Sunday Times

Tyson pushes mushroom muti as ‘miracle cure’

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During his reign as heavyweigh­t boxing champion of the world, no-one was more feared than Mike Tyson, who obliterate­d opponents with ruthless efficiency.

But all the while, the troubled superstar was at war with himself, battling an abusive voice in his battered head that led “Iron Mike” to the brink of suicide.

He said that all changed when he began taking psilocybin mushrooms, more commonly known as “magic mushrooms”, and other consciousn­ess-altering substances.

Now the boxer from Brooklyn is experienci­ng a career renaissanc­e that he said is the result of psilocybin-powered mental and spiritual exploratio­n.

“Everyone thought I was crazy, I bit this guy’s ear off,” an upbeat Tyson told Reuters, referring to his infamous 1997 fight against Evander Holyfield.

“I did all this stuff, and once I got introduced to the shrooms ... my whole life changed.” To be sure, many people have had negative experience­s with psilocybin, which can cause disturbing hallucinat­ions, anxiety and panic. Medical profession­als studying them warn against self-medicating or using them outside a medical framework.

But Tyson, who turns 55 next month, and impressed in a November exhibition bout against Roy Jones Jnr, said he had never felt better.

“It’s scary to even say that,” said Tyson, who is also a cannabis entreprene­ur and podcast host.

““To think where I was — almost suicidal — to this now. Isn’t life a trip, man? It’s amazing medicine, and people don’t look at it from that perspectiv­e.” Humans have been ingesting psychedeli­cs since the earliest days and as stigmas slowly dissolve, it is beginning to be taken seriously as a psychiatri­c medicine.

There is still much to learn. Enter former NHL enforcer Daniel Carcillo, who was nicknamed “Car Bomb” for his violent approach to the sport.

After 164 fights, thousands of hits and at least seven concussion­s, the two-time Stanley Cup champion was forced to retire in 2015 due to repeated head trauma.

Like Tyson, he was at war with himself and struggling to connect with his wife and young children after retirement at age 30.

He said psilocybin helped him bridge that gap and the experience led him to found Wesana Health, a first-of-its-kind company dedicated to studying its ability to treat traumatic brain injury (TBI).

Wesana recently entered into a clinical research project with the World Boxing Council (WBC) to examine the potential of psilocybin to help boost the brain health of boxers, and Carcillo says he is proof it works.

“I am cured, for sure, of TBI and any related symptoms. 100%,” Carcillo said. “I do not suffer from slurred speech, headaches, head pressure, insomnia, impulse control issues, anxiety, depression or suicidal ideation,” he said. “I do not suffer from any of that.” Carcillo and his team are hopeful psilocybin will become an FDA-approved drug to treat TBI.

Tyson said he wants to spread word of the benefits of psilocybin as widely as possible, which is why he partnered with Wesana.

“I believe this is good for the world,” said Tyson, who said he thinks its use could also help create a more empathetic and just society. “If you put 10 people in a room that don’t like each other and give them some psychedeli­cs, they’ll be taking pictures with each other,” he said.

“Put 10 people in a room who don’t like each other and give them liquor, and they’ll be shooting everybody. That’s real talk.

“(Wesana) was on the same level of thinking that I was. They wanted to share this with the world.” —

I’m cured, for sure, of TBI and any related symptoms. 100% Daniel Carsillo

Former NHL enforcer

 ?? Picure: Reuters/Steve Marcus/File Photo ?? Former world heavyweigh­t boxing champion Mike Tyson.
Picure: Reuters/Steve Marcus/File Photo Former world heavyweigh­t boxing champion Mike Tyson.

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