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Shrooms Q Street Interview Exclusive -

“It’s not a dispensary situation,” Miles explains, sipping cold brew in a back booth of a dimly lit diner. “You can’t walk into a storefront and use a credit card. But if you walk down Q Street between 14th and 18th on a Friday night? You’ll feel it. The vibration is different.”

“That’s the shocker. You think it’s college kids. It’s not. It’s lobbyists. It’s Hill staffers. It’s neurotic lawyers from firms in Rosslyn. I’ve served a woman in a pantsuit who just defended a merger; she wanted to ‘unwind the ego.’ I’ve served a 68-year-old retired foreign service officer with PTSD. The Q Street scene is white-collar psychedelia. People don’t want to go to a rave; they want to sit in a sound bath and cry.” Part 3: The Dark Side of the Gift – A Cautionary Tale No exclusive interview about the underground is complete without the shadow side. shrooms q street interview exclusive

The result was a medical emergency. The police were called. Because Initiative 81 makes shrooms the lowest priority, officers technically don’t have to arrest you—but they can detain you for "public disturbance." You’ll feel it

By: Jasper Hale, Urban Ethnographer Dateline: Washington, D.C. – Ward 4 It’s not

“It’s medicine. It’s just wearing a hoodie right now.”