Meditation and cannabis
Posted: Thu Oct 20, 2022 3:33 pm
Hey everyone,
I'm a grad student studying mental health counseling and have been using the Muse S (gen2) to record my sits for a form of meditation called Centering Prayer consistently for about 4 months. I have about 90 recordings, only about half of which I would say are reliable because of defectiveness with the first device that Interaxon provided. Thankfully, they replaced it, the new one seems to work great, and I have continued. About 2 months ago, I grew curious about the impact of cannabis on meditation and the neural correlates. I have about 10 recordings from those experiments because I only do the cannabis sessions on the weekends.
I wanted to ask the community a few questions:
1) Has anyone else has been experimenting with Centering Prayer or another form of prayer? Interested in trying??
If you've studied your own, would love to hear about your results! And whether you have or haven't, I would love to organize a group to practice and record together, with or without cannabis. I'm one who believes that there are subtle nuances between forms of prayer/meditation that lead to very different outcomes and this is one of the only forms of contemplation that the Christian community in the west has, which is why I want to study it and see if it is of any merit and value, beyond my subjective experience with it (which is a resounding yes for me, personally).
2) Does anyone have experience interpreting the graphs who would be willing to help me interpret mine?
My education and training has not been in neuroscience so I have only been able to make sense of some details, but feel like I am largely scratching the surface. I have the opportunity to present some of my findings through my university at a national conference next year, and would appreciate any assistance you can provide!
Below are two examples of the meditation and cannabis experiments. The top row shows the sober sit, and the bottom row is the cannabis sit.
Thanks in advance for any help, and look forward to collaborating if possible!
I'm a grad student studying mental health counseling and have been using the Muse S (gen2) to record my sits for a form of meditation called Centering Prayer consistently for about 4 months. I have about 90 recordings, only about half of which I would say are reliable because of defectiveness with the first device that Interaxon provided. Thankfully, they replaced it, the new one seems to work great, and I have continued. About 2 months ago, I grew curious about the impact of cannabis on meditation and the neural correlates. I have about 10 recordings from those experiments because I only do the cannabis sessions on the weekends.
I wanted to ask the community a few questions:
1) Has anyone else has been experimenting with Centering Prayer or another form of prayer? Interested in trying??
If you've studied your own, would love to hear about your results! And whether you have or haven't, I would love to organize a group to practice and record together, with or without cannabis. I'm one who believes that there are subtle nuances between forms of prayer/meditation that lead to very different outcomes and this is one of the only forms of contemplation that the Christian community in the west has, which is why I want to study it and see if it is of any merit and value, beyond my subjective experience with it (which is a resounding yes for me, personally).
2) Does anyone have experience interpreting the graphs who would be willing to help me interpret mine?
My education and training has not been in neuroscience so I have only been able to make sense of some details, but feel like I am largely scratching the surface. I have the opportunity to present some of my findings through my university at a national conference next year, and would appreciate any assistance you can provide!
Below are two examples of the meditation and cannabis experiments. The top row shows the sober sit, and the bottom row is the cannabis sit.
Thanks in advance for any help, and look forward to collaborating if possible!