almost impossible to find good lsd. It needs to be made in large batches to breakeven. not that much demand anymore. Wouldn't trust or take anything that is sold today as lsd.
Surf I hope you begin to understand the danger you're putting yourself in. Stop self-diagnosing and taking advice from Tim Ferriss and ET members about health matters.
Here's an interesting tale about fast cycling manic depression. http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/t...sr=8-1/ref=pd_bbs_1?v=glance&s=books&n=507846
only if you grow it yourself, and even growing button mushrooms or shitake requires quite a commitment
drugs don't cure depression, but they may help somebody who is predisposed to depression (and like the man said, if you had it you were probably born with it and it has nothing to do with whether it is sunny outside or you just made money in the market) and the problem is you have a lot of people who are not depressed telling us that drugs didn't help them when those of us that are depressed may find some relief in them. What a normal person calls depression is quite different than what a depressed person calls depression. The best safe guard against depression is ignorance. Once you start understanding things it's hard not to get depressed. Drugs won't help, but they may give some brief relief, but almost always involve more pay back and pain than you started with. as far as danger to society, I rank drugs about equal to home equity loans
but if everybody could spend just one night with a good hit of pure LSD and some good pot in a safe environment with a friend and some good music the world would be a much better place. (but you have to be prepared, both spiritually and mentally but also physically, and that takes work.)
Men are suffering from a psychological phenomenon that can undermine their success — but they're too ashamed to talk about it http://www.businessinsider.com/men-suffer-from-impostor-syndrome-2016-1