The Colorado Sun
Attendees can choose 2 grams of dried psilocybin mushrooms, two weeks’ worth of microdoses or a light dose of dimethyltryptamine, or DMT
He now runs about a dozen gatherings a month, mostly in his home, through what he has dubbed “Colorado’s first psychedelic church.”
During “primary gatherings” at the church, Dezaval guides people into discussion on topics from love to social justice. He also hosts a range of social events, from movie nights to painting while microdosing. Mushrooms along with other psychedelics are offered to anyone 21 years or older.
He is in the process of certifying the organization as a religious nonprofit and promotes it on his website, through Meetup, Reddit and Discord, and word of mouth.
https://www.coloradopsychedelicchurch.com/about-us
The church is just one example of a tidal wave of new ideas about how to use psychedelics after Colorado voters approved Proposition 122 in 2022, which decriminalized the use of psilocybin — the psychedelic fungi commonly known as “magic mushrooms” that have long been used by Indigenous people as a natural medicine.
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Colorado’s “first psychedelic church” for magic mushrooms opens in Colorado Springs