Psychedelics Today Podcast

736 episodes
Chris Bache - LSD and the Mind of the Universe: Diamonds from Heaven
Chris Bache - LSD and the Mind of the Universe: Diamonds from Heaven
In this episode, Kyle and Joe interview Chris Bache, author of LSD and the Mind of the Universe. Chris went through 73 high dose LSD sessions and talks about his experience in the show.
3 Key Points:- Chris went through 73 high dose LSD sessions, but he says that pushing the edge of high dose and high frequency use brought on increasingly intense difficulties. He does not recommend high dose sessions like he did.
- The mind of the universe is where someone goes when one completely dissolves.
- In the show, they discuss psychedelic therapy and the debate on whether or not therapists should have to have psychedelic experience to do the therapy. Chris believes that the level of experience a therapist has had will impact the type of support they will be able to give.
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- It was at the time Chris had just finished grad school and was looking where to take his research as a university professor
- He was introduced to the work of Stan Grof, and his book Realms of the Human Unconscious: Observations from LSD Research (Condor Books)
- He was the professor of Religious Studies, sticking to his traditional life
- He knew there would come a time for him to share his experiences with a larger audience
- Chris says he's always been locked into his body and his physical experience
- He had no background in psychedelic states of consciousness
- He said you're always working with a sitter and same context/setting
- As the dosage increased, he began creating a more intense music playlist
- Chris thinks music is very important for psychedelic sessions
- Chris does not recommend working with high doses
- “When you're working with opening consciousness that radically, music has a tremendous effect, it has an amplifying effect by 5 or 10x than doing it without music” - Chris
- Chris said he has experienced all the common layers of the psychedelic unconscious that's talked about
- Chris experienced 4 different death/rebirths
- Chris differentiated 5 levels of the universe
- The first is at the personal mind, where an ego death happens
- The second takes places at the collective mind, about species
- The third level is an archetypal mind, the high subtle mind, moving beyond the species existence
- The fourth level is causal mind, causal oneness, profound states of non-dual reality
- The last is Diamond Luminosity, its absolute clarity, pureness
- Chris says that there is a certain level of support that one needs to truly let go of themselves and let go to the experience
- He says that he thinks the level of experience will impact the type of support a therapist will be able to give
- The mind of the universe is where someone goes when one completely dissolves
- Pushing the edge of high dose, high frequency use brought on increasingly intense difficulties
- Chris says he was very secret about his psychedelic use, his students didn't know about it
- But he said after he had gone deep and touched these different levels of consciousness, his students became alive
- The deeper he went in his own work, the more it touched the students at a deeper level
- Chris thinks that LSD is a little cleaner than other psychedelics
- His basic sense is that psilocybin tends to be less evocative, disruptive
- Ayahuasca is more disruptive in opening up to deeper levels
- LSD is the most disruptive in opening people up to really deep levels of consciousness
- With LSD is was less about his personal experience, and more about the collective unconscious experience
- With one of his experiences, he had seen everything in his whole life all at once
- He then entered into archetypal experiences, the platonic domain beyond the time-space reality
- The beings he ‘met’ were as large as universes, responsible for creating time and space
- He went into ‘deep time’, different magnitudes of time experiences in a broader frame of reference (where we are in the history of time, what our future looks like)
- He reached that diamond luminosity level only 4 times out of all of his LSD sessions
- “If we keep this up, sooner or later, the totality of this consciousness is going to wake up” - Chris
- “We are moving toward a collective wake up, it's not a personal experience, it's a collective experience. An evolution of our species.” -Chris
- If Chris has one tip, is to let go of our fear of death, when we die, we go back home
- After so many sessions, and not taking the time to stop to integrate, after years, his body was screaming for community, and he felt this deep existential sadness and felt as if he was just waiting to die
- It took 10 years to integrate his deep exploration, and to finally feel okay and comfortable again in his body suit and in this life
- The universe is an infinite ocean of possibilities, we will never reach the end
- “The collective psyche is being cosmically stimulated by the trauma that we are entering into” -Chris
LSD and the Mind of the Universe: Diamonds from Heaven
Chrisbache.com - future website
About Chris
Christopher M. Bache is professor in the Department of Philosophy and Religious Studies at Youngstown State University where he taught for 33 years. He is also adjunct faculty at the California Institute of Integral Studies and a Fellow at the Institute of Noetic Sciences. An award-winning teacher, Chris’ work explores the philosophical implications of non-ordinary states of consciousness, especially psychedelic states. Chris has written three books translated into six languages: Lifecycles - a study of reincarnation in light of contemporary consciousness research; Dark Night, Early Dawn - a pioneering work in psychedelic philosophy and collective consciousness; and The Living Classroom, an exploration of teaching and collective fields of consciousness. His new book is Diamonds from Heaven ~ LSD and the Mind of the Universe (2019).
Use code PSYTODAY at Onnit for a discount on all products except fitness equipment Get a 30 day free audible trial at audibletrial.com/psychedelicstodayPeter H. Addy PhD - Salvia: Research and Therapeutic Use
Peter H. Addy PhD - Salvia: Research and Therapeutic Use
In this episode, Joe interviews Dr. Peter Addy, Licensed Mental Health Counselor out of Washington. In the show, they talk about the research and therapeutic use of Salvia.
3 Key Points:- Salvinorin A is the active molecule that causes the psychedelic experiential reports, although there are at least a dozen unique compounds in the Salvia plant.
- In a recreational setting, Salvia is usually smoked, but in the Mazatec culture, they do not smoke it, they use a sublingual method.
- The clinical applications of Salvia are tricky right now. It's not easy to get funding for psychedelic research.
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- Peter helped found the Yale Psychedelic Speaker Series
- The main goal was to normalize talking about psychedelic research as research
- Peter joined the pharmacology lab for his post doctoral research on Salvia
- The team was mainly studying THC but were also studying Ketamine
- He wanted to bring in MDMA and Psilocybin research
- Peter attended The Institute of Transpersonal Psychology
- As a psychologist, Peter focused heavily on feedback and experience
- It all started when Peter stumbled across a dusty book in the library as a Freshman,
Rafael Lancelotta and Alan Kooi Davis - 5-MEO-DMT: Facilitation Harms, Oneness and Privilege
Rafael Lancelotta and Alan Kooi Davis - 5-MEO-DMT: Facilitation Harms, Oneness and Privilege
In today’s episode, Joe visits Naropa in Boulder, CO to sit down with Rafael Lancelotta and Alan Kooi Davis. Alan is a Clinical Psychology Professor at Ohio State and Rafael is a legal Psychedelic Therapist operating out of Innate Path in Colorado.
3 Key Points:- Facilitation is a huge problem in the 5-MEO-DMT space. Some people take it without the intention of working on it afterward, they are commonly given too much, and also in a poor context. This recipe of poor facilitation and guidance leads to a lot of challenging experiences and a lot of integration work.
- The feeling of oneness typically arises when taking 5-MEO-DMT. It can be great for some, but for others, it can be extremely overwhelming and harmful when not provided the correct intention, context and tools to work through it.
- Privilege is a huge issue in the psychedelic space. The goal in this space is to make everyone’s voice heard, not just those of privilege.
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- Rafael studied Mental Health Counseling at the University of Wyoming
- He is currently at Innate Path in Lakewood, CO doing Ketamine and Cannabis assisted Psychotherapy
- Alan is on the Faculty at John’s Hopkins
- He is a Clinical Psychologist
- He is currently doing clinical research on psychoactive substances
- It is a psychoactive substance that comes from the Sonoran Desert Toad
- It's a fast acting and powerful psychedelic substance that is challenging to predict
- Some have amazing, beautiful and transcendent experiences, but it also has the ability to bring up challenging and dark things to deal with
- It isn't as visual as other psychedelics, it has to deal a lot more with consciousness itself
- “It may feel like being shot right into the center of love, or the center of the universe” - Alan
- DMT can be more visual, while 5-MEO-DMT can be more spiritual, not that they can’t dip into each other
- Alan did a talk on 5-MEO-DMT at Horizons
- There are a lot of harms when using 5-MEO-DMT
- Both Alan and Rafael have been contacted numerous times about looking for facilitators or about trying to integrate massive and difficult experiences
- An ego death, in the right context, can be transformative, but in the wrong context, can be extremely harmful.
- The facilitators are the problem
- If the facilitators are delivering the medicine in a shamanic practice, and the people using it are coming from a Western mindset, then with goals misaligned, there can be some major issues
- People have these grand, god-like experiences when using psychedelics, then feel like they need to become shamans and facilitate these experiences for others and have literally no clue or education on how to properly care for these people using the Toad
- Joe says facilitators commonly overdose their users because the toad venom is hard to predict potency
- Alan says that the fear response needs to be initiated when extracting the venom from the toad
- He thinks it can come up as a huge problem when using 5-MEO-DMT from a fear-stricken animal
- Alan says there is a lot of reports of feeling abducted by aliens, and it could be related to the fear response from the toad being hunted for its venom
- It's a similar concept to the traumatization of any other animal by the way it is killed and then eating the meat of that traumatized animal
- On average, there is roughly 10-20% of 5-MEO-DMT in the venom
- When someone becomes ‘one’ with everything, it takes a lot of detailed integration
- When someone becomes ‘one’ with everything, that would also mean that they experience the suffering of everything around them
- When the rational mind comes back online, if the person does not decide to take action, it can be seriously overwhelming to feel that oneness
- Integration has part to do with the experience but then the other part is everything before it, our family, relationships, job, our personality, etc.
- “Yeah its cool that we are one with the universe, but so is everything else” - Rafael
- Privilege means having a voice, but it also means position in society, gender, race etc
- In psychedelics, for so long, it has been so hard to find a voice
- But with this psychedelic renaissance, it has become so much easier to speak up about psychedelic use, research, etc
- The people within the scientific community get put on a pedestal to speak about psychedelic research
- Alan says his goal as someone in the middle of the research role, is to create community, to bring every voice to be heard
- Being connected to psychedelics in anyway, used to mean prosecution
- There are still imbalances that need to be looked at
- The psychedelic renaissance is a chance to look at systemic issues
- We need to determine what our personal values are, and values of the whole community, and whether or not they are aligned
- Alan says his goal is to continue having a voice and allowing others’ voices to be heard in this space
- Rafael says his goal is to make this therapy more available to those who can benefit from it and not just for the privileged
Rafael is a graduate from the University of Wyoming in Mental Health Counseling. He has worked as a wilderness therapy guide with adolescents and young adults experiencing a wide range of emotional and psychological challenges. He has also worked as a counselor at the Behavioral Health Services unit of a psychiatric hospital treating severe and persistent mental illness and medically supervised drug and alcohol detox. He has worked on several research projects studying the epidemiology of 5-MeO-DMT use in the global population and is also the administrator of 5meodmt.org, an online forum dedicated to hosting community discussions on harm reduction, integration, and safe practices around 5-MeO-DMT use. He is interested in the use of psychedelics paired with therapy for increased resiliency, mental health, and openness. He believes that the counseling relationship is essential to deepen, enhance, and actualize the benefits of psychedelic-assisted therapy. He is passionate about finding ways to make psychedelic-assisted therapies available to all those who may benefit from it as well as helping to raise awareness as to responsible clinical applications of psychedelics/entheogens.
About Alan Kooi DavisDr. Alan K Davis is an Assistant Professor of Social Work at The Ohio State University and an Adjunct Assistant Professor in the Psychedelic Research Unit at Johns Hopkins University. Dr. Davis’s clinical experience includes working with people diagnosed with trauma-based psychological problems such as addiction, PTSD, depression, and anxiety. His clinical expertise includes providing evidenced-based treatments such as motivational interviewing, cognitive behavioral therapy, acceptance and commitment therapy, and psilocybin-assisted psychotherapy. Consistent with his clinical interests, his research interests and expertise focus on contributing to the knowledge of and ability to help those suffering with substance use and mental health problems, understanding how to improve clinical outcomes through examining new treatments, and developing ways to conceptualize substance use and mental health problems through a strengths-based approach.
Use code PSYTODAY at Onnit for a discount on all products except fitness equipment Get a 30 day free audible trial at audibletrial.com/psychedelicstodayMike Jay - Mescaline: A Global History of the First Psychedelic
Mike Jay - Mescaline: A Global History of the First Psychedelic
In today’s episode, Joe interviews Mike Jay, Author of the book, Mescaline: A Global History of the First Psychedelic. In the show they discuss Mescaline’s origins and the history of Peyote use.
3 Key Points:-
Mike Jay is a Cultural Historian and Author whose topics include science, medicine, drugs, madness, literature and radical politics.
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Mike’s recent book, Mescaline, is a definitive history of mescaline that explores its mind-altering effects across cultures, from ancient America to western modernity.
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Over time, Peyote has been used by spiritual seekers, by psychologists investigating the secrets of consciousness, artists exploring the creative process, and by psychiatrists.
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- Mike Jay is a freelance writer, an author and cultural historian
- Mike has been interested in Mescaline for a really long time
- James Mooney is a crucial figure in the transition from indigenous use of peyote to the more current applications
- The New Deal made religions respected, protected under the First Amendment for freedom of worship
- There is a ton of literature before the 60’s on psychedelic use
- It was obvious that if people were interested in psychoactive drugs, they would take it themselves
- Back then, science was much more proactive than it is today, but it is becoming more popular again
- It's hard to find an ethical source of Peyote
- Mike says its unpleasant but warm and tingly and euphoric
- By 1970, Mescaline was this legendary substance, but it was hard to find on the streets unless you knew an underground chemist
- On the Erowid site, they have a bulletin that the DEA created about all of the street drug seizures He wrote a book 20 years ago called Emperors of Dreams
- 2CB is not as intense as Mescaline
- Mescaline is a phenethylamine
- It does not cross the blood brain barrier as easily. So you need to take more of it
- It is a body and mind drug
- The Comanches were in a reservation in the Wichita mountains
- He was notified by the Comanches on some history
- He went to meet with them, and they told him stories on the history
- Peyote use originated inside of a Tipi
- “The way that we see psychedelics in modern Western culture, is not the only way of thinking about it:” - Mike
- There is an interesting thing that happened between Mexican/South American Shamanic practice and Native American Church
- In the ceremony, the facilitator is made to not ask like a priest, everyone is their own priest
- It is a healing modality for everybody
- The very first peyote experiences in the west encouraged artists to make art
- Salvador Dali was apparently anti-drug use
- The surrealist movement had a number of rules
- Huichol art is a very psychedelic inspired art
- Peyote is so fast growing, in some places it is growing naturally
- San Pedro is way more sustainable than Peyote
- There is a lot of demand for Peyote currently
- Joe says he thinks that Peyote is not scheduled in Canada
- The western story is full of first-person experiencesIts based on the personal
- experiences and visions
- In the indigenous accounts, there are very little stories on experience or personal matters, its more recording on the collective experience
Mike Jay is a leading specialist in the study of drugs across history and cultures. The author of Artificial Paradises, Emperors of Dreams, and The Atmosphere of Heaven, his critical writing on drugs has appeared in many publications, including The Guardian, The Telegraph, and The International Journal of Drug Policy. He sits on the editorial board of the addiction journal Drugs and Alcohol Today and on the board of the Transform Drug Policy Foundation. He lives in England.
Use code PSYTODAY at Onnit for a discount on all products except fitness equipment Get a 30 day free audible trial at audibletrial.com/psychedelicstodayDena Justice - Neuro Linguistic Programming and Non-ordinary States of Consciousness
Dena Justice - Neuro Linguistic Programming and Non-ordinary States of Consciousness
In this episode, Joe interviews Dena Justice from the Ecstatic Collective. Dena and Joe talk about Neuro Linguistic Programming and how it is beneficial to use with non-ordinary states of consciousness.
3 Key Points:- NLP is Neuro Linguistic Programming. Dena Justice is a Lifestyle Design Strategist that uses NLP to help people create their dream, ecstatic life.
- 93% of communication happens at the subconscious level. NLP training focuses on how we use communication tools to help people in non-ordinary states of consciousness.
- Perception is Projection. Our belief of someone else, is a projection of ourselves onto them.
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- Dena grew up with NLP in her life
- NLP is Neuro Linguistic Programming
- “You get to create your reality, what are you choosing consciously?” - Dena
- She became impacted by Tony Robbin’s events, and decided to teach NLP
- NLP is about language and communication and things that are happening subconsciously
- 93% of communication happens at the unconscious level
- Perception is projection
- “If I have a belief about someone else, that is my projection of myself onto them” - Dena
- The big no-no in NLP is to say things like don't or not
- Say it the way you intend it
- What messages do you want to enforce when in an altered state? You want it to be positive
- “What is someone creating in their reality based on their unconscious communication?” - Dena
- It's important to take NLP and combine it with non-ordinary states because they are more powerful together than the sum of them separately
- The ‘aha’ moment happens because we have neural networks in every single cell in our body
- Resistance is always a sign of a breakthrough
- Virginia Satir is known for translating people’s representational systems
- In the Hierarchy of Ideas, Virginia was all about ‘chunking down’
- When someone says “I'm upset” then you ask “how specifically?”
- On the opposing side, Milton Erickson focuses on abstraction, chunking higher to get to trance
- Dena uses the Milton model of hypnosis to bring people into trance states
- Dena offers NLP training that focuses on how we use communication tools to help people in non-ordinary states of consciousness
- It's so important to understand the 93% of communication that is happening at an unconscious level
- Timeline therapy is a process that utilizes the unconscious mind to get rid of negative emotions such as anger, sadness and guilt
- Every part of her training concludes with NLP coaching
- The Milton model and hypnosis is really beneficial when focusing on its delivery specifically
- Hypnosis is important because its using everyday words but with intention and volition to put people into a trance state
- We reduce resistance in communication when we move up in abstraction
As a master manifester, Dena has created a beautiful life for herself. She been financially responsible since age 15 including putting herself through college, two masters degrees and purchasing her own home in the San Francisco Bay Area. She has made over $1M in her life through a fulfilling career as a facilitator, educator, trainer, mentor and coach working with thousands of people across the country. She loved her career, yet hit a point where she felt empty. Near the top of her career ladder, she was a classic case of a high performer and leader hitting burnout. She chose a powerful pivot out of her J-O-B and into her own business. Now, she helps other high performers who have hit burnout and are scared to admit they’ve hit a plateau or a wall. She helps them get the eff out of their own way and move to the next level to increase their impact so they feel fulfilled and inspired again, as well as helping them create more wealth and the relationships they want in their lives. She helps people experience new levels of success, increase/improve focus and performance, abolish FOMO, evolve communication skills, develop transformational leadership skills, create amazing relationships, increase financial abundance and live life on their own terms.
Use code PSYTODAY at Onnit for a discount on all products except fitness equipment Get a 30 day free audible trial at audibletrial.com/psychedelicstodayRaquel Bennett - KRIYA Conference Recap: Ketamine in Psychiatry and Psychotherapy
Raquel Bennett - KRIYA Conference Recap: Ketamine in Psychiatry and Psychotherapy
In this episode, Kyle sits down with Raquel Bennett to recap on the KRIYA Conference. Kyle attended the conference, which is to bring people together with dedication to understanding the better use of Ketamine.
3 Key Points:- The more recent KRIYA Conference was the last of its kind. The goal is to make information on ketamine more accessible to more people in the future.
- At KRIYA Institute, they believe that there is not one right way to use ketamine, different patients are best served by different treatment strategies.
- Intramuscular ketamine is usually 93% bioavailable, while nasal and lozenge based ketamine is usually only 40% bioavailable. The less variability the better when working with a powerful medicine for therapy.
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- KRIYA is an international conference focused on ketamine and its therapeutic potential
- The goal of KRIYA is to get people of all different ketamine backgrounds in the same room
- Different people benefit from different things, and different doses and methods matter
- There is a symbiotic relationship between therapeutic and spiritual practice of ketamine
- She wanted to create a place where researchers and clinicians could come together
- This last conference was the last one
- The conference is CME accredited, which means physicians can get units for their education
- Raquel picks people from different backgrounds, therapists who use low dose ketamine for therapy, to those who do full blown spiritual work with ketamine
- Ketamine is a relational medicine - which is about having a relationship with the substance
- Ketamine Therapy Lessons
- Wisdom Teaching
- A Loving Relationship
- The Medicine
- The medicine is adjunct to the entire process, it's not just about the ketamine, it's about the relationships, the wisdom teaching, etc. And each are powerful on their own, and even more powerful when all combined
- When people are using ketamine in absence from the other components, people are not getting the full effect that they could
- “Ketamine when done correctly, when administered in the right setting, with the correct support, enhances resilience.” - Raquel
- Therapy is an important mechanism to teach coping skills needed in psychotherapy
- When Raquel first started running this conference in 2015, the clinicians were afraid to even come, they were afraid to talk about Ketamine
- This past year, there were hundreds of applicants and so much excitement around talking about ketamine
- In 2014, a whole bunch of psychiatrists stood up and said they have been using ketamine for their patients and it worked
- A doctor talked about combining meditation with ketamine to heal substance use disorder
- When ketamine is offered in a structured context, its highly beneficial
- Another doctor talked about using ketamine to treat those who are acutely suicidal
- People who are severely psychiatrically distressed benefit from ketamine treatment
- Another doctor talked about combining ketamine with EMDR to treat patients with PTSD
- Raquel says she prefers intramuscular ketamine over lozenges
- It's the cheapest way of doing it
- Its super precise, you have a great control of the bioavailability of the ketamine to the patient
- With IM, 93% is bioavailable
- With nasal and lozenge ketamine, usually 40% makes it to the patient's brain, which is a huge range of variability when working with a powerful medicine
- Clinicians are on the fence for prescribing for at home use
- A doctor talked about 4 different tiers of ketamine experiences related to dosage
- Other doctors talked about measurement tools of pre and post experience ways to take data when administering ketamine to patients
- There is a lot of ketamine use outside of the medical context
- The field is stuck in the question “Should ketamine be allowed to be used by people who aren't psychiatrically fragile?”
- Everything good that is going to come out of ketamine usage and assisted therapy, will come
- It's a slow process, but it is all moving forward
- Raquel encourages people to are interested with using ketamine in therapy to get together regionally and learn from each other
- She is thinking about creating a video series, as well as a retreat for ketamine providers
- The KRIYA Conference is over, but the KRIYA Institute isn't going anywhere
- She is looking at ways to get the information out faster and to more people, than to limit it just to conference attendees
Dr. Bennett is a Post-Doctoral Fellow in Clinical Psychology (PSB 94022544), working under the supervision of Dr. Bravo. Dr. Bennett primarily works with people who are experiencing severe depression, who are on the bipolar spectrum, or who are contemplating suicide. She has been studying the therapeutic properties of ketamine since she first encountered it in 2002. In addition to her clinical work, Dr. Bennett’s practice has evolved to include consultation services for medical professionals who wish to add ketamine services to their offices. She also lectures frequently about therapeutic ketamine. Dr. Bennett is the Founder of KRIYA Institute and the Organizer of the KRIYA Conferences.
Use code PSYTODAY at Onnit for a discount on all products except fitness equipment Get a 30 day free audible trial at audibletrial.com/psychedelicstodayAndy Frasco - Finding Balance with Psychedelics and other Substances as a Touring Musician
Andy Frasco - Finding Balance with Psychedelics and other Substances as a Touring Musician
In today’s episode, Joe sits down with Andy Frasco, a touring rock musician with the band, Andy Frasco and the UN. In the show, they cover what is it like to be a touring rock musician with drugs so available and how to live more healthfully in the space.
3 Key Points:- Andy Frasco is a talented, touring music artist a part of the band, Andy Frasco and the UN, as well as a podcast show host. Andy uses psychedelics to help cope with the anxiety that the rock star lifestyle brings.
- Psychedelics open us up to the possibility that everything we know is wrong. Finding truth and clarity for some people is hard, and people resort to alcohol and other harmful behaviors to suppress the painful reality we live in.
- Cocaine and uppers only keep a rock star up for so long. It keeps you awake for the partying, but it suppresses all the stresses of the lifestyle. Psychedelics and meditation can help with the balance needed in a stressful, lifestyle of traveling and fame.
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- Joe attended a bunch of his live shows and was able to catch up with Andy in his hotel room while he was in town
- Life is tough for a traveling entertainer, so the healthier they are, the better they are to perform for their audience
- Andy Frasco’s World Saving Podcast
- Microdosing is typically 6 weeks on, two weeks off, dosing every 3 days
- 1/10-3/10ths of a gram (of mushrooms) is the typical microdose
- Once you feel it, it's more of a macro-dose
- Paul Stamets has made mushrooms popular
- Mushrooms did not leave a mark on bone structure, so it's hard to tell if they actually made a difference in human evolution
- Drugs have been around for a long time, and people in the past have definitely used them
- There are studies of mushrooms helping to grow nerve cells and brain neurons back
- We are only 50-100 years in on science “(Psychedelics) open you up to the possibility that everything you know is wrong.” -Terence McKenna
- Joe says he's been to a therapist a bunch of times, and he says he has enjoyed it
- Joe’s main form of therapy has been Breathwork
- His most intense experiences have been just as powerful as his Ayahuasca experience
- Andy says he is open about taking psychedelics, he takes mushrooms, he doesn't really use cocaine
- He says he feels more anxious when he isn't taking them than when he is
- He says he gets really anxious on weed now as he gets older
- Psychedelics show us a lot of truths
- “We are all trying to figure out life, it's hard. Psychedelics help us create a better relationship with our mind.” - Andy
- Andy says he has been anxious his whole life
- He has had very scary panic attacks
- He became addicted to sex as a crutch for his anxiety
- He woke up one day, and sex didn't give him the thrill anymore
- Andy started in the music industry because rock stars get the chicks
- Teen years are just about being super insecure about everything
- Shame is a huge influence on our relationships with other people
- “The majority of effects from drug use for people are good.” - a quote from Carl Hart, a Psychology Professor who studies drug use
- Andy's first psychedelic experience was an 8th of mushrooms at 18 years old
- Andy says he used to be really into coke because he just had to stay up for the shows
- But he says he doesn't take anything anymore that feels like speed
- He was coping his exhaustion with drugs and alcohol
- “When you're in a band you're the party for one day of the year in that city.” - Andy
- Life for a rock star can't just be the 2 hour show, the trick is figuring out how to be mindful for the other 14 hours of the day after the party
- The lifestyle is really hard, its very common to use drugs, sex and alcohol to suppress it
- Humans were not designed for this
- Andy has begun using transcendental meditation to help with this lifestyle
- He also mentions having his first DMT experience recently
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About Andy FrascoAndy Frasco, a Los Angeles, CA native singer, songwriter, band maestro, entrepreneur, party starter and everyday hustler, tours with his band, “The U.N.” The music has elements of Soul, Funk, Rock and Roots and the shows have been described as orchestrated chaos, an overall great time. Frasco average 200+ dates a year, touring the country dozens of times, creating a loyal following everywhere he goes.
Kyle and Joe - Q&A: The Many Uses of Psychedelics
Kyle and Joe - Q&A: The Many Uses of Psychedelics
In this episode, Kyle and Joe sit down to cover questions from listeners of the show. They discuss topics that include psychedelic use for exorcisms, cluster headaches, athletic performance, processing grief and more.
3 Key Points:- There are a few examples where psychedelics are used to increase athletic performance. Psychedelics can also be used to help realign those who are using sports as a form of distraction from internalized issues.
- When eliminating variables for psilocybin consistency in mushrooms for therapeutic use, freeze drying helps. But there are so many variables in mushrooms versus synthesized psilocybin.
- When addressing the sustainability of the Toad, according to the data, there isn't a real difference between 5-MEO-DMT from a toad and synthesized 5-MEO-DMT
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- Joe brings up an issue that was brought up to him by a physician from the Wholeness Center, Dr. Craig Heacock, out of Fort Collins, CO
- Dr. Heacock warns about Kratom
- It is safer than opioids, but it can be physically addictive and getting off of it can be horrible
- Kratom withdrawal closely imitates opioid withdrawal
- The receptor site activity is the same as opioid pills
- Kyle thinks of shamanic uses for plant medicines, and with the idea of purging and spiritual emergence, working in non-ordinary states can exacerbate these states and maybe help with this kind of work
- Joe and Kyle go into writings from Stan Grof, explaining the physical appearance of those going through LSD psychotherapy or breathwork, and how it assimilates to an ‘exorcism’ of releasing the bad
- The purging during a psychedelic experience may feel evil, or alien
- Joe and Kyle say, do not perform an exorcism, leave it to the trained people
- Cluster Busters is an organization for the research on cluster headaches
- LSD works for some as well as oxygen treatments work for others
- We know a lot more about migraines than cluster headaches
- The migraine is where neurons in the brain start misfiring and create a firing storm
- Joe says the practical solution is to have a really large amount of psilocybe cubensis, all blended up, and then split in even doses
- There are potency differences between species, strains, etc
- There are so many variances with mushrooms versus synthetic psilocybin
- Freeze drying also promotes close to 0% loss of psilocybin when drying mushrooms
- There may be psychological blocks that are getting in the way of a person reaching the peak performance of their genome
- It could be trauma, or psychological blocks
- Athletic performance could be a distraction from what you're really here to do
- Athletes have a lot of dysfunctional behavior
- Psychedelics may show us our bad behavior and help us align
- Kyle says he had this passion to snowboard and dedicate his life to snowboarding, and then he received a message in journeywork that told him snowboarding is simply a hobby and he needs to focus his life on other things
- “Sports are a great way to cover up our emotions” - Joe
- Kyle mentions tow other episodes that cover similar topics Ben Eddy Shane Lemaster
- Start a club
- Joe says he’s been incubating a Psychedelic Club in Phoenix
- Clubs are great for harm reduction
- Joe says yes, roadkill, pick them up off the road
- If you touch a living one, there is a chance you'll be doing harm
- Even touching the toad can transmit harmful fungus to them
- According to the data, there isn't a real difference between 5-MEO-DMT from a toad and synthesized 5-MEO-DMT
- Kyle says when he thinks about grief, he thinks about trauma
- Psychedelics may be really beneficial when treating trauma
- Kyle says he loves breathwork, because it creates the container to process things and even just simply cry
- Kyle recommends a really great book on grieving, The Smell of Rain on Dust: Grief and Praise by Martin Prechtel
- Our culture does not contain grief very well
- A lot of people internalize it instead of breaking down and letting it go
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About KyleKyle’s interest in exploring non-ordinary states of consciousness began when he was 16-years-old when he suffered a traumatic snowboarding accident. Waking up after having a near-death experience changed Kyle’s life. Since then, Kyle has earned his B.A. in Transpersonal Psychology, where he studied the healing potential of non-ordinary states of consciousness by exploring shamanism, plant medicine, Holotropic Breathwork, and the roots/benefits of psychedelic psychotherapy. Kyle has co-taught two college-level courses. One of the courses Kyle created as a capstone project, “Stanislav Grof’s Psychology of Extraordinary Experiences,” and the other one which he co-created, “The History of Psychedelics.”
Kyle completed his M.S. in clinical mental health counseling with an emphasis in somatic psychology. Kyle’s clinical background in mental health consists of working with at-risk teenagers in crisis and with individuals experiencing an early-episode of psychosis. Kyle also facilitates Transpersonal Breathwork workshops.
About JoeJoe studied philosophy in New Hampshire, where he earned his B.A.. After stumbling upon the work of Stanislav Grof during his undergraduate years, Joe began participating in Holotropic Breathwork workshops in Vermont in 2003. Joe helped facilitate Holotropic and Transpersonal Breathwork workshops while he spent his time in New England. He is now working in the software industry as well as hosting a few podcasts. Joe now coordinates Dreamshadow Transpersonal Breathwork workshops, in Breckenridge, Colorado.
Jac Harrison - DMT Inspired Music: How DMT Mimics The Near-Death Experience
Jac Harrison - DMT Inspired Music: How DMT Mimics The Near-Death Experience
In this episode, Kyle sits down with Jac Harrison, a grammy nominated music producer. Kyle and Jac talk about music as therapy, how DMT mimics the near death experience, and how Jac produces music based on frequencies of mystical experiences.
3 Key Points:- Jac shares his story about his near death experience, and how DMT has been a therapeutic option for him to cope with his crippling anxiety and PTSD.
- Jac is a music producer, who uses frequencies from mystical experiences to produce music. His music helps people with addiction, sleep issues, anxiety, and more.
- Music is not an FDA approved medicine, but if there is music that tricks your mind into thinking you have taken a medicine, then it should be an option for those suffering.
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- In 2008, Jac was newly married with a baby on the way
- He needed a new job, and accepted one with Whole Foods Magazine
- Around 2011, the owner of the company became ill, and gave his company to his daughter, who was awful
- Jac said that he knew something had to change
- He started his music career, went under a lot of stress, and went through a divorce
- Everything started to go okay with his music career, money was pouring in
- His first album was Musicians Collection Project
- He had a ton of anxiety after the divorce, and had high blood pressure
- He took some cold medicine, on top of his blood pressure medicine, totally forgot about it, then decided to have a glass of wine with a friend
- The next thing he knew, he was in an ambulance getting his chest pounded on
- They told him he was in and out all night, and practically died
- After this near death experience, he felt amazing!
- But the feeling of greatness only lasted about 3 weeks, and then his anxiety came back, and it was crippling
- Jac says he doesn't believe in magic or witchcraft or any woo woo
- For his 39th birthday, he was working a trade show
- He ran around his hotel in Las Vegas, screaming that he felt he was going to die
- He didn't know how, but he could feel it
- Everyone thought he was crazy
- Moments later, was the shooting right outside of his hotel
- It was the Las Vegas shooting
- He does believe in coincidence
- He had this overwhelming feeling that something bad was going to happen, it was his intuition
- After trying to figure out what this all meant, he took a 2000mg bar of chocolate to blast off, trying to relive his near death experience
- He said, there was a lot of frequency, and as a musician, he felt like he could mimic it
- His first album, and first song on the album, Relief, was about his experience when he died
- His music is found at MindToyBox
- Each song he did after that, catalogs the DMT experience he had
- “An old projector TV, I had one for a while, it was great. The light came on and told me I needed to change the bulb. I changed the bulb and saw in a new and clear way forever. That's what DMT is like.” - Jac
- Kyle says that when he attended COSM for the DMT Spirit Molecule release party, Rick Strassman was there and said that the idea that DMT comes out of the pineal gland is just a hypothesis, and people took it and ran with it as truth
- After he smoked DMT, he heard this humming, and so he started humming and recording it as a frequency for the album
- He took opium, and then figured out the frequency that substance performs at
- He wrote music, based on the mathematical equation on how opium works and releases
- He says it has helped others detox off of opium
- Jac cant take mushrooms because he is allergic, so he takes DMT
- Jac worked with a man who had gone through a ton of trauma, he had gone through combat
- He kept reliving his combat trauma when he would try to go asleep
- He smoked DMT, and really relived the experience, and was able to let go of it after that
- “Your mind is a bitch.” - Jac
- “If you can lock onto a memory, and dissociate it with something, and re-associate it with something else, Every time you can go back to that memory,you can relive it in a way that it's tolerable, and get over it.” - Jac
- Jac says without this, he would not be able to function, and he would be institutionalized
- Jac’s music is Alex Grey’s form of art creation
- It is made to go with journeywork experiences
- It is supposed to mimic taking a pill, so you don't need to take the actual pill
- It is supposed to guide people when taking different psychedelics
- His tracks match the frequency of specific psychedelics
- The Malta Hypogeum, the oracle chamber, is a cave with naturally occurring frequencies
- Raymond Reif is an underestimated person in history
- He beat cancer using frequencies in the 30’s and 40’s
- “If we're not going to someone to get drugs for something that we need drugs for, and solving our problems using plant based medicines, music therapy, and frequencies, we are much better off.” - Jac
- Jac came across psychedelics when trying to treat crippling anxiety
- Kyle is the first person he has told this NDE story to
- Alzheimers is not a neurological problem, it's a perception problem
- Psychedelic medicine should be used for research to treat cognitive health problems, PTSD, alzheimers, etc
- “If the earth gives us something for our body, we should be able to take that at the same time we are able to take modern medicine.” - Jac
- Jac says that he started doing this type of work as more of an Atheist, and after the psychedelic experiences, he says he has become more spiritual
- Jac says that his intuition and discernment came after his near death experience
- Kyle says that this happens after mystical experiences, we become more in tune with what is going on around us
- “I believe that we have something in us, that is triggered, when we have a fear of death.” - Jac
- Jac recommends Relief as the first track for listeners
- He extends himself to people who are heavily anxious, have severe PTSD, or depressed, to come to him, and he will make music for them
- He said that this is not medicine, but if there is music that tricks your mind into thinking you have taken a medicine, then it should be an option for those suffering
Having spent most of his adolescent life medicated to treat ADD/ADHD, Jac developed a dependency on the medications and could not function without them. When he stopped using them, his anxiety was so bad that he was diagnosed with PTSD in 2009; so he took his love for music with his understanding of mathematics and developed music to help himself get off all the medication. Mind Toy Box is the result of his work.
Kyle Buller and Joe Moore - Exploring Psychedelic Integration and Coaching
Kyle Buller and Joe Moore - Exploring Psychedelic Integration and Coaching
In this episode, Kyle and Joe sit down to explore psychedelic integration. They cover different frameworks, resources and benefits of integration and coaching services.
3 Key Points:- Integration is commonly confused as post-session only, but it includes pre-session, self care, and really begins at the point you decide to engage in self-work.
- It is important to remember the GPA framework when determining where you are at in the integration process, G - grounding, P - processing, A - action.
- Psychedelics Today offers many resources to assist with the integration process; Navigating Psychedelics Online Course (and Live Course), Coaching and Integration Calls, and books, Trip Journal and Integration Workbook.
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- Kyle will be attending the ACISTE Conference this November
- He is speaking and doing a breakout session with Michelle Hobart
- Kyle is going to present on using technology for support with spiritual emergence
- Kyle and Joe will not be offering any major workshops until spring.
- They will be attending a conference in Exeter UK - Psychedelics and Philosophy
- Kyle says his near death experience shows up in his life everyday
- Integration is not only post session, it is also pre-session
- Integration, at its root means bringing parts together into wholeness
- Joe says you don't need support to do integration, although it is helpful
- Kyle's analogy of a psychedelic experience as a big hallway with a lot of doors, and a ton of magical stuff, even scary monsters, are coming through the doors and wandering through the halls
- The goal is to realize and say “this is a part of me” and learn to be okay with all of the stuff in the hall
- Self care works until it doesn't, and that is when integration comes in
- Kyle uses a framework and asks, what is your GPA?
- G - grounding, post session, how are we getting re-connected to ourselves?
- P - processing, once energy feels stable and centered, how can we process the material? It could mean journaling, therapy, body or somatic work, breathwork, yoga, etc.
- A - action, moving it forward, breaking the leanings down into goals of things to work on
- Kyle says that these things do not need to be done in order necessarily, but its a good framework to check in after an experience and see where you're at
- Joe reminds listeners of 'pre-hab', that preparation can make a world of a difference and weigh a lot more than post work in a lot of cases
- “Life is integration, call your mom, pay your rent.” - Joe
- Joe mentions the quote that “the opposite of addiction is connection”
- Climate change can bring up a lot of existential dread, the connection piece, and other topics can be addressed with psychedelic integration
- The Psychedelics Today, Navigating Psychedelics Course is a great way to learn more about integration
- We offer two books, the Trip Journal and the Integration Workbook
- We also offer Psychedelic Integration coaching calls and services
- You don't need an integration coach all the time, but for someone to just be there helps
- If you have a retreat planned, integration and coaching can really help mitigate the risks
- Integration within the psychedelic community is somewhat understood
- Kyle says he gets tons of emails asking for medicine sessions
- Psychedelic Integration and coaching services do not include medicine or guiding or providing of medicine, its simply pre and post session guidance
- Psychedelics Today does not suggest underground or illegal psychedelic sessions/therapy and makes a significant effort to be ignorant of underground work, there are legal options to choose from
Kyle’s interest in exploring non-ordinary states of consciousness began when he was 16-years-old when he suffered a traumatic snowboarding accident. Waking up after having a near-death experience changed Kyle’s life. Since then, Kyle has earned his B.A. in Transpersonal Psychology, where he studied the healing potential of non-ordinary states of consciousness by exploring shamanism, plant medicine, Holotropic Breathwork, and the roots/benefits of psychedelic psychotherapy. Kyle has co-taught two college-level courses. One of the courses Kyle created as a capstone project, “Stanislav Grof’s Psychology of Extraordinary Experiences,” and the other one which he co-created, “The History of Psychedelics.”
Kyle completed his M.S. in clinical mental health counseling with an emphasis in somatic psychology. Kyle’s clinical background in mental health consists of working with at-risk teenagers in crisis and with individuals experiencing an early-episode of psychosis. Kyle also facilitates Transpersonal Breathwork workshops.
About JoeJoe studied philosophy in New Hampshire, where he earned his B.A.. After stumbling upon the work of Stanislav Grof during his undergraduate years, Joe began participating in Holotropic Breathwork workshops in Vermont in 2003. Joe helped facilitate Holotropic and Transpersonal Breathwork workshops while he spent his time in New England. He is now working in the software industry as well as hosting a few podcasts. Joe now coordinates Dreamshadow Transpersonal Breathwork workshops, in Breckenridge, Colorado.
Kyle and Joe - Horizons Highlights: Perspectives on Psychedelics
Kyle and Joe - Horizons Highlights: Perspectives on Psychedelics
In this episode, Joe and Kyle sit down to cover highlights from the Horizons Conference. In the show, they discuss the presentations and topics they heard at the conference.
3 Key Points:- Joe and Kyle attended Horizons: Perspectives on Psychedelics Conference in NYC, it is a forum that examines the role of psychedelic drugs and plant medicines in science, medicine, culture and spirituality.
- Carl Hart gave a compelling talk; Dispelling the Lies that the Psychedelic Community believes about Drugs. Greater than 80% of the effects of drugs used are positive.
- Another popular topic was on the economics around psychedelics, and discussion on companies trying to monopolize on psychedelics.
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- Kyle mentions he loves to attend because it's a great social event to connect with others interested or involved in the psychedelic field
- Kyle says the videos of the talks from the conference will be released soon
- They presented neuro-imaging data
- Dr. Alan Davis did a talk on 5-MEO-DMT and its challenges
- People have a hard time letting go into the experience because its so fast and overwhelming
- He talked about a term, reactivation, similar to flashbacks that happen between 1-2 weeks after the experience
- People were reporting it as positive experiences, 80% of people enjoyed the reactivations
- He did say that there were some bad players in the 5-MEO-DMT space
- There is no control in the dosing in underground facilitation
- A lot of people eyeball their dosage in 5-MEO-DMT
- Joe suggests to buy a milligram scale
- Carl Hart did a talk; Dispelling the Lies that the Psychedelic Community believes about drugs
- Greater than 80% of the effects of drugs used are positive
- PCP is a psychedelic drug, but the psychedelic community chooses not to own it
- Ketamine was derived from PCP
- Hamilton Morris said that no drug is bad, it comes down to the dose and how its being used
- Poison can be a medicine, and medicine can be a poison, it all depends on dose
- No drug should be illegal, drug scheduling should just go away
- Some states are starting to ban private prisons
- Joe says the drug war is the war on race, the war on class, etc
- Joe suggests looking up the Portugal drug law; less overdoses, less HIV, less incarceration, etc
- Kyle mentions that in some cultures they would drink alcohol to get into a trance state and dance around all night and then chill for 3 days afterward because they would all be recovering from the hangover
- Shelby and Madison, co founders from Doubleblind Magazine did a talk
- Fiona Misham did a talk on the use of psychedelics for festivals and fun
- She talked about having on-site drug testing facilities and how they heighten safety
- In 2018 in Europe the MDMA contents were tested at 168milligrams
- 1 in 5 substances are mis-sold
- 1 in 20 MDMA samples were long lasting N-ethylpentylone, a drug that keeps you up for 3 days straight
- There was also an Economics panel
- Kyle says it was a heavy and hot debate
- There was a lot of conversation on companies making money on psychedelics
- There was worry from some on Compass Pathways monopolizing on psychedelics
- Kyle says big and fast growth can be dangerous for mental health
- It's possible that these companies will just push for results to pay off the investment than to really take the time to have slow meaningful sessions and include the therapeutic model
- When therapists have more congruence with their client, they get better results
Kyle’s interest in exploring non-ordinary states of consciousness began when he was 16-years-old when he suffered a traumatic snowboarding accident. Waking up after having a near-death experience changed Kyle’s life. Since then, Kyle has earned his B.A. in Transpersonal Psychology, where he studied the healing potential of non-ordinary states of consciousness by exploring shamanism, plant medicine, Holotropic Breathwork, and the roots/benefits of psychedelic psychotherapy. Kyle has co-taught two college-level courses. One of the courses Kyle created as a capstone project, “Stanislav Grof’s Psychology of Extraordinary Experiences,” and the other one which he co-created, “The History of Psychedelics.”
Kyle completed his M.S. in clinical mental health counseling with an emphasis in somatic psychology. Kyle’s clinical background in mental health consists of working with at-risk teenagers in crisis and with individuals experiencing an early-episode of psychosis. Kyle also facilitates Transpersonal Breathwork workshops.
About JoeJoe studied philosophy in New Hampshire, where he earned his B.A.. After stumbling upon the work of Stanislav Grof during his undergraduate years, Joe began participating in Holotropic Breathwork workshops in Vermont in 2003. Joe helped facilitate Holotropic and Transpersonal Breathwork workshops while he spent his time in New England. He is now working in the software industry as well as hosting a few podcasts. Joe now coordinates Dreamshadow Transpersonal Breathwork workshops, in Breckenridge, Colorado.
RiverStyx - Funding the Access and Preservation of Sacred Plant Medicines
RiverStyx - Funding the Access and Preservation of Sacred Plant Medicines
In this episode, Joe interviews Cody Swift from the Riverstyx Foundation. In the show, they talk about Peyote and the troubles for Native Americans and their church not having access and preservation of Peyote.
3 Key Points:- RiverStyx is a small family foundation that funds projects that demonstrate the potential for healing and beauty. RiverStyx has funded the preservation of land to protect the sacred Peyote plant.
- The Portugal Model shows that decriminalization works. Portugal faced unprecedented overdoses and drug abuse, typically with heroine, and when they turned to decriminalization and treatment, overdoses and incarceration dropped significantly to almost none.
- The Native American churches have held onto their ceremonial practices very tightly, and they struggle to find legal and sustainable access to Peyote, their sacred plant medicine.
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- RiverStyx is a small family foundation
- Cody’s grandfather was the CEO of UPS, and before his grandmother passed, she put a large share of the stock into a small family foundation
- Cody and his father took their quarter of the Foundation and created RiverStyx
- “How do you use a million and a half dollars a year for remarkable good?” - Cody
- He fell into philanthropy along with the burden/blessing of making decisions to change the world with a lot of money
- He started LEAD (Law Enforcement Assisted Diversion)
- It is a program that aims to help those struggling with addiction rather than punishing them with prison time
- In the early 2000’s, Eric Schlosser’s book, Reefer Madness Reefer Madness: Sex, Drugs, and Cheap Labor in the American Black Market eluded to Portugal having decriminalized all drugs
- Portugal faced unprecedented overdoses and drug abuse, typically with heroine
- They realized that they couldn't arrest their country out of the drug addiction problem, so they turned to decriminalization and treatment
- They de-stigmatized treatment and drug users didn't have to feel ashamed and use drugs in the shadows
- This lowered HIV rates to almost nothing
- It was highly successful
- “Not everyone needs drugs, but not everyone should be at risk to go to jail if they get caught with them.” - Joe
- Joe encourages psychedelically inclined folks to look deeper into harm reduction and drug decriminalization
- “Let's provide these people safe access to a clean supply where they can stabilize again” - Cody
- Joe mentions a book by Jeremy Narby, Cosmic Serpent: DNA and the Origins of Knowledge, Cosmic Serpent: DNA and the Origins of Knowledge
- The drug war is causing danger to the plants
- Cody says, if cane syrup was made illegal because it is killing people, we wouldn’t ban the growth of corn, because it is sacred and used for so many other things
- “Jail is one of the biggest problems for mushroom users” - Joe
- Joe mentions that he was a little frustrated that Michael Pollan was able to take mushrooms and not go to jail, but the average person could go to jail
- Cody says that he highly respects Michael Pollan and what he has done for the psychedelic revolution, and that he thinks that Pollan wouldn't want anyone to go to jail for this
- People like Michael Pollan and Tim Ferriss have done a tremendous job securing funding for Psychedelic Research
- Native American people had always been close to Cody’s heart
- As a philanthropist, he didn't know where to begin
- There is a myriad of problems facing Native American communities
- About 5 years ago, it just came into consciousness
- He got connected to Sandor of the Native American church
- He learned about ceremony and it became absolutely clear that he had to be a part of it
- It was an unclear path on how to support the community in the beginning, there was no 501C-3, there were no other philanthropists, the community is so large
- “How to support them in the continuance and empowerment of their using of a highly potent and healing substance to treat communities that have suffered so much, that was the key question” - Cody
- Looking at the threat and endangerment of the Peyote plant was the most important part of securing the preservation of this sacred plant
- Synthetic Mescaline is difficult to access and expensive
- It's hard to track the ancient original threats to the traditions
- The Native American churches have held onto the ceremonial practices very tightly
- It's important that white people don't just come in and tweak the ceremony
- The average life expectancy for Native Americans is only in their 50s
- They have gone through so much suffering, and they are very awake, sensitive people that are holding this culture and practice close to them
- Alcoholism is one of the largest problems in Native American communities, and Peyote has shown to be a highly tangible benefit and cure for alcoholism
- It has taken over 4 years to begin building these alliances
- Riverstyx and Bronners have been the only sources of funding, they need more
- Through this, they purchased 605 acres of land for peyote preservation in Texas
- 600 acres may not solve the Peyote crisis, but it is a start and has opened the doors to connect with other farmers that has now led to 12,000 acres dedicated to peyote preservation
- This is to return sovereignty and control to the Native
- After the land was purchased, they had a pilgrimage with the Navajo
- Peyote is God to them, it's their connection to the spiritual realm
- Native Americans have resisted acculturation and stuck to their ways, that is their strength
Email: cody@riverstyxfoundation.org
About RiverStyxRiverStyx Foundation attempts to lessen human suffering caused by misguided social policy and stigma, while advocating enhanced opportunities for healing, growth, and transformation in such areas as drug policy, criminal justice, and end-of-life care. The Riverstyx Foundation believes in the human potential for healing, growth, and transformation. The Riverstyx Foundation works to provide a bridge to the relinquished parts of ourselves, our society, and our ecology, to ease those fears and prejudices by funding projects that demonstrate the potential for healing and beauty, when life is embraced in its fullest expression.
Louis Adam and Jordan Williams - Mycology Now: Spreading Knowledge one Spore at a Time
Louis Adam and Jordan Williams - Mycology Now: Spreading Knowledge one Spore at a Time
In this episode, Joe sits down with Jordan and Lou from Mycology Now, a company that makes and sells spore syringes for microscopy use. In the show, they talk about the start of Mycology Now, the culture change caused by psychedelics, and personal stories on how psychedelics changed their lives.
3 Key Points:- Mycology Now is a company that produces premium spores for microscopy use. The goal is to spread knowledge about mycology, one spore at a time.
- We are living in an age of information that has never been experienced before, people have the tools to break the stigma on their own just by educating themselves.
- Psychedelics are becoming a culture change agent, more and more people are becoming accepting of psychedelics, and psychedelics are helping people come together to create positive change.
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- Jordan and Lou are co-owners and creators of Mycology Now
- The company runs out of Florida
- Mycology Now is a company that sells spores for microscopy
- They have two locations in Denver
- The mission of the company is to spread spores and knowledge
- Lou shares how his interest in mycology began
- He says it began with his struggle with depression and suicidal tendencies
- Psilocybin had ended up being the only thing that helped with the struggle, the depression was completely erased
- Jordan shares his story
- His mother was in a relationship when he was about 10 years old with an abusive man
- This man abused narcotics, opioids
- He was abusive mentally, physically and emotionally
- He grew up being convinced that he wasn't worthy of love, and he blamed himself
- About 2 years ago, he discovered mushrooms, and was able to go into the painful parts of his childhood and forgive himself and heal from his trauma
- “Although negative things did happen to me, and to my family, I was not the cause of it, and I should not have to carry that around with me.” - Jordan
- He wants to do everything in his power to bring that to the rest of the world
- One thing that they have noticed about the younger generation is that they are way more open and have way more acceptance of psychedelics and an interest in self care and mental health
- “We are living in an age of information that has never been experienced before, people have the tools to break the stigma on their own just by educating themselves.” - Jordan
- Joe mentions that in Colorado, psychedelics are a bit normalized to have conversation about
- In Florida, the median age is 55, so there is more of a challenge because people that age grew up in the taboo time of psychedelics
- It organically grew into a website
- Lou says it was an entity that grew on its own
- Joe predicts that in 2020, we are about to see the Psilocybin movement really take off
- Joe brings up the Paul Stamets Stack, which is Cubensis, Lions Mane and Niacin
- There are testimonials about auditory changes that you can measure, you can increase your ability to hear frequencies
- They bring up an example of a deaf man being able to hear the waves of the ocean for the first time after practicing the Stamet’s stack
- Some people say its the worst time in history, and other people say this is the best time in history
- There is a hunger of more digestible ways of receiving information
- Psychedelics can help us understand the impermanence of things
- Lou brings up that Paul Staments and Dennis McKenna were the catalysts to his understanding of mycology
- Jordan says that his inspiration and influence came from people at music festivals
- People are very open and authentic when on psychedelics
- Meeting real people with real lives who had profound change in their lives because of psychedelics are his major sources of inspiration
- Lou’s sister was diagnosed with Metastatic breast cancer with a double mastectomy and was diagnosed with depression afterward
- After talking about the health benefits, she took psilocybin, and laid down and disconnected with her body
- Afterward, she was able to come out of it and talk about her ease with death
- The experience felt like death itself, and having felt what death might feel like, she no longer experiences depression about her cancer
- Johns Hopkins psilocybin study on smoking cessation
- 80% of people were abstinent from smoking cigarettes on a 6 month followup
- Those people smoked an average of 19 cigarettes per day for an average of 31 years of their life
Mycology Now is a humble small business dedicated to spreading awareness. They are a company that makes and sells spore syringes for microscopy use. Their Mushroom Spore prints and syringes speak for themselves; always having a heavy spore count.
Dr. Daniela Peluso - Guidelines for the Awareness of Sexual Abuse in Ayahuasca Ceremony
Dr. Daniela Peluso - Guidelines for the Awareness of Sexual Abuse in Ayahuasca Ceremony
In this episode, Kyle joins in conversation with Dr. Daniela Peluso, Cultural Anthropologist and Associate Director at Chacruna. In the show, they discuss guidelines for the awareness of against sexual abuse in Ayahuasca ceremony.
3 Key Points:- Ayahuasca settings bring together shamans and participants, and with the increasing occurrence of such encounters, there is an alarming rate of incidences where shamans make sexual advances toward participants during or following ceremonies.
- Ayahuasca is a commonly used substance for seducing participants looking for healing, whom then return from their retreats needing additional healing from sexual abuse.
- This guideline reviews some of the key behaviors to look out for and ways to prepare before attending an Ayahuasca retreat to avoid and protect oneself against sexual abuse.
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- Daniela has a PhD in Anthropology
- She was living with Indinenous people in Amazonia
- She conducted field work in the Amazonian regions of Peru over the last two decades, particularly Ese Eja
- She is on the board of Directors at Chacruna's Institute for sexual abuse
- She wrote an article on Ayahuasca and was noticed
- There was an initiative that made a guideline for doing Ayahuasca but it was held back because there are so many different ways ceremony can be performed and it wasn't accurate
- Drinking with friends is wise
- Drinking with experienced women or a couple is another wise move Abuse mainly happens to women but it does happen to men as well There is a higher chance for a person to speak up when they have someone they know and trust there with them Ayahuasca tourism is why sexual abuse is such a problem When someone doesn't know that touch is out of the norm in ceremony, they might accept it because they were never informed that it's wrong They may think that being touched sexually is just a part of the ceremony, and it's not AyaAdvisors and Tripadvisor are both decent resources for reviews on Ayahuasca centers/ceremonial retreats Unless something goes terribly wrong, you will usually get good reviews Places also change over time
- It's not necessary for healers to touch intimate parts of your body or any area to which you do not consent There are forms of healing where the body is touched, so it's important for the person to make known what is okay and not okay from the start
- Curaciones, Sopladas and Limpiezas do not require you to remove your clothes If a shaman removes clothing, that may be a warning sign because that is not a part of tradition
- Look out for warning signs that a healers intentions with you might be sexual When healers start to talk about how they aren't married or that they can give you ‘special treatment’ or that sexual or ‘love magic’ is necessary for healing, that is a warning sign Use common sense and draw the line immediately if anything sexual comes up
- Sexual Intercourse between healer and patient during ceremonies or directly after the ceremony is not acceptable in Ayahuasca tradition
- Sexual intercourse with a healer does not give you special power or energy
- Consider cultural differences and local behavioral norms when interacting with native healers, letting go of ethnocentrism Having an understanding of what is culturally normal is important
- Consider cultural differences and local clothing customs
- Protect your personal space, physically and spiritually Each person has a right to know their body and know what feels right and wrong to them No means no
- Be wary if healers offer psychoactive substances other than those used during ceremonies
- He is a Shaman, not a Saint! There is a lot more “I am a Shaman” these days, where it used to be more of “I am not a Shaman” Ayahuasca tourism definitely romanticized what being a Shaman really is
- If violation occurs, get support People should speak up as quickly as they are able to, vocally or physically “There is no need to suffer in silence” - Daniela
- Beware of what might appear to be consensual sex It has a lot to do with having the same form of communication, trust, and power dynamics
- Beware of getting romantically involved
- If you are aware of or witness sexual abuse, speak up
“Individuals have to accept that Ayahuasca has become a business and an industry as much as it is a spiritual practice, and that it includes the trappings of capitalism like exploitation and inequality.” - Daniela
LinksEmail: d.peluso@kent.ac.uk
About Daniela Peluso, PhDDaniela Peluso is a cultural anthropologist whose current research focuses on indigenous Amazonian communities. She has worked over the last two decades in Lowland South America, mostly with communities in in the Peruvian and Bolivian Amazon. She is actively involved in various local efforts on issues relating to health, gender, indigenous urbanization and land-rights and works in close collaboration with indigenous and local organizations as reflected in her publications. She also specializes on the anthropology of finance. She received her PhD in 2003 from Columbia University and is a senior lecturer in social anthropology at the University of Kent. She is an Associate Director of the Chacruna Institute for Psychedelic Plant Medicines and on the board of the Society of Lowland South America (SALSA) and People and Plants International (PPI).
Laura Northrup - Healing Sexual Trauma with Psychedelics and Entheogens
Laura Northrup - Healing Sexual Trauma with Psychedelics and Entheogens
In this episode, Kyle interviews Laura Northrup, Marriage and Relationship Somatic Psychotherapist and creator of the podcast, Inside Eyes. Inside Eyes is an audio series about people using entheogens and psychedelics to heal from sexual trauma.
3 Key Points:- If you think sexual abuse is happening, its important to speak up! We live in a world where it's scary to speak up, but at its core, it's really scary to not speak up, and to let these things happen to our fellow humans.
- Somatic work brings people the autonomy of their body that usually gets taken away when trauma is formed.
- Dissociation is usually a side effect of trauma, and it's common for a trauma patient to take psychedelics and become re-associative after one experience. But, if a patient was traumatized at a young age and dissociated their whole life, becoming re-associated can be stressful, and integration becomes really important.
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Show Notes Inside Eyes- Inside Eyes is an audio series about people using entheogens and psychedelics to heal from sexual trauma.
- Laura says the name 'Inside eyes' means to look inward
- Sexual violence happens in every community, as well as in the psychedelic community
- “Entheogens and psychedelics can wake us up so we can be more empowered and better stewards to the earth. But just because someone uses these substances, it doesn't mean that they will be operating at their highest self.” - Laura
- Laura is a psychotherapist in the Bay area who works with survivors of sexual trauma
- There is a place where people get with their healing that is very difficult to move past
- There is something on a spiritual level that needs to move to heal someone past their ‘block’
- Somatic therapy is a huge part of preparing for and integrating these experiences to heal from trauma
- Laura says when people talk about their healing, its common to only talk about the part when the entheogen or psychedelic comes in, but maybe not the 6 years of therapy they had before hand
- She says she really wants to create the balance of including both the therapy and the entheogenic/psychedelic use
- Laura says she also believes in community based healing
- There is so much shame in secrecy
- One theory of somatic therapy, is that there was a physical response that our body may have wanted to make during a moment of sexual trauma, and psychedelics and entheogens brings those movements out in therapy, to be able to heal
- Somatic work brings people the autonomy of their body that usually gets taken away when trauma is formed
- This thing can happen when you become extremely dissociated from trauma, and then you use psychedelics or entheogens, and you become associated after just one experience, thats great
- But if you have trauma from a young age and have been dissociated for your whole life, one psychedelic experience can be very stressful
- It takes a lot of integration to deal with the difficulties
- Dissociation when you're already suffering from dissociation has a healing effect
- “Part of healing is going toward wholeness” - Laura
- There is a lot of variation in what someone considers dissociation
- “Being embodied is empowering, and being disembodied is different than being dissociated. People can become more embodied after using a dis-associative medicine.” - Laura
- Laura also covers how people function in their relationships as they heal from their trauma
- Alcohol is legal, its horrible for your body, it causes so many deaths yearly, yet we don't look at Ayahuasca and MDMA and all these other medicines as a collective culture
- If you think something is going on, it's important to not just be polite and not say anything
- The politeness is a sickness that we have in America
- Psychedelics and entheogens can be really good at helping us be activists in healing both ourselves and others
- We live in a world where it's scary to speak up, but at its core, it's really scary to not speak up, and to let these things happen to our fellow humans
- Psychedelics and Entheogens get people into a deeper sense of their own truth
- “We need to be in a globally aware place, we don't need to just be healing ourselves, we need to all be healing.” - Laura
- We need more connected relationships, if you spend today and have a more connected relationship to yourself or someone else, that is one step closer to healing our world
- Just because you get connected to a group, does not mean that that group is the group you need to do your healing with
- Do your research, and get references
- Laura says she looks at psychedelic and entheogenic substance use from two lenses, she cares about the people taking it, and about the plants themselves
- She says that some of these plant compounds are becoming endangered so it's important to be mindful of that
- She also says that some therapists and shamans use bodywork and ‘touch’ so it's also important to be aware of that before ceremony or therapy
- Touch can be both very healing, but also traumatizing, so it's important to know boundaries
- Laura will be hosting an event at Horizons on sexual ethics in the psychedelic community, sign up here
Email: insideeyespodcast@gmail.com
About Laura NorthrupLaura Mae Northrup is the creator and host of the podcast Inside Eyes, a series that explores the use of entheogens and psychedelics to heal sexual trauma. She is a practicing psychotherapist and educator. Her work focuses on defining sexual violence through a spiritual and politicized lens and supporting the spiritual integrity of our collective humanity. She is a champion of living more fully engaged and responsible lives through the healing use of entheogens and psychedelics. She lives and works in Oakland, CA.
Laura Northrup - Healing Sexual Trauma with Psychedelics and Entheogens
Laura Northrup - Healing Sexual Trauma with Psychedelics and Entheogens
In this episode, Kyle interviews Laura Northrup, Marriage and Relationship Somatic Psychotherapist and creator of the podcast, Inside Eyes; an audio series about people using psychedelics to heal from sexual trauma.
www.psychedelicstoday.com
Dr. Ben Sessa - Preliminary Results from MDMA Assisted Therapy for Alcohol Use Disorder
Dr. Ben Sessa - Preliminary Results from MDMA Assisted Therapy for Alcohol Use Disorder
In this episode, Kyle and Joe interview Ben Sessa, a Consultant Psychiatrist. Ben comes on the show to talk about preliminary results from the first ever, MDMA assisted therapy for alcohol use disorder (AUD).
3 Key Points:- Ben Sessa plays a role in leading the current MDMA assisted therapy study for alcohol use disorder, and shares preliminary results.
- In the current stage, out of the first 12 patients, 2 have turned back to drinking, 5 have stayed completely dry and another 5 who have had a drink or two but have not relapsed back to their typical levels of consumption.
- Most people with a long term substance addiction have a history of trauma. MDMA can help people feel safe, in order to work through and heal trauma.
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Show Notes Preliminary Results- They had 13 people in the study, and they took data on 4 people
- The first caveat in these results is that there was no blinding and no placebo in this study
- There is no way to tell that it was solely the drug that resulted in the effects
- In terms of tolerability, everyone preferred it to other treatment, there were no bad reactions to the MDMA, there were no negative reactions, it was a total success in terms of tolerability
- In the current stage, out of the first 12 patients, 2 have turned back to drinking, 5 have stayed completely dry and another 5 who have had a drink or two but have not relapsed back to their typical levels of consumption
- They did a similar study previous to this one except without the MDMA and they had 11 patients, 9 of them went back to their full level of consumption
- They chose alcohol use disorder because it's so difficult to treat
- All patients are recruits from local drug and alcohol services
- Ben picks them up after they have detoxed, after they have been cured of the physical dependence, but when they have yet to be cured of the psychological dependence
- They receive 2 dosing days within their 8 week therapy (usually weeks 3 and 6)
- They do 125mg and then half that size dose 2 hours later, which sustains the high
- Ben mentions that recruitment is difficult, a lot of people have a drinking problem, but they can't have patients that are depressed, suicidal, pregnant, epileptic, etc.
- Up until next March, they are continuing to take in new patients for the study to have more data
- The next step is to have a randomized control study
- This current study is sponsored by Imperial College of London
- It's not a MAPS sponsored study, it's the first non MAPS, MDMA study
- The main papers, with all the data are over a year and a half away from publishing
- “MDMA addiction is as rare as a hen with teeth.” - Ben
- “Most people with a long term substance addiction have a history of trauma.” - Ben
- Trauma and PTSD is highly treatment resistant
- There are certain drugs that inhibit fear response, such as alcohol, heroin, etc
- They make you forget the pain but you can't work with them and do therapy with them, with MDMA you can
- MDMA can help people feel safe, in order to work through and heal trauma
- “We are all the products of our attachment relationships.” - Ben
- This past year was the 5th one
- There were 1300 attendees from all over the world
- What's wonderful about Breaking Convention is how multidisciplinary it is
- There's the guy in the gray suit in one room talking about high level neuroscience and a hippie with dreads in the other room talking about the spirits that live in the Salvia leaves
- Ben says they work really hard to make that balance work
- There's a lot of debate and conflict in the psychedelic movement right now,
- Breaking Convention is very important for creating space for this debate
- Ben is looking into opening a clinic
- He mentions academia is not his area of study, he is a clinician, but this research is an excuse to treat patients
Ben Sessa is a consultant psychiatrist in adult addictions, working part-time at Addaction in Weston-Super-Mare and is senior research fellow at Bristol, Cardiff and Imperial College London Universities, where he is currently taking time off clinical medical practice to study towards a PhD in MDMA Psychotherapy. He has specialist training as a child and adolescent psychiatrist and is interested in the developmental trajectory from child maltreatment to adult mental health disorders. Dr Sessa’s joint interests in psychotherapy, pharmacology and trauma have lead him towards researching the subject of drug-assisted psychotherapy using psychedelic adjuncts. He is the author of two books exploring psychedelic medicine; The Psychedelic Renaissance (2012) and To Fathom Hell or Soar Angelic (2015) and is currently conducting research with Imperial College London and Cardiff universities studying the potential role for MDMA-assisted therapy for the treatment of PTSD and alcohol dependence syndrome. Dr Sessa is outspoken on lobbying for change in the current system by which drugs are classified in the UK, believing a more progressive policy of regulation would reduce the harms of recreational drug use. He is a co-founder and director of the UK’s Breaking Convention conference.
Rachel Anderson and James Franzo - Creating Practice using Kratom and other Botanicals
Rachel Anderson and James Franzo - Creating Practice using Kratom and other Botanicals
In this episode, Joe and Kyle interview Rachel Anderson and James Franzo, founders of the EDELIC Center for Ethnobotanicals. In the show, they talk about the benefits of creating a healing practice using botanicals such as Kratom and the need to decriminalize all plants.
3 Key Points:- EDELIC is a non-profit in Eugene, Oregon that began as a public lending library that has grown to a community of information, events, and conservatory of psychoactive botanicals.
- Kratom can sometimes get a bad rep, commonly thought of as an opioid. But Kratom is not an opioid, it just affects the opioid receptors in the brain, respiration never changes, and it's actually in the same category as the coffee family, so it gives a boost of energy.
- There is not an economic incentive that puts the botanical research on the same level as synthetic research. At EDELIC, the goal is to create scientific evidence that validates citizen-led research, authentic scientific information, and create a scientifically valid, open science and praxis oriented, non-commodified access pathway, to and from the direct human & botanicals/fungi relationship while protecting the bounty emerging from therein.
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- EDELIC is a non-profit in Eugene Oregon that has been operating for 4 years
- They started as a public lending library
- They put on a weekly discussion group and host events
- What started as a library, grew to a conservatory to protect plants, and now includes research
- They have 15-16 psychoactive species, such as Salvia, Kratom, San-Pedro, etc.
- Volunteers are able to help out in the garden
- They are interested in growing the conservatory to have different climates that cater to each individual plant
- They have done both a CBD event and Kratom event, and have brought the plants from the conservatory
- The events that they have been holding are based on community desire for more information on those plants
- Kratom has the potential to prevent deaths in the opioid crisis with less initial stigma than ibogaine, psilocybin, etc
- The symptoms of withdrawal from Kratom are similar to withdrawal from coffee
- Kratom is a plant and the benefits can be harnessed along with a practice
- when habits are formed, a person doesn't need to have a dependency on the Kratom
- Kyle mentions that creating a practice is a foreign concept to some people, they think their healing comes solely from the substance and not the practice
- The best way to take it is in tea form, and let all the intelligence centers of the body take the medicine in
- James says he hears news and TED Talks on Kratom tinctures and extracts, and he thinks that leans Kratom toward that abusive behavior again
- Using it continuously and re-upping on the go makes it less of a practice
- “In all cases, were encouraging folks to focus on the whole botanical, letting the intelligence of the body to form the relationship with the plant will keep you safer than going in the other direction” - James
- The goal is to use the Kratom to take away the pain to a point where the individual has more energy and to say, “what can I do to improve my health in this moment?”
- That may look less like taking 100% of the pain away and taking it away just enough to have the energy to create a practice of healing without the reliance on another substance
- Its generally safe, it has a predictable response in individuals, and it is legal
- Kratom is not an opioid, it just effects the opioid receptors in the brain, respiration never changes, and its in the same category as the coffee family, so it gives a boost of energy
- “Botanicals, integration practice, and realizing our internal intelligence centers can really influence and inform our decision making process” - James
- Kratom can be tested, and there are industry standards similar to how cannabis is tested
- Kratom is highly unregulated and you are taking a risk when not testing it for quality
- In 1994, the World Trade Organization introduced this piece of legislation that says in US Patent Law, minor scientific alterations to natural botanical plants can be patented
- Patent law protects scientific adaptations to botanicals, and therefore, the US claimed that third world countries owe us royalties for agricultural products
- In Canada, they said to patent an indigenous plant is to steal from the third world country, and i n that case, the US owes other countries over 300 million and in pharmaceuticals, billions
- That is why in the US, there is an urge to make money on synthetic versions of these plants
- There is not an economic incentive that puts the botanical research on the same level as the synthetic research
- The WTO does not recognize technology or innovations by farmers, artisans or grassroots innovators that happen in a grassroots setup
- There are churches that are recognized at the federal level, they cant conduct research, but they have access to provide these plants
- "We are hoping to create scientific evidence that validates citizen-led research, authentic scientific information, and create a scientifically valid, open science and praxis oriented, non-commodified access pathway, to and from the direct human & botanicals/fungi relationship while protecting the bounty emerging from therein. – James
- Rachel notes that all funding so far has been from volunteers and donors
- “I am strongly for decriminalizing nature, it protects the indigenous, it protects nature, there is no reason someone should be criminalized for using plants” - Rachel
- There is a unique interplay between the laws at the local, state and federal level
- There is a need for people to come together, a need to not feel alone, a need to share
- If anyone is interested in starting a non-profit, Rachel and James are willing to help
Email: team@ecfes.org
About Rachel AndersonRachel’s focus is on somatic therapies and the healthy integration of plant practices. She has successfully fund-raised, planned and organized public events, hosted intentional integration practices with ethnobotanicals, created artwork, designed integration journals, met with the 4J school board to discuss drug awareness education in classrooms. Rachel brings power, stability, and genuine strength and determination to ECfES and acts as an original steward for the original ECfES vision.
About James FranzoA 20-year journey of self-education (using what has now become a large part of the lending library we operate) inspired James to launch ECFES. Additionally, gaining experience working in the field of chemical dependency treatment and social services contributed further to his disenfranchisement with current policy and treatment modalities, and attracted him further to evidence-based approaches to drug policy reform and the mental health field in general. Specifically, potent ethnobotanical plants and mind/body methodologies for integrating them. James is also an honorably discharged military veteran, who served for six years. James has been the website content developer @ ECFES, library archivist, team builder, and steward of the original vision for ECFES, an ethnobotanical/psychedelic/entheogenic healing center under one roof.
Tep - Drug Education and Festival Safety
Tep - Drug Education and Festival Safety
In this episode, Joe interviews Tep, a chemical engineer and educated, psychedelic enthusiast. They dive into rich conversation regarding drug use education and creating a cohesive meaning among recreational, medical and therapeutic substance use.
3 Key Points:- There is a disconnect between drug education and drug use. There are a lot of people who use drugs, but not a lot of people who are educated on how to use them.
- There is a huge advantage of isolating the property of the drug when using them for therapy. For example, using isolated psilocybin vs mushrooms.
- Learning on site at festivals and music events may not be super successful, drug education and harm reduction may look more like preparation.
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Show Notes About Tep- Tep listens to all sorts of music, whether that's rave style with lights, or jam bands, or a music festival with camping, or even rap and jazz
- There is a whole spectrum of drug use in the music environment
- She points out that some people are very mindful of what and how much they are taking, and other people are just taking anything they can find, and sometimes a lot or too much
- She started to talk to people at festivals and realized that people really didn't know about the benefits and power of psychedelics
- There definitely is a place for harm reduction education at festivals
- Joe brings up the Zendo project and other initiatives that help people who are having a difficult drug experience to walk them out of it
- Some festival ‘families’ go around and have missions to hydrate people or make sure people are having a good time
- They aren't staff or paid to do it or anything but they do it for the good of the whole
- Learning on site may not be super successful, most festival goers have an agenda for adventure and music and not for learning at a booth or speaker
- Drug education and harm reduction may look more like preparation
- Tep mentions Diplo doesn't allow any drug use at his shows, alcohol is the only allowed substance
- Tep thinks that he probably doesn't know that alcohol is far worse than psychedelics and other drugs
- When someone goes and has a vacation, they have certain chemicals released in their mind, it is still therapeutic, even if it's not a psychedelic experience
- “Not only can psychedelics be fun, they can also be therapeutic.” - Tep
- Tep started going to camping style festivals and started hanging out with a crowd of people 10 years older than her, where their drug use was mature and mindful and safe
- Then when she would hang around her younger friend group again, she realized how unsafe and unmindful their drug use was
- It led her to be more active in wanting to educate everyone on how to use drugs properly
- Shulgin's magical half dozen includes 2CB, 2CT2, and others
- Tep mentions preference of truffles over mushrooms
- Her and Joe bring up the decrease in potency of most drugs with exposure to moisture and time and other variables
- There is a huge advantage of isolating the property of the drug when using them for therapy
- For example, using isolated psilocybin vs mushrooms
- The therapy is just as important as the substance
- There is a way to find information in this community without getting a degree in it
Tep is a chemical engineer who had an interest in modern psychedelic research. She is passionate about the EDM and music culture and finding new ways to educate drug users on harm reduction and drug use education.
Dr. Peter Sjöstedt-H and Dr. Andrew Gallimore - Alien Information Theory Book Review
Dr. Peter Sjöstedt-H and Dr. Andrew Gallimore - Alien Information Theory Book Review
In this unique episode, Dr. Peter Sjöstedt-H joins together in conversation with Dr. Andrew Gallimore, Author of Alien Information Theory: Psychedelic Drug Technologies and the Cosmic Game. In the show, these two Englishmen discuss Peter's critique of Dr. Gallimore's recent book.
3 Key Points:- Dr. Andrew Gallimore’s recent book, Alien Information Theory: Psychedelic Drug Technologies and the Cosmic Game, explains how DMT provides the secret to the very structure of our reality.
- Based on a recently published review of Andrew’s book, Dr. Peter Sjöstedt-H sifts through and confronts Andrew’s idea that DMT allows one access to, and existence in a hyperspatial world.
- They discuss Peter’s critique, covering topics on information, consciousness, dimensions, dreams and theory.
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Show Notes Peter’s review on Alien Information Theory- Peter mentions 3 ‘problems’
- The first problem is a critique on what information is
- The second point regards consciousness
- The third point talks about dimensions and theories
- The first problem Peter states says that the originality of the work pushes the ideas further toward art and further away from truth
- Andrew says he is a fan of making things a work of art, and he says at the start of the book that it isn't something scientific
- In philosophy it's called speculative metaphysics
- “It's cliche isn't it, that science fiction eventually becomes science fact.” - Peter
- Minkowski Space Time, the theory that Einstein supports, HG Wells wrote about a half a century before Minkowski wrote about it
- Peter says that a person could be defined by a set of numbers, weight, height, age, etc.
- Andrew says that the information is the electron, and how it interacts with other information
- How do we know that there is not more to anything than that which we can know about it?
- How matter creates/is mind is a mystery
- Peter asks, ‘does information at a high level produce subjectivity?’
- Andrew says consciousness is fundamental
- Panpsychism holds a distinction between an aggregate and a hold-on
- Andrew says that integrated information is consciousness
- Information doesn't emerge from consciousness, information actually is consciousness
- Andrew says that he is an idealist, he thinks that the world is structured
- Peter says that information always has to be about something
- Andrew disagrees and says that information is substantiated
- You could say, the fundamental digits of our reality are ran by an ‘alien computer’, the physics completely different than our understanding of reality
- Andrew says that the absolute self is not only aware of itself, its aware that it is aware of itself
- He also says that these ideas are all musings, all things he has thought about as possibilities
- Peter asks Andrew if he thinks brains are required for consciousness
- Andrew says, consciousness is not a property of matter, it is an organization of things
- Andrew says we don't need senses to experience other worlds
- The DMT experience is not mind dependent, it shows another reality
- When you're dreaming, it's independent of the sensory experience, but its not entirely independent of the waking world
- “The dream state is informed by the waking state.” - Andrew
- Peter asks, ‘If the brain creates dreams, why does the brain not create the DMT world?’
- “We know how the brain learns to construct worlds, but we don't know how the brain learns to construct DMT worlds.” - Andrew
- When looking at a machine elf, is he equally as able to deny his consciousness as we are able to?
- Peter concludes that Andrew is a Realist/Panthiest
- Peter and Andrew think that they don't disagree with each other, but Peter believes Andrew would have to go into extremely deep detail on all of his points in his book, and the book is thick enough as it is
- Peter agrees Andrew’s book is a great narrative for mapping the DMT space
- Andrew likes to think of it as computational idealism
Alien Information Theory: Psychedelic Drug Technologies and the Cosmic Game
About Dr. Andrew GallimoreDr. Andrew Gallimore is a computational neurobiologist, pharmacologist, chemist, and writer who has been interested in the neural basis of psychedelic drug action for many years and is the author of a number of articles and research papers on the powerful psychedelic drug, N,N-dimethyltryptamine (DMT), as well as the book Alien Information Theory: Psychedelic Drug Technologies and the Cosmic Game (April 2019). He recently collaborated with DMT pioneer Dr. Rick Strassman, author of DMT: The Spirit Molecule, to develop a pharmacokinetic model of DMT as the basis of a target-controlled intravenous infusion protocol for extended journeys in DMT space. His current interests focus on DMT as a tool for gating access to extradimensional realities and how this can be understood in terms of the neuroscience of information. He currently lives and works in Japan.
About Dr. Peter Sjöstedt-HDr Peter Sjöstedt-H is an Anglo-Scandinavian philosopher of mind and a metaphysician who specializes in the thought of Whitehead and Nietzsche, and in fields pertaining to panpsychism and altered states of sentience. Following his degree in Continental Philosophy at the University of Warwick, he became a Philosophy lecturer in London for six years and has now passed his PhD (on ‘Pansentient Monism’, examined by Galen Strawson and Joel Krueger) at the University of Exeter, where he also teaches philosophy modules and writing skills. He is now to become a postdoc fellow of the university. Peter is the author of Noumenautics , the TEDx Talker on ‘psychedelics and consciousness‘, and he is inspiration to the inhuman philosopher Marvel Superhero, Karnak.