Ayahuasca Research Paper

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A less controversial South American drug that brings in tourist from around the world is Ayahuasca. The psychedelic drug has positively been expressed through music like Paul Simons song “Spirit Voices” and famous literature like Terence McKenna’s the True Hallucinations. Ayahuasca is an indigenous brew of several flora that contain N,N-Dimethyltryptamine (DMT) and Monoamine Oxidase type-A (MAO) two chemicals that cause an intense psychedelic reaction in the human brain (Sklerov). The flora used in a brew can vary between recipes, but Ayahuasca gets its name after the only constant variable in every brew, the Ayahuasca vine (Banisteriopsis caapi vine). Ayahuasca means “vine of the soul” in Quechuan, an indigenous language shared by multiple tribes in the Andes region of South America. It is commonly found in Peru …show more content…

Many describe Ayahuasca as a spiritually healing drug, but there have been multiple studies that suggest that Ayahuasca has psychological healing aspects. As culturalsurvival.org says in their article Ayahuasca: Shamanism Shared across Cultures “Ayahuasca falls under Michael Winkelman’s definition of ‘psychointegrators’ because of its physiological effects that integrate emotion and conscious, pre-conscious, and unconscious processes” (Luna). Psychiatrist Claudio Naranjo used harmaline, a psychoactive alkaloid in Ayahuasca on 30 emotionally conflicted individuals which 10 of those showed changes would have been expected of them if they went through intense therapy (Trichter 134). Stephen Trichter found in a report about Ayahuasca participants, that each user was able to experience an emotion like sadness, joy, or anger that they originally weren’t able to experience. Trichter also found that most user had an introspective experience through Ayahuasca (Trichter 134). Within all of these studies no physical or psychological harm was found in the subjects (Trichter

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