Mistbloom. A moss and drug. Requires extreme elevation to grow, and exists almost entirely in the Northern Gardast range. Raw contact causes intense hallucinogenic episodes that reoccur unexpectedly throughout life. Toxins quickly absorb through the skin and store themselves in body fat, spine, joints, and lymph nodes. When boiled into tea, the effects can be slightly subdued, with a longer lasting initial response, with no lingering effects in the body parts. Popularly mixed with other medicines to bolster their effects. A very synergistic compound which is also used in certain poisons, weapons, and explosives. Heavy users are vulnerable to possession, and use is referred to as torching or lamping referring to the light and attention they draw to themselves linking to the invisible world. The experience is always the same, linked to the imagined appearance of surrounding, encroaching fog initiating each hallucinogenic episode. Can cause heart and brain rupture. Helps with comas, depression, and sometimes reverses possession. Since mosses are also used as paint pigments, this plays an important role in the initiation rites of several civilization, primarily in Aken. Full accounts are found in the Book of Peoples under diseases and treatments.