpected and telling happened. Beginning in the 1990s, well out of view of most of us, a small group of scientists, psychotherapists, and so-called psychonauts, believing that some- thing precious had been lost from both science and culture, resolved to recover it.
Today, after several decades of suppression and neglect, psyche- delics are having a renaissance. A new generation of scientists, many of them inspired by their own personal experience of the compounds, are testing their potential to heal mental illnesses such as depression, anxiety, trauma, and addiction. Other scientists are using psychedelics in conjunction with new brain-imaging tools to explore the links between brain and mind, hoping to unravel some of the mysteries of consciousness.
One good way to understand a complex system is to disturb it and then see what happens. By smashing atoms, a particle accelerator forces them to yield their secrets. By administering psychedelics in carefully calibrated doses, neuroscientists can profoundly disturb the normal waking consciousness of volunteers, dissolving the structures of the self and occasioning what can be described as a mystical expe- rience. While this is happening, imaging tools can observe the changes in the brain’s activity and patterns of connection. Already this work is yielding surprising insights into the “neural correlates” of the sense of self and spiritual experience. The hoary 1960s platitude that psychedelics offered a key to understanding—and “expanding”— consciousness no longer looks quite so preposterous.
How to Change Your Mind is the story of this renaissance. Although it didn’t start out that way, it is a very personal as well as public his- tory. Perhaps this was inevitable. Everything I was learning about the third-person history of psychedelic research made me want to explore this novel landscape of the mind in the first person too—to see how the changes in consciousness these molecules wrought actu- ally feel and what, if anything, they had to teach me about my mind and might contribute to my life.
Product details
- Publisher : Penguin Books; Reprint edition (May 14, 2019)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 464 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0735224153
- ISBN-13 : 978-0735224155
- Item Weight : 2.31 pounds
- Dimensions : 5.4 x 1 x 8.4 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #4,880 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #2 in Pain Medicine Pharmacology
- #13 in Culinary Biographies & Memoirs
- #23 in Scientist Biographies
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About the author

Michael Pollan is the author of seven previous books, including Cooked, Food Rules, In Defense of Food, The Omnivore's Dilemma and The Botany of Desire, all of which were New York Times bestsellers. A longtime contributor to the New York Times Magazine, he also teaches writing at Harvard and the University of California, Berkeley. In 2010, TIME magazine named him one of the one hundred most influential people in the world.
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Customers find the book enlightening and well-researched. They describe it as an enjoyable read with engaging writing style. The history of psychedelic drugs is well-presented, and the experiences are compelling and poignant. Readers appreciate the thoughtful, comprehensive coverage of the subject matter. Overall, they find the book thought-provoking and a must-read for understanding the history of psychedelical drugs.
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Customers find the book well-researched and informative. They appreciate its clear presentation of facts and perspectives from leading scientists. Readers mention it's a must-read for understanding the history of psychedelics.
"...The author is scientific in approach and given his non substance intensive background it seems to be an honest account of a subject which I am sure..." Read more
"...That something as simple as a mushroom or meditation can shake the brain up and help someone escape from deeply ingrained patterns of thinking is..." Read more
"...A book that analyses each song, and also has a very good introduction (an essay really) which begins with a quote by Aaron Copland: “If you want to..." Read more
"...Even better is his history of the modern psychedelic movement (in the 50's/60's), it's politicization and a startling conclusion that hippies did..." Read more
Customers find the book engaging and thought-provoking. They describe it as a fascinating read that provides valuable insight into the current state of psychedelics. Readers appreciate the well-written non-fiction and consider it worth their time.
"...psychadelics, the mind and perspective on a balanced life; this is worth the read...." Read more
"...about to rush out and buy a bunch of LSD I have been very reflective of how my mind works, what this experience of conciousness even is, and most..." Read more
"...Need I say more? A most excellent read and a wonderful book to create more avenues for exploration...." Read more
"...over 400 pages and written at an advanced level and will engage the most curious of readers. The book is organized into six chapters...." Read more
Customers find the book well-written and easy to read. They appreciate the author's verbal artistry and how he makes sure readers understand the subject matter in a comprehensive way. The author is also the narrator, providing a quick introduction to how he came to want to take the personal journey.
"...The book is split really into 3 parts. The author gives a quick introduction to how he came to want to take the personal journey to understand..." Read more
"...as well told stories, the book is very engaging and information easy to take in...." Read more
"...As for the prosaic the book is over 400 pages and written at an advanced level and will engage the most curious of readers...." Read more
"...That’s not the case here. Pollan is an exceptionally gifted writer of a different style than a Malcolm Gladwell or Michael Lewis...." Read more
Customers find the book provides a thorough review of the past regarding these drugs. They find the stories and people mentioned interesting. The book weaves together present-day stories, including the author's own experiences, with the underground history of how they came to be.
"...Its pretty interesting to learn the history of what early benefits were perceived for LSD; in particular as a means to understand psychosis but..." Read more
"...Because each section, even the more science heavy ones, are presented as well told stories, the book is very engaging and information easy to take..." Read more
"...how these amazing molecules impact consciousness, the now underground history of how they came to be and how we came to place such a taboo on them..." Read more
"...Michael Pollan is a gifted writer and storyteller, and in this book, he is writing about topics that can be difficult to articulate...." Read more
Customers find the book engaging and poignant. They appreciate the author's openness to experiences and generosity in sharing them. The book is described as informative as well as entertaining from a neutral point of view.
"...Its definitely entertaining and the sense of connectedness is conveyed...." Read more
"...- The stories in this book are great and often very funny...." Read more
"...Modern use, where there is some reliable psychological screening, is important...." Read more
"...and healing power of the "dissolution of the ego... the mystical experience, the death rehearsal process, the overview effect, the notion of a..." Read more
Customers find the book insightful and well-presented. They describe it as thoughtful, expressive, and entertaining. The material is relevant and well-organized, providing a nice background. Readers praise the author's bold and beautiful prose.
"...Pollan's writing is both clear and beautifully crafted...." Read more
"...This book is very well organized, and very thoughtful to cover all of the angles that can surround a taboo topic...." Read more
"...You would be wrong. The author has crafted an intriguing picture of where we've been and where we could be going with mind altering drugs in a..." Read more
"Well written although gets a little verbose at times, provided a nice background to go along with my current ketamine treatment." Read more
Customers find the book's depth engaging. They appreciate the author's descriptions of his trips, which provide additional insights. The book covers a wide range of contemporary practices and provides a rational journey through various contemporary practices.
"...There's a lot of ground covered in the book and the level of objectivity is to be admired...." Read more
"This book take you on a guided tour through the various contemporary practices of spiritual and medical applications for psychedelic medicine...." Read more
"...newcomer to psychedelics, and frankly, the book’s style possesses a journalistic dryness that often belies his empirical evidence...." Read more
"...His personal journey was okay but not compelling for me. Would have worked for me to read a 30 page article" Read more
Customers find the book repetitive and boring. They dislike the chapter structure and long chapters that drag on. The content lacks relevance and they keep reading paragraphs over and over without understanding them. Some readers feel the book is depressing and the author goes on for too long, going too deep into certain topics.
"...I think this book will be somewhat disappointing and irritating to anyone who has more experience with this world--whether you have done these drugs..." Read more
"...minor quibbles with the book are that some of the early chapters can be slightly repetitive, and the history portion (1950s-1960s) is not as..." Read more
"...And - not to be too picky - I truly dislike his chapter structure. Very long chapters that sometimes just drag on and on...." Read more
"This is an ok book, but not up to the Michael Pollan standard...." Read more
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- Reviewed in the United States on July 31, 2018How to Change Your Mind is quite a different pace from the author's other books; but the result is excellent nonetheless. I typically had read Michael Pollan for his food non-fiction works but How to Change Your Mind is a personal journey of psychedelics that the author bolsters with history and science to help the reader learn about a subject that is seemingly wrongly a taboo. There's a lot of ground covered in the book and the level of objectivity is to be admired. For a person looking to learn about psychadelics, the mind and perspective on a balanced life; this is worth the read.
The book is split really into 3 parts. The author gives a quick introduction to how he came to want to take the personal journey to understand psychedelics and the potential benefits as his personal background was largely absent of substance use/abuse so the first chapter really just contextualizes the why for this project as its a different pace than his previous books. The book then gets into a more structured approach and discusses the history of the use of psychedelics in the West. He discusses how mushrooms were discovered in Mexico and had been used for spiritual journeys and also how LSD was synthesized and shelved by Sandoz and how its use by an individual was largely a random act. Its pretty interesting to learn the history of what early benefits were perceived for LSD; in particular as a means to understand psychosis but soon after as a means to help with addiction and terminal illness. LSD and mushrooms were made illegal partially due to Timothy Leary and the counterculture that evolved and embraced their use and the author gives the stories of events. Its definitely interesting for those unfamiliar. After giving the reader a good sense of how people used and thought about psychedelics as they first explored their potential, the author gets into his experience in using them for the first time. Inevitably communicating the experience is tough as one has an altered state of consciousness that is difficult to communicate with accuracy, but to one gets a shadow of the author's experience on some serious mushrooms, LSD and a hallucinogenic toad. Its definitely entertaining and the sense of connectedness is conveyed. Especially if one has personal experience with doing the drugs the author does a pretty good job of describing some of the sensations. In any case the author goes through experiences of mushroom hunting as well as the perceptions while on it and the lingering aspects of the experience. If one has read the omnivore's dilemma, mushroom hunting falls within the author's expertise but magic mushrooms are seemingly much harder to distinguish from many poisonous mushrooms so the hunting process is pretty interesting. The author then discusses some of the understood neuroscience of hallucinogens and some theories about how psychedelics operate. This remains a subject of study so there aren't definitive conclusions but the author argues that mushrooms and LSD improve communication between parts of the brain which don't communicate actively and suppress activity in the more self referential parts of the brain which the author names the default network. The author discusses recent studies in psychedelic clinical research and notes funding for such programs has increased in the last decade. The author finally discusses how these substances might be useful to people. The focuses of discussion are on those terminally ill, as psychedelics can help a person come to grips with their mortality; the author takes a case study approach with this chapter and discusses the effects on particular people who found them extremely useful. The author discusses addiction as well and how addiction can be broken with psychedelics when properly applied, it is caveated though that the effects are unlikely to be permanent but can help behavior on the order of months. One needs to remember that these are areas that need to be studied such that clinical data can lead to actual conclusions about these topics rather than the stories and hopes projected by believers or the fears projected by the puritanical. The author finally discusses depression which is a huge category. The anecdotal evidence from the authors interactions were all positive about the benefits of clinically administered psychedelics to combat depression.
How to Change Your Mind is an informative book to consider. The author partially argues that psychedelics become very useful as we get to middle age and get entrenched in our way of thinking. These drugs expand the way the mind processes and bring back a youthfulness to the way that the mind thinks about things that is very spiritual. The author is scientific in approach and given his non substance intensive background it seems to be an honest account of a subject which I am sure many people consider taboo so its quite convincing. The book definitely helps rationalize doing psychedelics for tangible benefit without real side effects; though it is careful to remind the reader the environment of consumption matters. Definitely worth the read and almost definitely worth the experience if one can!
- Reviewed in the United States on July 22, 2018I've enjoyed several if Michael Pollan's other books and I was intrigued after watching his Google talk on this one. I have never used psychadelics and knew very little about them, other than various stereotypes from TV and film, anecdotal reports from friends, and horror stories from health class. In his talk he touched on a few points that really stuck with me, such as the promising research into psychadelics treating a variety of mental disorders, and the history and influence of them in high tech. I'm so glad I decided to pick this book up because I absolutely loved it. It's one of my favorite books I've read, and my favorite from Michael Pollan. Other longer reviews likely delve into what content to expect so I'll outline what stuck out to me as especially interesting and enjoyable.
- Michael Pollan's writing is a joy to read. I highlighted a hefty portion of this book, and many of those were little phrases and descriptions which perfectly captured what he was trying to describe or captured the essence of someone's character.
- Speaking of characters, Michael Pollan crossed paths with a host of eccentric characters, and his descriptions of them were a delight to read. Many were "out there" by most standards but he documented their ideas, theories, and life choices fairly and without judgement.
- On that note, this book deals with a tricky subject matter, and handles it quite well. Much of what he's documenting is at least for now outside the realm of science, and he does an excellent job describing what science is there now, where the research is headed, and what experiences and ideas we may just never be able to explain with the tools of science. The subject matter is also, of course, illegal, and many readers with certain backgrounds or in a certain age bracket will come to this book with prejudices, thinking they understand psychadelics as a negative force on society which derails lives and drives young minds to mental disorder. I would strongly encourage anyone with a negative view of psychadelics to give this book a try. Michael Pollan's narrative on these drugs is largely positive (assuming the right setting and context), but I think he also gives a fair voice to their potential risks and detractors.
- This book changed how I think about my own mind, and while I'm not about to rush out and buy a bunch of LSD I have been very reflective of how my mind works, what this experience of conciousness even is, and most importantly how my ego / sense of self doesn't have to be my entire identity and what the benefits of letting go of that a bit could be. I've struggled my whole life with anxiety, depression, obsessive thinking, and thought spirals. The descriptions of getting stuck in certain modes of thinking and becoming destructively inward focused felt dead on. That something as simple as a mushroom or meditation can shake the brain up and help someone escape from deeply ingrained patterns of thinking is fascinating and potentially extremely important. I feel like I can now step back a bit and identify some of these destructive patterns in my own thinking where my ego runs wild, and on the other end of the spectrum can reflect back on sublime "mystical" feeling experiences I've had, and how small but connected I felt to things (like MP I feel uncomfortable using like "mystical" and "spiritual" but that's the language I have to work with).
- The stories in this book are great and often very funny. Because each section, even the more science heavy ones, are presented as well told stories, the book is very engaging and information easy to take in.
This review may come across as disjointed but that's because I'm still sorting out all of the interesting information and insights I gained. Definitely give this one a read if you're feeling open minded.
Top reviews from other countries
- Bolshevik PenpalReviewed in Canada on December 20, 2024
5.0 out of 5 stars Dose Me, Egghead !
Lovely. Honest, fascinating. I love how Pollan hates the word and idea "spiritual" (as do I) but cannot get away from it when he is on psychedelics.
Yep.
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AllisonwisterReviewed in Mexico on October 19, 2023
5.0 out of 5 stars Compralo
Uno de los mejores libros que he leído y con mucho aprendizaje sobre la psicodelia y la historia de los pioneros de la terapia con psicodelicos
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LoliReviewed in Germany on January 25, 2025
5.0 out of 5 stars Tolles Buch
Das Buch ist lesenswert. Toll geschrieben. Es zwingt dazu, unvoreingenommen über Psychedelika nachzudenken. Ich empfehle es. Schnelle Lieferung.
LoliTolles Buch
Reviewed in Germany on January 25, 2025
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- Hobbit Hole BooksReviewed in the United Kingdom on January 4, 2025
5.0 out of 5 stars Life changing
I think everyone should be able to read this insightful and groundbreaking exploration of psychadelics and how they may just be the most powerful and radical treatment for mental health in decades.
Open your mind, learn about the science, and explore the world as it was meant to be seen.
Genuinely, i will never be the same again. Eye opening in the extreme
- We Are 1Reviewed in India on December 13, 2023
5.0 out of 5 stars Michael Pollen is knowledgeable, credible and readable.
We are fans of Michael Pollan, having enjoyed the classic Botany of Desire and his Omnivore’s Dilemma .. “ Don’t eat anything with more than 5 ingredients, Don’t eat anything your grandmother wouldn’t recognize as food, Don’t eat anything with ingredients you can’t pronounce… In any case I’ll get off my sattvic soap box and recommend this wonderful read…. Even though I personally am too sensitive to enjoy psychoadelics, I do appreciate a fair and open minded treatment of 5he subject.