Psyche
Delicacies
Coffee, Chocolate, Chiles, kava
and Cannabis
And Why They’re Good For You
By Chris Kilham
“Psyche Delicacies will tickle your
neurons.” - Ken Kesey
The human fascination with, and
craving for mind and mood-modifying plants goes far back in history.
Early archaeological excavations show that our primitive forbearers were
enamored of the opium poppy, cannabis, psychoactive seeds, barks and
flowers. The history of virtually every culture save those living at the
icy poles, gives testimony to the enduring human affinity for
psychoactive plants.
Exploring the history, legends, lore
and uses of coffee, chocolate, chiles, kava and cannabis, reveals each
plant enjoys centuries of use imparting benefits to both body and mind,
with little risk to health. These five plants are among the most widely
consumed and traded plants in the world. They are attractive. They are
clever. They have us under a spell. We have become their advocates,
their porters, their protectors, their proclaimers.
Coffee, chocolate, chiles, kava and
cannabis each once existed in relative obscurity. But as quickly as they
were discovered, they spread like wildfire, from one nation to another,
and leaping across oceans. Each plant has undergone a long and
extraordinary journey on the backs of millions of human beings. Each is
the object of substantial trade, each is the subject of scientific and
medical scruitiny, and each produces its own precious reverie.
The Noble Bean
“Coffee, the sober drink, the mighty
nourishment of the brain, which unlike other spirits, heightens purity
and lucidity; coffee, which clears the clouds of the imagination and
their gloomy weight; which illumines the reality of things suddenly with
the flash of truth...” - 1600’s description of coffee
Coffee, The Plant
The marvellous plant from which
coffee derives is the coffee tree (Coffea arabica, canephora, liberica),
an exquisite beauty of nature. Coffee makes up the genus Coffea of the
family Rubiaceae. Arabian coffee is classified as Coffea arabica,
robusta coffee as Coffea canephora, and Liberian coffee as Coffea
liberica. According to botanical evidence, Coffea arabica originated in
central Ethiopia.
Varying from 2 to 4 metres in
height, the coffee tree is an evergreen possessed of long, slender
branches covered with bright, waxy, spear-shaped leaves. The tree bears
its fragrant white flowers and coffee cherries at the same time. Coffee
fluorishes at higher altitudes, requires both sun and shade, needs
plenty of water, and must be rooted in porous, well drained soil. When
all the conditions in which it thrives are met, the coffee tree responds
by producing a profusion of elliptic green berries, which grow and ripen
into bright red cherries half an inch long. Inside the bright red skin
of the coffee cherry rests the simple coffee bean which bears the
bracing stimulant caffeine.
“The intelligent man who empties
these cups of foaming coffee, he alone knows truth.” -16th
cent Arabic quote
A rich aromatic cup of coffee,
brewed lovingly and drunk thoughtfully, delights the mind and banishes
fatigue. It flings the eyes open, like a window thrown up to the sensual
delights of a spring day. If you don’t care for coffee, then by all
means don’t touch it. But if you enjoy coffee, then sip and savor
without guilt or concern. For coffee is good for you, a gift
from the gods, to relieve the fatigue of weary humanity. Coffee
inspires.
Mighty Caffeine
The agent in coffee which imbues the
bean with the power to march armies and mount massive commerce is
caffeine, a humble alkaloid also known as
1,3,7 -trimethylxanthine. In green
beans, arabica coffee contains 1.1% caffeine by weight, burly robusta
weighs in at a hefty 2.2%, and liberica tips the scales at 1.4%. These
percentages will vary depending on growing conditions.
Whatever contains caffeine will be
consumed widely. This is a maxim upon which you can hang your hat,
assured that no philosophical or pseudo-scientific wind will blow it
off. Why do we consume caffeine? Because we love and crave it, of
course. And why do we love and crave caffeine? Because it makes us feel
good, by stimulating valuable physical and mental functions.
First and foremost, caffeine
stimulates the central nervous system. It is a cortical stimulant, thus
mobilizing brain function. It stimulates the flow of blood in the brain,
and increases secretion of the important neurotransmitter serotonin in
the cerebellum and the cerebral cortex. Caffeine invigorates the mind.
It enhances alertness, facilitates thought formation, and decreases
fatigue. Caffeine inspires the weary, elevates the moderately depressed,
and quickens the step of the tired.
As with virtually every other
substance known, dosage is important with caffeine. Dosage determines
whether you will have a good experience or a bad one. For while caffeine
promotes beneficial activity in the body, too much caffeine can produce
nervousness, irritability and insomnia. A recent meta-analysis of
caffeine studies performed at the French National Institute of Health
and Medical Research, concluded that at around 300 milligrams per day,
caffeine improves mood, vigilance, alertness and an overall sense of
well being. Caffeine appears to work on the dopaminergic pathway in the
brain, thereby enhancing mood. For most caffeine tolerant adults, this
dosage range produces positive effects. This translates into two or
three average strength cups of coffee per day.
Food Of The Gods
“The beverage of the gods was
Ambrosia; that of man is chocolate.
Both increase the length of life in
a prodigious manner.”
-
in Phantastica, Lewis
Lewin
The rainforest tree from which chocolate originates is Theobroma
cacao, which owes its name to the 18th century Swedish
scientist Carl von Linne’. The Latin binomial Theobroma cacao
means food of the gods, as apt a monnicker as could possibly be
assigned. Cacao trees bear clusters of pale, button-sized, five-petaled
flowers growing off the trunk and larger branches, which possess only a
faint aroma. The large, distinctive fruit pods of the tree jut out
directly from the trunk and the lower branches. Mature fruit pods
average about nine inches in length, and typically contain 30 – 40
almond-sized seeds, or cocoa beans, nestled in a pale white flesh. These
seeds are made into the heavenly electuary chocolate.
Chocolate Reverie
Chocolate, that mysterious and
exotic rainforest food from the ancient Maya, provokes a luxurious,
content mood, a serene sense of sumptuous delight. Chocolate is a Trojan
horse, carrying into the body many hundreds of natural compounds, some
ordinary and some exotic, which work busily to modify mood in subtle yet
undeniable ways.
Of the multitudinous compounds in
chocolate, one is PEA, or phenethylamine. This chemical, which occurs in
chocolate in small quantities, stimulates the nervous system and
triggers the release of pleasurable opium-like compounds known as
endorphins. It also potentiates the activity of dopamine, a
neurochemical directly associated with sexual arousal and pleasure.
Phenethylamine increases in the brain when we fall in love, and during
orgasm. The giddy, restless feelings that occur when we are in love are
at least partly due to PEA. This adds a rather remarkable dimension to
chocolate, and may account for why it is so highly prized. For while
there are a great many agents in nature which boost libido and enhance
sexual function, chocolate alone actually promotes the brain chemistry
of being in love.
Chocolate is a sensuous delight
whose rich flavor, silky mouth feel and earthy aroma have captured the
palates and imaginations of people for over three thousand years.
Throughout history lovers have turned to chocolate to heighten the
experience of lovemaking. The Aztec king Montezuma reputedly drank a
large goblet of the drink before retiring to his harem. The legendary
Venetian lover and seducer Giovanni Giacomo Casanova also reputedly
consumed chocolate before bedding women. From antiquity to the present,
chocolate has been a gift of lovers, more often given from a man to a
woman.
Chocolate additionally boosts a
sense of well being by increasing brain levels of serotonin, the
so-called feel-good brain chemical. For this reason chocolate provides a
highly desirable mood boost to women during PMS and menstruation, when
serotonin levels are often down. In fact, women are consistently more
sensistive to chocolate than men. Women typically experience stronger
chocolate cravings than men. And for many, chocolate is the perfect PMS
Rx. A little chocolate can restore a feeling of well being.
“I think that you could call
chocolate a soft drug. It definitely has an effect on your brain
chemistry, on your physiology. I think that a lot of chocolate
consumption is based on an individual’s need to self medicate. They feel
a need to have a certain amount of chemicals in their brain soup, in
their cranium, and chocolate does that.” – Timothy Moley
Yet another constituent in chocolate
alters mental state in pleasurable ways. Anandamide a cannabinoid, a
member of the same psychoactive substances found in cannabis. Anandamide
binds to the same receptor sites in the brain as THC. And its effect?
Anandamide produces a global feeling of euphoria. This compound may
account for why some people become euphoric when they eat chocolate. The
brain is a deep and mysterious organ, whose dark folds and gray
crenellations are barely understood. But tickle the right neurons, and
all heaven breaks loose.
Some scientists question that there
are sufficient quantities of PEA or anandamide in chocolate to produce
euphoria or a pleasurable mental state. But others are not so quick to
dismiss a highly complex and chemically-loaded food employed as a
mood-enhancer for centuries. For how would chocolate develop a
long-standing reputation for enhancing mood, if it had no effect?
Individual chemistry appears to be key with chocolate, as with almost
everything else. Chocolate may have little impact on some, but it does
make others swoon. Chocolate is an agent of fine and lovely reverie, a
gift which puts us in reflection of our highest selves.
Hell Fire In Your
Mouth
If chiles had a song, it would be
Heat Wave. If chiles had a movie, it would be Towering Inferno. If
chiles performed a native ritual, they would firewalk. If chiles had a
heroine, it would be Joan of Arc. Chiles are burning, blazing, sizzling,
searing, on fire, hot, hot, hot.
“After the first mouthful the tears
started to come. I could not say a word and believed that I had
hell-fire in my mouth. However, one becomes accustomed to it after
frequent bold victories.” – Ignaz Pfefferkorn
Chile, The Plant
The chile plant is any of several
members of the genus Capsicum, about which there has been much dispute
and hot debate over the past 300 years. For our purposes, the chile
plant is any of five domesticated species of Capsicum, including
Capsicum annum, C. frutescens, C. pubescens, C. chinense, and
C. baccatum. These species are descendant of over twenty wild
species from tropical and subtropical America, originally found in
Bolivia, Mesoamerica and Amazonia. All chiles may have originated from a
single source, which some experts believe lies in central Bolivia.
The chile plant is a cultivated
perennial shrub as short as 12 inches and rarely taller than 2 metres in
height, with profuse, asymmetrical light to dark green leaves, small
white or purple flowers, and bearing numerous fruits (chiles) of varying
size, color and heat. Almost all chiles are green when immature, though
some appear white or yellow or purplish. As a rule mature chiles are
red, orange, or yellow. This coloration is due to the presence of a red
carotenoid known as capsanthin. The shape of chiles varies greatly. The
cayenne variety is long and slender and tapered. The cherry variety
looks like a small tomato. The jalapeno variety is smooth and bulbous,
while the penis pepper looks like a flaccid glans penis.
The heat of chili peppers is
measured by the Scoville Heat Index in multiples of 100 units, from the
bell pepper at zero Scoville units to the incendiary Habanero at 300,000
Scoville units. That’s hot! But even the hellish habanero has been
surpassed by hotter peppers. The Mexican Red Savina variety of habanero
has been tested at 575,000 Scoville units. You would expect this extreme
heat to secure a position for the Red Savina as the world’s hottest
pepper by a wide and uncomfortable margin. But specialists at Assam’s
Defense Research Laboratory reported in August 2000 that India’s Naga
Jolokia variety of Capsicum frutescens measures an astonishing
855,000 Scoville units. Will there ever be an end to the pain?
Chile Reverie
The Devil’s own vegetable
woos the faithful with a
seductive religious experience of chapped and burning lips, a spanked
and swollen tongue, a mouth that aches with heat, a searing swallow, a
boiling gastric churning, sweat drooling down a sizzling brow, the face
and brain flush with hot pounding blood, and a wave of pain-quenching
endorphins, which surge in the brain like firemen in a city aflame. In
the grip of chili fever, the mind swoons in ecstatic pain, like an
acolyte with stigmata.
Why do people subject themselves to
this blazing ordeal? It’s the pleasure, brain cells swimming in
endorphins, giddy and happy-faced on natural opiates. Herein lies the
secret to chiles. People don’t eat super hot peppers because they like
the sensation of mucous membranes being seared raw. Chile aficionados
like the evil little vegetables because they cause the brain to produce
profuse amounts of endorphins, morphine-like substances that can alter
your mental state significantly, if you get enough going at once.
The Blazing Capsaicinoids
The substances that make chilis hot
are a group of natural oleoresins called capsaicinoids. These
substances account for between 0.1% - 1% of the total composition of a
chile pepper. Of these compounds the hottest is capsaicin, which tips
the scales at over 16,000,000 Scoville Heat Units. Capsaicin and
di-hydrocapsaicin together make up 80-90% of the capsaicinoids found in
peppers. The sensation of burning produced by the capsaicinoids is
physiologically similar to the sensation of burning caused by heat or
fire. The capsaicinoids open cell membranes in a way that allows calcium
ions to flood into cells. This triggers a pain signal that is
transmitted to the next cell. This same process occurs when cells are
exposed to excessive heat.
The blazing capsaicinoids are
wonders of nature. Only a tiny amount produces an extraordinary
sensation of heat. Imagine the surprise of the very first person who
ever bit into a chile!
The Pacific Elixir
From the Pacific isles comes kava,
the peace plant. Kava is the name of both the plant Piper methysticum,
and a beverage made from its pounded roots. Kava soothes. Kava rubs the
sore and weary shoulders of humanity. Kava eases the mind of its burdens
and delivers the drinker to pleasant peace. In this regard kava is the
perfect representative of the Pacific islands, for it imparts to body
and mind what the imagination conjures about those places. Kava is an
agent of equal opportunity reverie, soothing and easing natives and
non-natives alike.
For 3,000 years the indigenous
native people of the South Pacific have quaffed kava because it produces
a highly pleasurable feeling of tranquility in body and mind. Kava is
nature’s most perfect soothing plant. Consumed in moderation, kava is a
fundamentally friendly elixir of peace, promoting a state of
stress-free happiness and contentment.
Kava relaxes and refreshes at the
same time. It promotes a good night’s sleep, and enhances vigor upon
awakening. Furthermore kava is a social, not solitary, agent of reverie.
Kava drinking reinforces social bonds, enhances sense of community, and
encourages a spirit of conviviality among drinkers. In every respect,
kava is an antidote to stress. It washes away nervous tension and
relieves the mind. Kava is an agent of peace, second to no plant in this
world. The kava drinker becomes reflective and calm. The static and
chatter of the mind simmer down to the gentlest fluctuations, and the
drinker is unburdened of the cares of the day. By this means, the
troubled heart finds rest. For a world that is cranked to the eyeballs
with stress and tension, kava offers blessed relief.
“The head is affected pleasantly;
you feel friendly, not beer sentimental; you cannot hate with kava in
you. Kava quiets the mind; the world gains no new color or rose tint; it
fits in its place and in one easily understandable whole.”
- E.M. Lemert
Kava, The Peace Plant
The name Piper methysticum,
which means intoxicating pepper, was given to kava by Johann Georg
Forster, a botanist who sailed with Captain Cook. A robust and
attractive perrenial shrub with smooth, heart-shaped green leaves, kava
is a member of the Piperaceae, or pepper family, whose 2000 or
more diverse species have been widely distributed throughout Africa,
India, Southeast Asia and Indonesia since antiquity.
While the exact origin of kava
remains undetermined, researchers believe that kava was native either to
New Guinea, the Solomon Islands, or Northern Vanuatu, and that after its
mind and mood-altering effects became known to natives there, it was
widely dispersed throughout the pacific islands by seafaring islanders.
By virtue of its delightful tranquilizing effects, kava was embraced by
island culture, and was carried by natives from one island to the next.
Kava’s Tranquil Agents
The active tranquility-promoting
constituents of kava are a group of resinous compounds known as
kavalactones, or kavapyrones. The kavalactones have been the objects of
chemical research since the mid 1800's, and much is known about their
mode of activity. While as many as fifteen kavalactones are known, only
six appear appear in kava to any significant extent. These six
kavalactones are demethoxy-yangonin, dihydrokavain, yangonin, kavain,
dihydromethysticin and methysticin.
The kavalactones together produce
local anaesthetic activity, with potency similar to that of cocaine and
procaine. The kavalactones numb the tongue and throat when kava is drunk
in its traditional form or when taken orally as a liquid extract. The
kavalactones are first-rate sedatives, producing a state of calm, and
promoting sleep if taken in sufficient quantity. The kavalactones
possess excellent analgesic activity, superior to aspirin, and less
potent than morphine. The kavalactones are excellent muscle relaxants
and can make the pain of an aching back, a sore neck or any other
cramped, sore or injured muscle disappear.
Ganja Road
Pot, bhang, ganja, weed, marijuana
and grass are just a few of the myriad names by which cannabis is known.
By any name, cannabis is one of the most widely employed mind and
mood-altering substances on earth. In the United States alone, an
estimated 70 million Americans have smoked marijuana. All of them, with
the improbable exception of former President Bill Clinton, have inhaled.
“Penalties against possession of a
drug should not be more damaging to an individual than the use of the
drug itself. - President Jimmy Carter
Cannabis delivers an expansive,
spacious high. For many users, cannabis heightens sensory experience. It
makes music more rich, food more tasty, colors more vivid, touch more
sensual, sex more erotic. In some people, cannabis stimulates
creativity. In many, it provokes laughter. The 1894 Indian Hemp Drugs
Commission Report described the effects of cannabis this way: “Bhang…
makes the tongue of the lisper plain, freshens the intellect, and gives
alertness to the body and gaiety to the mind … Bhang quickens fancy,
deepens thought and braces judgement….. Bhang is the Joy-giver, the
Sky-flier, the Heavenly guide, the poor man’s Heaven, the soother of
grief.”
Opinions of cannabis and its effects
are highly polarized. Some people regard cannabis use as a menace, an
evil which destroys the mind and corrupts the very fabric of society.
Others regard cannabis use as a fairly innocuous and pleasant pastime
which should be legalized without further ado. Despite this apparent
gulf, one thing is certain. Cannabis plays an important role in the
ongoing human inclination to modify mind and mood, and it will not go
away.
“The actual experience of the smoked
herb has been clouded by a fog of dirty language perpetrated by a crowd
of fakers who have not had the experience and yet insist on downgrading
it.” - Allen Ginsburg
Just Say Know
In 1997, The World Health
Organization reported on a study comparing cannabis with alcohol and
tobacco. Using high quality scientific methods and data analysis, the
WHO researchers who produced the report found that cannabis compared
more favorably than either alcohol or tobacco with regard to long term
health effects. In five out of seven areas of comparison, cannabis was
deemed safer. The report did say though that heavy cannabis use could
promote psychosis in some susceptible people, and that cannabis smoking
“may be a contributory cause of cancers of the aerodigestive tract.” The
authors of the report stated that the comparision between cannabis,
alcohol and tobacco “was not to promote one drug over another, but
rather to minimize the double standards that have operated in appraising
the health effects of cannabis.”
Cannabis, The Plant
There is general agreement that
Cannabis sativa is native to central Asia, north of the Himalayan range.
The name Cannabis sativa means cannabis – “cane-like” and sativa
- sown or planted. Throughout time many botanists have maintained that
all cannabis plants are Cannabis sativa or sativa sub-species. But
Russian botanists as well as Drs Richard Evans Schultes and LSD
discoverer Albert Hoffman assert that there are two other distinct
species, Cannabis indica, or so-called “Indian hemp,” and
Cannabis ruderalis. Of these, Cannabis indica is most consistently
of high potency as far as psychoactivity is concerned.
Virtually all parts of the cannabis
plant above ground are covered with trichomes, fine hairs. Among the
various types of trichomes, those known as capitate glandular trichomes
contain a resin rich in cannabinoids, the phytochemicals which produce
the distinctive psychoactive effects of this plant. Flowers have a
greater number of resin glands, and are thus the most prized parts of
the plant. In high quality cannabis, male flowers can produce a high.
But in lower grades, they may not do so at all. Female flowers,
however, will be resinous and will produce a high. For this reason
growers apply their best agronomic efforts to increasing female bud size
and yield, as well as potency.
THC, The Big Kahuna
Cannabis produces its expansive and
euphoric effects due to THC, or tetrahydrocannabinol, which is found in
the resin which accumulates in cannabis leaves and flowers. This
compound is a member of a group of 70 compounds known as the
cannabinoids. Of these, the THC content of cannabis alone determines the
potency of the material, producing euphoria and relaxation. The acute
toxicity of THC is extremely low, and there has never been a single
reported case of a death due to THC or cannabis consumption in any
form.
In August 1990, researchers reported
in the journal Nature the discovery of receptors in the brain which
specifically accommodate the cannabinoids in pot. Cannabinoids bind to
particular neurological sites in the brain, as though the brain was
specifically designed to utilize this plant. Did nature toss cannabinoid
receptors into the brain by random chance? Or are cannabinoid receptors
part of an intelligent design for deriving maximum benefit from
cannabis? Is cannabis a elixir of reverie for which we are ideally
suited?
Gifts From The Gods
The five psyche delicacies described
here are exquisite works of nature, arising from the murky, protoplasmic
swamp of biological history. We may never know the full story of how
these plants first came into being. But we do know with certainty that
the psyche delicacies have swept human culture like a great tidal surge.
And just as we have carried these plants far and wide, so too they have
borne the human mind on clouds of wonder. Thus they are to us as gifts
from the gods.