Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Scholar and artist Roopali Kambo straddles the worlds of culture, identity, art, and design at this year’s new Movers & Makers art ...
Kambo uses the poison of the giant monkey frog, to purify the body and treat various health conditions. However, there is no scientific evidence to verify the benefits. Many people have attempted the ...
One morning in late June, self-described wellness and transformation educator Jonathan Carrick and his client sit cross-legged on a blanket, on a bluff overlooking a Northern California beach. The ...
West Coast wellness elites think kambo, an Amazonian frog poison drug, is helping them purge “toxins” from their lives. Credit...Jason Henry for The New York Times Supported by By Alex Williams “It’s ...
Kambo is a South American healing ritual that incorporates the poisonous secretions of a frog. Indigenous peoples have used it for centuries but it can cause a range of unpleasant side effects. Share ...
The housemate of a woman who died following a kambo ritual using frog poison in Mullumbimby has broken down in tears while giving evidence at a coronial inquiry today. Natasha Lechner died in 2019 ...
Kambo, aka frog medicine, is the venomous secretion of Phyllomedusa bicolor, the giant leaf or monkey frog native to the Amazon basin. The substance’s range of traditional and potential therapeutic ...
From reproductive rights to climate change to Big Tech, The Independent is on the ground when the story is developing. Whether it's investigating the financials of Elon Musk's pro-Trump PAC or ...
Scholar and artist Roopali Kambo straddles the worlds of culture, identity, art, and design at this year’s new Movers & Makers art exhibition. The exhibit at the Artport Gallery, which includes ...