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Therapists explore psychedelics for patients

WEIGHT-LOSS DRUG VIEW ONLINE
A TRIP FROM THE THERAPIST
 
Wednesday, May 3, 2023
In today’s newsletter, we explore how medics will safeguard coming psychedelic treatment, examine the battle that changed England … and learn how the bagel began. Plus, a partial lunar eclipse and a Halley’s Comet meteor shower.
MICROGRAPH BY M. I. WALKER, SCIENCE SOURCE/SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY
Being treated for depression, the patient thought her body had detached and was floating. Her psychiatrist squeezed her hand and made her feel safe as the drug dissipated inside her.

Buckle up, everyone: Get ready for doctors and psychedelics.

With Oregon and the FDA poised to approve psychedelics for mental health, will there be medics trained to treat patients? What’s being done right now?

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PHOTOGRAPH BY MERIDITH KOHUT, THE NEW YORK TIMES/REDUX
A trip across the border: Jenna Lombardo-Grosso, a former Marine, is assisted after smoking 5-MeO-DMT, a powerful hallucinogen derived from the poison of the Sonoran desert toad, at a psychedelic therapy retreat outside Tijuana, Mexico. At top, crystallized ketamine. Read more.
STORIES WE’RE FOLLOWING
ILLUSTRATION VIA LOOK AND LEARN / BRIDGEMAN IMAGES
This battle (depicted above) lasted just one day—but forever changed England
Should you get tested for a genetic mutation related to breast cancer?
Why is Mounjaro such a great weight-loss drug, and how does it compare to others?
‘Stone of Destiny’ being revived for King Charles’s coronation
Hawaii’s Native language nearly vanished—this is the fight to bring it back
These 7 hormones influence how much—or little—you eat. Can we influence them?
​The gory history of Europe’s mummy-eating fad
These 2,500-year-old canals, once thought mythical, were real, scientists now say
How did England become a monarchy? Hint: Bloodshed
WHO WORE THIS?
PHOTOGRAPH BY MAX PLANCK, INSTITUTE FOR EVOLUTIONARY ANTHROPOLOGY

And who was she?
For the first time in history, scientists were able to recover ancient human DNA from an artifact—and tell us who wore this deertooth pendant (above) … and when. Did it even come from a human?
CLICK HERE TO FIND OUT
THE NIGHT SKIES
ILLUSTRATION BY ANDREW FAZEKAS

 

Bits of Halley’s Comet rain down: The last time we saw the most famous comet in our corner of the solar system was in 1986, and it won’t be back until 2062. But. before dawn Saturday, we can see all the sand-grain sized particles shed by this icy visitor burn up high above our heads. Some of Halley’s pieces are in the Eta Aquarid meteor shower, which peaks this weekend. In the southern hemisphere, viewers may see as many as 25 shooting stars an hour. On Friday, viewers in Europe, Asia, Africa, and parts of the Pacific may see a shadow from this month’s full moon from a penumbral lunar eclipse. For more stargazing highlights check out my Night Sky This Week livestream. — Andrew Fazekas

 

NIGHT SKY HIGHLIGHTS
PHOTO OF THE DAY
PHOTOGRAPHS BY RAKU INOUE

 

Pretty bugs? These insects actually aren’t insects at all: They’re flowers, sticks, leaves, intricately designed to resemble stag beetles (left), horn beetles (right), butterflies, and more—and the artist’s work is beautiful.
EXPLORE MORE
HOW DID THE BAGEL BEGIN?
PHOTOGRAPH BY REBECCA HALE, NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC

Sesame street:
Toasted everything bagel with a lil’ bit of cream cheese from this hole-in-the-wall deli down the street, made fresh daily—that’s how some of America’s 202 million bagel eaters like it. But how did these staple Jewish American breads originate?

CREAM CHEESE OR BUTTER?
Today’s soundtrack: Therapy, Andrew Garfield, Vanessa Hudgens

Correction: In yesterday’s newsletter, a photo used with our blurb on saving the native Hawaiian language contained an unrelated image. Please read the whole story here.

This newsletter has been curated and edited by Mallory Benedict, Hannah Farrow, and David Beard. Want to say hello? We’d love to hear from you: david.beard@natgeo.com. Thanks for reading!

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