Spoiler: I hope to have many more years on this planet, so y’all are stuck with me for the time being. :)

Once the party alure of shrooms wore off, I was still stuck wondering how deep the rabbit hole actually was.

After months (or eons?) of searching all the galaxies in the universe and turning over every metaphorical stone in my brain, I still never found the mystical “42” that everyone kept talking about.

For me, the years of searching for the meaning of life ended right were it started. I had nothing and still have nothing. And I was baffled.

Yet, I felt that this primitive form of life, ney, this thing, this humble fungi, was trying to teach me something. Many times before, my brain has formed this idea: Listen to what the mushroom is telling you.

So, I stood back and looked: Mycelium, in its most basic form, bridges the gap between life and death. It is an extremely efficient nutrient eating machine and it poops out more life wherever it goes. It is a simple, yet extremely elegant and complex creature.

The it hit me like a freight train filled with PE: The mycelium quite literally dissolves the barriers we are taught in life: You are born. Hard stop. You then die. Hard stop.

Life never dies. It gets converted millions of times over into different forms, but yet, it is still life. The artificial and insignificant barriers of life and death are meaningless to mycelium. If one cell of it manages to survive my compost heap, I can say with near certainty that in a few thousand years, that one bitch of a cell will have multiplied a trillion times over and eaten half the neighborhood. (Life, uh, finds a way.)

Mycelium is quite literally the honey badger of humanities rules and honey badger don’t give a fuck what you think.

My main takeaway from this is something that the fungi figured out 650 million years ago: You are already immortal, you idiot. Sure, this body will die eventually, and get converted into some other form of life.

What is life? I am life. It took billions of years and several iterations of stars, and here we are. The universe had to cram a fuck ton of actual energy into what we are now. In the words of one of my heros: We are starstuff.

You, me and everyone in this planet is a glorious example of how the universe is becoming self aware. Right in front of our eyes, we can see the infinite number of combinations life is testing. Every living thing on this planet is an example of how life itself probes trillions of different combinations of things at the exact same time. Like it or not, we are the sum of all the good and evil on this planet.

Now it becomes clear that the geometric patterns and the fractals that we see during our trips are a bit of delicious humor: If you keep zooming in to those patterns, you are only going to end up where you started, friend.

So, today, I actually believe that I was the closest to death that I have ever been and it was the most humbling and beautiful experiences of my life. I truly believe I held the lightswitch of this life in my hand and could have easily pushed that button, but it didn’t matter. Life is immortal. We are immortal.

Today, I saw nothing, but yet, I saw everything.

    • remoteloveOP
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      1 year ago

      Oh, we were bouncing around between here and lemmy.world in our conversations I just found out. Lulz.

      The shrooms community just got unbanned over there, btw. That is nice, as it is a huge instance. I’ll probably stay on lemmy.ca as my home though.

    • remoteloveOP
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      1 year ago

      On a relevant note on this, I read up on this subject again just yesterday and gypsum is a source of sulfates and is pH neutral (~6.7). Mushrooms like sulfates in small quantities, it seems. Its species dependant on if you would add it to a casing layer, if I remember correctly now. Stamets book references gypsum in several different contexts, so it’s going to be a bit for me to take that in myself.

      Thanks for the grow compliments! My current monotub is about to go into fruit and my fingers are crossed.

      (Excuse me if I was wrong before. I tend to remember lots of things incorrectly and have to reference the same data a hundred times before it sticks in my brain.)