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Book : A Really Good Day How Microdosing Made A Mega...

Modelo 01973722
Fabricante o sello Anchor
Peso 0.23 Kg.
Precio:   $67,359.00
Si compra hoy, este producto se despachara y/o entregara entre el 15-05-2025 y el 25-05-2025
Descripción
-Titulo Original : A Really Good Day How Microdosing Made A Mega Difference In My Mood, My Marriage, And My Life

-Fabricante :

Anchor

-Descripcion Original:

“Relentlessly honest and surprisingly funny.” - The Washington Post“Genuinely brave and human.” -The New York Times “Wildly brilliant.” -ElleThe true story of how a renowned writer’s struggle with mood storms led her to try a remedy as drastic as it is forbidden: microdoses of LSD. Her fascinating journey provides a window into one family and the complex world of a once-infamous drug seen through new eyes.When a small vial arrives in her mailbox from Lewis Carroll, Ayelet Waldman is ready to try anything. Her depression has become intolerable, severe and unmanageable; medication has failed to make a difference. Married with four children and a robust career, she should be happy, but instead her family and her work are suffering at the mercy of her mood disorder. So she opens the vial, places two drops on her tongue, and becomes part of a burgeoning underground group of scientists and civilians successfully using therapeutic microdoses of LSD. As Waldman charts her experience over the course of a month, during which she achieved a newfound feeling of serenity, she also explores the history and mythology of LSD, the cutting-edge research into the drug, and the byzantine policies that control it. Drawing on her experience as a federal public defender, and as the mother of teenagers, and her research into the therapeutic value of psychedelics, Waldman has produced a book that is candid, revealing and completely enthralling. Review “Genuinely brave and human… In normalizing the conversation about LSD, she may one day help others feel normal.” -Jennifer Senior, The New York Times A wildly brilliant, radically candid, and rigorous daybook of [Waldman’s] life-changing, last-resort journey. -Lisa Shea, Elle Relentlessly honest and surprisingly funny. -Sharon Peters, USA Today An intriguing and thorough look at the therapeutic possibilities of an illegal drug... Engaging and deeply researched. -Nora Krug, The Washington Post Smart, outspoken, provoking, and funny… Poignant, sometimes hilarious... Waldman calls for renewed research and drug-law reform in this informative, candid, altogether irresistible quest. -Donna Seaman, Booklist Honest and intelligent… A humane, well-reasoned, and absolutely necessary argument for a major overhaul of America’s drug policy. The book triumphantly coheres in a lucid manifesto of how and why the racist, immoral undertaking called the War on Drugs has failed… Passionate, persuasive. -Claire Vaye Watkins, The New Republic About the Author AYELET WALDMAN is the author of the novels Love and Treasure, Red Hook Road, Love and Other Impossible Pursuits, and Daughters Keeper, as well as of the essay collection Bad Mother: A Chronicle of Maternal Crimes, Minor Calamities, and Occasional Moments of Grace, and the Mommy-Track Mystery series. She was a federal public defender and taught at Loyola Law School and the UC Berkeley School of Law, where she developed and taught courses on the legal implications of the war on drugs. She lives in Berkeley, California, with her husband, Michael Chabon, and their four children. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. This morning I took LSD. The table I’m sitting at right now is not breathing. My keyboard is not exploding in psychedelic fireworks, lightning bolts shooting from the letters “R” and “P.” I am not giddy and frantic, or zoned out with bliss. I feel no transcendent sense of oneness with the universe or with the divine. On the contrary. I feel normal.Well, except for one thing: I’m content and relaxed. I’m busy, but not stressed. That might be normal for some people, but it isn’t for me.I did not drop a tab of acid. What I took is known as a “microdose,” a subtherapeutic dose of a drug administered at a quantity low enough to elicit no adverse side effects yet high enough for a measurable cellular response. A microdose of a psychedelic drug is approximately one-tenth of a t
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