Based on research from Johns Hopkins University & Imperial College London
A skeptic's honest 30-day experiment
I was on antidepressants for 6 years. I'd heard about microdosing mushrooms and thought it was nonsense. Then a Johns Hopkins study changed my mind — and I decided to document everything.
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Let me be clear: I was the last person who would try this.
I'm a 44-year-old accountant from Ohio. I've been on SSRIs since I was 38. Lexapro first, then Effexor when that stopped working, then Wellbutrin added on top. My psychiatrist is a good doctor. She's not doing anything wrong. But after six years, I still woke up every morning feeling like I was moving through wet concrete.
My wife sent me a link to a Johns Hopkins study. I almost didn't read it. "Magic mushrooms for depression" — I assumed it was some wellness blog nonsense. But it was published in JAMA Psychiatry. Peer-reviewed. 71% of participants showed significant improvement. 54% went into full remission.
I spent three weeks reading everything I could find. The Imperial College London trials. The NYU research. The FDA's "Breakthrough Therapy" designation. I'm an accountant — I read the actual data, not the headlines. And the data was... hard to argue with.
The study that changed my mind
"Two doses of psilocybin produced large, rapid, and sustained antidepressant effects... at 1-year follow-up, 75% of participants maintained their response."
— Davis et al., JAMA Psychiatry, 2021
I decided to document 30 days. I kept a daily journal. I tracked my sleep, my mood, my ability to concentrate at work. I told my wife what I was doing. I did not tell my psychiatrist — I wasn't sure how she'd react.
Here's what happened.
Day 1 was unremarkable. Day 3, I noticed I wasn't dreading my morning. Not excited — just... neutral. Which, for me, was unusual. By day 7, my wife said I seemed "lighter." I didn't know what she meant until I realized I'd laughed at something on TV — actually laughed, not performed laughing.
By day 14, I was sleeping through the night for the first time in years. By day 21, I had a conversation with my son about his college plans and I was present — not just waiting for the conversation to end so I could go back to feeling nothing.
Day 30: I went back and read my day 1 journal entry. The person who wrote it felt like a stranger.
Want the exact protocol I used?
I'll send you the full 30-day journal + the dosing schedule I followed.
I'm not telling you this will work for you. I'm not a doctor. I'm not making any medical claims. What I'm telling you is that I spent six years believing I'd tried everything — and I hadn't. And the research that convinced me to try it is real, it's peer-reviewed, and it's available to anyone who wants to read it.
If you opt in above, I'll send you the full story — including the specific protocol I used, the exact dosing schedule, and the three things I wish I'd known before I started. I'll also send you the links to the actual research papers so you can read the data yourself.
I'm not selling anything in this email. I'm just sharing what worked for me and letting you decide what to do with it.
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This story represents one person's experience and is for informational purposes only. It does not constitute medical advice. Consult your physician before making any changes to your health regimen. These statements have not been evaluated by the FDA. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.