Duncan Trussell Family Hour - 423: Hamilton Morris
Episode Date: February 13, 2021Hamilton Morris, creator of Hamilton's Pharmacopeia and a true luminary in the psychedelic universe, re-joins the DTFH! Click here to check out all 3 seasons of Hamilton's Pharmacopeia. Hamilton is ...also republishing Ken Nelson's classic psychedelic pamphlet, Bufo Alvarius: The Psychedelic Toad of the Sonoran Desert. Click here to get your copy! If you want to support Hamilton's amazing works please contribute to his Patreon! Original music by Aaron Michael Goldberg. This episode is brought to you by: ExpressVPN - Visit expressVPN.com/duncan and get an extra 3 months FREE when you buy a 1 year package. Athletic Greens - Visit AthleticGreens.com/Duncan for a FREE 1 year supply of vitamin D and 5 FREE travel packs with your first purchase! Babbel - Sign up for a 3-month subscription with promo code DUNCAN to get an extra 3 months FREE!
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Hamilton Morris, a true luminary in the psychedelic universe who has created
an amazing series called Hamilton's Pharmacopia. For those of you familiar with it, you probably
are aware that he now has a third season which is available on Amazon and if you haven't had
the good fortune to see it yet, you'll be thrilled to hear that it's as far as I'm considered the
best season yet. He's so funny and so brilliant and so good at capturing different facets of
psychedelic culture and also sort of shotgunning just random interesting facts throughout every
single episode. And on top of that, the show has insane production quality. It's just a beautiful
show. It's got amazing animation. It's got just they spend a lot of time on their setups and
their lighting and all of it just combines to make it a beautiful gift to the planet and I'm not
just saying that because he took an hour and a half out of what I'm sure is his very busy schedule
because on top of being a TV personality, a producer and a writer, he is also a working
chemist which is incredible to think about the fact that he's a TV star who probably also
knows how to make LSD. Does that make him the coolest person on earth? Definitely makes him
one of them and he's here with us today. We're going to jump right into this episode but first,
some quick business. A tremendous thank you to Express VPN, the great liberators of the
internet for sponsoring this episode of the DTFH. My loves, you might not be aware of this but
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And now an excerpt from The Way of the Bodhisattva by Shanti Deva.
Drop into our hands. Tigers, lions, elephants and bears, snakes and every hostile foe. Those
who guard the prisoners in hell, ghosts and ghouls and every evil wraith. By simple binding
of this mind alone all these things are likewise bound. By simple taming of this mind alone all
these things are likewise tamed. For all anxiety and fear and pain in boundless quantity
their source and wellspring is the mind itself. That's Way of the Bodhisattva. It was translated by
the Dalai Lama and read by Wolston Fletcher. It's available on Audible. You should definitely listen
to it not just because the narrator sounds like a character out of demon souls but also because it
presents a variety of compelling arguments for the possibility that the you that you think you are
is not you at all. And that's what I always loved about LSD. That's what I always loved about
psychedelics was that moment where the identity is annihilated by the tsunami of the psychedelic
and somewhere in that annihilation an entire new universe appears as though whatever the you
you thought you were was actually some kind of blindfold that the universe was wearing.
And the Way of the Bodhisattva has a lot of chapters that you might find useful. If you're
somebody like me and you have anger problems, if you're tormented by anger it's got an entire
chapter on how to deal with that, on the antidote for anger which is patience and also just because
I love horror movies and I love the Hellraiser movies it's got some amazingly vivid descriptions
of the hell realms. And it mentions more than once the janitors of hell which is an interesting
idea. Like I had no idea hell had janitors but I guess it would need somebody would have to be
there to like clean up the blood and mop up the sizzling guts. Speaking of sizzling guts I would
like to invite you to head over to patreon.com forward slash DTFH and a big thank you to all
the people who have recently subscribed to the Patreon. Because I'm doing a kind of paternity
leave you have not experienced the full glory of the DTFH Patreon which you will begin to experience
again next week. Starting Monday I'll be back to guiding our weekly group meditation journey into
boredom and on Friday we'll resume our Friday family gatherings and then starting again in March
will be our book club we have yet to pick that title. But if you want to jump into the DTFH
community, if you want piles of glorious, fragrant, vivid, beautiful, powerful, slightly
pungent content all you got to do is go to patreon.com forward slash DTFH not only will you have
access to commercial free episodes of the DTFH but if you stick around long enough you will get
exclusive merchandise a beautiful mug a sticker an incredible t-shirt go check us out it's at
patreon.com forward slash DTFH friends we've got a wonderful podcast for you today
returning to the DTFH the host of Hamilton's Pharmacopia welcome Hamilton Morris
Hamilton welcome back to the DTFH it's so great to hear your voice
thanks for having me I always love talking with you and I really am grateful to you for the
uh sending me all the episodes of season three of Hamilton's Pharmacopia now available on Amazon
what was the service it was on prior to Amazon Hulu it's you know it's a hard show for people to
find it's very frustrating for me the majority of the messages that I get are from people trying to
figure out how to watch it um yeah it's and I can't help people in that way because I don't
even know it depends on where you are the easiest way if you're in the US is to just
watch it on Amazon you can also buy it for I think two dollars an episode on YouTube
and people have been uh have been like pirating it and putting it on YouTube which I think is
great like I just want people to watch it the only issue is the people that pirate it do a
terrible job and cut out pieces and like splice in soccer games and do things to get over whatever
copyright bots so that all right just on the level of people not seeing the entire episode
I really discourage people from watching those pirated ones uh but it's also on iTunes I hope
it'll be on Hulu at some point I have no idea when no one will tell me um and it's on TV as well
for people that I don't have a TV but I guess if you have a TV it's uh available on vice TV
and in some cable packages not to start off with a pretty mundane technical question but
are you producing these yourself or who's who's who are you making these with yeah I mean I am the
writer and director of the show and I make it with a small closely knit group of people who
help with every facet of the editing and the photography and the sound mix and the color
correction and things like that but it's it's made by a very small number of people um considering
and and doing this over the pandemic as well was you know like a really bizarre
filmmaking exercise but uh but yeah this is it is something I'm doing myself sometimes people
I think people are actually right now very confused by how things are made like yes like
they are very detached from the act of creation and so they often attribute creative agency to
corporations they're like yeah they're like why did vice make this or what like why did vice do
this it's like vice is a logo vice doesn't exist why are you getting angry at a logo or why are
you praising a logo like these are not like they're human beings that create these things
and their names are in the credits but then on top of that I feel all these streaming services like
Netflix and Amazon they actually cut the credits out of a lot of episodes now which I think
exacerbates this problem of people not even being aware of the act of creation they don't
on some level even think about what it means to make something I just well listen I want to praise
whatever logo or non-logo has you know been part of making this show because it is so good the
animation is amazing the you know some people who maybe haven't seen Hamilton's Pharmacopia
you might think that it's uh monolithic in subject matter it's that it's just about drugs or something
it isn't it's it's like a shotgun scattering of fascinating facts and it's just so you you've
done such a good job editing it it just looks so pretty so thanks for making it I love it
yeah thank you and the reason I even bring up this credit thing which I understand may sound like a
weird pedantic note to begin the conversation with is because yeah it was insanely difficult to make
and I I can't name all of the people that were involved but their names are in the credits
and it was a real labor of love to do it I mean this was not a job for many of the people I had
to work for or I chose to work for you know four months unpaid to get it done and it's because
a lot of the people were just very passionate about the subject matter and getting these stories told
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you know i have a kind of sentimental
feeling when it comes to shows with the subject matter of hamilton's pharmacopia
specifically psychoactive substances which is that anytime a show revolving around
that subject is against it i i mean instant hate of the thing because it's embarrassing to
watch it feels like some kind of you know throw back to the war on drugs but when it's pro the
subject matter um and it's made poorly then you get that effect of like well i mean they're whatever
stoners or acid heads or they're people who are psychonauts or whatever you want to call it
and because of that their show sucks so anytime you get like a kind of the a great show meeting
something that is not anti uh psychoactive substances i think it benefits everybody
because it shows yeah you can i mean you're there's an the opening of the xenon gas episode
you are inhaling you're inhaling a balloon of a gas that i'd only vaguely heard of and had no idea
it was psychoactive incredible do you ever feel like you're putting yourself in danger doing this
no and i think that's it that is sort of an interesting question is there's often
at least in terms of the consumption of the psychoactive substances there's often this idea
that it's very dangerous there are very dangerous things that happen in the show but the consumption
of the psychoactive drugs is not one of them i would say um you know they're they're maybe in
the xenon clinic there were some things that were questionable i mean that's a whole long story i
don't know like it's a bit of a tangent we can get into that but um but you know the the consumption
itself is often something that's done very carefully because you know i think for so long
people have associated drug use with self-destruction like they consider even people that enjoy drugs
even people that are in favor of drugs that think that they should be legal that think they should
be researched many of those people still on some level believe that the use of a psychoactive drug
is self-destructive and i think that one of the major things that i i try to communicate is it
doesn't need to be that way and you can use these things in a way that is not only not destructive
but constructive it actually will help you it will make you better than you were and
and i think that that's uh an important lesson of course not all use is like that and it requires
an enormous amount of discipline and research and care in order to achieve the best effect from
these experiences but i think it's just important to keep that in mind that um this is not something
that people need to be ashamed of or think is inherently bad for any reason i love psychoactive
substances they have uh been a huge benefit in various parts of my life but hamilton i cannot
get the effect of growing up during the war on drugs out of my head there's always some
underlying sense of doing something wrong of you know uh that this is somehow uh getting off
the track of what a life should be and these are things that i passionately love can you
do you have that in you at all yes or did you have oh i do absolutely i think and i don't think
it's even just the war on drugs i think that it's also capitalism and also it's not an entirely
unreasonable idea to have because we are taught that well not even just taught we live in a capitalist
society for better or worse where productivity is prized above all else and anything that interferes
with productivity is not good in our society regardless of how it makes you feel so right
you know my own i would say that the thing that i struggle with the most is cannabis i
without question enjoy smoking it but i have never been able to fully overcome
a sort of shame or guilt associated with using it and for that reason i use it
infrequently because no matter how much i enjoy it no matter how beneficial or relaxing it is for me
i still can't entirely shake this sense that it would be better if i were
sober reading it would be better if i were studying it would be better if i were writing
is this really oh is it truly permissible for me just to feel good and just relax and have a
conversation or watch a movie yeah that's it i i think we're hopefully some of the last generations
to be poisoned in that way and i'm hoping that might by the time my kids are old enough to
you know safely use any of these substances that the propaganda mechanism will have worn down and
will have the data available to show that it's beneficial but yeah wow so i guess that's just
something we're gonna have to deal with for the rest of our lives and it impacts the experience
itself i mean people often think of the placebo effect is something that exists entirely independently
from the pharmacological action of drugs but the sense of those drugs that we have impacts the
experience so if you grow up in a culture that says using lsd is therapeutic and beneficial and
may actually make you a better person you can be sure that that user will have a better lsd experience
than someone who calls it acid conceptualizes the experience as frying their brain calls the
experience frying thinks that it's a poison of some kind i mean even even if you're having the
best experience of your life if that's in the background you can't fully enjoy it in the same
way that i can't you know i could eat the most delicious meal from mcdonald's in the world but
i am still thinking about it as a like unethical poisonous material regardless of what it actually
is you know i haven't you know done deep personal research into the nutritional value of fast food
but my intuitive sense of it is that it's bad and should be avoided and so regardless i could you
know maybe someone could sneak an extra healthy ethically raised piece of meat into my mcdonald's
hamburger with like a carefully baked bun but i would still feel ashamed eating it because of this
sense that it is bad and should be avoided yep i can't do it i i can't pull off i can't have a
happy meal like no matter what's happening i'm always disgusted with myself if i'm eating mcdonald's
matter how good it tastes
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so i was thinking about what the questions i have for you now that you're three seasons in
to this incredible show uh and i know that you're a person who is is constantly researching and
like you get literally into the atomic depths of these substances in the way they affect our
consciousness and i've been loosely following some of the research that's happening currently
regarding implanting memories in creatures and the the implications of that to me are
wonderful on one level in the sense of learning and expediting certain kinds of training or god it
goes on and on uh but on another level it's the first time i've really sort of had an inner
shutter like a eldest huxley sense of like oh my god is is this the next wave of psychedelics uh
that we're gonna have memories implanted and removed meaning that this entire war on drugs
problem theoretically could somehow be pharmaceutically softened or altered anyway the the question is
if you and i'm sorry i know this is a terrible thing to ask people especially in these days of
technological acceleration but do you have any uh prognostications regarding what types of psychedelics
might be in our future yes um the the final episode of my show aired last night and it
profiled a brilliant pharmacologist named brian roth are you have you heard his name before i have
not he's a really interesting guy and he's one of these scientists who has done a lot of work that
if you didn't know better you'd think it was science fiction um he was crucial in developing
a technology called dread d r e a d d that stands for designer receptors exclusively activated by
designer drugs and his idea was you know in traditional pharmacology one of the most important
goals is to develop drugs that are selective for one receptor and only one receptor because
when you look at a drug like ibogaine or dmt or mescaline or many of the drugs that people
are aware of they often are promiscuous in their binding they have activity at a variety of different
receptors and it makes it hard to study the causal relationship pharmacologically because if a drug is
acting on several different receptors how do you know what receptor is responsible for what
physiological neurological effect so if you can come up with a drug that is exclusively binding
to one receptor it's a very useful pharmacological tool but it's hard i mean there are people that
spend their entire careers trying to develop a drug that exclusively binds to the serotonin
2a receptor the serotonin 2b receptor or so on and so forth what what are those receptors responsible
for um one is considered the primary site of psychedelic action that's the serotonin 2a
receptor the 2b receptor is considered an undesirable target of some drugs that causes uh
excessive growth of heart valves actually so but anyway so this guy brian roth his idea was okay
what if we sidestep this entire issue and instead of trying to develop high selectivity drugs we
develop high selectivity receptors receptors in a brain that exclusively are activated by one drug
and only one drug and we reverse engineer the basically reverse engineer the brain for the drug
instead of the drug for the brain whoa yeah and that and this is not and this is something he
has actually done that scientists are currently using i it's not an entire brain of neurons it's
one receptor but this is the the idea so there are these amazing things that are being done and
then he's he's taken that a step further where if you know the molecular structure of a receptor
you know every amino acid residue and how it is three-dimensionally arranged you can then
based on the charge of those residues and their shape you can
and using ai generate artificial drugs and bind those artificial drugs to the artificial receptor
so you're doing basic pharmacology research but it's entirely in silico there's no actual
proteins and there's no actual drugs you're just docking virtual drugs onto a virtual receptor
but because you don't have to go to the trouble of synthesizing a drug or isolating a receptor
protein you can look at the pharmacology of 10 million drugs a day so using this technology
he has and he hasn't published it for two a yet but he claims to have developed entirely new
scaffolds for psychedelics that is you know traditionally the psychedelics are
fallen to a couple of structural classes urgolines tryptomines phenethylamines but
hypothetically they could have totally different structures that haven't been discovered yet so
he's using computers to discover new drugs on a virtual receptor and uh and you know that's
that's one of these things it's just you know what is that going to do in the future who knows
but it's very exciting and i think we are on the precipice of a lot of great discoveries
this matches one of nick bostrom's predictions for how a superintelligence might come to the
planet which is some interaction with an ai and um some kind of uh genetic shift in like the human
nervous system to increase amplify whatever type of intelligence you want to amplify so
that is wild to think about but just to jump back for a second you said in silico as in it's it's
okay so that's that means just it's just happening in a computer it's uh it's like the what they're
doing with protein folding right now but with psychoactive chemicals yeah whoa that is wild this
is this this is one of the much like i mean even though every you know people are talking about a
ai is being the future there just can never be enough emphasis on how it how it's going to transform
culture but the addition of ai interacting with the genetic engineering of the human brain do you
mean so you're saying there's the possibility of having a open brain surgery or how would you
change your own brain in in a way that it would become receptive or a receptor to these artificial
chemicals nobody has done that yet but i think hypothetically you would probably inject a virus
into the brain that would cause a transcriptional change that would cause the uh the receptors to
produce these new designer proteins so what you're talking about there is also like a nightmare
bioweapon which is a virus that causes a change in the human brain that pairs with a chemical weapon
that induces states of consciousness i mean yes there there are certainly potentially nefarious
uses for this technology assuming that it could even work that way i mean that's that's a problem
with a lot of these things like the uh you know implantation of memories in a snail or um dread
technology being used as a weapon or things like that uh is that often it's just hard it's much
harder to do these things than people realize you know on one hand you have the nickbostrums
of the world that are talking about super intelligence and then on the other hand you have
an iphone in 2021 that can't autocorrect i am to i apostrophe n
right but you know we you know but just thinking in terms of uh uh like steam engines to the
bullet trains in japan you know and the span of time between them is uh you know based on
universal time not that long at all but in human time what is it's like almost a lifetime between
those two uh transformations into technology but still this thing even if it is 50 30 years into
the future it's we're talking about a kind of apocalypse i mean sometimes i think about the
amount of um the amount of time that gets put into anyone getting good at anything and how the
compression of that time is going to create uh genius like we've never seen before mixed in
with a kind of terrible hubris you know it the there's some humiliation that has to happen in any
path towards learning something it it fucks with your ego enough that hopefully by the time you get
good at anything you have some humility but remove that gap of time via some pharmacological
technology and suddenly we're gonna have a planet filled with these hyper talented beings
that never have encountered the learning curve i i don't mean to get too like weird and into the
and i don't know why i'm getting so negative with you hamilton but do you know what i mean
that these all i'm saying is uh when we think about on the horizon of history uh what's coming our way
it is so bizarre to imagine that we are potentially 10 years 15 years away from consuming a substance
that transforms the way that we see uh we see ourselves by implanting memories
that are healthy memories or even analyzing past memories and correcting them enough
that they no longer that we're not beating ourselves up anymore do you ever like worry
about that the that there is some potential for a dystopian pharmacological future for our species
i mean i think we're we're already in a dystopian pharmacological future i so i think um you know
i think that there's a lot of room for improvement where we currently are you know there's some
enormous percentage of the american population taking ssri antidepressants i think it's something
like 15 percent of american women something close to that seems like it's a lot more in new york it's
in new york it seems like it's a solid third of women that i meet take ssri's and i of course
understand that for some people it's beneficial i'm not gonna sit say that no one should use ssri's
i don't think that but i think that very few people that use ssri's are extremely happy about it
you know i i don't it's very rare for me to meet someone who says yeah i take prozac and i love it
it's fantastic i'm so happy that prozac entered my life i am so grateful for prozac i want to
take it forever it's been the best thing that ever happened to me it's usually a kind of begrudging
well it's better than the way i was before it's a necessary evil um and you know i think that
we can do better i think we can do a lot better and i have hope for that in terms of dystopian
futures of implanted memories i don't know you know it's it's very easy to look at the headlines
of these articles and then and not look at what's actually being done and what's actually being done
it's like you know they're doing some it's not a memory in the sense that you or i think of a memory
it's some like extremely minimal impulse and a snail that uh that is very different from what
we would call memory that's not to say that it's impossible it probably is possible and probably
will occur at some point i imagine not in either of our lifetimes but uh but when it happens i hope
that we are mature enough to use these things constructively
what are your thoughts regarding uh ketamine in the treatment of depression as compared to the ssri
well yeah i mean related to what i was just saying you know there's a little bit of a crisis in
psychiatry in that there have been so many years where we haven't had a dramatically new treatment
for depression and i think the fda started to liberalize its criteria a little bit because
actually the clinical data for ketamine were not all that impressive compared to placebo
it wasn't it wasn't the at least in terms of the clinical trials that were done
it was not a miracle cure for depression and really the only way that they were able to get it approved
was by making it a fast-tracked breakthrough therapy for treatment resistant depression
which is justifiably considered a life-threatening disease like cancer and so there are special
designations available for diseases that are life-threatening where they can liberalize the
criteria slightly to allow new therapies to be introduced to the market for conditions that
could really benefit from them and ketamine is a complicated one yeah the i haven't been following
every new piece of clinical data that emerges but uh but it's it seems like it
anecdotally does help a lot of people um i certainly also know people who haven't been helped and have
been uh i think have been harmed by it and it's a i think that because it's a psychedelic it might
require a different strategy than is typically used for antidepressants and one that
is not really part of our current medical framework because we're so used to this idea of
an antidepressant is a drug that you take every day or in the case of ketamine i think typically
every week or every second week and we're and we associate one off use of a psychoactive drug
with non-medical recreational use but i do wonder if that type of strategy makes the most sense for
ketamine i think it's funny the way that like so-called abuse or non-medical use is converging
with medical orthodoxy where you know uh four years ago if you'd told a medical doctor i
snort ketamine to treat my depression they would say you know that's irresponsible that's not the
way that you use ketamine it's not okay to snort it you uh it's not a recognized antidepressant
now johnson and johnson sells a nasal spray of ketamine to treat depression um but you know in
my own use of ketamine as an antidepressant which i haven't done in years but in 2018 i was i was
very depressed and um used it three times that year and i think that the way that i used it
was actually very beneficial which wasn't to use it as a daily antidepressant or a weekly antidepressant
but to use it as a kind of one-off tool to break out of a ingrained thought pattern that was
disrupting my functioning if you had to describe the k-hole how how would you talk about it what is
that place ha ha uh i mean it's it's not it's not easy to describe and it's not easy to remember
and it's not something that is analogous to anything in normal consciousness it's not analogous to a
dream it's maybe somewhat close to a waking sort of lucid type dream sometimes but even then it's
hard to say it's it's a it seems like a very random um and it's a very random rearrangement of your
consciousness that has elements that feel like what i imagine schizophrenia feels like um where
there's a sort of grandiose sense of privileged understanding of the mechanism of the universe
that other people don't appreciate yeah um or a privileged understanding of genetics and
inheritance and genealogy and all these kinds of you start thinking about you know connecting
wires of your life and your lineage and society in these very abstract weird ways that um if you
describe them to another person it would sound like a sort of typical schizophrenic delusion um
and that i don't i don't know if that is the beneficial aspect of it i think what is really
interesting about ketamine is that i think that when you're depressed and you've been depressed
for a while you can get locked into a certain type of thinking that is pessimistic basically and one
that has a very limited view of the world where you think this is this is who i am i'm this guy this
is what i do this is what i'm good at this is what i'm bad at and i don't do these other things and i
don't have any hope of doing those other things because this is who i am and and and what today
was like is what tomorrow will be like and the day after and that's just my lot and when you take
ketamine it can give you a delusional sense of possibility the aperture of possibility expands
dramatically and suddenly all of the restrictions that you once thought existed disintegrate and
you can feel that okay oh i want to be a politician i guess i guess i'll be a politician then oh i i
should write a novel tomorrow i guess i'll i'll be a movie star i'll be a medical doctor i'll be
whatever and and if you're depressed that sounds delusional be a politician how on earth could i
be a politician that makes no sense but then in that state you think why not well every politician
had to begin with the thought i can be a politician so the first step of becoming a politician is to
think that you can be a politician and so i actually think that that you know delusional or
potentially delusional self-image can be very therapeutic for people that have a
overly restrictive view of themselves and what is possible because you do need you do need that
moment of thinking i can do this in order to do something and so even if it is delusional that's
the first step in expanding yourself when this becomes problematic is when you do it all the
time because i think as a one-off thing every now and then it can be tremendously beneficial to
expand the scope of possibility of yourself but if you're doing it all the time then you can just
end up having a totally distorted self-image that is not therapeutic or beneficial in any way
and that i think is is the is the both the therapeutic psychological component of ketamine
and what makes it dangerous yeah it you know i it's so interesting to hear you say this because
i never considered that facet of it which is it's not like the cocaine confidence it's something
entirely different it and for me artistically it was one of the most inspiring psychoactive substances
i've ever encountered and it informed a lot of the show i made called the midnight gospel but
i got addicted to it i had to fly i couldn't i got habituated to it ended up having to flush
it down the toilet i you know it stopped working you know to me that that's the the main problem
exactly what you're saying which is you know that it's you can't just live a life of thinking that
you're enlightened or inspired you need to go through revision you know you need to go through
the the work part too but that's interesting to hear you say that you know i the the delusional
part that this is and we've had this conversation before and i love how rational you are and and
we need it and i love how logical you are and also i love how uh you know you you know how to
create these things or you're an actual chemist uh which is which is incredible but i was just
reading some you know i don't know a blog or something regarding people who are researching
psychoactive chemicals currently and that if they if they announce that they've been using them
then their research is kind of not looked upon in the same light or even worse if these people
are using the chemicals that they're studying and having these experiences that are you know when i
think of ketamine i think of buddhism i think of the dissolution of the identity and some kind of
experience of the gap between thoughts or something you know that's as far as i've gotten with it or a
bardo state but i'm allowed to do that because i'm a podcaster i wonder if you could talk a little
bit about any brushes you've had with what people would call the mystical and how your mind integrates
that into into into your life yeah i mean i i think people often get confused when i say
that i'm a materialist or that i don't believe in or that i'm not spiritual and i'm not saying that
i don't have amazing experiences that i cannot describe i'm not saying that i live in some kind
of you know sterile reality that is uh free of any astonishment it's all i'm saying is that
i don't feel the need to invoke the supernatural to explain things i'm also not saying that i feel
those things are at this time sufficiently explained by science it's really just my way of
saying of trying to communicate that sometimes there is no explanation and and i would prefer
not to use the supernatural to explain things that way um but there are all kinds of you know
back to the ketamine example i mean i remember um the last time i used it maybe three three years
ago i believe um i had this sort of immersive vision of myself at the telluride mushroom festival
and it was this very boring memory it was it was you know it's strange to simultaneously
uh have this you know basically an out of body experience where you're dropped into a memory
that you thought you'd forgotten that is so immersive it feels like reality but that is also
a boring memory not it's not a memory of you know some kind of extremely important moment in your
life it's totally mundane or so it seemed and i came out of it and i thought wow that was so
mundane just a memory of myself walking down a road in telluride colorado after going mushroom
hunting why would i even think of that and then the more i thought about it it started to sort of
unfold and the importance of it started to become apparent emotionally and i thought
how is that even possible how is it possible that by antagonizing this protein in my brain
i relive a memory so boring that even i don't recognize its significance at the time that
i'm experiencing it or re-experiencing it and then subsequently i'm able to recognize that it
carried some kind of implicit message that was valuable to me like you know these are very strange
experiences it's very strange and uh and how you know how how like for you know if i use DMT
one thing that's totally remarkable to me is how good the things that i think are like they are
so good that i am puzzled by how good they are like you know the importance of love the importance
of kindness the importance of generosity the importance of gratitude where why why on earth
would diamethyl tryptamine binding to this subtype of serotonin receptor cause me to
suddenly feel these extremely positive values of all things you know you could think it could just
as easily be that i like salty foods or you know that like i need a new couch or like whatever
but instead it's like love your family one day they'll be gone you know like how does that
happen i don't know science has not explained it i don't think spirituality explains it either
i think it's unknown and i would i would love to to learn even the smallest morsel of how that
comes to be well you know i'm i've gotten so into meditation lately and i've gotten so into buddhism
lately that the best spiritual explanation i have for it and forgive me any anyone listening who
disagrees or is a buddhist or i'm totally wrong because yeah i'm just going jogging in the woods
and listening to like audible buddhist books but there's an idea in buddhism that humans are
fundamentally good that's a controversial idea but that's the idea that that sort of the that
everything else everything a human does that involves hurting other people is of just an ignorance of
what we really are which is sort of an interconnected matrix of energy that doesn't have any
uh lasting or um integral self and uh somehow the the there's a reality that that's just you
know for lack of a better word and is a lazy thing to call it just good i'm sure there's some
Tibetan word that would make more sense so the answer could be if we're looking at it from a
spiritual lens that these substances are kind of you know wiping off the windshield or something
enough that the what you actually are starts coming out and that you know maybe gets sort of
animated or you know configured based on the substance itself but it's the reason that's the
message these things seem to keep giving us isn't necessarily that it's the substance that has encoded
in it compassion but that we're fundamentally compassionate that's just my current thinking
on it but who knows yeah no i agree i agree that the substance does not contain information
it's not the substance um and i would hope that you're right that we're fundamentally
compassionate i mean that would that would really be good if that's what's behind it all
inside each of us yeah i mean yes that that is well it's good but then also it's i think the
the beautiful thing about i mean it is good but the the beautiful thing about like i'm reading
i'm getting into these super obscure buddhist scriptures and they're wild man they're wild
but it's so on anilatory on one level you know so much of like a human suffering and i think this
answers the ketamine depression question to some degree it's like so much of us our suffering is
just what you were saying we're all wound up in our self and our bodies you know or it's and it's a
bummer when you get to a certain age your body starts hurting you look weirder and weirder every
year and so at least i do not maybe not you actually you look great man but like you know what i mean
so a disassociative it like sort of temporarily takes off this thing or at least loosens it a
little bit that we call our identity which if you really think about it it's really interesting that
you know whatever that thing is is really just what we tend to pull out of the environment
and notice you know and so maybe there's just in just in suddenly no longer pulling out the same
constant you know aspects of reality that we've become habituated to pulling out you know maybe
there's just some relief in suddenly seeing the world just as it is you know or a warped version
of the world there's freedom in it yeah yeah and i think that that you know i don't know that this
has ever been studied or even looked at very carefully but a very large number of people
that i know who are transgender have also used a lot of ketamine and they have felt that ketamine
was something that like helped them loosen the boundaries of their gender self-image
and i think that that's another example of what i was talking about is you know
maybe maybe you're unhappy and every single day the reason that you're unhappy is you think oh it's
because i'm a man or whatever and then you take ketamine and you realize oh i'm not anything
i can be whatever i can be i can be a medical doctor and i can be a woman and i could be
50 other things if i want to i mean you know john lily toward the end i think it was it was sort of
he was kind of an early adopter um but i'm under the impression that toward the end of yeah breast
implants yeah yeah i i yes i i mean definitely that's i think one of the you know evolutionary
qualities of of that particular drug and the reason that like when people take it uh some people
dislike it because it has this sort of sci-fi quality to it you know it has a weird technological
aspect to it and that some people you know people like this sort of warm glow of mushrooms but
sometimes with ketamine you go really go into the void and yeah i i think something in that
melting down of the self it's not just yeah it's not just like suddenly you realize like holy
shit there's no reason i can't become a a poet or a doctor or learn to fly an airplane or you know
what it's also you realize like why am i so fixated on my gender being the thing you know why am i
so fixated on inequality of myself you know being like who i am and that that makes it a very
controversial substance in that regard but you know i want not i want to swing around for a moment
just because uh and i'm sorry if this makes you feel uncomfortable but you are like in the psychedelic
universe you're a rock star man and i was like one of my favorite things that you do on twitter i
love your social media presence but sometimes you'll like show someone's tattoo of like DMT
or whatever they think it's DMT and you're like actually and then you'll say you'll say what it is
it's some either like completely benign something or like aspirin or something like that but
and i love that i love the way you interact with people in the psychedelic world but
not to be scandalous i wonder if you could maybe tell a story of some weird interactions you
must have had with people out there who are you know tweaking out and have decided that you're
jesus oh i mean i have them on a daily basis i have them too frequently in fact and it's because
over the last couple months my show has been airing i'm getting you know 100 messages a day
and there's a lot of really strange people out there as you know um and you know i've i've gotten
the the full the full spectrum of of people you know someone telling me that they their girlfriend
is pregnant with the second coming of jesus and what can they do how can i help spread awareness
so that the world knows you know you get that sort of thing you get people to think they are jesus of
course um you have um people that are convinced that various psychoactive substances are having
some kind of like transhumanist ultra positive effect on them but they actually seem to be
in the throes of one of these sorts of delusions that we've just described that's actually a pretty
a pretty common one and and that goes to show um how i think that actually represents one of the
central problems with psychoactive drugs is you can think that they're helping you but that's very
different from them helping you and i think that's actually one of the most important reasons to try
to use them as infrequently as possible is it will aid that self-assessment because if you're
constantly in the throes of it you can easily lose track of who you are and how you relate to
who you used to be and where you're going so you know it's yeah it's yeah it's it's very tricky and i
and hamilton when i told my wife i told my wife at one point after i'd like gotten out of the
ketamine's grip i was like but you know what it was helping me make music and the look on her face
said everything she's like she's like you think it was helping you make music
and then i went back and listened to some of the music i was making
horrible horrible but in the midst of the haze i was in i was like this is cutting cutting edge
and it was not so yeah i hear you may i've experienced it and it's like i'm lucky i
it's just embarrassing you know but it can get much worse so i didn't even know this that this
had happened with you maybe you've probably talked about this in past uh podcast so i don't
know if it's something you want to rehash but i'm just sort of curious because i've actually been
hearing about a lot of people especially over the pandemic who have gotten very seriously into
dissociatives um both ketamine and nitrous oxide i used to never hear about nitrous oxide addiction
among just like you know my acquaintances and in the last few months i've casually heard people
reference having to have multiple nitrous oxide interventions was this something that you were
going through during the pandemic or is this more distant past it was it was in the past more but
yeah it just it's classic addiction it just snuck up on me you know it's it started off just like
what we were like it with a i was just excited because because it it to me it is a kind of
visionary substance and wildly alien and it and it sort of checks all the boxes and what i love
about psychedelics and also it's 45 minutes you know so you're not committing to uh six or eight
or 12 hour trip which is really delightful but then you know just it's nothing new just a classic
story like it it stopped it wasn't even working anymore uh but i was doing it all the time all
day long it was embarrassing i was getting that like i i've been addicted to a few things in my
life uh i got physically addicted to benzos a long time ago when i was on a long comedy tour
because i was taking him to go to sleep but then i also started taking him in the day and i was and
i and i only had maybe a four week supply but i wasn't aware of how they can i wasn't quite aware
of how they can get their hooks into you and so i just went it was a i went through withdrawals it
was the most fucked up i got lucky it was just like 24 48 hours but uh and then the catamine it
was it was more nefarious and that it doesn't seem to be fit i don't it's not physically addictive
but you get really like it's like cigarettes which are physically addicted you just i just got
habituated and it wasn't working you know the last time i did it uh over over a year ago the last
time i did it longer the last time i did it it took me like four and a half hours to do a commercial
for my podcast and i just realized like you this is not only is this not inspiring you anymore but
it's coming up your ability to create something you love creating so i i just got i was able to kick
it i'm just lucky in that way that i can just flush a thing down the toilet and then it's
over or you know not with it took a few flushes to be honest but yeah yeah but it's it's scary in
that way i think that's the big problem with it is that it's it is a treatment for depression
it does it and i think i was using it to cope with like a lot of like my dad's and my mom passing
and you know i think it was legitimately keeping me out of a long depressive episode but just like
what you're saying you know it's you it's you can't isolate and do these things this is why i
think you know when people talk about psychedelic therapy it seems like they forget that that involves
a therapist you know it involves an expert who's there to be the person who can hopefully help
you avoid all the sand traps that are out there when it comes to any of these substances i mean
we all love bliss who can blame us right of course and i mean this is another one of the
complicated aspects of psychoactive drugs and addiction is sometimes someone who has no experience
they'll look at a news report of somebody who's freaking out after having consumed so-called
bath salts or spice or something like that and they think oh i never want to do that what would
drive a person to do that why on earth would the person do that but what they're not recognizing is
that was the worst time for that person but previously it was probably good that's why
they were doing it it starts out good often and then there can be a slow change that occurs
where you either stop responding to it or in addition to the good things there's a bad thing
or it becomes entirely bad and tracking that is yeah something that a therapist or a friend
is really helpful for or i think the easiest way is just to try to do these things infrequently
that way you can track yourself absolutely yeah absolutely and it's always better if you do it
infrequently anyway that it just it's so much better to like i know that somewhere around the
corner in a few years it's not like i won't do ketamine again but i also know that when i do it
it'll be wonderful because it's been a long time in between and i think that you know that's a you
know our whole way of looking at addiction seems somehow you know tainted by the prohibition
i don't think people understand that there's a there's actually a way that these substances
can be used with very infrequently and successfully and it doesn't mean that your whole life is going
to fall apart after that but i'm sure you must have had moments where you worry about the effect
that your show is having i mean do you have that do you have some sense of like you look like
you're a disciplined person you're able to modulate the way you use these substances but
sometimes with my podcast and especially earlier episodes when i was i think very irresponsible
in my bugling the benefits of psychedelics i worry that uh you know i wasn't cautionary enough
and that i might have you know i don't know and even in a in a small way i would hate to think
that i led someone into a place they couldn't get out of yeah um i think that i've been pretty good
about specifying the dangerous aspects or if not i try to implicitly communicate that so sometimes
people will say hey man i watched your show and you showed this this person who they're a weird
oh they do ketamine and they're weird that that's not gonna end prohibition you need to show silicon
valley micro dosers who are using it to empower their high productivity career that's the way you
change the narrative and uh and one reason that i include people who are weird or who have beliefs
that maybe um you know from like a drug policy or advocacy perspective these beliefs would not be
the ones that most people would want to elevate and say this is what happens when you use a drug
but one reason in addition to just i like talking to weird people as you do as well uh yes and uh
and so i'm not i'm not you know like making advertisements for psychedelics i'm making
documentaries about psychedelics and in doing that i want to show people who sometimes have
strange beliefs partially because i find it interesting but partially to show yeah you
know these things do open your mind and sometimes that's beneficial and sometimes that might promote
a type of uh thinking that maybe is undesirable to you and this is what it looks like you know i got
a lot of people criticized me for showing you know this this guy that smoked dmt and believed in
pizza gate and uh you know saying how how could you possibly do that you're gonna undo any progress
but you know if you only talk about johns hopkins university and academic research with psychedelics
you're neglecting to acknowledge the reality of psychedelic drug use for many people so that's
that's the way i try to handle it is to show that you know just to show honestly how these things
exist in society and let people draw their own conclusions so if you see somebody who's you
know a strange artist living alone in the desert who has a lot of outlandish beliefs about angels
and ufo's and dolphins who uses a lot of ketamine and you think love that episode and you think
that's terrible well then there you go then you then you have uh but if you think that's fantastic
then there you go as well you know that's that's kind of my my take on it and hell in love with
that guy me too what was his name timothy wiley wow what a saint that guy was he had to me and maybe
it was just the lighting he really seemed to have this ethereal glow about him like he really seemed
like a some kind of i don't know awakened being or something oh well you know he was like a
spiritual leader uh you know the process church yeah he was you know big part of the process
church he was behind the scenes in a lot of different things you know genesis purge
yes yes like her transformation was because of timothy wiley wow yeah giving her ketamine and
helping her like transform so he was he was part of a lot of different things and he was a really
you know he was a true artist a true weirdo a true um independent strange thinker and
i love that you know i think that i don't want a reality that is so sterile that people only
talk about these things as you know psychiatric medications for treatment of disease i think
that they're useful for expanding thought in directions that are strange and artistic and
poetic and weird why not you know it's yeah this is all beautiful and good and in the
finale of my show last night um i profiled this woman amanda fielding who reminds me of timothy
wiley in a lot of ways you know she's brilliant she's a truly heterodox thinker who has uh
spent her life in this quixotic quest to demonstrate that trepanation is a medically valid
procedure and and and well i don't think that trepanation is likely to be medically validated
although i'd be happy to be wrong um i i think that part of it comes from a certain insecurity
that many people have that they need medical validation when i see this as a sort of artistic
decision that she made a sort of body modification that is valid whether or not it has any impact
on her consciousness as something symbolic is truly opening her head opening her mind you
know i think that there's something amazing about that regardless of what physiological
effect it may or may not have listen if you if anybody who has watched a documentary on trepanation
and hasn't had at least the fleeting thought of like shit maybe i should try that that sounds
awesome i think you're not looking into it deeply have trepanation is one of those things
the problem with it is like how do you go back you know what if you're wrong but anytime i've
seen these documentaries i would never be is it trepanated is that how you'd say it yeah we're
treponed i would never be treponed but come on aren't you curious about like what the effect is
and this was it's not just like this is something body modification people are doing this was a
like a cultural movement at one time right that this was something that was being practiced
for centuries right like we're still finding skulls with that have been treponed oh yes it's
one of the oldest known surgical procedures yeah it's some form of what what like neurological
bloodletting or something like well what is the idea it relieves pressure on the brain or it enhances
mystical states i haven't yet to see the finale so sorry if i'm making you repeat something that's
no no and the finale actually doesn't even go into the science of it because i don't want to take a
public stance on trepanation you know for the record i i do not imagine that it has uh i don't
predict that it has major therapeutic effects you know people routinely have holes drilled in their
skulls for surgical procedures you know right craniotomy so it's it's not as if it's not done in
the 21st century and it doesn't seem to uh have a major effect but you know and historically in these
you know various artifacts that have been uncovered and these ancient skulls that have been
treponed it makes a lot of intuitive sense if you have a headache well where's the pain it's in your
head right so where are you gonna direct your medical intervention to the head you got to
get out that demon that's in your head you're insane right there's something in your head
there's a problem in your head you got to get it out so it makes sense in this
you know an intuitive understanding of the way the body works especially from a spiritual framework
where you're attributing disease to malevolent spirits right yes oh yeah let me also emphasize
i don't don't treponate yourself or your friends or anybody it's just a curious thing that has
happened in the past also you know what was the anesthetic that they were using i mean maybe part
of the you know experience in the past was the you know lack of any kind of anesthetic because we
at least the ones we have access to now maybe there was some initiatory pain
high that people are getting from it but do you you know this is to me what you know i i know you
get it now i'm hearing that you get it which is like the people who are very protective of what
they see as some kind of you know flowering psychedelic renaissance what do they call it the
third i don't know there's a name for the thing and i've forgotten what it is and their people are
rightfully protective of it and i agree with you it does seem to me to be in right now maybe
necessarily imbalanced towards the medical universe just so that it can get to the place where it can
you know happily be used as a cultural amplifier stimulator and inspiring kind of something that
could like you know shape movies and and art and things like that but the message i've gotten from
people uh is more along the lines of we don't need any more tim you know gurus we don't need
any more psychedelic jesus's out there well you know what do you think is the the weird
connection between psychedelics and the messianic thing that seems to like happen to people you know
like inevitably someone emerges you get a person who's taken enough acid that they really believe
they're the christ or the matreya or whatever an alien representative and weirdly they end up with a
group of people following them around because uh you know there is some kind of actual gravity
these people have but what are your thoughts on that do you do you have any thoughts on like the
many psychedelic messiahs we've had in the past and certainly will have in the coming years well
it depends on how you define messiah because if you're including timothy leary there i i think
timothy leary is very widely misunderstood you know the more i think about timothy leary the more
i think of him as a comedian i really you know i think more than a psychologist more than a guru
more than almost anything timothy leary was a comedian and he was someone who believed in
psychedelics at a time when they were being attacked from every imaginable direction medically
legally socially and he defended them and the psychedelic community does not appreciate
what he did the sacrifices that he made he's you know routinely criticized people uh blame him for
the end of psychedelic research i think a lot of what we have today is not something that exists
in spite of timothy leary but because of timothy leary and um i don't really think he did anything
wrong at all i think that he was a victim of many many i mean he was he was facing life in prison
he they were threatening to lobotomize him like can you imagine what he went through
just because he was interested in lsd in cannabis no no no i can't and also let me clarify he i love
him i've read uh much of his uh like writing and some of his obscure writing is is amazing the
circuits of consciousness uh i really i really love him i could see though why he gets criticized
i could see i mean they you know you want to scapegoat you know and he was i guess the loudest
one that i could think of in in that movement tune in turn on drop out an invitation to sort of
exit capitalism he would have these days he would have seemed like a almost like a square you know
he would he would have had a podcast would have seemed cool but in those days yeah he was a
culture shatterer i could see both sides of it but do you know what i'm saying though like this is
something i've noticed specifically with psychedelics which is that you will meet people who have
uh transform themselves legitimately heal themselves people who have taken ayahuasca
and uh have become peaceful and people who are just have a kind of sweetness to them that they report
being related to a series of experiences they had in a psychedelic but weirdly you run into these like
people who somehow the thing is making them into egomaniacs and it's one of the more confusing
aspects of these drugs it's just a bizarre thing to witness these people and also because you know
that there's a i i i guess to reduce it to less than a messiah what are your thoughts on this thing
or the self-assignment of oneself as a shaman yeah yeah it's um i i i guess i would say i regard it
with suspicion and distrust most of the time um as one should and i think that i think again like
so many of the problems with drugs they're not actually problems with drugs or problems with
prohibition and cultural problems more than they are pharmacological ones so you know if you think
about it in the context of a society that says everything is bad or says a thing is bad and then
you try it and then you realize that not only is it not bad it's good and you think okay well i'll
make it my mission to tell everyone that it's good actually i think that's that's kind of the
basic thing that's operating in a lot of these people is they have some transformative experience
and they want to share it i think it often is happening from a somewhat positive perspective
but then i think where it tends to go wrong is not when people are talking about the positives
but when people start to try to control behavior or try to um coerce other people into doing things
or start creating a rigid set of beliefs that uh are used to create different types of moral
dichotomies where you can criticize other people or or say that they're doing something wrong you
know that's i think where you really run into problems and i've spent time with a lot of different
religious groups that use psychedelics and indigenous groups that use psychedelics and the
ones that i think run into problems are the ones that start to dictate other people's behavior
and force people to do things or force people to believe things you know there's a big difference
between saying i think you shouldn't eat meat because meat is requires violence to an animal and
you should try to minimize the violence of your existence in any possible way but it is your choice
to eat meat and saying you know you're a bad person you're not enlightened you're not spiritual
you're part of the problem if you eat meat you know i think part of of using these things constructively
and existing in the world constructively is to be permissive of other people's behavior as long as
they're not hurting other people and i understand that it's like you know it all comes into this
this kind of classic you know socratic idea that no one knowingly does wrong and so all these people
are always thinking that they're doing the right thing they're thinking oh you know the problem
with eating meat is it's so bad or the problem with being gay is that it's really bad god doesn't
want you to be gay or whatever they think they're doing the right thing they don't they're not
operating from a perspective of of uh usually i don't think operating from a perspective of
wanting to contribute pain or evil into the world but that's what happens when they're trying to do
good um and you know i've i got very close to a psychedelic cult for a while i was writing a
story which call i am not going to say their name because it went sour with them and uh and
like ended with sort of oblique death threats from them uh but i was maybe i'll write something
about it at some point it was for an article in harpers this was like one of the things that was
contributing to my depression in 2018 but anyway um you know this group had a very strict code of
conduct that i think i think that you know their psychedelic advocacy was wound up in control
fantasies of the leader and you know that's i think that's the the major line it's there's nothing
wrong with being you know thinking you're a messiah but i think there is something wrong
with attempting to control other people or trying to um or trying to make other people
feel bad about their actions unnecessarily you know this there's a famous story ramdas tells
because his brother got institutionalized because his brother thought he was jesus they found him
in an apartment he had six elderly women around him worshiping him and he was having a messianic
fan of delusion got institutionalized ramdas tells the story goes to visit his brother
in a mental hospital and his brother says to ramdas look at you you know you're dressed like jesus
you're you know you're you have followers people you know you're you're a you're like a scuru person
how come you're out there and i'm in here and ramdas's answer was well the difference is
you think you're the only jesus and i think everyone's jesus
haha that's great yeah it's pretty cool but yeah well i mean your encounter with this leader
did he demonstrate to you inequalities that were magnetic or did you feel sort of you know
vacuumed into his uh social gravity well my impression was that you know again when you're
part of a a subculture an underground group you have beliefs that are not only not shared by the
majority of people that surround you they're illegal you'll kind of go with whoever you
can find so this guy i wouldn't say that his beliefs were especially unusual they're just
at that heat this is someone who was operating starting in the really in the 60s and continues
to this day um and uh but but really just someone who believed in psychedelics and believed in
nonviolence and believed in vegetarianism and believed in a lot of good things and so that
drew people in not because he was necessarily charismatic or magnetic but because they thought
oh okay well here's a guy that at least gets what's going on he understands the value of
health food he understands the value of meditation he understands the value of psychedelics he has
liberal ideas about about the importance of sex you know things like that so um i think that for a
long time you could cultivate a following just by not hating these things basically right right
right wow yeah well you know congratulations on uh getting out of that thing you know i think
there's something to be said i think it's a good sign if you have gotten vacuumed into a cult and
if you know that's a that means you're living life if you ask me you know importantly that you've
got also got now but i should say i was not although i actually did try to join this cult as a
freshman in college uh i was never a member of this cult i was involved with them via a strange
series of connections and was ultimately trying to write a story about them because i at the
beginning felt very sympathetic toward them i felt that they had been uh that they'd gone through
horrible horrible uh adversity in order to you know believe in psychedelics for decades and
they did they you know that's like so many of these things it's complicated they really did
um fight for psychedelics at a time when very few other people were and they did they were
both persecuted and prosecuted by the government and they uh you know understandably developed
a number of different complexes as a result of it but right but yeah so i was trying to
write a story about it this was uh not as a a member of the cult thankfully well you should
get into a cult hamilton but hey let me end on a kind of mundane question what a wonderful
conversation i i'm so grateful for being on the show but i what are your thoughts on this is by
the way speaking of like people who have gone through hell because of the war on drugs who
had the initial understanding that these things were medicines they had great potential and it got
arrested had their lives destroyed uh i feel i am so exhilarated by the reality that right now you
can buy stock in companies that are you know synthesizing lsd and uh you know doing real
legal research on it but i feel a little bitterness uh too you know it's like oh great now you're you
know i can literally buy stock and accompany doing experiments with lsd when not that long ago if i had
it in my pot well to this day if i had it i have i'll go to jail but do you do you feel that kind of
bitterness for me there's like a i don't know how to put it there's just this feeling of like
yeah we knew this you know we knew how many lives have been destroyed how many people
have lost their children how many people have you know been like completely
ostracized from society for you know just doing a thing that is ultimately like very beneficial
to a person's life do you ever do you get that feeling like you don't have talking about like a
kind of oh twinge of of course of course and you know it's this is what you're describing
is a feeling you should have because it's deeply contradictory it's deeply disturbing
and at the same time it's good it's weird it's a weird feeling and it's you know of course it
happened first with cannabis you have people becoming multi-millionaires from cannabis at the
same time that there are people locked in cages isolated from their family their lives destroyed
for cannabis this is happening right now as we speak so um yeah there's a deep and
painful hypocrisy in that and we're seeing it happen with psychedelics and the weirdest
thing about it is that it's a good thing you know that you look at this and you think this is deeply
unjust but it's even weirder to think this is actually the right thing to be happening
because this is progress this is how things change and this is the rate of change in our society it
doesn't happen overnight in fact it's happening a hell of a lot faster than i or almost anyone
else thought it would you know that yes that there are publicly traded psilocybin stocks
that you can invest in on robin hood right now that's mind boggling and that you know like for
example i've done chemistry research for over a decade at the small pharmacy school in philadelphia
and um and in the past that there was a little bit of money from the university i would you know
self fund the research a few nice people like you know tim ferris gave me some money at one
point for research but you know for the most part we were just we barely had enough money for solvents
to do this chemistry and now there are so many pharmaceutical companies trying to hire me to
do research to be on their board of advisors and yeah it's it's like it's a weird feeling but i
am also aware wow this is how things are going to change now this isn't going to be a question of oh
can i afford you know this reagent now people are are going to be able to do so much research so they
never could do before so many of these you know multi decade lasting questions about the potential
of psychedelics both positive and negative are on the precipice of being answered and it's it's
going to be great you know i'm so excited for what's happening i really am i'm not and if you
know i'm not an especially optimistic person i am usually a somewhat pessimistic person actually
but this forces a tiny bit of optimism out of me and we'll of course see how it all plays out
but you know i think that there's a lot of of good things that can come out of it even if every
pharmaceutical psychedelic fails then maybe at least in this process we will have taught people
that these things do have at least medical potential or that they shouldn't be illegal and that would
be tremendous progress that we will see in our lifetime so i am i'm really excited i'm excited
to be a part of it you know i i uh i'm pretty much planning to you know i have a podcast and i'm
going to continue doing that i'm going to continue writing but i'm planning to do a lot less of this
documentary work in order to focus on chemistry because the resources are available now you know
now is the first time that this could be a full-time job and it's so exciting wow but wait you you
can't close saying that you're not going to do another season is that what you're saying well
it's funny it's you know at the same time that all these resources are being made available for
scientific research the season was i don't i don't want to like close on something negative but it was
a herculean task to finish it right um you know for me and for the many people that worked on it it
was you know the the consensus among most of the group was we could do it this time you know working
13 14 hours a day seven days a week sacrificing everything to finish it working unpaid but that's
not sustainable you can do that right you can do that for a year you can't do that for the rest of
your life and so if some you know offer emerges that would change that that would make it a
reasonable thing that people wouldn't have to you know there was someone who was working on the show
who had you know had a breakdown from the the level of stress working on it you know it's i think
it's hard for people to fathom what went into that so when people contact me and they say like oh why
didn't you show you know you really should have shown xenon distillation why didn't you do that it's
like well because it was a pandemic and and and i wanted to and it wasn't possible and we were
already completely out of money and like filming things on our iPhones so um but you know so it
was it was really really hard and i'm proud of a lot of what we all created but uh i think now
the time has come to do some chemistry and i'm excited to do that
Hamilton Morris i love you thank you so much for coming on this show everybody
Hamilton's pharmacopia season three it's on amazon please watch it it is a beautiful show
and i could tell that that y'all sweated blood to create it but thank you for making it what's
the name of your podcast Hamilton it's it's my patreon patreon.com slash Hamilton Morris it
doesn't have a name it's really just a chemistry mostly chemistry and psychoactive drug science
podcast and and then some other assorted little projects so yeah people can check that out and
and oh and one final thing is i i just republished this small book that i should send you a copy
Duncan but it's it's a cool book about Bufwell Various it was written by this guy Ken Nelson
and um it also has information about the synthesis of five m e o d m t and all the
profit from that goes to the michael j fox foundation and spend this kind of amazing
fundraising success where it's now raises like a hundred and twenty thousand dollars for
parkinson's research and that's still available so if anyone wants to check that out w w w dot
psychedelic toad of the sonoran desert dot com wonderful all the links you need to find that
will be at dugatrustle.com Hamilton thank you so much and uh you're just the best thank you you're
the best let's talk again soon okay great Hare Krishna thank you that was Hamilton Morris everybody
i hope that you will download season three of Hamilton's pharmacopia a tremendous thank you
to our sponsors remember by supporting them you support us and much thanks to my dear patreon
family all right pals i'll see you next week i hope you have a great weekend and don't forget
starting monday i'll be back to our weekly meditation group journey into boredom at patreon.com
for d t f h i hope to see you there thanks for listening Hare Krishna a good time starts with
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