Quantcast
Channel: Tokin Woman
Viewing all 444 articles
Browse latest View live

RIP Cassie Gaines, One of Lynyrd Skynyrd's Honkettes

$
0
0
The Honkettes: JoJo Billingsley, Cassie Gaines and Leslie Hawkins
A new documentary is out on Lynyrd Skynyrd, the rockin' Southern Rock band that lost its singer/songwriter Ronnie Van Zant along with band members Cassie & Steve Gaines in a tragic plane crash on this date in 1977.

Lynyrd Skynyrd: If I Leave Here Tomorrow interviews surviving members of the band and reveals how Cassie and her fellow Honkettes classed up the group when they joined as back-up singers.

Cassie Gaines joined the band in 1975 and later recommended her younger brother Steve join in as a guitarist. She was mentioned in stories recounted in the film as the band member who always had marijuana, and it was said of her brother Steve that he "was no farmer, but he could grow some bud." When the band opened for The Rolling Stones, Very Important Pothead Jack Nicholson smelled Cassie's weed and asked if he could take a toke.

Read more »

Michelle Obama Writes About Using Marijuana in New Memoir

$
0
0
Michelle Obama's memoir Becoming, released today, contains a passage about her high school days when she and a boyfriend named David “fooled around and smoked pot in his car.”

Asked by Robin Roberts of ABC's 20/20 why she didn't leave out the marijuana mention, Obama replied, "That was what I did. It's part of the 'Becoming' story....Why would I hide that from the next generation?"

Obviously her youthful dalliance with weed didn't turn Michelle into a worthless pothead. She graduated from Princeton and Harvard Law School, and met her future husband Barack Obama when he interned for her at a law firm.

Read more »

Film Review: "Weed the People"

$
0
0
Weed the People, the Ricki Lake–produced film about the journey parents and their children with cancer are taking with cannabis, is possibly the best documentary I've seen on marijuana, possibly because it's a film made by women and largely depicting women.

The film follows several children undergoing cancer therapy, who are able to stop using powerful opiate painkillers and sometimes see their tumors shrink while using cannabinoids. The intimate stories of the families are exceptionally powerful, and the film goes further to interview doctors, researchers, and activists, presenting a historical perspective on the war on marijuana that has put patients in jeopardy by the illegality of cannabis, and the roadblocks to research on its uses in the US.

One mother summed it up well when she said, "I just find it staggering to accept that with the billions of dollars spend on cancer research, that the medicine we're relying on is made is somebody's kitchen."

Gordon (right) with a patient and his mother in the film.  
Central to the film is the work of Mara Gordon of Aunt Zelda's, a California cannabis cooperative that also advances research on cannabis's medical uses at Harvard University and in Australia. Gordon and her partner have been helping pediatric cancer patients augment their cancer therapy with high-concentration cannabis oils in a hands-on fashion, and gathering data on the results. Gordon also works closely with doctors, who are depicted in the film as accepting their patients'"alternative therapy." One doctor went from skepticism to joining Aunt Zelda's advisory board after seeing the effects of cannabis on his young patient.

Dr. Bonni Goldstein, who has treated 300 children with cannabis, explains in the film that cannabinoids have anti-tumor properties in a test tube, causing apoptosis (cell death) of cancers, but there are few human studies on their effects. Dr. Donald Abrams, a UCSF oncologist, talks about the long history of cannabis in medicine.

The film interviews many of the top minds in the field, including

• Ethan Nadelmann and Amanda Reiman (Drug Policy Alliance)
• Alice O'Leary, the "first lady of medical marijuana" whose husband Bob successfully sued the government to access to his medicine in the 1970s
• Doctors Sunil Aggarwal and Raphael Mechoulam, the Israeli researcher who isolated THC from cannabis

Directed by Abby Epstein, Weed the People was the winner of the Audience Choice award at the Nashville Film Festival.

Catch a Weed the People screening or host one.

Another film, From Shock to Awe, about veterans' use of cannabis and ayahuasca to treat PTSD, is now in theaters. Host a screening of From Shock to Awe.

Mary Todd Lincoln, A Hemp Farmer's Daughter

$
0
0
Last week, the Mary Todd Lincoln House in Lexington, Kentucky celebrated the 200th birthday of our former first lady. It's fitting that the celebration came as Kentucky Senator Mitch McConnell signed off on language for a farm bill that will legalize hemp cultivation in the US, should President Trump choose to sign it.

Mary Todd was a Southern Belle from a prominent, founding family of Fayette county, Kentucky. According to the Kentucky Office in Lexington:

Hemp was introduced at an early date [in Fayette]. Nathan Burrowes, a county resident, invented a machine for cleaning it [in 1796]. The soil produced fine hemp and in 1870 the county grew 4.3 million pounds. The crop declined in the 1890s because of increased demand for tobacco and competition from imported hemp from the Philippines. In 1941, when the federal government saw a possible shortage of manila rope from the Philippines, farmers were encouraged to grow hemp once again for use in World War II. The crop declined again in 1945.

After their marriage in 1842, the Lincolns visited Lexington several times and stayed at the family home on Main street, which is open to the public today. Nearby is the Hunt-Morgan house, built in 1814 for the first millionaire west of the Alleghenies, a hemp merchant named John Wesley Hunt. Among Hunt’s descendants was Confederate General John Hunt Morgan, the flamboyant leader of the guerrilla fighters known as "Morgan’s Raiders." Morgan’s nephew, Thomas Hunt Morgan, born in Lexington in 1866, would become the first Kentuckian to win a Nobel Prize, for his work in genetics.

On November 5, 1849, President Lincoln wrote a letter to William B. Preston, Secretary of the Navy, recommending Mary Todd's uncle, Dr. John T. Parker, for the Hemp Agency of Kentucky. He wrote,

Dear Sir: Being here in Kentucky on private business, I have learned that the name of Dr. John T. Parker is before you as an applicant for the Hemp Agency of the State. I understand that his name has been presented in accordance with the wish of the hemp-growers, rather than his own. I personally know him to be a gentleman of high character, of excellent general information, and, withal, an experienced hemp grower himself. 

Lincoln with her sons Willie and Tad in 1860.
It has been reported that after the death of her husband and two of her three sons, Mary, whose own mother died when she was six, was institutionalized at a sanitarium where hashish was prescribed. She was confined for four months in 1875 at Bellevue Place in Illinois, where patients "were routinely given popular drugs of the era." Typical treatments for her mental symptoms included chloral hydrate, bromide of potassium, opium, and cannabis, or various combinations of these.

Thus as with her contemporary Queen Victoria, we know that doctors who treated her used cannabis, but don't have specific proof that she was given the treatment. The oft-repeated quote supposedly from Abraham Lincoln saying he liked to sit on his porch, smoke a hemp pipe, and play a harmonica has largely been debunked, although Lincoln did play a harmonica.

2018 Tokey Awards

$
0
0

TOKIN WOMAN OF THE YEAR


We've got to give this year's honor to former First Lady Michelle Obama who, in her new memoir, candidly wrote about smoking pot with a high school boyfriend in his car (where they also fooled around).

Asked by Robin Roberts of ABC's 20/20 why she didn't leave out the marijuana mention, Obama replied, "That was what I did. It's part of the 'Becoming' story....Why would I hide that from the next generation?"

Obviously her youthful dalliance with weed didn't turn Michelle into a worthless pothead. It may even have encouraged her interest in organic fruits and vegetables.

HONORABLE MENTIONS

Other famous women who outed themselves this year include Kristen Bell, who said on the podcast WTF with Mark Aaron, “I like my vape pen quite a bit," adding that it doesn't bother her sober hubby Dax Shepard when she uses it occasionally. Her admission stirred some controversy, leading to Shepard tweeting in support.

Charlize Theron, while promoting her marijuana-themed movie Gringo, told E! Magazine, "I was a wake-and-baker for most of my life" and said to Jimmy Kimmel that she had "a good solid eight years on the marijuana." Now, she and her mom share edibles they use for sleep.

Fran Drescher, who wrote about her battle with ovarian cancer in Cancer Schmancer, keynoted a medical marijuana conference in Portland this year. Not only did cannabis help with her own recovery, she reports her father is using it to deal with his Parkinson's disease.

Gayle King, guesting on The Ellen Show, mimed smoking pot while talking about Ellen's recent birthday party, where Amy Schumer told King that she wants to get her high. King says she's planning to try it, and that her friend Oprah Winfrey"has smoked a little marijuana too." In a separate interview on Ellen, Oprah declared the pot-infused birthday party "the most fun I ever had. I don't even know what happened to me." I wonder if she got a contact high (at least).

In other outings, Liz Phair talked about smoking weed with Joe Rogan. Miley Cyrus promised she'd be back to smoking someday, and now says her mom got her back to smokingCarly Simon said she uses CBD oil on her knee, and Toni Braxton embraced CBD as a treatment for lupus. Kathy Ireland and Gwynneth Paltrow released cannabis products, as did Estee Lauder.

BEST FILM


Abby Epstein & Ricki Lake
Weed the People

This powerful documentary follows several children undergoing cancer therapy, who are able to stop using powerful opiate painkillers and sometimes see their tumors shrink while using cannabinoids.

The film goes further to interview doctors, researchers, and activists, presenting a historical perspective on the war on marijuana that has put patients in
jeopardy by the illegality of cannabis, and the roadblocks to research on its uses.

HONORABLE MENTIONS

- Filmmaker Amy Scott profiles director Hal Ashby, including his love of marijuana, in Hal.
- Grace Jones smokes a joint and talks about drugs in Bloodlight and Bami
- Rihanna plays a ganga-smoking rasta in Oceans 8.
- British actresses Celia Imrie and Imelda Stanton puff together playing senior sisters in Finding Your Feet.


BEST BOOK



This comprehensive and thoughtful study on how patients negotiate semi-legalization is as readable as it is thorough.

Drawing on interviews with patients in Colorado, the book explores the practical decisions individuals confront about medical use, including: whether cannabis will work for them; the risks of registering in a state program; and how to handle questions of supply, dosage, and routines of use. Individual stories capture how patients redefine and reclaim cannabis use as legitimate—individually and collectively—and help illustrate how stigma, prejudice, and social change operate.


HONORABLE MENTIONS

MilaHow I Became the Hash Queen

Stephanie Hua and Coreen Carroll: Edibles - Small Bites for the Modern Cannabis Kitchen. 



BEST REPORTING


Amanda Chicago Lewis: How Federal Housing Policy Excludes Poor People From Legal Pot 

Sarah Stillman: America's Other Family Separation Crisis

HONORABLE MENTIONS

Whoopi GoldbergHow women benefit from legal access to cannabis products

Morgan RoweMedical Marijuana in Maine: A Mother-Daughter Adventure

Jacob SullumPot Prohibition Makes Self Defense Illegal

Anthony PapaChildren are one of the 'War on Drugs' casualties

Good Housekeeping: "Should we all be using cannabis?"


BEST BUSINESS REPORTING

Amy MargolisThe Top Cannabis Companies Are Dominated By Men. We Must Do Better 


HONORABLE MENTIONS

Lisa Bernard-Kuhn
: She’s in charge: New accelerator looks to boost opportunities for women in cannabis 

Janet Burns: Women In Film Are Advancing Weed, But Censors And Stigma Don't Help


ACTIVISTS OF THE YEAR


Chelsea and Deedee in the Pot Lifers Museum. 
Deedee Kirkwood 
and Chelsea Sutula
For many years, Deedee Kirkwood has put in endless energy and creativity on behalf of prisoners serving life sentences for marijuana charges. She has 30 prison pen pals for whom she works daily towards clemency and release on a daily basis. Her creative projects have included writing "Toke: The Play," telling her own story of emerging from a housewife and mother who hid her pot smoking to an activist for the cause. Currently, she embodies the spirit of The Pot Fairy creating adorable aprons and purses, the sales of which go to pot prisoners' commissary accounts.

Deedee met Chelsea Sutula after her collective was raided in 2016 and she was arrested. The two women became friends and supporters, and when Chelsea re-opened her Sespe Creek Collective in Ojai, CA, she added a Pot Lifers Museum and Boutique dedicated to Deedee's work and pot prison lifers.


HONORABLE MENTIONS

Kim Karsashian: Donald Trump pardons Alice Marie Johnson after Kim Kardashian plea

Bernadette CoughlinWoman Fired For Consuming Cannabis After Work Is Not Going Down Without A Fight

Kim PhillipsMontana hemp farmer gets permission to use federal water from the BLM

Delores SaltzmanMrs. Saltzman Goes to Jail: The True Story of a Michigan Outlaw



TOP POLITICIANS 



Cynthia Nixon made headlines when she strongly supported marijuana legalization while running for Governor of New York. Although she didn't win, her campaign seems to have nudged Gov. Cuomo towards reform.

In Nevada, Jacky Rosen won a Senate seat after calling out her opponent for opposing legal marijuana, and Gov. Gina Raimondo of Rhode Island signed a marijuana legalization bill into law.

These Congresswomen advanced reform bills this year:

Elizabeth WarrenSTATES Act
Tulsi GabbardDATA Act
Barbara LeePregnant Women in Custody Act (now part of First Step)
Kirsten Gillibrand & Kamala Harris: Marijuana Justice Act.

And finally, Lynne Patton of HUD in NY/NJ tweeted that she would address the problem of medical marijuana users being denied HUD housing, after a 78-year-old was evicted from HUD housing for using cannabis.



MOST SHAMEFUL STORIES 


Maine Lobster Festival Strips Sea Goddess, 18, of Crown Over 'Inappropriate' Social Media Photos 

Wells Fargo Closes Bank Account of Marijuana-Friendly Candidate

NRA TV Calls MJ A Prostitute of Sorts

Feds Squash Doctor Training on Cannabis for Pain

SSRIs increasingly prescribed during pregnancy, without much study on their effects

BLUE MEANIES HATE GREEN


Young mom sues in Texas after questionable marijuana arrest leads to rape by jailer

Pennsylvania woman fined $4000 for marijuana on Royal Caribbean cruise

Law Enforcement and Media Attempt to Slander Murder Victim Over Marijuana

PA Man Killed After Police Chased Him in a Bulldozer over Small Marijuana Grow


BEST COMIC


Findlay & Curtis: Dagga


BEST COMEDY BIT 

Bill Maher: Grass Warfare

Jim Jeffries Ride Along With Amsterdam Cops



TOP TWEETS



































HONORABLE MENTIONS

God
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez
Bill Piper
Rachel Wolfson
https://twitter.com/Ocasio2018/status/975005911394766848
https://twitter.com/Ocasio2018/status/975005911394766848

RIP


Marty Balin
Bernardo Bertolucci
Anthony Bourdain
Penny Marshall
Hugh Masekela
Charlotte Rae (pictured)
Neil Simon
Kate Spade

Mrs. Maisel and the Golden Glow

$
0
0

As talent agent Susie Myerson in Season 2 of the Netflix series The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel—the role for which she won an Emmy last year and just scored her second Golden Globe nom—the very funny Alex Borstein finds, smells, and smokes a joint...and then takes a glowingly stoned bubble bath.

Another memorable character of Borstein's, Ms. Swan, smuggled in "the medicinal kine" on MadTV, where she liked to be "just a little bit stone" in a skit where she outwits a protection racketeer.


Rachel Brosnahan, who just picked up her second consecutive Golden Globe for her lead role in the series, puffed in Season 1 with none other than Lenny Bruce (a stoner gal's dream date; at least one known Tokin' Woman, Annie Ross, did so).

Since Brosnahan's last Netflix appearance was as a call girl on House of Cards who becomes the obsession of powerful politico—leading to an end almost worse than the subway slaying of another female character—it's nice and notable that the matriarchal village behind Mrs. Maisel, which Brosnahan thanked in her acceptance speech, gave her a more positive role to play.

The plot of the series plays into just what Glenn Close—who toked onscreen herself in The Big Chill—got a standing ovation for at the Globes, when she spoke of her mother sublimating her own needs to her family's. Mrs. Maisel, who wears a cocktail dress and pearls as did Tokin' Woman Joan Rivers, is also said to be based on housewives-turned-comics Phyllis Diller (whose hair has inspired a marijuana strain) and Totie Fields.

In the James Baldwin novel brought to the screen in If Beale Street Could Talk—which was honored with multiple Globe nominations—a young black man is falsely accused of rape by a system that spiraled from a marijuana charge. Regina King, who was so powerful in Ray, won the Globe for her performance in that film.

It's too bad Sandra Oh wasn't given a chance to be her sassy self as hostess sans the drab Andy Samberg. I thought her character was so cool when she passed a joint to Virginia Madsen in Sideways, hiding it from her kids. I haven't seen Killing Eve, for which she grabbed a Globe, but I hope it's not about actually killing a woman.

A Special Achievement award went to Carol Burnett, who played a medical marijuana smoker on Hawaii 5-0. The prestigious Cecil B. DeMille award, which Oprah won last year,  went to Jeff "The Dude" Bridges, who embraced his Duditude in what was the sweetest, stoniest speech since Whoopi Goldberg won her Oscar on weed.

For counterbalance, it all ended a bit creepily as Richard Gere groped the waist of co-presenter Julianne Moore, and Best Writing and Directing honors went to the Mexican film Roma, also on Netflix, in which the men get away with leaving their wives and girlfriends to bring up their children (and clean their dog's shit). I'm not sure that to make of that.

Celebrating Women's Herstory Month

$
0
0
March was declared Women's History Month in 1987 by the United States Congress, after being petitioned by the National Women's History Alliance. This year's theme is "Visionary Women: Champions of Peace & Nonviolence."  

We've got some Visionary Tokin' Women to celebrate!

Let's start with actress/poet Dora Shaw, who was apparently inspired by FitzHugh Ludlow’s writings to try hashish on July 4, 1859 with novelist Marie Stevens Case, who recorded the event in The New York Saturday Press (7/16/59). After a fascinating experience where Case reports, "I was fast becoming a sphinx—my head expanded to the size of the room, and I thought I was an oracle doomed to respond through all Eternity...'Do you not see,' I cried, 'that I am stone....and if you make me laugh, I shall be scattered to the four winds.'" After seemingly having a vision of the Egyptian Goddess Seshat, the women watched a fireworks display. "The effect of the hascheesh was still upon us a little and the rockets seemed the most astonishing and gorgeous things in the universe." So the first recorded use of American women taking cannabis happened with a fireworks show.

In 1869, writer Louisa May Alcott, author of Little Women, published "Perilous Play," a short story in which a group of young socialites enjoys hashish bon-bons. It ends with the declaration, "Heaven bless hashish if its dreams end like this!"A Modern Mephistopheles, the novel Alcott published anonymously in 1877, contains a much fuller description of hashish's effects on a heroine named Gladys. "I feel as if I could do anything to-night," Gladys announces, and she came to them "with a swift step, an eager air, as if longing to find some outlet for the strange energy which seemed to thrill every nerve and set her heart beating audibly."


Our former first lady Mary Todd Lincoln, the daughter of a Kentucky hemp farmer, was confined for four months in 1875 at a sanitarium where patients "were routinely given popular drugs of the era." Typical treatments for her mental symptoms included chloral hydrate, bromide of potassium, opium, and cannabis, or various combinations of these. Thus as with her contemporary Queen Victoria, we know that doctors who treated her prescribed cannabis, but don't have specific proof that she was given the treatment.

In the 1920s and beyond, singers Bessie Smith and Billie Holiday used marijuana, as did dancer Josephine Baker and actress Tallulah Bankhead. Jazz singer Anita O'Day and actress Lila Leeds were targeted for arrest for their marijuana use in the 1940s.

Author Maya Angelou wrote vividly about her experiences with cannabis circa 1946 in Gather Together in My Name, the sequel to I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings. "The food was the best I'd ever tasted. Every morsel was an experience of sheer delight. I lost myself in a haze of sensual pleasure, enjoying not only the tastes but the feel of the food in my mouth, the smells, and the sound of my jaws chewing......I decided to dance for my hostesses. The music dipped and swayed, pulling and pushing. I let my body rest on the sound and turned and bowed in the tiny room. The shapes and forms melted until I felt I was in a charcoal sketch, or a sepia watercolor."


The hashish fudge recipe published in The Alice B. Toklas Cookbook (1954) has made Toklas a beloved figure to Tokin' Women everywhere (although she disavowed knowledge of it). Her lover Gertrude Stein published a play in 1947 with a character named Jenny Reefer. An episode called "Tabitha's Weekend" that aired on TV's Bewitched on March 6, 1969 has this interesting exchange: Endora (the grandmother witch played by Agnes Moorehead) is offered cookies by Darrin's (straight) mother. "They're not by chance from an Alice B. Toklas recipe?" Endora asks. When told they were not, "Then I think I'll pass," is her answer.

In the 1960s, musicians Grace Slick, Janis Joplin and "Mama" Cass Elliot enjoyed marijuana and sang about it, and about social justice. Anthropologist Margaret Mead testified before Congress in 1969 in favor of marijuana legalization, and said that she had tried it herself.

And for a visionary activist, Karen Silkwood was carrying a manilla envelope carrying documents about corruption at the Kerr-McGee plutonium processing plant where she worked when her car suspiciously ran off the road in 1974. The documents were never found afterwards, but investigators did find marijuana cigarettes in the pocket of her coat.

Read about more Tokin' Women at VeryImportantPotheads.com/women, and in the book Tokin' Women: A 4000-Year Herstory

On International Women's Day: Why So Many Nonwhites Have a Harder Time with Marijuana

$
0
0
One Day at a Time, the Netflix series that remakes the 1970's sitcom about a single mom with a Latina cast, just tackled marijuana in its new third season (Episode 5: "Nip It in the Bud").


It did a pretty good job, addressing vaping, edibles, youth use, opiate addiction, and racism in the drug war.

In the episode, Penelope (Justina Machado), a military veteran and nurse who suffers from PTSD and anxiety, catches her 15-year-old son Alex vaping marijuana at a "Bud E. Fest." She takes the problem to her therapy group lead by Pam, played by Mackenzie Williams, who starred in the original series and famously had an addiction problem after her father turned her onto drugs while she was still a teen.

When Penelope brings up the subject, some of the women in the group reveal they smoke pot. A vet in a wheelchair notes that cannabis helps her with pain (and more), and that "a lot of veterans were prescribed opiates and couldn't get off of them." Penelope says it happened to her ex-husband (which might explain why he's her ex). A great new film, From Shock to Awe, follows veteran couples who journey with cannabis and ayahuasca to find healing.

"I don't smoke since I'm sober, but boy did I like it," Pam tells the group. She correctly notes that at age 15, the brain is still developing, and Penelope makes this point to her son when he tries to tell her pot is no big deal because it's legal. "It's not legal for you," she counters, comparing it to alcohol, tobacco and gambling.

"Of course I tried it, but Alex can't know that. He needs to think I'm perfect," Penelope tells her group.  But she does admit to him that she used it, telling a story about being arrested for smoking a joint while her white friend was only given a warning. She tells him he needs to be especially careful because he is Latino. Sadly, it's true: in California where the sitcom is set, Hispanics were again the most-arrested demographic in 2016, accounting for 3,066 of the felony arrests, with 2,076 whites arrested and 1,592 blacks.

The black woman in Penelope's group says, "Weed makes me paranoid, like everyone's out to get me. Because when you're black, everyone is." She makes a good a point: the drug war has disproportionately arrested and incarcerated blacks as well as Latinos.

Meanwhile, for comic relief, the episode has Penelope's mom Lydia (played by the still-fabulous Rita Moreno at age 87), inadvertently consuming cannabis lozenges at the opera and gets all the classic symptoms: awareness (pictured) followed by giggles, paranoia, and the munchies.

Interestingly, Lydia only resorts to the lozenges for her cough when she discovers she hasn't brought her faux opera glasses containing rum; Penelope swigs a hit of liquor from binoculars of Schneider's after talking with her son about his sobriety. So alcohol is still OK to use and joke about. Maybe if that were still illegal it would make people paranoid about using it, too.

"We Are Mary Jane" Exhibit in Barcelona Celebrates Worldwide Women of Weed

$
0
0
Celebrating Women’s Herstory Month, “We Are Mary Jane,” an exhibit presenting 12 female cannabis activists from around the world, opened on March 14 at the breathtakingly beautiful Hash Marihuana & Hemp Museum in Barcelona.

I was fortunate enough to attend the opening party, and be included in the exhibit among these inspiring women.

Opening the exhibit is “The Hash Queen” Mila Jansen, who as a single mother invented The Pollinator, a machine used to make hash, while observing a clothes dryer’s tumbling action. Mila published an autobiography last year and was present at the opening and the coinciding Spannabis show with a booth where she signed copies of her book.

Another grand dame in the exhibit is Michka Seeliger-Chatelain, a Paris-based activist and author who has become the first woman I know of to have a cannabis strain named after her, available from Sensi Seeds. Michka’s bestselling books on cannabis have been translated into English and Spanish, and I traded a Tokin’ Woman book for her beautifully written (in French) autobiography A La Main Gauche (From the Left Hand).

Carola Pérez, the Madrid-based medical marijuana activist who spoke eloquently at the ICBC conference that coincided with the exhibit opening, is also represented, and her TEDx Talk is included. “Abuela Marihuana” Fernanda de la Figuera, a 77-year-old activist who grows her own marijuana and runs a social club in Spain, was included and present at the event.

“Señora Cannabis” Alicia Castilla of Uruguay is quoted saying, “I would love to toke with Saint Hildegard” (one of my Tokin’ Women). Castilla was imprisoned for 94 days at the age of 66 after police discovered 29 unsexed marijuana seedlings at her home in 2011. She has the most radical statement in the exhibit, saying, “I see two futures: one masculine, to get all kinds of commercial benefits from the plant, to transform it into a commodity, and in which the products obtained are sold at high prices, even with misleading advertising. The other, feminine, to learn to cultivate it according to personal needs, to recognize the properties of each variety, to discover the way to use it, in each case, according to the needs of the patient, in a direct relationship with the plant and without the interference of money.”

Also represented are the “Princess of Pot,” Canadian activist and Jodie Emery; Debora Paulino, pioneer hemp cultivator at the Obelisk Farm in Latvia; and the multitalented Cedella Marley, Bob Marley’s eldest daughter who is a cannabis cookbook author.

Americans represented are California-based activist and author Mikki Norris, and “Dr.” Dina of Los Angeles who notes that, “Brownie Mary paved the way for all of us.” Brownie Mary was the San Francisco-based activist who became famous for baking pot brownies for AIDS patients in the early days of medical marijuana activism.

I (Ellen Komp) am included with a statement about our Herstory and an open letter I wrote to Hillary Clinton while she was running for president. A letter from feminist activist Francesca Brivio Grill to Martin Vizcarra, the president of Peru, is also included.

A Tokin’ Women book has been donated to the Museum, which seems necessary since a book published by the museum contains a spread of 40 famous marijuana users including only two women, both associated with powerful men (Marianne Faithful and Frida Kahlo).

Norris’s statement summed up the exhibit well: “I hope that many more women will engage with cannabis businesses to bring more compassion and greater diversity to people of all genders, races, religions, classes, ethnicities, persuasions, etc. Cannabis has a way of bringing people from various backgrounds together making us more empathetic and open towards each other, so diversity is the key to its future.”

The “We Are Mary Jane” exhibit, with materials presented in English, Spanish and French, plus a list of worldwide women-run cannabis activist organizations, will be open with free entry through September 29, 2019. Don’t miss the full museum, housed in a fabulously restored 15-century palace, and plan to take the 80-minute audiotour of the extensive collection. The museum is open daily from 10am-10 pm.

Of Paris, Potheads and Jack Herer

$
0
0

I guess I'm feeling extra sad and nostalgic today because I'm watching Notre Dame burning, and it's the anniversary of the passing of "The Hemperor" Jack Herer.

I visited Paris and saw Notre Dame in 1991, which indirectly lead to my becoming a hemp activist (the guy who got me into the movement wanted to meet me when he heard I'd gone to France by myself; also a man I met on the plane advised me to pray for guidance in my life and the next thing I knew, the rebel without a cause had found hers: hemp).

I started my journey as a hemp/marijuana activist at Herer's booth on Venice Beach (pictured), which is how we turned people onto hemp, one by one (we couldn't even get the word "hemp" into the newspaper at the time; they would always change it to "marijuana"). Only one person in 10 knew anything but "rope and dope" when I joined the hemp movement; after a few years, only 1 in 10 didn't know all about hemp. It was all done by the grassroots, and Jack was the leader.

Jack was self educated, but he would surprise you by doing things like speaking Korean in restaurants (he served in Korea during that war). Without Jack's tireless research (and his self-admitted ability to get others to help him) we would quite likely have lost the USDA's Hemp for Victory film, which as The Emperor tells, he had to go to D.C. to secure. His research and dedication re-invigorated the marijuana reform movement that had nearly been wiped out in the "Just Say No" 1980s.

I always said about Jack, he had a heart as big as all outdoors...and a voice to match. Once I heard him speak at the Oregon venue where later he suffered a stroke, leading up to his death from a heart attack in 2010. Standing at the far end of the football-field-sized venue, all the other speakers sounded like gobbeldygook until Jack took the stage and came through clear as a bell. The only comparable experience I've had was hearing Ella Fitzgerald sing at a stadium.

Jack used his voice well, stumping for hemp across the country and making The Emperor Wears No Clothes a million-copy seller. I traveled with him to Colorado in 1992 to work on a petition campaign, and worked with him to edit the 9th edition of The Emperor, watching him ponder over every line. We did this late at night at a Sunset Blvd. copyshop where renting computers after midnight was cheaper. One day he looked around and said, "Everything here could be made of hemp. The carpets, the computer terminals, the drapes..." While driving around he envisioned hemp fields everywhere. Now that we've effectively legalized hemp cultivation in the US with the new farm bill, Jack's vision is becoming a reality.

The section from The Emperor about famous people who smoked pot inspired my website VeryImportantPotheads.com and its spin offs, this blog and the book Tokin' Women. Moreover, Jack's often-repeated mantra that educating people about the many uses and history of hemp would change their minds about it is why my activism has always had an educational component.

The cover of Tokin' Women is "Women of Algiers," a painting by French artist Eugene Delacroix that I saw at the Louvre on my 1991 trip. In Paris this 4/21,  the film "Mary Janes: The Women of Weed" will screen at the Paris 420 Festival, hosted by NORML France.

Sula Benet, Kaneh Bosm, and the Amazon Women

$
0
0
Polish anthropologist Dr. Sula Benet (aka Sara Benetowa), whose 1936 doctoral thesis ''Hashish in Folk Customs and Beliefs'' won her a Warsaw Society of Sciences scholarship for graduate study at Columbia University, theorized that the biblical incense kaneh bosm, meaning "aromatic cane" was cannabis, mistranslated as "calamus" in the modern bibles.

Benet proposes that the term cannabis is derived from Semitic languages and that both its name and forms of its use were borrowed by the Scythians from the peoples of the Near East. This predated by at least 1000 years hemp's mention by the Greek historian Herodotus, who in the fifth century B.C., observed that the Scythians used the plant in funeral rituals, thowing hemp seeds on the fire and "inhaling the smoke and becoming intoxicated, just as the Greeks become inebriated with wine."

"Tracing the history of hemp in terms of cultural contacts, the Old Testament must not be overlooked since it provides one of the oldest and most important written source materials," Benet writes. "In the original Hebrew text of the Old Testament there are references to hemp, both as incense, which was an integral part of religious celebration, and as an intoxicant. Cannabis as an incense was also used in the temples of Assyria and Babylon 'because its aroma was pleasing to the Gods." (Meissner 1925 (II): 84)."

Benet continues, "Both in the original Hebrew text of the Old Testament and in the Aramaic translation, the word 'kaneh' or ' keneh' is used either alone or linked to the adjective bosm in Hebrew and busma in Aramaic, meaning aromatic. It is 'cana' in Sanskrit, 'qunnabu' in Assyrian, 'kenab' in Persian, 'kannab' in Arabic and 'kanbun' un /chaldean. In Exodus 30: 23, God directed Moses to make a holy oil composed of 'myrrh, sweet cinnamon, kaneh bosm and kassia.' 

"In many translations of the Bible's original Hebrew, we find 'kaneh bosm' variously and erroneously translated as 'calamus' and 'aromatic reed,' a vague term. Calamus, (Calamus aromaticus) is a fragrant marsh plant. The error occurred in the oldest Greek translation of the Hebrew Bible, Septuagint, in the third century B.C., where the terms 'kaneh, kaneh bosm' were incorrectly translated as 'calamus.' And in the many translations that followed, including Martin Luther's, the same error was repeated.

"Another piece of evidence regarding the use of the word 'kaneh' in the sense of hemp rather than reed among the Hebrews is the religious requirement that the dead be buried in 'kaneh' shirts. Centuries later, linen was substituted for hemp (Klein 1908).

"In the course of time, the two words 'kaneh' and 'bosm' were fused into one, 'kanabos' or 'kannabus,' known to us from Mishna, the body of traditional Hebrew law. The word bears an unmistakable similarity to the Scythian 'cannabis.' Is it too far-fetched to assume that the Semitic word 'kanbosm' and the Scythian word 'cannabis' mean the same thing?

"Since hemp was originally used in rituals, it may be assumed that the Scythians spread their custom among the people with whom they came into contact. The Siberian tribes of Pazaryk in the Altai region (discovered by the Soviet archaeologist, S. Rudenko) left burial mounds in which bronze vessels containing burnt hemp seeds to produce incense vapors were found. Rudenko believes that these objects were used for funeral purification ceremonies similar to those practised by the Scythians (Emboden 1972: 223)."

In her book The Amazons: Lives & Legends of Warrior Women Across the Ancient World, Stanford Professor Adrienne Mayor presents new archeological and DNA evidence for the existence of the once-mythical Scythian Amazon Women. She puts them at the funeral fires, inhaling hemp smoke and also availing themselves of other intoxicants like fermented milk or honey and haoma/soma, which may have been mead, cannabis, Amanita muscaria, other mushrooms, ephedra or opium (or a combination).

As Mayor tells in her Google Talk on the subject (which served as my Easter /Ishtar sermon today): whereas Ancient Greek women were confined indoors to sew and weave, Scythian girls learned to ride horses, hunt and fight with bows and arrows, and their women fought with swords and battle-axes alongside their brothers. Like men they could revel in their physicality, with freedoms including wearing trousers and choosing their own sexual partners. Mayor points out that burial mounds found in the Altai region housed both male and female warriors, along with weapons, hemp clothing, and "personal kits for smoking hemp."

Resurrecting Jezebel

$
0
0
Shirley Jones playing a Jezebel
with Burt Lancaster in "Elmer Gantry." 
In the bible, Jezebel was a Phoenician princess who married King Ahab of Israel in the 9th century. Queen Jezebel and her followers were defeated by the prophet Elijah, and to this day “a Jezebel” is a term applied to a fallen woman not to be trusted.

Throughout the Old Testament, prophet after prophet warns the children of Israel that God will bring misery upon them unless they cease to burn incense to worship the god Baal. Baal was depicted, in some regions, as a horned god, and his horns were adopted for the Christian concept of the Devil.

Some scholars think that the “burnt offerings” that were made to Baal and his consort Ashtoreth/Asherah "The Queen of Heaven" were cannabis, mistranslated as “calamus” from kaneh bosm ("aromatic cane") in scripture. If so, the first known prohibition of cannabis was a Judeo-Christian one.

Baal was also called Bel, a descendant of Belili, the Sumerian White Goddess. Jezebel, who's name means "where is Bel?" was a follower of Bel, and therefore possibly an incense inhaler herself. In Jeremiah 44, the women tell the prophet that they will continue to secretly burn incense to the Queen of Heaven.

Jezebel was the name of a 1938 Bette Davis movie wherein she betrays her fiancé by wearing a flamboyant red dress instead of a virginal white one to a ball. In the 1960 movie Elmer Gantry, in order to impress another minister/mark, Elmer (Burt Lancaster) throws a picture of a scantily clad LuLu (Shirley Jones) into the fire, pronouncing "Burn, ye naked Jezebel!"


Read more »

Tokin' Woman Does Chelsea (Lately)

$
0
0
Chelsea gives a thumbs up upon
receiving her copy of Tokin' Women
Chelsea Handler, whose new book Life Will Be the Death of Me debuted as the #1 New York Times bestseller last month, appeared yesterday at The Hall of Flowers, a "B2B Premium Cannabis Trade Show" in Santa Rosa, California.

Interviewed by "Dr. Dina" for a conversation titled "Changing Stigmas: Hollywood's Opportunity with Cannabis," Handler looked great in a "Feminized" T-shirt, pencil jeans and purple pumps, and exhibited wit, wisdom, and lots of humor.

To the first question, "What is your relationship with cannabis?" Handler replied unequivocally, "It's strong." Saying that she tried marijuana a few times in high school but got "too stoned" and paranoid, she thought, "Why don't I just stick with alcohol?"

But in her new book she relates how after the Trump election she found that her rage at the political situation was overly exacerbated by alcohol, and so she began learning more about marijuana as a substitute, starting as an aid to meditation. "It's changed my life," she announced. "It's cut my drinking in half, which is a sentence I never thought I'd say."

Though she said she's more of recreational user, she also said she's replaced Xanax and sleeping pills with edible cannabis products. She joked that she's learning, "This is the strain I use to sleep, to wake up, to go to my nephew's bar mitzvah..."

Handler is launching a cannabis company aimed at producing products especially for women who are "dipping their toes in the water" of using cannabis again, or for the first time. Mentioning her sisters and a niece who uses it successfully for anxiety she said, "I've seen it impact people I care about. And I know from experience if you can do that, you can impact the world."

Having smoked with Willie Nelson and Snoop, she said, "That's serious shit. That's not an introductory weed for women who might want to come back to the marketplace." She wants her customers to know, "You're safe with me. I wouldn't promote something I don't use. I think people know they can rely on me for authenticity."

Handler is working on developing cannabis strains that don't cause "the munchees," which ought to be especially popular with women (even non-female Bill Maher mentioned he was interested when she guested on his show recently.)

Watch: Chelsea Handler and Dr. Dina conversing about cannabis. 
Talking about ending the stigma against "potheads," Handler spoke of the importance of normalizing cannabis use, in life and in the media. "So many users aren't out because of shame," she lamented, adding, "But I have time to be here and be a New York Times #1 bestselling author."

"We need to highlight that cannabis can be used to function, to create, to contribute," Handler said. "We're going through a cultural shift. Like the world is getting browner and gayer, cannabis is coming. So hop on board before you miss the bus."

"I think the world needs cannabis more than it's ever needed anything," she continued. "Alcohol is not doing it.....if we want a kinder, softer and gentler place, then we have the answer." For herself, she says cannabis makes her more patient, and slower to react, "which for me is a great thing." Asked what she likes to do when stoned, Handler replied, "I like to write," and added that she's also getting into exercising on cannabis.

Looking to the future, Chelsea envisioned more state-by-state legalization, leading to legalization on the federal level. Dina, the inspiration for the TV show "Weeds" who was a consultant to the Netflix series "Disjointed," spoke about her nonprofit FreedomGrow.org supporting pot prisoners, announcing that longtime prisoner Paul Free was freed the day before, and that Anthony Bascara, who's been imprisoned for 36 years and is now in his late 80s, is also going home. She introduced her partner in the venture, Stephanie Landa, who was incarcerated in federal prison for five years for growing pot for Dina's dispensary.

Dina brought up Whoopi Goldberg's upcoming film Waldo on Weed about a pediatric eye cancer patient, and someone from the audience asked about Chelsea's recent appearance on "The View" where (apparently) Whoopi is not permitted to talk about cannabis. "She can't talk about much," Handler said. "But I'm pretty sure she was stoned. I gave her a look like, 'we're in this together.'" She added that she's starting a podcast and that, although there was concern by the producers about her talking about cannabis on the show, she was able to convince them it wasn't a problem.

On my way home, I listened to an interview on KPFA radio with Jane Fonda at the San Francisco Film Festival in 1975 (the year both Chelsea and Dina were born). Jane talked about how the Nixon administration tried to blackball her from the the movie industry due to her political activity, but she prevailed. It's nice to see prominent women now able to stand up for cannabis and stay in the public eye.

Buy tickets to Handler's current Sit-Down Comedy Tour.

Film Review: "Wine County" and RIP Peggy Lipton

$
0
0
Ana Gasteyer whips out the Molly in "Wine Country"

"Wine Country," now in theaters and on Netflix, is directed by Amy Poehler, who co-stars as the insecure control freak Abby on a weekend getaway with gal pals played by fellow SNLers Rachel Dratch, Maya Rudolph, Ana Gasteyer, Paula Pell and Emily Spivey.

Of course throughout the movie the characters compulsively slurp wine, our socially acceptable but not very interesting inebriant. The group talks about microdosing Molly, but doesn't do it, mainly because they don't know how it will react with all the prescription drugs they're taking, including Wellbutrin, Xanax, Zoloft, and "WhoYaGonnaCallTrex."  Zoloft, being a Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitor (SSRI) arguably already works as a microdose of psychedelics, since those substances flood the brain's serotonin receptors. Usually people taking SSRIs don’t feel the affect of psychedelics.

"Apparently we're just not that interested in doing drugs," Abby announces, to which Spivey's astutely responds, "Except for the thousands of drugs we just listed." Instead, the 50-year-old birthday girl Rebecca (Dratch) lays on the floor all night in back pain to have her needed revelation (which sounds a lot less pleasant than taking a little MDMA).

"Toking" is also only mentioned, as a means of coping alongside soaking in a tub, by an amusingly butchy character played by Tina Fey. Then the script makes her a cokehead. Poehler recently pronounced herself unproductive on pot and had a bad time the day after she tried Molly (she wasn't asked about wine). Maybe someday like Chelsea Handler she'll figure out that cannabis can enhance creativity, and it's safer than alcohol. SNL was certainly funnier when its writers and actors smoked weed.

Read more »

RIP To the Marvelous Doris Day

$
0
0
Day in Man with a Horn (1950).
RIP to Doris Day, a wonderful singer, dancer and actress who was hipper than most knew: Groucho Marx once joked, "I'm so old I knew Doris Day before she was a virgin." Bob Hope's nickname for her was "jigglebutt." 

Day was too marvelous for words in films like Man with a Horn, The Pajama Game, and It Happened to Jane, where she fights for her rights in a small New England town. As part of her well marketed wholesome image, Day plays a character shocked by marijuana in Lover Come Back (1961), one of several films she made with Rock Hudson.

The rather convoluted plot goes something like this: 

Advertising executives Carol Templeton (Doris) and Jerry Webster (Rock) work for competing ad agencies. Angered by Jerry’s method of nabbing clients using alcohol and women, Carol brings his behavior up before the Advertising Council. But Jerry bribes Carol’s star witness by filming her in a TV commercial for an imaginary product named VIP. When the ads are accidentally broadcast, Jerry pays a scientist to invent something he can call VIP. Meanwhile, Carol goes after the VIP account and mistakes Jerry, whom she has never met, for the scientist. Rock goes along, pretending to be an inexperienced and marriageable academic instead of the rogue his character truly is, a ruse that was a good cover for Hudson’s homosexuality.

When Carol shows up at Webster’s apartment to confront him she is surprised when Jerry, who she thinks is the scientist, opens the door. Jerry feigns confusion, implying he was partying with the dastardly Webster the night before and his memory is fuzzy.

Rock: “I was dizzy after that cigarette he gave me.”

Doris: “Oh, that depraved monster! What kind of cigarette?”

Rock: “I don’t know. It didn’t have any printing on it.”


Read more »

When Margot Fonteyn Got Caught at a Pot Party in San Francisco

$
0
0
Fonteyn and Nureyev dance in 1967, the year they were arrested for pot.
British Ballerina Margot Fonteyn was 42 years old in 1961 when 23-year-old Rudolf Nureyev defected from Russia and became her dance partner.

By then Fonteyn had long been the top dancer in the world, as told in the documentary Margot, now on Amazon Prime. A vision of grace and beauty with a brilliant smile and perfect proportions, her flawless technique and "miraculous" balance allowed her to stay on pointe for a breathtaking length of time, all the while keeping her crowds enthralled with the emotion she emitted. 

Always well dressed in designer clothes, Fonteyn nonetheless had a fascination with hippies, as told in the biography Margot Fonteyn: A Life by Meredith Daneman, who writes that she "did raise her hem well above her fairly sturdy knees, and was photographed at a nightclub wearing an African-style dress of grass fringing and wooden beads....with a psychedelic dot on her tummy." When someone said he found the hippy culture "scruffy and irksome," Fonteyn replied, "Oh no! I think it's fascinating. I can't take my eyes off those people."  She was also described as a bit of a "party animal" who liked to keep up with Nureyev's curiosity about everything. 

On July 10, 1967, as Daneman tells it, a bearded hippy named Paul Wesley stood outside the stage door after Margot's performance in San Francisco, and invited her to a "freak-out." She took the address and, wearing a white fur coat, brought Nureyev along to what turned out to be a pot party at 42 Belvedere Street in the Haight district.
Read more »

Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice Turn 50

$
0
0
Alice (Dyan Cannon) & Ted (Elliott Gould) & Bob
(Robert Culp) & Carol (Natalie Wood) have a pot party. 
This year marks the 50th anniversary of Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice, the first modern movie that depicted women smoking pot.

The film was written and directed by Paul Mazursky (who also wrote 1968's I Love You Alice B. Toklas, in which pot brownies are imbibed). It begins with married couple Bob (Robert Stack) and Carol (Natalie Wood) participating in an encounter group, based on Mazursky's experiences at the Esalen Institute in Big Sur, CA.

Having opened up to new experiences, Bob has a fling with a colleague on a business trip, and confesses his infidelity to Carol. She is surprisingly accepting of Bob's experimentation, and soon tries some of her own.

Child star/actress Natalie Wood (Miracle on 34th Street,
Rebel Without a Cause, West Side Story
) puffs pot.
The couple's experiments include smoking pot with their friends, another married couple Ted (Elliot Gould) and Alice (Dyan Cannon). Wood as Carol daintily takes a few little hits, after filling the pipe and lighting it for her husband.

She then pronounces herself "totally and completely zonked out of my skull" but doesn't really act like it, except for amusing herself by talking about doing things "groovily and peacefully."

Cannon, despite her character's name being Alice (as in Wonderland or B. Toklas), insists that she "never gets high," while puffing and coughing away. Her revelation is that she's too fearful of "getting into a potful of trouble," especially because Bob & Ted are lawyers. Ted tells her he loves her anyway, calling her "my sweet unstoned mother of my only son."

Read more »

Marilyn Monroe and Marijuana

$
0
0
Monroe in River of No Return. The green dress
she wore sold for $500K at auction in 2011. 
It's no surprise that modern screen Goddess Marilyn Monroe was born in June 1, the first day of the month named for the goddess Hera/Juno.

A talented singer and dancer, Monroe exuded sex as no one before, or since. Just see her cameo in the Marx BrothersLove Happy, or her opening number in There's No Business Like Show Business. Or her songs in River of No Return with Robert Mitchum. Or her powerhouse performance in a movie she produced, The Prince and the Showgirl. And yes, that was her playing ukulele in Some Like It Hot. 

A foster child quite probably abused by both men and women in her youth, Norma Jeane Mortenson worked her way to the top of the entertainment business, no easy feat. She was the first actress since Mary Pickford to form her own production company and (literally) call her own shots.

Having married the top athlete perhaps ever (Joe DiMaggio), she surprised everyone by next marrying playwright Arthur Miller, who soon was called before the HUAC committee during the shameful Red Scare of the 1950s. Monroe stood by her man, drawing cameras to her as she bravely appeared with her husband.

Around this time, in a home movie released in 2009, Marilyn apparently smoked marijuana at a party in New Jersey. According to Keya Morgan, who purchased the film for $275,000, the filmmaker (named Gretchen), told him she "rolled up the joint and handed it over to Marilyn."

Morgan says it was the FBI who tipped off Morgan to the film's existence. "They felt that Marilyn Monroe posed a security threat to the presidency because she was under the influence of marijuana and under the influence of alcohol, and could be a danger not only to herself but also to the presidency," he said. The plot sickens. 

Tony Curtis, Monroe's co-star in Some Like It Hot, was brilliant as a swarmy PR flack who tries to smear a jazz guitarist as a pot-smoking commie in Sweet Smell of Success (1957). Curtis was caught with marijuana at London's Heathrow Airport in 1971, when he flew to London for an anti-tobacco appearance.

Monroe's friend Jeanne Carmen's son and biographer confirmed to me that both she and Monroe smoked pot. An actress, pin-up girl, and trick-shot golfer, Carmen lived next door to Monroe in the years before she died in 1962. The apartments were owned by Frank Sinatra, as described in valet George Jacobs' book Mr. S.: My Life with Frank Sinatra.

Carmen died in 2007, but her son Brandon James writes, "My mom was not a 'pot smoker' but she did smoke pot on occasion. Marilyn was the same way." James traveled with his mother to events in the 1990s, and gathered her experiences in Jeanne Carmen: My Wild Wild Life (2006).

One of tales told in the book happened in 1961 or 1962 when Marilyn and Jeanne were invited to a "boat party" with B-movie actor/ladies' man Steve Cochran, who fancied himself a new Errol Flynn. Cochran pulled out some weed but when he tried to turn the party into an orgy, Marilyn and Jeanne jumped ship. (Alchibiades lives, but it's the Goddesses we still worship.)

Blonde pot-puffing love interests appear in two seminal Hollywood novels, The Day of the Locust and The Last Tycoon, see Can L.A. Solve Its Mexican Marijuana Problem? Not Until It Confronts Its Past.

Pleasure, Poison, Prescription, Prayer: The Worlds of Mind-Altering Substances Exhibit in Berkeley

$
0
0
I stopped to see the Pleasure, Poison, Prescription, Prayer: The Worlds of Mind-Altering Substances exhibit at the Phoebe A. Hearst Museum of Anthropology on UC Berkeley Campus. The introduction states, "The objects in this exhibit illustrate just a few of the changing meanings of substances and the people who use them. With the legal and cultural landscape of mind-altering drugs rapidly changing here in California and around the world, the Hearst Museum invites you to question your assumptions and alter your perspective on the origins and contents of these diverse substances.” 

The exhibition is nicely mounted, with brief descriptive sections, along with art and artifacts for peyote, kava, coca, opium, coffee, sugar, tobacco etc., pinning each substance to a part of the world where it has been used. Cannabis rates only a small section with a description tracing it back only 6000 years (in Western use) and displaying a few nice hookahs from India. It concludes, “Across ten of the United States, cannabis is now regulated as a controlled substance like alcohol and tobacco.”

It’s a bit Western and male dominated, with no mention in the extensive alcohol section of the possibility that ancient wines contained other substances, and nothing about psychedelic compounds in native tobacco (harmalines in Nicotiana rusticum). Women are depicted only in photos of the well-known Minoan Poppy Goddess found in Crete, and “L’Exalation de la Fleur” stone fragment from Greece, plus a description of a drunken ritual to the Hathor, the Egyptian goddess of "joy, celebration, kindness, and love, who people associated with drunkenness and music.” (They skipped the myrrh and incense, also associated with Hathor, who was later conflated with Isis and Asherah/Ishtar). Also pictured in the exhibit is a red-toothed areca-chewing woman from Papua New Guinea, accompanied by an interesting story of “political suicide” committed in 2015 when the governor of the capital at Port Moresby tried to ban the popular plant, which is important in commerce for the area.

The exhibit is interactive in the way the recent Oakland Museum exhibit on cannabis was: viewers can leave a record of their experiences with the various drugs depicted, starting with “This is a story of…” for which most circled “pleasure” rather than the other three options. One wrote about a psilocybin experience, “The colors of the trees and all surroundings were enhanced so that I felt like I had been seeing the world through dirty glasses before.” Another wrote of the same substance, “I had a profound experience of complete contentment, like everything in life was as it should be.” Strangely, though, there were no mushrooms of any kind in the exhibit. One person circled both “pleasure” and “prayer” for their cannabis experience, “I had lost my inner voice….the first time I smoked I was able to hear her again.” Another who’d overdosed on an edible called weed “poison.”

It's easy to get to at the corner of Bancroft and College, the entry fee is only $6 (less for students and seniors) and the exhibit is on view during various hours, Weds.-Sun. through December 15. It's being held in conjunction with several events around the topic, including intoxicating plant garden tours, an Ethiopian coffee ceremony, a lecture on Maria Sabina, and a family-friendly event exploring how to fashion medicine pouches, Maya medicine cups, and hemp bracelets.

Women's Visionary Congress 2019

$
0
0
After a three-year hiatus, the Women's Visionary Congress held a gathering in Oakland, CA over the weekend, hostessing 23 activists, researchers, healers and artists as presenters. The eye-opening event was held just after the city of Oakland passed an ordinance decriminalizing "nature," and speakers from across the county and Canada addressed various aspects of psychedelic and cannabis law, research, and more.

Christie Stenquist of Truce Utah at the WVC
Christie Stenquist of TRUCE in Utah gave a powerful presentation that earned a standing ovation, and a few tears, from the audience.  She began with her own journey of how, as a 24-year-old mother, she was diagnosed with a brain tumor that left her bedridden for 16 years.

In desperation she tried Marinol, then whole-plant cannabis, after her 19-year-old daughter steered her away from "Spice," a dangerous substance then advertised as legal marijuana, and her narcotics officer-father advised her she could probably find a stray bag of the still-illegal weed. Within moments free of her nausea, within weeks she was walking again, and soon driving to Capital Hill "because I would be damned if any other patient in my state would suffer like I did."

Stenquist formed a broad, nonpartisan coalition of MS patients, pain management groups, and cannabis activists called TRUCE (Together for Responsible Use & Cannabis Education). She gave members reading lists on the history, policy, and science of cannabis which propped up TRUCE's 4th pillar: patients. In 2014 the group ran into opposition from epilepsy moms who were lobbying for a CBD-only bill. "But that was fracturing a movement by demonizing part of the plant," Stenquist countered. Silenced and told to wait their turn, the group saw Utah pass the first CBD-only law in the country, which protects patients with only two types of epilepsy, and allows for no procurement of cannabis.

So TRUCE went to the ballot, gathering the needed 113K signatures to put Prop. 2 to the voters. After the LDS (not LSD) church came out against the measure, the group lost half of its executive board, but the measure still carried with 53% of the vote. Immediately, the state legislature passed an LDS-backed measure severely limiting the law, allowing only seven dispensaries in the most populated regions of the state, and requiring others to mail order their medicine from health departments, stripping away their right to grow for themselves. TRUCE has engaged former Salt Lake City Mayor and drug reformer Rocky Anderson to file a lawsuit "to win our vote back."Read more about TRUCE and support the lawsuit. 

Eleonora Molnar, a Canadian psychotherapist, gave a strong presentation on the ethical and legally defensible way to conduct psychedelic-assisted therapy in Canada.

She identified patients for whom therapy can be done: those in dire need, due to chronic, serious & debilitating diseases and for whom traditional therapy has proved unhelpful; and those at the end of their lives, for whom possible long-term risks are irrelevant.

Therapists may not procure psychedelic substances for their patients, or administer them, but can attend and provide psychotherapy during and after a psychedelic session, provided the proper messaging is given and attested to beforehand regarding the benefits and risks of the therapy and the legalities of the therapeutic situation.

Molnar recommended therapists get training, through places like MAPS and CIIS, and recommended Stanislav Grof's book LSD Psychotherapy and Janice Phelps’ paper, “Developing Guidelines and Competencies for the Training of Psychedelic Therapists" (2017).

The legal footing for assisting a patient doing an illegal drug starts in the emergency room, where physicians may treat a patient who is under the influence, and the rights to personal freedom, autonomy, and health contained in the Canadian Charter.

Molnar cited three cannabis court cases that pertain, if one takes the stance that psychedelics are also medicine necessary for some patients: R v. Parker (Ontario Court of Appeal 2000), a medical necessity case; R v. Smith (Supreme Court Canada 2015), which ruled that prohibition “limits the liberty of medical users by foreclosing reasonable medical choices through the threat of criminal prosecution," and Allard v. Canada (Canada Federal Court 2016), upholding a patient’s right to produce their own medicine.

Attorney and activist Madalyn McElwain of DanceSafe also gave a powerful presentation entitled, "From Underground to Mainstream: How Drug Checking has Become a Vital Tool to Combat the Consequences of the War on Drugs."

Her group, whose motto is "Test It Before You Ingest It" provides onsite education and testing of party drugs at events.  McElwain had only to remind the crowd of the Fentanyl overdose crisis to give her talk gravitas. DanceSafe has Fentanyl test strips available by mail-order. On psychedelics, McElwain reminded us, "As we open up access, we need to provide safety."

She also discussed the legal aspects of her organization's work in a world where under most states' paraphernalia laws, testing kits are illegal. Currently, the states of CO, MD, MN, IL, and RI have laws pending in their legislatures to reform this sad and dangerous situation. DanceSafe is also working to amend the federal "RAVE Act" to legalize drug-testing kits as a public health measure. And they're conducting a fundraising campaign to upgrade their onsite testing to a portable infrared spectroscopy machine, while keeping their library up-to-date so that they can identify all the substances out there. They've raised $15K of the $50K needed; interested donors can write here

A special treat was the appearance of Ann Shulgin, the 88-year-old widow of MDMA chemist Alexander Shulgin, who co-wrote PIKHAL and TIKHAL with him. Shulgin spoke about "The Shadow," the "dark side" of ourselves that often must be confronted during psychedelic experiences. Shulgin stressed that we must come to terms with the feelings & impulses that we have denied and repressed in our shadow selves in order to become whole. A skilled therapist can use psychedelic-assisted psychotherapy and hypnosis to "take a person to step inside their monster and see out its eyes," enabling a person to transform. She stressed that the therapist who attempts this practice must have completed it themselves first.

Raquel Bennett, a Berkeley-based psychologist, spoke about her work with Ketamine therapy, which she said "helps people open up to a window of relational re-learning." Working with patients with severe depression, there are several alternative dosages and modes of treatment which must be "spiritually and psychologically safe," including follow-up treatment.

On March 5, the FDA approved Spratavo, a pharmaceutical preparation of S-Ketamine for use under strict regulations. FDA approved ketamine (Ketalar) in 1970. Pharmaceutical S-Ketamine costs upwards of $850 per dose, but is available in generic form for $1.59.

Bennett will give a talk on Ketamine therapy as part of the UC Berkeley "Pleasure, Poison, Prescription, Prayer" exhibit, and also mentioned the coming KRIYA Conference this November in SF.

On the movement fractionating subject, Elise Szabo of Students for Sensible Drug Policy (SSDP) had an interesting point: She noted that the Alameda County sheriff testified that only 15 people had been arrested in the previous year for psychedelics, but significantly more were arrested for more stigmatized drugs like heroin, and many of those were people of color. Lanese Martin of The Hood Incubator pointed out that 25% of deportations are drug related, and insightfully noted that, "The discipline of self-empowerment is harder than following a sociopathic leader."


All this and much more highlighted an enlightening weekend, full of wonderful food and fellowship. The all-woman Brazilian dance and drumming troupe Mulhercatu was a special treat.

Conference organizer Annie Oak spoke about forming the Women's Visionary Council (WVC) after attending a 2017 GAIA conference in Switzerland where 80 of the speakers were male and only 4 were female. Following the logic, "If you want to change the world, make a better party," she started inviting women to speak at events and now has seen women's voices amplified at other conferences as well.

OG WVC Board President Carolyn "Mountain Girl" Garcia wrapped things up saying of the event, "It makes my heart sing...there are a thousand strategies to make a better society, to be a different kind of light, to continue to become better people." She encouraged everyone to "connect, connect, connect."

Since 2008, the Women's Visionary Council has been sustained by supporters and members. All donations to the WVC are tax-deductible. A donation of $75 makes you a member of the WVC, eligible for discounts on WVC events, the WVC newsletter, and the ability to nominate people for WVC grants. Donations of any size can be made via PayPal, or by mailing a check to POB 5305 Berkeley CA 94705.
Viewing all 444 articles
Browse latest View live