Showing posts sorted by relevance for query The Sacred Mushroom John M. Allegro. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query The Sacred Mushroom John M. Allegro. Sort by date Show all posts

Monday, December 23, 2019

Joe Rogan: Santa was a Mushroom (video)

AOK; Joe Rogan Experience; Pat Macpherson, Dhr. Seven (eds.), Wisdom Quarterly Wiki edit


Santa Claus was a Mushroom!


Joe Rogan talks about Christian English archeologist and Dead Sea Scrolls scholar John Marco Allegro and his amazing research. It rocked the Catholic Church because it proved that the Amanita muscaria "fly agaric" mushroom was what Jesus Christ symbolized -- showing the connection to Nordic Siberian Pagan (Swedish Sami) Santa Claus and the many clues to his origin as a symbol of this very special reindeer mushroom. No one would believe it, particularly out of the mouth of whacky Joe Rogan, but the scholarly evidence is all there laid out in Allegro's book, once banned by the Church, now available because the truth will not remain concealed.

The Sacred Mushroom and the Cross: A Study of the Nature and Origins of Christianity Within the Fertility Cults of the Ancient Near East is a book by John M. Allegro (1923-1988) about the linguistics of early Christianity and fertility cults in the ancient Near East (Flint & VanderKam, 2005).

The book follows the development of language and religions, myths, and cult practices in world cultures. Allegro argues, using etymology, that the roots of Christianity and many other religions, are in fertility cults.

Cool, man, I'm a Western cultural icon.
Furthermore, cult practices, such as consuming visionary plants (entheogens, "mind-making" psychedelics) to perceive the "mind of God," persisted into the early Christian era.

This continued into the 13th century with reoccurrences in the 18th century and mid-20th century, as Allegro interprets the fresco at Plaincourault Chapel: It is an accurate depiction of the ritual ingestion of Amanita muscaria magic mushroom as the Eucharist.

Allegro argues that Jesus never existed as a historical figure but was a mythological creation of early Christians under the influence of psychoactive mushroom extracts such as psilocybin (Ibid.) More

Monday, June 25, 2018

Getting STONED in Christianity, Pt. 2 (video)

John Allegro; OMFfacts; Mystic-Skeptic; Dhr. Seven, Pat Macpherson (eds.), Wisdom Quarterly

Oxford scholar proves Jesus was a Mushroom 
Historians and theologians have long debated the “real story” of [the SUN god] Jesus. Sure, the Bible says he was the son of God, born to a virgin in the stables of Bethlehem — but that’s just one take on it.

Some believe that Jesus (Joshua, Issa, Y'shua) was a real person and that the stories of his supernatural powers are made up. Others feel that the Jesus we read about is a composite of several historical people.


(The Mushroom and the Cross) Let's read the text for ourselves.

Then there’s John Marco Allegro, an Oxford archeologist and heavyweight biblical scholar with so much evidence in 1970 he published his shocking findings: The Sacred Mushroom and the Cross: A Study of the Nature and Origins of Christianity Within the Fertility Cults of the Ancient Near East.

The Holy Mushroom (Irwin)
The evidence of who/what “Jesus” really is is clear. Allegro takes as a starting point something that’s perplexed other biblical scholars for centuries: When translating the Bible from the original Hebrew, there are some words that seem out of place. Allegro's book was banned by the Vatican. But it got out and is now available to serious scholars and those reevaluating psychedelics. More

The Holy Mushroom: Evidence of Mushrooms in Judeo-Christianity (FREE PDF) by J.R. Irvin is a critical re-evaluation of the schism between John M. Allegro and R. Gordon Wasson over the theory on the entheogenic origins of Christianity presented in The Sacred Mushroom and the Cross.

Friday, January 11, 2019

PROOF: "Jesus" is a magic mushroom (video)

Rev. Failla via TheOriginsOfReligion; Pat Macpherson, Dhr. Seven (eds.), Wisdom Quarterly


Jesus is Magic Mushrooms (PROOF)
Jesus Is Magic Mushrooms (originally published as "The Origins of Religion: as Reference to Sacred Mushrooms" by Rev. Nicklas B. Failla. The complete new book is loaded with extra information and pictures @ createspace.com/5521164. Free complete thesis paper with full reference list @ colostate.academia.edu/NickFa...

The Sacred Mushroom and The Cross: A Study
The Sacred Mushroom and the Cross: A Study of the Nature and Origins of Christianity Within the Fertility Cults of the Ancient Near East by famed Christian scholar John M. Allegro (reference) is a book documenting the linguistics of early Christianity and fertility cults in the Ancient Near East. It argues that "Jesus" never existed as a historical figure but was... Is Jesus a Mushroom? Christianity Retold Through Mycology... (prohbtd.com, Aug. 16, 2017) Biblical scholar John Allegro, after years of researching the Dead Sea Scrolls and... Testament's main subject, Jesus Christ, is actually....

ABSTRACT
Throughout the ancient stories of humanity, plants and fungi have been used as a source to contact the divine by shaman [wandering ascetic] and priest [Brahmin] alike.

These experiences are often potent enough to form [and fuel] mystics, prophets, spiritual gurus, and even gods [devas].

Psychotropic substances in the modern era have been virtually demonized and condemned by most members of society or labeled as "recreational" by others -- leaving any claims to a spiritual connection castrated at the [beginning] thesis statement.

Scholars fear tackling this subject by reality of being ostracized from peers and/or banished by the church if not outright imprisoned by the state.

Christian holidays such as Christmas and Easter and church sacraments like Holy Communion and marriage all appear to have their roots in the experience that "Christ" is centered upon -- sacred psilocybin mushrooms [which are entheogens that reveal the divine within and psychedelics that are "mind making" substances].

This author [Rev. Nicklas Failla] takes a deeper look into the myths, artwork, and stories that surround religions and breaks down how each individual can come into direct communication with “the Divine” by instituting the true holy blessed sacrament.

SPECIAL EDITION
The motif of the sacred scarab (dung beetle) symbol is a distinctly predominating theme in ancient Egyptian hieroglyphs and amulets. The ancient Egyptians even depicted the dung beetle as a religious deity known as “Khepri.”

Its prevalence as sacred imagery has been ill explained by past archaeologists and Egyptologists. Many historical explanations of the divinity attributed to this beetle have been based upon assumptions that the dynasties of ancient Egypt had “misunderstood” the biology of beetle, and that it was this “misunderstanding” which led the Egyptians to keep the beetle in such high esteem.

Secondary research, which was triggered by newly discovered evidence obtained and presented by scholars on the newly discovered genus of psilocybin mushrooms, offers possible explanations to more probable motives behind ancient Egyptian’s use of the sacred scarab symbol.

AUTHOR
Rev. Nicklas B. Failla is a cultural anthropologist with an emphasis on religious sacrament use, particularly that of P. cubensis. Rev. Failla plans to continue research into how neurotrophic and psychoactive substances have melded spirituality since the beginning of time, as well as their current importance for the future of humanity.

Like the Fanpage: The Origins of Religion (Jesus as Mushroom). Complete special edition by Nicklas B. Failla (fully remastered) includes The Origins of Religion plus Ancient Egyptian Royal Motifs, references to P. cubensis. Fanpage: facebook.com/TheOriginsOf... Memorabilia: ow.ly/JFg79.

Monday, July 1, 2024

Jesus used drugs: Bible scholar Dr. Hillman

You don't understand. This is how it was, leading a Mystery cult, magic, trying to see GOD.

Ancient language expert: Jesus Christ used children as drugs | Dr. David Ammon Hillman
Jesus: She-Male Gods of...
(Danny Jones) May 20, 2024: KONCRETE Podcast (S1 E239). Watch this episode uncensored and ad-free on Patreon: dannyjones

Dr. David C. Ammon Hillman, Ph.D. earned his master's degree in bacteriology from the University of Arizona and a master's and doctoral degree in classics from the University of Wisconsin, Madison, where he specialized in Ancient Greek and Roman medicine and pharmacology (Greek pharmakos = sorcery, potion brewing, dosing).

His first book, The Chemical Muse, was published with St. Martin’s Press immediately after his dissertation committee forced him to delete all references to recreational drugs from his thesis. Dr. Hillman was recently investigated by the Vatican for demon possession and portal opening while teaching as a professor of Classical Languages.

OUTLINE
  • British John Marco Allegro
    00:00 - Religious history
  • 11:24 - Tal Megiddo excavation [site of Armageddon]
  • 16:39 - Original meaning of "Christ" [anointed with drug]
  • 17:51 - Neuropeptides
  • 23:25 - Ancient pharmacology; John Scarborough
  • 28:23 - Galen (Marcus Aurelius doctor) 
  • 33:44 - Drugs in ancient Rome
  • 38:02 - The Chemical Muse
  • 47:11 - Greek Septuagint vs. the Dead Sea Scrolls
  • 55:57 - Greek drug cults
  • 01:03:08 - Solon and the creation of democracy
  • 01:10:21 - The ancient Bible
  • 01:16:40 - Greek came before Hebrew Old Testament
  • 01:19:08 - Interpreting ancient texts
  • 01:24:15 - John Marco Allegro (The Sacred Mushroom and the Cross)
  • 01:28:39 - Why ancient Greek is superior language
  • 01:33:59 - The "Purple" (drug reference)
  • 01:38:23 - Christian cults and revisionism
  • 01:46:49 - The Christ
  • 01:55:52 - Zeus [Je'Zeus, Son of Zeus]
  • 02:05:59 - The Garden of Gethsemane
  • 02:16:46 - The "Burning Purple"
  • 02:27:52 - Death of Jesus
  • 02:41:31 - Using the human bodies to produce drugs
  • 02:43:58 - The men crucified next to Jesus
  • 02:52:08 - Demon possession and opening portals
  • 03:02:03 - Alexander the False Prophet
  • 03:08:46 - Lucifer: The Dawn Bringer
  • 03:17:38 - Modern enlightenment
Original Sin: Ritual Child Rape
ABOUT: Dr. Ammon Hillman earned his MS in bacteriology and Ph.D. in classics from the University of Wisconsin, Madison, where he specialized in Ancient Greek and Roman medicine, pharmacology, and endocrinology. His first book, The Chemical Muse, was published with St. Martin’s Press immediately after his dissertation committee forced him to delete all references to recreational drugs from his thesis. Dr. Hillman was later investigated by the Vatican for "demon possession" while working at Mount Saint Mary's in an effort to expel him.
EPISODE LINKS
SPONSORS
mudwtr.com/danny - Try it now for only $29. (That's less than $1 per cup). buy.ver.so/danny - Use code DANNY to save 15% on your first order. whiterabbitenergy.com - Use code DJP for 20% off. buy.ver.so/danny

LISTEN ON

Monday, December 23, 2013

O, Christmas: Shaman Santa Cometh! (video)

Dhr. Seven, Amber Larson, Ashley Wells, Pat Macpherson, Wisdom Quarterly; John Allegro
Was "Santa" originally a Siberian/Scandinavian shaman distributing magic mushrooms?
Reindeer-drawn sleigh in pagan Scandinavia, the Norwegian Lapland (visitnorway.com)
 
Budai (Elysia in Wonderland)
We love the holiday season -- not because of the crass commercialism, family fights, or endless droning of Judeo-Christian Xmas TV specials around the house.

No, it is because scholarly research has shown us the true origins of the Santa Claus.

It is not, as the Catholic Christians say, Saint Nick(olas). But we'll have to check in with Megyn Kelly and Jon Stewart for the ongoing debate about that as Stephen Colbert and Bill O'Reilly weigh in.

The indigenous Scandinavians, the Sami, and their shaman ways tied to reindeer and magic mushrooms: Introducing Santa
 
Weihnachten means Krampus
No, it is a Scandinavian/Siberian tale of something that really happened and happens -- a custom, a ritual, something to look forward to in the cold of winter. Across Siberia and Norwegian-Swedish-Finnish Lapland, among the indigenous peoples, the blond Sami and brunette (pre-Buddhist) Mongolians, the local shaman gathered the entheogen mushrooms.
  • (Many Buddhists are Russians, and many more are Mongolian-Siberians, Central Asians, and inhabitants of Europe's only indigenously Buddhist country, Kalmykia).
Amanita mushrooms on pine needle floor
The red and white gifts from Mother Nature sprung up under and around pine trees. Big gifts come in small packages. Each family got its share, delivered by reindeer-drawn sleigh to hut houses with prominent chimneys burning away. The shaman came in the front door, made his moist distribution, which were in dire need of drying to preserve and maximize their effectiveness. (A chemical conversion process takes place through heating, drying, or boiling).
  • Why pine trees? Is it because they are evergreen and therefore a symbol of fertility? Partly as birthrates nine months down the road show, but mainly because these fly agaric mushrooms (Amanita muscaria) have a symbiotic relationship with the roots of pine trees. Not much can grow in the bed of dropped needles, a chemical plant strategy to enhance the success of their species by more or less sterilizing adjacent ground and minimizing competition.
Paul Stamets: the world's first "Internet" or communication Web, Mycelium "Running"
  
Mushrooms communicate very well.
The driest and warmest place to accomplish this was above an open fire, in the hearth, in convenient stockings that that hung their. Stocking stuffers, to the delight of Kris Kringles and toadstool-loving gnomes and sprinkling-fairies and mischievous elves who haunted residents with their poltergeist activities. These elementals really went to work, activities which became visible to those consuming the Forest's offerings. No one knew better than the reindeer themselves, with perhaps the exception of old jolly (delirious) Saint Shaman. They "fly" in two senses, high as the sky thanks to licking the snow and trotting, prancing, bounding as they pull.
  
Jolly Budai or Hotei with his sack and candy (Dbonyun/flickr.com)
Massive Budai (melissahardytrevenna)
  • Eventually the legend of an obese saintly man carrying a big sack of gifts to give out drifted Far(ther) East from Siberia to China and made it to Buddhist Asia. In addition to Scandinavian shaman "Santa" in his white and red furs, there is Chinese shraman "Santa" in his patchwork saffron robes: Budai (Hotei) Bodhisattva, the "fat, happy Laughing Buddha" as he is almost universally regarded. He was actually a historical figure, a jolly and rotund Buddhist monk who went about carrying a sack of treats to give to children.
Another Mushroom Link
Jesus was a mushroom -- no, really, he was!
If we were to say that Saint Issa (of "Jesus Christ" fame) was a mushroom, we would be scorned and ridiculed -- charged with hooliganism and inciting religious hatred like our Russian colleagues. But it is not we who say such a strange thing. 

It is preeminent, banned-by-the-Vatican scholar John M. Allegro (johnallegro.org) -- author of The Sacred Mushroom and the Cross, familiar with many texts in Christian languages (Aramaic, Hebrew, Greek, Latin, English) -- who figured it out.
 
The would-be Satan or Santa?
He was such a towering figure in Christian theology that he could not be dismissed. So his work, originally titled "The Sacred Mushroom and the Cross: A Study of the Nature and Origins of Christianity Within the Fertility Cults of the Ancient Near East," was banned.
 
What does Allegro mean when claiming that the sacred sage Jesus (a former Buddhist monk according to the BBC), son-of-god (Sanskrit devaputra, anyone reborn among celestial devas, son-of-man, anyone reborn in our manusya loka, Human Plane, as the offspring-of-humans), Jewish revolutionary (renegade rabbi), and presumptive Vajrayana "Maitreya" (Messiah, the new Mithra), was a "mushroom"?

Ye olde Xmas catalogs (wishbook)
Was he the Nazarene Leader of the Essenes or "Jesus Christ," whose name is actually a title meaning "Yahshua the Redeemer"?

Of course, Jesus of Nazareth may have been a good Middle Eastern man and troublemaker (or an exiled dynastic Egyptian trying to gather up an army to attack the Pharaoh), but he only lived on in legend as the "greatest person who ever lived" (Jesus Christ superstar) because clever esoteric Essene/Jewish cultists embodied the lore of magic mushrooms in the name of this obscure figure.

Sami (Erika Larsen/NYTimes.com)
He returned to Nazareth or Jerusalem, Palestine (or Ethiopia, or Egypt) from 18 "lost years" in Kashmir, India. (See scholar Holger Kersten). He was preaching something new, which the mushroom cult adopted as a cover story. Christianity grew to greatness not as the religion of this godman-sadhu-guru, as we are we taught in the West, but as the amalgamation of Euro Pagan Greco-Roman syncretism -- appropriating (borrowing) everything but calling it by new names to fit its take-over-the-world theology.
  • Xmas in Japan = money
    Why do so many people claim Jesus/Y'shua as their own -- Jews, Greeks, imperial Holy Romans, Egyptians (Coptics), Tibetan Buddhists (who consider him a tulku, rimpoche, or even as Maitreya Buddha), Persians (who see him as Mithra), and so on and so on? It is because Christianity misappropriated parts of Jesus' life story to fabricate the greatest story every sold/told. It worked. Catholicism/Christianity can claim about three billion adherents, at least nominally, twice the number of Buddhists (when China's billion Buddhists, formerly counted as "atheists" in officially-communist China, are classified correctly in census records).
(TTW) Allegro on the mycological origins of Jesus Christ (Min. 1:50)
 
Scandinavian shaman fairyland
The Essenes -- mystic-monastic Jews, forerunners of the Gnostics, with a monasticism for spiritual striving that was new to the Near East/West (rather than the traditional rabbinical/priestly family integration) -- would have been lost to history. But the message that we are all "GOD," that we are of a divine nature (i.e., have the potential to become devas and brahmas when we are reborn again as spiritus, "light beings," subtle matter of the Fine Material Sphere), that an entheogen like magic mushrooms draws out and makes evident, was too good to lose.

Allegro figured out and published how Jesus came to be conflated with magic mushroom lore, but that he was, of that Allegro was absolutely convinced.

Garden gnome Budai
What motivated Budai/Hotei Bodhisattva to gain weight, distribute treats, and be so happy, that we do not know. Wandering Buddhist monks, called shramans, are like that.

More importantly, what will Wisdom Quarterly staff be doing for Christmas, the Pagan holiday of gift giving and merriment? Eating traditional Chinese food, rubbing Budai's belly for luck, reading our fortunes in the folds of inedible cookies, visiting family and friends to collect and distribute gifts just as Buddhist Lisa Simpson would have us do (any maybe this year there will finally be a wrapped pony under the plastic tree), and Xmas Eve meditation at Against the Stream.

(ML) A Very Pagan Xmas: The True Origins of Christmas
 
Everything we "know" about Christmas we don't. Iranian Mithra has more to do with it than Israeli Jesus. Every common holiday misconception is cracked wide open. The producers who unmasked Halloween now unwrap Christmas. This is a must see for seekers of truth. It recounts Biblical tales. But was Dec. 25th Jesus' birthday? Why do we decorate a pine tree, put lights up, teach children to believe in St. Nicholas, or Santa and his magical reindeer? Paganism. Christendom adopted popular customs; it did not invent them. This will be the Season for Reason when the real story of Christmas is known. For once our eyes are open, Christmas may never close them again.
  
Paul Stamets' Fungi Perfecti (fungi.com)
 
The Sami or Lapp
Sami girl in kolt (visitnorway)
Lapp means a "patch of cloth" for mending. Thus, the name suggests that the Sami are wearing patched garments [just as India's "shamans," the Buddhist shramanas, or "wandering ascetics" (some say bhikkhu/ni originally meant "one who picks up  or makes use of discarded rags for clothing") wear patched robes], a derogatory term and one that needs to be replaced. The word "Laplander" is also problematic since that could mean any person who lives within this region, even non-natives. Finally, there's a part of the Sami population who always have lived outside the region of "Lapland" such as the Sami of Sweden, Jemtland, and Härjedalen. (Editor: One Sami word that made it into several major languages is tundra, which speaks volumes about this part of the world). More

Wednesday, May 15, 2013

Science: Plants talk to each other (video)

Ashley Wells, Seth Auberon, Wisdom Quarterly; Fungi.com; Eric Pfeiffer (Yahoo News)
Underground mushroom network beneath forest floor: MYCELIUM (Fungi Perfecti)
 
Oh no, they discovered the secret!
As Wisdom Quarterly reported earlier, mycologist Paul Stamets discovered that the first "World Wide Web" was an internet of fibers called mycelium, which runs along the forest floor connecting mushrooms and serving as a WWW for plants. Now a new scientific study is catching up to Stamets' original Internet discovery. Plants and "plant beings" have been communicating with one another all along, and animals, too. Humans in forests or using plants know, see, and speak to Nature directly as she manifests in sentient organisms of all kinds, seen and unseen, full of light and a little scary. The Church has known, and sages have seen. And how often did the Buddha speak of "shining ones" (devas) who illuminated the entire woodland grove, or serpent-beings and ogres (nagas and yakkhas) who shapeshifted?

(TED) Mycologist Paul Stamets studies mycelium and lists 6 ways this astonishing fungal network can help save the world. It cleans polluted soil, creates new insecticides, treats smallpox and maybe even the flu... A mere 18 minutes is not long enough for him to get all the way through his list, but it is plenty of time to blow our minds. His presentation was an audience favorite at TED 2008. (17:44, recorded Feb. 2008, Monterey, California).
  
Mushroom like Buddhist stupa (VW)
A new study has demonstrated that plants can use an underground network of fungi to warn each other about incoming insect attacks.

Carried out by researchers from the University of Aberdeen, the James Hutton Institute, and Rothamsted Research, the study demonstrated that the plants are able to send warnings of incoming aphids to other plants connected to their network. The plants then send out a chemical signal that repels aphids and attracts wasps, a natural aphid predator.
 
The research follows previous findings that have shown plants can communicate similar chemical warnings through the air.
 
Mushrooms were the first "flowers" and "trees" on Earth.
The new study says plants can connect with other via a common fungus known as mycorrhizae. "Mycorrhizal fungi need to get [products of photosynthesis] from the plant, and they have to do something for the plant," John Pickett of Rothamsted Research told the BBC.
 
"In the past, we thought of them making nutrients available from the [roots and soil], but now we see another evolutionary role for them in which they pay the plant back by transmitting the signal efficiently," he said.
 
Univ. of Aberdeen’s David Johnson added, "Our understanding of ecological systems has not considered the fact that plants are interconnected in this way. It could have major implications for our understanding of how one organism affects another."
 
Shamans and wise neanderthals knew it all along and considered all plants sacred.
  
They know, they know! (Great-wall-hikers)
Conversely, the plants in the study not connected to the fungal network did not send out warning signals to other plants after coming under attack. The in-network plants were also covered with bags to ensure that they were not actually sending the signals through the air [which is another mode of communication they are known by scientists to utilize].
 
Pickett said the discovery could lead to farms using the fungi as an advance warning system for their crops. In theory, one “sacrificial” plant would be kept at a distance from the crops. If it fell under attack from insects, it would warn the rest of the plants, giving them time to mount a viable defense.


The secret is DMT: The Spirit Molecule (Documentary), the "seat of consciousness," found in nearly all plants and tissues like the heart and pineal gland!
 
Mycological Society of San Francisco (MSSF.org/thekitchn.com)
(Origins of Religion) Mushrooms as medicine for the psyche ("soul")
The Sacred Mushroom and the Cross (John M. Allegro)
(Unsealed) UFOs and the Vatican: what plant shamans have long known

Tuesday, October 15, 2024

National Mushroom Day: Oct 15, 2024



National Mushroom Day – October 15, 2024 U.S.
Portobello, shiitake, button, cremini, truffle — we’re talking mushrooms, because today (Oct. 15th) is National Mushroom Day. "Mushrooms" are the fleshy fruiting bodies of fungi (a kingdom unto itself apart from animals, plants, and minerals, which means mushrooms are not plants).

There’s a variety of species, which is why we have so many types of mushrooms to choose from. They’re a staple in a vegetarian’s diet due to their umami flavor, nutritious value, texture, and hearty consistency — plus they make a delicious main dish for the culinary varieties. That means everyone can have fun celebrating National Mushroom Day.

National Mushroom Day Timeline

  • 1707 The cultivation of mushrooms: Edible fungus was successfully cultivated in the controlled environment of a vegetable garden
  • 1950 ​Nurseries for mushrooms were built: The first above-ground mushroom nursery was built — complete with many cultivation areas. 
  • 1955 ​The cultivation process turned to wood: Concrete trays for mushroom cultivation transitioned into wooden boxes in trays.
  • 1975 ​Metal was used for cultivation: ​Metal trays became the preferred material to cultivate mushrooms.
National Mushroom Day Activities
Get funky with fungi dishes
There are lots of different ways to utilize mushrooms in cooking, so on National Mushroom Day, get creative. For example:
  • Swap out juicy dead flesh and sub in a juicy portobello mushroom to build a better burger.
  • Or warm up with a hearty bowl of mushroom soup (which usually uses mycelia rather than mushroom).
  • Or take a vegan omelet (Vietnamese rice flour and turmeric) to the next level by filling or topping it with mushrooms.
Throw a ‘shroom cook-off
Invite friends, family, and coworkers over to show off their best mushroom dishes (or try a new one). Since mushrooms are so versatile, there are lots of different types of dishes to taste and judge. Plus, there are sure to be leftovers. So mushroom cravings can be satisfied long after National Mushroom Day is over.

Plan a mushroom picking outing
Celebrate National Mushroom Day by getting into the great outdoors with friends, neighbors, and family and picking some fresh mushrooms. Now, many mushrooms found in the woods are not edible (CHECK ONLINE BEFORE EATING!). But eating’s not really the point of the hunt anyways. Instead, view mushroom outings as fun adventures with loved ones and strangers -- an opportunity to get out of the house or office.

​​4 Groovy Mushroom Tidbits
There’s a mushroom that tastes like chicken (actually more than one). The Laetiporus mushroom, which grows in the wild, is said to taste almost exactly the same as fried chicken. Better and easier are tree oyster mushrooms found growing on bark.

Same mushroom, different mushroom (different stages)
Button mushrooms, portobello mushrooms, cremini mushrooms, and white mushrooms are not different mushrooms as the names suggest. Instead, they are the very same mushroom at different levels of maturity. The small cremini will grow into the giant portobello.

​Lighting affects mushroom growth
​In fact, lighting causes mushrooms to become more abundant. They like the dark and the yin energy of moonlight. When exposed to sunlight, even after they have been cut off their stalks, they produce large amounts of vegetarian Vitamin D.

Mushrooms can get pricey 
White truffles, which are subterranean fungi, are known for being expensive. At 3.3 pounds, one was purchased for $330,000. The word truffle is synonymous with exquisite taste and a price tag to match the savory goodness. Most truffles are not the real thing but a synthetic flavoring or a diffusion in oil or water sprinkled onto something else to impart such flavor as would be tough to mimic in the real world.
psychedelicsangha.org
  • Mushrooms are strange, and perhaps the strangest thing about them is that we are more closely related to them than other things one would assume. Moreover, mushrooms can form intentions and do things. Take for example the strange cordyceps mushroom that infects bugs, takes parasitic control of their brains, and makes them do things favorable to the shroom and its spread. It doesn't end well for the bug (usually a Himalayan caterpillar or ant) but it disperses the spores and keeps the species thriving. Fortunately, herbalist and elixir maker Ron Teaguarden -- who married a Bhutanese Buddhist and launched a business with herbs and exotic elements he sourced in the last Himalayan Buddhist kingdom in the world (Bhutan) -- figured out a way to cultivate the vegan version of this species in a tub. The strange power of entheogenic ("bringing out the divine from within") psychedelic ("mind making") mushrooms is legendary: LSD (ergot fungus), magic (psilocybin), and perhaps the strangest, Fly agaric (Amanita muscaria), the source of Christmas lore of shaman Santa Clauses and their reindeer from Siberia and Scandinavia like the Lapland of Sweden with its Native Sami culture.
Why we love National Mushroom Day

They make a hearty soup
Goddess (Carl A. P. Ruck)
As the weather gets cooler, nothing warms one up better than a hot bowl of soup. Luckily, mycelium (the root like filaments that feed the fruiting bodies) has a lot of flavor, and National Mushroom Day arrives in the fall — a good time for soup. So put down the pumpkin spice latte and pick up a warm bowl of vegan cream of mushroom soup.

They have a lot of health benefits
National Mushroom Day is a good reminder to eat ‘shrooms because they’re delicious and nutritious. In fact, mushrooms have a high protein content, and they contain B vitamins, Vitamin C, calcium, potassium, zinc, and minerals. So not only is one participating in National Mushroom Day, but also doing something good for health — and we call that a double win.

They have mental health implications

Sacred Cross (John M. Allegro)
Magic mushrooms (psilocybe) have mental health potential, relieving depression, anxiety, the fear of death, and PTSD symptoms ("soul retrieval" in shamanic terms). They have the potential to offer a glimpse of the spiritual world, the unseen reality all around us. Glimpsing that, life may regain its meaning and psychonauts may see that everything is just as it should be, that there's a masterplan in operation that we lost sight of. When grad students pursue mycology, it is often because the mushrooms have "spoken" to them and kicked off an insatiable curiosity for how they do all they do.

Biorehabilitation and saving the world

Mycologist Paul Stamets says that not only do they represent the "first tree" and the "first internet" -- the Wood Wide Web (as their mycelial filaments innervate the forest floor and breakdown plant matter to build themselves up and link root systems and individual plants into a community -- but also that mushrooms will save the world, clean it up, regenerate it.

Vegans, vegetarians, and omnivores can get in on the action

Whether one is a vegetarian (thriving on a peaceful and ecological plant-based diet) or just wants to celebrate with someone who is — National Mushroom Day has something for everyone to enjoy.

Craving burgers? Vegetarians love indulging in mushroom burgers. (Portobello mushroom has been dubbed the “meat” of the fungi world, but there are better choices like sauteed, sliced king oyster, mycelia burgers, which are the of the future with excellent texture, and dried and rehydrated shiitake).

If the carnivorous omnivores out there are unhappy with this option, go for a Beyond Burger — topped with mushrooms in honor of National Mushroom Day. Now everyone can be happy. 
LA's annual wild mushroom fair
  • I Love Lucy Day
  • International Day of Rural Women
  • Kullu Dussehra
  • Mother's Day in Malawi
  • National Dashi Day National
  • National Grouch Day
  • National Latino AIDS Awareness Day
  • National Lemon Bar Day
  • National Mushroom Day
  • Pro-Life Day of Silent Solidarity
  • Shine a Light Night
  • White Cane Safety Day
  • World Students’ Day
  • Nationaltoday.com/national-mushroom-day; Eds., Wisdom Quarterly