Nizo Neto remembers the death of his son from ayahuasca abuse: “Surtou”

Nizo Neto remembers the death of his son from ayahuasca abuse: “Surtou”


Rian died in 2016, he was found lifeless on Quissamã beach in Rio





Nizo Neto remembers the death of his son from ayahuasca abuse: “Surtou”

Nizo Neto58 years old, son of Chico Anysio (1931-2012), recalled in recent days the death of his son, Rian, 26, who died after taking several doses of Ayahuasca tea.

Rian died in 2016, he was found lifeless on Quissamã beach in Rio de Janeiro. According to Nizo Neto, the boy was mentally debilitated, trying to overcome unrequited love. As a result, he took three or more doses of ayahuasca and, according to her father, she had a psychotic break.

Despite the circumstances in which his son died, Nizo is not against the medicinal use of Ayahuasca. On the contrary, he defends its use, which earns him a lot of criticism. In the interview he shared on his networks about him, he claims:

“He was looking for a spiritual way to deal with a loss of love he had had and began to accept. By the third or fourth dose, she had gone off. I didn’t want to eat anymore. He said that if she ate he would betray God “, recalled the actor, in a speech given at ‘Bac Cast’

With the high dosage, Rian began to have rambling lines, leaving the family in anguish.

“I said ‘but come here, what betrayal is this?’ She would have come up with a crazy conversation, with a conversation that no one understood, and we really saw that something very strange was going on. He started losing too much weight, a 1.80m boy, who weighed 50 kilos. Totally anorexic and with already gray skin, “he reminded him.

With the help of relatives, Nizo Neto sent Rian to a psychiatric clinic. According to the actor, at this stage, the boy was malnourished, almost dying. On the run from the establishment, the boy was found lifeless on the beach of Quissamã, in the north of Fluminense.

What is Ayahuasca?

Ayahuasca, also known as Santo Daime, is the combination of an Amazonian vine and the chacrona plant. Its active ingredient is dimethyltryptamine, or DMT, which causes hallucinations.

In 2010, a National Council resolution on drug policy allowed tea for religious purposes. The only requirement is that the groups that use it must maintain “strict control over the admission system for new members”. However, the standard does not specify how the control should be carried out.

Since it is released for religious use only, ayahuasca it cannot be marketed. Its execution is punishable by legal measures.

Source: Terra

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