Oli Genn-Bash

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Blue honey, made by infusing magic mushrooms in honey, can be framed as a living link between ancient medicinal traditions and a more ecological, community-rooted approach to psychedelics.
Psychedelics helped Oli Genn-Bash process long-held grief over his mother's death by facilitating emotional release, reconnection with nature, and a renewed sense of meaning and creativity.
Psychedelics can act as moral catalysts that increase empathy, dissolve rigid beliefs, and expand one's sense of interconnectedness, but they don't provide a universal moral direction - with outcomes shaped largely by individual psychology, cultural context, and how experiences are integrated.
Oli Genn-Bash describes how the aftermath of a sudden breakup felt like a prolonged 'bad trip', as well as the potential role of psychedelics in healing this emotional pain.
Psychedelics can enhance humour and laughter, which may help people bond socially, gain new perspectives, loosen attachment to the ego, and potentially access deeper insights by not taking life - or the self - too seriously.
Oli Genn-Bash describes his first San Pedro cactus ceremony in Cusco, Peru, as a gentle yet transformative psychedelic experience that, despite its subtlety, facilitated deep emotional release and long-lasting insights over time.
Oli Genn-Bash discusses how LSD uniquely enhances active listening, creativity, and musical insight, offering a more profound synergy between psychedelics and music.
Oli Genn-Bash argues that boredom may be more damaging than stress in modern overstimulated life because it reflects a lack of meaning and connection, and while psychedelics don't eliminate boredom, they may reshape our attention and sense of meaning, helping us relate differently to both mundane and meaningful aspects of life.