Lex Fridman Podcast - #202 – Rick Doblin: Psychedelics
Episode Date: July 21, 2021Rick Doblin is a psychedelics researcher and the founder and executive director of the Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies (MAPS). Please support this podcast by checking out our spo...nsors: - Theragun: https://therabody.com/lex to get 30 day trial - ExpressVPN: https://expressvpn.com/lexpod and use code LexPod to get 3 months free - Blinkist: https://blinkist.com/lex and use code LEX to get 25% off premium - Eight Sleep: https://www.eightsleep.com/lex and use code LEX to get special savings EPISODE LINKS: Rick's Twitter: https://twitter.com/RickDoblin MAPS: https://maps.org PODCAST INFO: Podcast website: https://lexfridman.com/podcast Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/2lwqZIr Spotify: https://spoti.fi/2nEwCF8 RSS: https://lexfridman.com/feed/podcast/ YouTube Full Episodes: https://youtube.com/lexfridman YouTube Clips: https://youtube.com/lexclips SUPPORT & CONNECT: - Check out the sponsors above, it's the best way to support this podcast - Support on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/lexfridman - Twitter: https://twitter.com/lexfridman - Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lexfridman - LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/lexfridman - Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/lexfridman - Medium: https://medium.com/@lexfridman OUTLINE: Here's the timestamps for the episode. On some podcast players you should be able to click the timestamp to jump to that time. (00:00) - Introduction (07:54) - Introduction to psychedelics (11:09) - Psychedelics reveals the inner depths of humans (23:43) - Differences between psychedelics (31:08) - The future of psychedelics (39:52) - Epigenetics (45:49) - DMT (53:16) - Ego dissolution (56:33) - One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest (59:32) - Psychedelics and Creativity (1:03:25) - MKUltra and the Grateful Dead (1:08:04) - Ted Kaczynski (1:13:46) - Timothy Leary (1:21:10) - Good Friday Experiment (1:25:46) - Forming of MAPS (1:37:01) - Gaining access to psychedelics (1:45:30) - MDMA Medical Trials (2:17:00) - Clinical Trials for other substances (2:21:43) - Future of society with psychedelics (2:26:13) - Big Pharma (2:32:32) - Advice for the younger generations (2:38:17) - Meaning of life
Transcript
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The following is a conversation with Rick Doblin, founder and executive director of the
multi-disciplinary association for psychedelic studies, Maps.
He is one of the seminal figures in both the cultural history and the cutting-edge science
of psychedelics.
He was there, along with the biggest characters throughout this fascinating history of psychedelics,
and he is here to tell the story.
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As a side note, let me say that exploring the places the human mind can go can help us
understand where it comes from, how it works, and how to engineer mental journeys, whether
that's through life experiences,
chemical substances, brain computer interfaces, or interactions with artificial intelligence systems.
On a personal level, I think the dissolution of the ego for stretches of time is a powerful tool
for understanding yourself. A lot of things can do this, including Jiu-Jitsu, literature, meditation, but psychedelics
is definitely, or at least arguably, one of the most powerful, from psilocybin to DMT.
I'm excited that people like Rick are leading the scientific research that reveals the efficacy
and the safety of these substances, so that their proper dosage and usage protocols can
be understood, and people like me can safely and effectively
use them, not just for recreation, but for rigorous exploration of my own mind.
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This is the Lex Friedman podcast, and here is my conversation with Rick Doblin. Could you give an introduction to psychedelics like a big, bold, world-wind overview of what
are psychedelics, what are the kinds of psychedelics out there,
in whatever way you think is meaningful.
Right. Well, when I started MAAPS, the Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies,
it was very important for me that psychedelic be in the name. And the way in which the original meaning of psychedelic, it's mind manifesting. It was created by Humphrey
Osmond in dialogue with Aldous Huxley. And so psychedelic means mind manifesting. And so we interpret
that very broadly to mean dreams or psychedelic. Anything that kind of brings things to the surface,
the holotropic breathwork, you know, hyperventilation is psychedelic. So most
people think psychedelic is only about certain kind of chemical substances,
either natural or synthetic, but we've got a much broader view of that.
Meditation can be psychedelic in some ways, but our primary focus is on the
drugs, is on the medicines, or the, you might call
some people, might call them spiritual tools or sacraments. There's sort of two general
categories of those. One are what are called the classics psychedelics, and those are the
ego dissolving, sort of merged into the unitive states.
Those are like LSD, psilocybin, mescalin, ayahuasca,
I began DMT, things like that.
And then there is MDMA, which some people even argue
is not a psychedelic.
They'll say it's an empathogen or an antagonist
about touching within or empathy.
It doesn't do the same kind of ego dissolution
that the classic psychedelics do,
but it brings material to the surface
and it changes the way we process information.
And so I think you can quibble about whether it's a,
it's certainly not a classic psychedelic,
but I think MDMA is also a psychedelic.
Marijuana, I would say, is a psychedelic.
Marijuana is closer to the classics
like a psychedelic, than it is to MDMA.
One point I like to make is dreams,
because then everybody can relate to that.
Dreams are psychedelic.
Dream bring emotions, feelings, ideas, concepts,
in symbolic form a lot of times, or just in raw emotions to the surface. So when people
hear the word psychedelic, often they are frightened by it. It's about the loss of
control. And it is to an extent, loss of conscious control, particularly with the classic psychedelics,
but, you know, and we know with dreams that we can have frightening dreams, nightmares,
but I think that anchoring the concept of psychedelic and dreams is really helpful for people
to know that it's kind of a natural state and that there are other ways that you can
catalyze it then by going to sleep, and that
for thousands of years, the substance have been used in that way.
So you mentioned this idea of bringing something to this surface, which is really interesting.
So can you maybe elaborate the surface and what is there in the depths of things and how
does ego dissolution fit into that?
Well, all this Huxley talked about the brain
as a reducing valve that we have an enormous amount
of information.
So right now there's an air conditioning sound
in the background, but that's not crucial
to what you and I are doing talking to each other.
So we kind of tune that out.
You know, there's all sorts of sites and sounds.
There's incoming information in all the different sense modalities, and we have to figure
out what's important to us.
And so the mind, in a way, focuses a lot on what are our core needs.
And we filter all the incoming information
that we get towards focusing on what are our core needs.
And we can even get to Abraham Maslow
and the hierarchy of needs about survival needs,
belonging needs, the steam needs, you go on.
So I think what I mean by bringing things to the surface
is that we tend to not focus on a lot of things that
are coming, but we also push away things that
are difficult emotionally, difficult, cognitively.
We all know that we're on this very short trajectory
from birth to death,
but we're not constantly thinking about dying, although that can actually be helpful to focus us
on what's really important. Trauma's are often suppressed, conflicts, we see in America and around the world a kind of rise of irrationality where
people push away their logic in order for their emotional tribal needs to be met.
A lot of people are suffering from early childhood traumas of a different kinds or abandonment
issues or anything.
So we tend to focus on just what we need to survive,
and what we need for work and esteem.
And so psychedelics, by dissolving this ego control,
or by with MDMA, kind of strengthening our sense of self,
and our sense of self acceptance,
we can bring in other information
that have previously been too complicated
or too painful. You don't think of psychedelics as conjuring up something new. It is more
revealing something that is already there. I think that's a very crucial thing. So, yes,
Sasha Schulgen, who sort of the godfather of MDMA, you know, he sort of rediscovered it and brought it back into use.
He talked about his first experience with masculine. His first psychedelic experience was with masculine, and he had a tremendous experience. But what he said about it was he was having a human experience that
the masculine was helping him access rather than that he was having a masculine experience.
So that it's not like you pop a pill and you always have the same kind of experiences
everybody else, the experience is not contained in the pill. The pill opens you up and you have
an experience of yourself. Sometimes these are experiences that we've never consciously had.
But we can say right now that we know that our body below the level of our conscious awareness
has all these self-healing mechanisms.
And we don't modulate them to a large extent by conscious control.
I mean, eventually we are learning more about the mind body
and we learn about the placebo effect,
what we think is the case.
But I think that there's experiences that are below our level
of conscious awareness, particularly once we're adults,
that are more of these unitive mystical experiences,
sense of connection.
I think kids are like this a lot.
We kind of come from the void you could say,
and you're born in, you have a different way of processing information. One interesting
point about that has to do with ketamine, which has been approved as ketamine for depression,
but it's used for anesthesia. Roughly one tenths the anesthetic dose is a psychedelic dose.
And when it's used in anesthesia, there's what's called the emergent phenomena.
So this is you get enough ketamine for you can be operated on, you're not in pain,
you're not really there, your egos knocked out, but you can still breathe.
But as the operations get over and then people metabolize the ketamine,
there's a process that they call the emergent phenomena.
It's like as you're emerging from this tranquilized state,
and that's where you pass through the psychedelic phase,
and they don't prepare people for that.
And what we see is that a lot of adults
have difficult times with that.
But children don't seem to
have that with those problems.
Children are a little bit more already in this kind of state.
And so ketamine is used quite frequently in children now for anesthesia.
So all of that is to say to your question that I think these psychedelics reveal things
that are within us, some things that are,
how we process information back when we are children,
other things that we've never thought of before
that are sort of baked into our consciousness.
There's one drug five MEOTMT.
It's this toxin from a sonorant toad that many people consider it to be the
most powerful of all the psychedelics. And it kind of knocks the ego structures completely
out of it. And we experience something different, but it's something I think that's always
within us. It's a deeper layer. So we knock out some of the higher cognitive functions
and then we experience things in a different way. So my sense is that
These are human experiences that the psychedelics bring us to yeah, it's really profound, but and that's a DMT is a really interesting example. So
Terrence Buchanan has talked about these machine elves, right and there's this
I
Think from the people offered speak about the experience, there's a sense that you are
traveling elsewhere to meet entities, whether they're elves or not.
So in your sense, you're not traveling elsewhere.
You're just revealing something that's within and maybe it's a particular mechanism of
revealing what's already within.
Yeah, and I knew Terence.
I spent a lot of time talking with Terence
and I do not ascribe to a lot of things that he was saying.
He was tremendous entertainer
and I think he did a lot of really good things
and focused us on the power of psychedelics.
But I think I've never seen these quote machine elves.
I think culture is more determinative of what people experience under psychedelics, your
preconceptions, than we give it credit for.
And so I think there's a lot of priming that you could say that people received by stories from their culture.
You know, with ayahuasca it's about jaguars and Amazonian animals.
And so I think these machine elves are this construct of tarants that other people
have do see.
There's actually some people that are very interested in doing a study, and they're
well-funded and moving toward it to keep people on an IV infusion of DMT. For them specifically
to see, do they contact machine elves or aliens, and what kind of information do they bring back from these other cells, other places, or other entities. One question is, you know, who are we? Are we
connected to everything in the universe? We certainly know in many cases, you talk about waves
or particles, you know, the quantum approach. So I don't interpret
the quantum approach. So I don't interpret experiences that we have of some entity that's,
somehow or other deep in our consciousness that's not us. It's a part of who we are. So I tend to interpret it in that way. The question is, how big are we? Yeah. I mean, that's
How big are we? Yeah, I mean that that's
And how many ideas are within us that can be revealed by changing the perspective you mentioned physics one of the
What physicists especially
Mathematical physicists from mathematicians do is the they reveal truths by looking at a
By taking a slightly different perspective on a problem
that reveals the simplicity of how it actually works in totally new ways.
That's what Einstein did.
That's what, like, every progress in physics, and certainly every progress in mathematics
requires you to take a different perspective.
And then perhaps that's exactly what
psychedelics are doing. It's not that they're contacting aliens that are elsewhere. It may be
revealing the connection between us and other living life forms or actually it might be revealing.
I totally knew perspective on what life is or what consciousness is and giving us the glimpset
that even though our cognitive capabilities are limited into fully grasp and understand
it.
So it's just giving us an inkling of that somehow.
And it seems perhaps a little ridiculous, not from a scientific perspective in the sense
that we don't have a good physics of life or physics of intelligence or physics of consciousness,
but getting a glimpse of that is giving us a little bit of maybe an intuition of which
way to head to build such a physics.
Yeah, I think so.
I think that there's this other concept, I guess I would like to talk about briefly this Jungian collective unconscious,
this idea that somehow or other everything that has ever happened is still accessible,
maybe not with as much data or as much resolution, but that there's, you know, wave resonances. So that I do believe that we can
have experiences as part of this human collective unconscious that we're not from our own life.
Yeah.
And that we can, like the holographic realities, that there is a way to gather information that can be accurate
about other times and places through depth investigations of our own consciousness.
But I think what I tend to believe is that it's because there's emotional resonences between where we're at now in this life and
other kind of
Experiences that people have had before and you know we always hear about
Everybody who talks about past life. They're always kings and queens
Yeah, so I think that's you know that that's again you filter things what you want to be true. But I do think that there is a way to access information beyond what we've taken in in our own
temporal existence through our own five senses.
In some ways, I really find that compelling, the notion that that information is already there.
And you're simply just moving the attention of your mind to different parts of that.
Yeah. I mean, we have that with the radio. I mean, you know, you've got a frequency.
You turn all this information. You could actually say right now between the space
between us, we have the whole world's knowledge that's up on the internet.
It's right here. Yeah. But we don't see it tune in. Yeah.
What are the interesting differences? would you say, between the very psychedelics that
you mentioned?
I wasca, DMT, Acid LSD, Marijuana, Mesclin, PCPs, El Sibon, MDMA.
You mentioned a few of them, they're really interesting.
We'll talk about scientifically some of the different studies that have been conducted
on each, but sort of at a high level.
What are some interesting differences?
Well, one of the big ones that people make a big deal of that I think is completely misplaced
is summer from nature, summer from the lab.
So there's this kind of romantic thought that if it's from nature, it's good.
If it's from the lab, it's somehow tainted by humanity.
And, you know, there are four, some people are like all four plants, psychedelics.
What we see, the policy changes that have been happening in a couple cities, Cambridge,
Somerville, right, not far from where we're at now, where they decriminalize plant medicines.
So they call decriminalizing nature.
So I think that there is,
from my perspective,
certain things from nature are poison, certain things from the lab are spiritual,
even if they don't show up in nature, like LSD.
Now, there is something LSD is like
surrogic acid diethlamide.
There is like surgeic acid amide, LSA,
which comes from morning glory seeds.
So it's very similar.
But at the same time,
I'd say I don't buy into that distinction
that there's some fundamental preference.
One of the things that Terence McKenna
since we talked about him,
he talked about
how if it's from nature, it's good, and if it's not, you know, we should be suspect. Of course,
he had a lot of great LST experiences, but actually Terence, in 1984, we were at Estonlin with a bunch
other people. This was before the crackdown on MDMA. And this is some of the underground therapists and the above ground researchers were trying to
talk about how to protect MDMA from the eventual crackdown. And Terence was like, forget about it.
You know, it's from the lab. You know, it's dangerous. We have thousands of years of history,
all these other things. And you know, what do we know about MDMA and blah blah blah. And I was like, Terence, you're so unscientific. Full shit. Another way to say it is, and I just said, you know,
we need a study of the safety of MDMA. And so then Dick Price who started Aslan, I said,
I'll put a thousand Dick Price, he put a thousand. So Terrence was actually the catalyst for the first study with MDMA.
Just because he was so frustrating about how plants are okay, and you know if it's from the lab, it's bad.
So that's one distinction. The other distinction is this
sense of
classic psychedelics versus things like MDMA. So to what extent do they
of classic psychedelics versus things like MDMA. So to what extent do they dissolve the ego?
And you could say to what extent do they cause visions,
the 5-HT2A serotonin receptor subtype,
which is responsible for a lot of that,
where these drugs are activating.
Now, masculine of all the psychedelics,
chemically it's the most similar to MDMA.
It's a phenethylamine, which is MDMA.
So in the 50s, there was the, 53, I think it was,
the Army Chemical Warfare Service,
wanted to look at drugs for interrogations,
mind control, nonlethal incapacitance.
They did a study in eight substances. These were now toxicity studies in animals.
And on the one side was methamphetamine. On the other was mescaline and MDMA was in the middle,
chemically. So mescaline of these psychedelics tends to have a warmth that MDMA has. It's not as
eco-desolving quite as some of the others.
I mean, it's the main act of ingredient and peyote.
It is very psychedelic, very visual.
Another distinction with these different drugs
is how long they last.
And a lot of that has to do with the route of administration.
So for example, if you smoke DMT,
it takes 10, 15 minutes, and you're within seconds, you're
often in another world.
Similarly, 5MEO DMT.
Very rapid.
When you take DMT in the form of ayahuasca, where it's mixed with another substance that makes
it so that it's orally active, then it's a couple hours.
So LSD is 8, 10, 12 hours sometimes. Silicibin is more like five or six hours or four to six hours.
MDMA is similar. It's one reason why in our research, we give an initial dose of MDMA,
and then two hours later, we give half the initial
amount to extend the plateau because we want it to last longer for people to be in this therapeutic
state. So that's another distinction is, you know, how long these drugs last. Another distinction is
which of them come from a religious context, have a religion built around them. We have this sense that
some people are saying that 5MEO DMT and the Sino-Rentote that they have this long history of
indigenous use, but they don't. That's all modern. It's made up and it's kind of a new approach.
However, there was thousands of years of use of psilocybin mushrooms in religious contexts.
of use of psilocybin mushrooms in religious contexts. From 1600 BC to 396 AD, the world's longest mystery
ceremonies, the Ellucinian mysteries,
you know, sort of the heart of Greek culture,
the heart of Western culture, that was a psychedelic
potion called kicking on, that seems like it's very much
like an LSD-like substance, air got on grain, and LSD comes from air got.
So I think that there are a lot of ways to look at these
different substances. Another distinction is, you know,
which one of them are being researched right now
in scientific contexts and which are not.
And because of the rise of all these for-profit companies are being researched right now in scientific contexts, in which or not.
And because of the rise of all these for-profit companies and everybody's looking for what they can patent,
what they can claim, the land grab,
more and more, there are companies looking
at every different kind of psychedelics.
The ones that are most important
that are not being researched, masculine,
but now there's a company to do masculine,
a journey colab.
I began, which is crucial for opiate addiction.
There's a new company, a branch of this company,
a tie that's going to be looking at I began.
So I'd say the rise of the for-profit companies
is making it so that there's just going to be an enormous
amount of investigations into all these different psychedelics.
But what we're going to see is the development of new psychedelics that we don't know
anything about that have not existed yet because a lot of these for profit companies are
going to want to invent and patent and have composition of matter patents on new molecules.
So I think we'll see a lot of that happening too.
That's really fast. I mean, there's a lot of doors you've opened and we're going to walk
through all of them including the research and so on, but on this one little tangent of
the future of psychedelics, so engineering new psychedelics. Can you comment on
maybe the chemistry and the biology of how psychedelics work and where is the space of possible
engineering of psychedelics and what kind of things might they unlock?
in terms of the possible places our mind would be able to go and
the the effects of that of improving health. But maybe at the
basic level of chemistry and the space of what could be engineered.
Well, you remind of me of the talk I heard by Buckminster Fuller shortly before he died. And what he talked about is how technology was making things ever smaller, you know, that
we were able to pack more and more information into smaller and smaller spaces, and that
we're developing technologies of communications with people, you know, we now know the internet
and things like that. But what he said is that he thought the eventual evolution of this sort of research
would move from this miniaturization to telepathy.
Yeah.
And I was like a shocking thing for somebody like scientific like that to say that.
Yeah.
So will we unlock those parts
where I talked about the collective unconscious?
Will we be able to more consciously explore those areas?
So I think that that's a possibility.
There was Stan Graf, who's the world's leading LSD researcher
and has been my mentor, his wife Brigida. They were
talking about stories that they had heard about MDMA that people take and then on top of
that, they do 5MEO DMT. And so you get this ego dissolution, but underneath that you have this sense of ego, sort of sense of self, a safety
of self acceptance kind of grounds it. So, stem was like, that's the future of psychiatry
that you can watch without the terror of the ego dissolution, the sense that you're losing
your mind or you're going crazy or you're dying or, you know, that you have this grounded
sense of safety while you're dissolving your normal're dying, or that you have this grounded sense of safety
while you're dissolving your normal sense of how you see things.
And being able to engineer in a fine-tuned way
that exact experience, maybe fine-tuned to the person,
as opposed to this manual potion that's through,
through, well, I don't experiment.
Although I don't know about fine-tuning things
to the person in the sense that we believe
there's this inner healer, this kind of,
you know, inner healing intelligence.
We talked about it, the body repairs itself, you know.
So I think we more need to create safety for people
and then what emergence will be customized
to what they need to be looking at
from this inner healing intelligence.
At the same time, we will move to, you know, we hear so
much about the new approaches to oncology where you do genetic analysis of
different kind of tumors and then you have certain kind of chemotherapy agents
and you do like personalized chemotherapy. I think we will have more like personalized psychedelic therapy
But it'll be more like a sequence of different drugs that people go through over an extended period of time and then you kind of customize
What's next and sometimes you'll combine different drugs together like this?
5MEO DMT and MDMA or a lot of times people do LSD, MDMA combinations or psilocybin, MDMA combinations.
Chemistry and it's not my strength.
I'm more into clinical applications and policy, but I can say that from what I've learned
from reading from others and researched on by others, that different psychedelics have
an impact on different neurotransmitters,
different other parts of energies in the brain. The default mode network is what's considered
to be like our sense of self. And it's part of the brain that's sort of what I described before
scanning the world and filtering information for what's really important to us.
And both focusing us on things and also helping us to ignore a lot of things.
And the classics like Adoxo all weaken the energy in this default mode system.
And therefore you get this flood of information that you're not normally paying attention
to. And then you start seeing in more creative ways or more connected. You actually move to beyond
the verbal kind of thinking into sort of symbolic thinking a lot of times. And that's where you
sometimes get these mystical sense of connection. How it's all won and you get the sense also of
sense of connection, how it's all won, and you get the sense also of how big the universe is, and how small each one of us is. So there's a lot of work that Sasha Schilgen and Albert Hoffman
who invented LSD and first synthesized still-siped on what they call structure activity relationships,
what is the structural of the molecule, and then how do you predict what that new molecule
that never existed before is going to do
once you actually take it?
And you can get close, but you never really know,
until you actually take the drug.
And the way that Sasha ran his experiments
is that he would take the drugs himself first
in low doses and he would sort of you know
Step up the doses to have more experiences if he thought it was a value. He'd share it with his wife, Anne
But then what they would do is if they both thought it was valuable They had a group of 12 people that they were with for many many years
And they would distribute these new drug to these 12 people
and they would get the different perspectives.
And he felt that 12 was like a minimum number,
you know, because we're so unique how each of us see things.
But then you kind of get a little bit of a consensus
on how a lot of people are going to see it.
And then if that, 12 people were positive about it,
then they would turn it over to Leo Zaf,
who we called the secret chief,
the leader of the underground psychedelic therapy movement, and then he would start exploring
it in therapy.
So there's still a lot of mysteries as far as structure activity relationships, and it's
not going to be the case that people go into the lab and they tinker with molecules, and
they know exactly what they're going to get. And a lot of it has to do with the not so much chemistry as morphology.
You could say the shape of the molecule and how does that interact with receptor sites.
And so we're getting better at modeling all of that.
And how does that interaction relate to the morphing of the human experience and deeply
understanding that perhaps there's
no equations yet for that kind of thing.
You really have to build up intuition by experiencing it.
And over time, the subjective self-report, like trying to build an understanding of the
effects of the different chemistries.
Yeah, you can have approximate ideas, but to know exactly. So when I first tried MDMA, which was 1982, and this was after I had done lots of LSD
and masculine in mushrooms, I was shocked at how different it was than these other substances,
and yet how profound it was. So are there whole new kind of categories of classes
of drugs that we're not aware of?
That would be not so much this like eco-disillusion
or emotional.
What MDMA does is reduces activity in the amygdala,
the fear processing part of the brain.
So it's not just chemistry,
but it routes energy throughout the brain. So it's not just chemistry, but it routes
energy throughout the brain in a different way. It increases activity in the prefrontal cortex.
So you think more logically, that I think has an enormous impact on the effect of MDMA.
The other thing it does is it increases connectivity between the amygdala and the hippocampus. So it
helps facilitate processing of things into
long-term memory. And with PTSD, trauma is like never in the past. It's always about to happen.
So will we one time develop drugs that would even be specific to certain kind of memories?
We're working with a woman Rachel Yuhuda, who is at the Bronx VA,
Rachel Yuhuda, who is at the Bronx VA, and she's done some studies that are with the epigenetics of trauma. So she's worked with Holocaust survivors and their children, and she has identified
epigenetic mechanisms by which trauma has passed from generation to the generations,
sort of like set points for anxiety, fear,
certain things like that.
But the question is, can you actually transmit memories
from one generation to the next?
Now, this is not DNA changes,
which happen over a very long period of time
and evolutionary scale.
But within one lifetime, within some
experiences, your epigenetics, what turns on the genes, or turns off certain genes, that can
be impacted. And that's what we know now can be transmitted from generation to generation.
Either by the father or the mother, through the sperm or the egg. So it's pretty remarkable. So what Rachel's going to try to do is
MDMA research for PTSD and look at these
epigenetic markers before and after and see
if they change as in the consequence of therapy.
So will we develop one day certain kind of
chemicals that will be able to bring certain kind of memories to the surface.
That's not inconceivable.
The epigenetic angle is fascinating, that there will be these epigenetic perturbations that
lead to memories living from one generation to the other, and then bringing those memories
to the surface and using that as signal to understand what exactly the psychedelics bring to the surface and not.
Yeah. Now, the other portion of that though is culture. I mean, culture is where we store all these memories
and in the stories that we get passed out. Especially with a lot of shared, you talk about the Holocaust or World War II, where it is deeply ingrained
in the culture, the impact of those events and sort of an aggregate, the different perspectives
on that particular event, create a set of stories that you can plug into. And then they kind
of resonate with some aspect of you that creates a memory that's connected to. Like when I think about World War II and the Holocaust, I think about my own family, but
in some sense, it's also resonating with stories of many others.
So it's like somehow the two echo each other.
And I'm just providing my own little flavor on top.
The meat of the stories are probably those that are shared with others.
It's plugging into the collective unconscious.
That's really fascinating, really plugging into, like,
precisely plugging into particular memories as a way to deal with trauma and PTSD, that kind of thing. I'll just have that the most important dream of my life ever was of a Holocaust survivor
telling me that he was miraculously saved from death and he knew that he was saved for
a particular purpose, but he never knew what that purpose was.
So in the dream I'm seeing him on his deathbed. And then he shows me whatever happened to him during the Holocaust.
And then we're back in the room on his deathbed.
And he says, well, I know what my purpose was now.
And I'm like, oh, great.
Well, it wasn't.
He says, tell you to be a psychedelic therapist.
And study psychedelics and bring back psychedelic research.
And I thought to myself, I've already decided to do this.
You can lay this on me.
I can say yes, and then you can die in peace.
And then he died in front of my eyes in the dream.
So I think that that kind of cultural transmission
that I got from when I was really young,
then manifested in this dream.
And that was this story about how people can be incredibly
vicious and can be very motivated by irrational factors.
And so I just feel that this kind of multi-generational
transmission of this story of the irrational,
being a murderous factor,
and something I needed to respond to
was deeply ingrained. And I would say my guess is, you know, more culturally than this epigenetic mechanism. Yes. Yeah, but your sense is that whatever stimulated a certain part of human nature in World War II, especially
in Nazi Germany, but also in Stalinist Soviet Union, still within us, within all of us,
just like we were saying, you know, we embody quite a lot of things.
Yeah. body quite a lot of things. And one of those is whatever the capacity of for evil, it seems to be
one of those things. Yeah, there's a quote from Carl Jung, from just a few years that before he died.
What he says, and I'll just paraphrase it, is that we need to understand psychology. We need to understand who man is,
that the greatest danger to us is man. There are no other dangers, really, that impact our species.
And then it goes on to say that we are the source of all coming evil.
that we are the source of all coming evil. Now this was 15 years or so after World War II. But yeah, and I'd say one of the most important psychedelic experiences of my
life was a DMT experience. Also, Terence was there, Ralph Metzner, Andy Wilde, a few
others. And we were sitting around at Estl and smoking DMT.
And under the influence of DMT,
which now this was the first time I've ever smoked DMT,
I had this super rapid fraction of a second,
like dissolving of everything that I,
well, first off I saw a horizontal line,
then I saw a vertical line, then it turned into a color,
red, then it was red, then it turned into cubes, then it turned into a color, red, then it was red,
then it turned into cubes, then it turned into like an MC Escher kind of like, I don't know,
didn't make logical sense, then I was gone. And then it was just this period of 5, 10 minutes of
just feeling part of this enormous wave of billions of years of evolution, and how I had this sense that in my innermost sense
of who I am uniquely individually,
this inner voice that's talking to me
that I didn't develop English,
that it's like a gift to me from millions of people,
so that even in my most innermost sense,
it's not just me, it's the product of everything that came before me.
I'm part of this bigger system.
And then I just thought, wow, just how many billions of years
does it take to reach this point,
to self-awareness and all this, and it was glory,
it was beautiful.
And then I had this thought, and this is where
this kind of intellectual honesty, I guess you could say,
I just thought, well, if I'm part of everything
and everything's part of me, then it's not just the good parts that Hitler's
part of me too.
And that was just this shock like a stone sunk, you know, and I just was very moody for
the whole next day.
But it was that acknowledgement that each of us carries these potentials.
And what we activate is what matters, but what our potential are is the whole full range
of things.
I don't know if you can comment about the DMT trip itself and what it's like starting
from the very basic geometric shapes and then launching yourself into the context of the
enormity of space and time and human history.
Is there anything else to be said about that kind of visually or physically or emotionally
about that journey? What it's like that brief journey that reveals so much?
Well, I was with a group of people. The way we were doing
it was, you know, each of us would smoke DMT, have 10, 15 minutes experience while we
closed our eyes. And, you know, everybody else was just chatting. And then the person who
did the DMT would come back and tell their story. And what happened. And then we'd think
about it for a bit and then pass the pipe to the next person. And so this was like a
whole evening. You know, and even sorry, to interrupt, even the conversations themselves then is part of the
experience.
Exactly.
Yes, yes, because it's also what you bring back.
Right.
I mean, I think that's particularly for therapy.
You know, it's not so much about what the experience is, but it's what you bring back.
And what do you integrate?
And then also, how do you learn how to do these things on your own without the drugs?
There is this way because we're saying it's sort of a core human experience.
The drug is the mediator, but can we do this on our own?
And once you've seen it and felt it, then you have a little bit better sense to recreate
it on your own, although, you know, I've had dreams where I've been doing LSD and tripping. I was just incredible. It was, I was tripping
in my dreams, but I had not taken LSD. So there's this way in which we do that. So I would
say that from the DMT experience, the sense of safety, that's what I was trying to get
at with this, the group of us and the group of friends trying to do this common exploration that if you have
this sense of safety, you're incredibly vulnerable because you are giving up your awareness,
really, of what's happening around you. I think there's what we're finding is that in our psychedelic research for PTSD and what we see with the vaccines that even African Americans are reluctant to volunteer for vaccines because they haven't had that sense of safety from the medical establishment.
establishment, they don't volunteer for psychedelic therapy even as much. So the overlay has to be this sense of safety as you become vulnerable and looking inside. I was just actually told about how
there's a lot of work being done inside prisons to teach mindfulness. And you know, so one of the
And, you know, so one of the, um,
Charlene who's my assistant is trying to do work on
Helping people in prison with trauma potentially one day with him DMA or meditation or mindfulness But one of the exercises was, you know, teaching people to okay, here's how you do a stress
You know just close your eyes and deep breathe and what what Charlene was saying is don't close their eyes in prison, you know, you don't feel safe to do
that. So all that is just to say is that the context is the
most important factor. So while I'll talk about the DMT
experience, the context was this supportive sense of safety
that I could be completely vulnerable and out of any kind of
control women, I think, you know, often or less safe in this way than men because of all the
sexual assaults. But what it can do by taking the ego orientation offline to some extent. It opens you up to much more. And to make a bigger point of that,
we could say that it's very similar to the Copernican Revolution. And people thought that the
Earth was the center of the universe, and the inquisition murdered people that questioned that.
Father Bruno burned it the stake. Actually, one of the things he said,
I think that's worth all these years later, saying, is that when the inquisition
sent him to burn at the stake, for espousing this idea that the earth was not really the center
of the universe, he said to the inquisition, he said, your fear in sentencing me is greater than my fear in being sentenced.
That their worldview was so rigid, that they had to wipe out any way that would question it.
And so this idea of psychedelics displacing our ego is the center of the universe, and to realize that
we are just rotating about something much bigger than our individual life, our ego is designed
almost to protect this body while we're alive, and you're going to understand all the good
reasons why that is.
But it also disconnects us from this bigger reality. And so the psychedelics DMT by knocking this sort of
ego orientation or the default mode network offline,
you open up to the bigger sweeps of history.
So in that place of safety and vulnerability
in that fascinating group of people,
when their ego is dissolved in this way,
do they have similar experiences?
Is there different places that their minds want?
Yeah.
So, you know, once I had this kind of shattering experience that Hitler is part of me,
you know, no one else in the group had that.
Probably, a lot of them have maybe had that before, or they realized that they're not just,
you know, the good, the white hat, good people, and then
they're all good, and then, you know, we got to fight against the bad people.
You know, so, you know, people will go in different places.
And not only that, if you do it again, you'll go into a different place than you went to
the first time.
Unless you have not resolved the issue.
So I had a sequence of LSD trips that were very difficult, but it was like coming to the same
sort of conundrum, the same challenge that I was unable to overcome. This idea of letting go and
really fully dissolving, letting the ego fully go. And I would have these sequence of trips over
a couple months where I would reach this point where I was too scared to move forward and I would just be holding on.
So there are repeated themes sometimes.
What Stan Graft has said, which I find very beautiful, is that the full expression of
an emotion is the funeral pyre of that emotion.
And what that means is if you can fully lead in something, then the essence of life
has changed, is that it moves on, that everything's in motion.
And if you can fully experience it, even if it's a sense that you're going to be trapped
in eternity in this hellish state, if you surrender to that, that's the way out.
This full experience of something is this funeral pyro that emotion. And so that
runs against a lot of what modern psychiatry is doing too, which is to suppress symptoms.
And to instead of supporting people to kind of explore these insecurities so that then they
can contain them and then they can move on. So yeah, resistance is not a way to make progress.
Right, right.
Although in one of the reasons why we do
the supplemental dose during the MDMA,
or why there's advantages in a 10 hour LSD experience,
is that you have a lot of opportunities
to come up against this resistance.
It may be too difficult to deal with and then you kind of push it aside and then a couple hours
later you come back to it or you come back to it. Press news every once in a while. If you're not
ready. It's hard to do that. I think with MDMA you can negotiate. That's I think a part of
its safety in a sense. You can have this like, oh, I should be talking about this, but I, or I'm feeling
this, but it's too much for me now.
You can push it away, but with the classics, like Adelix, this kind of membrane between
the conscious and the unconscious, that once you take the drug and it weakens this membrane
and things are coming up, it's very difficult to negotiate with it. The key to successful
classics like adductrips is surrender. You've talked about the first beginner reconsider the negative
health myths around psychedelics when you learned that the book One Florever the Cooke who's
nested was written by Ken Keezy when he was in part
under the influence of LSD. So, how do you think LSD helped him? Ken Keezy in writing that incredible book.
Yeah. There's a process that's called semantic priming. And so what that means is that I say
night, you say day, you know, there's kind of normal patterns of kind of you say one word
What kind of words come to you next?
And so they've done some research they meaning scientists have done some research
Where you give people a psychedelic and then you do this semantic priming and
What you find is they have a wider range of associations
than they normally would when they're not under psychedelics.
So I think for Ken Keezy,
he was able with psychedelics to get like a deeper
kind of emotional connection to some of these states of mind
that people were in the Insta, and that he could explore them more in-depth and more eloquently.
Also, one of the things he talked about was the fog machine.
How people's minds were sort of clouded by the people that ran the institution and the fog machine would be coming in.
So I think the imagery and the metaphors that he used a lot in the book could come to him during
LSD experiences. And then now he wasn't doing, you know, very... When you're writing, you have to be
very, when you're writing, you have to be literate, you have to be able to write. So it would be more like beginning and ends of LSD trips instead of at the peak. But I think you would
get a lot of these, the feeling tones or the images, the metaphors, I think he would get,
these extend, also LSD lasts so long. You can get these extended focus and you can really elaborate on
images and
So much of psychedelic experiences are poetic and metaphorical. I mean you could take
You know veterans who've never
Read a book of poetry in their lives
read a book of poetry in their lives. And under the influence of MDMA,
just what they describe, the imagery and the way they describe
their experience is metaphorical, poetic.
It's incredible.
And so I think that Ken Kizzi was able to channel
what LSD did to his mind in a way that most people couldn't do, but he did
because he was trying to write the novel and because he was so brilliant.
Yeah, I mean, we'll talk about psychedelics and treating in bringing some trauma to the
surface and dealing with all those kinds of things, but
there's something also to the opening up of creativity for whether it's for writing
purposes or for in my world, for engineering, for invention, innovation and invention itself
is a very deeply creative process. And it's fascinating to think with the aid of psychedelics,
what kind of ideas can be brought to life. Yeah, well, we have the whole phenomena of a lot of
the people in Silicon Valley and else microdosing psychedelics in order to have a little touch more
of this creative approach to things. I would love it to see if it was, that's more like Terence McKenna territory correct me
from wrong, but I would love to sort of more scientific to where there would be the rigor
of saying how to do it effectively, you know, how to sort of understand sort of not just almost, you know, to take the full journey of creative exploration and to do it for
long periods of time, you know, for years, you know, lifelong kind of part of your life,
of how it empowers creativity. I think, of course, you start with helping people deal with trauma and then the
next step is people who have moved past their trauma and are trying to do something, create
something special in their life, how can then psychedelics empower that?
Yeah, now that also just to not shy away
from anything controversial,
that gets us to this idea of psychedelics for vision quest,
particularly for younger people.
You know, when you're sort of moving into this adult thing
kind of phase and you have to figure out
what are you gonna do with your life?
There's so many options.
A lot of people force field constrained that they have very few options. But I think this idea of psychedelics as a way to help
you find your calling or find your vision or find your unique leverage point, I think we'll
see that more and more as our culture evolves and gets healthier around the uses like adelix.
So it's both the science having the rigor of understanding how to do it safely and the
culture catching up to the fact that this is both safe and like very useful.
Yeah, although I would question this idea of safety.
So we can understand physiological risks and we can minimize them, and I think
there's very minimal physiological risks from the classic psychedelics, virtually none, or for even
MDMA under-save conditions. Psychological risks are harder to address, but we can do that through the sense of safety and support.
But I think there's a level of risk there that we shouldn't overlook.
And so, to make a drug into a medicine, what we have to do is prove to the satisfaction
of the FDA and other regulatory agencies, the things are safe and efficacious.
But even though they use those words, proving safety and safe and efficacious, it's in relationship
to the disease that you're trying to treat, and you accept a certain amount of risk.
So it's the risk-benefit ratio rather than pure safety.
Yeah, absolutely. Let me ask you about Ken Kizzi a little bit longer
because he was also part of Project MK Ultra. Yeah, yeah. What was Project MK Ultra? And what lessons
we should take away from it? Well MK Ultra was a program by the CA, you know, what they were looking at was, can you
take these drugs, these psychedelic drugs, and weaponize them in different ways, for interrogation,
for true serums, for, you know, exposing somebody before they give a big talk to something like LSD and then they can't talk or make a full of themselves.
Or can you spray LSD over the battlefield and have everybody tripping and drop their weapons and then you just walk up and nobody dies and you've won the battle.
So it's a fascinating concept. Yeah, they call it non-lethal incapacitates.
And I think that's how one way to win a war
is to enforce peace, to get everybody
not caring about the war, but yes.
Well, I think Gandhi said something even better,
which is that the true way to win a war
is to turn your enemy into your friend.
Yes, that's a beautiful way to put it.
Yeah.
But MK-Alter was really nefarious, and it was part of our military, and it was done in
secret, and they would dose people against their will.
I mean, one of the most infamous things was that they had a house prostitution in San Francisco,
and they would have one-way mirrors, all the stuff, and then they would just dose people
with LSD.
They would have the prostitutes dose these guys with LSD and observe what they would do and
how they would act.
The CIA, actually, for a while, was dosing each other secretly.
There's a famous case of this fellow Olson that either jumped out of a window where it
was pushed.
He might have been killed.
He was a CIA guy and they gave him LSD and then they're trying to see can they break
him down and get him to tell secrets.
I think he felt uncomfortable with what happened to him while he was under the influence
of LSD and whether he was pushed or not, I don't know if we'll ever know. But MK Ultra was violating people's human
rights, it was done in secret. And the irony of it is that Ken Keezy is one of the people,
one of the main early people that got LSD in this context, and then he was one
of the main people that helped inspire the hippies to use psychedelics to oppose the
Vietnam War.
So I think the CIA kind of, in many cases, things get out of their control.
What they think they can do, and it turned in to be a disaster for them.
I think there was some thought that some of the people
at the CIA had is that if you can turn people inside,
take drugs and they just focus on their internal experience,
they're not gonna be involved politically.
It's a way to sort of take people offline.
And what I don't think they countered on
is that when you're offline and you have these
unit of special experiences and you realize
how we're all connected,
then why do you wanna go out and kill have these unit of special experiences and you realize how we're all connected. Then why
do you want to go out and kill these Vietnamese and put a one dictator over another dictator,
dictators on both sides in North Vietnam and South Vietnam? Why are we doing that? So MK
Ultra has a very disreputable. We're learning more and more about what they did. And one of the unintended
consequences was Ken Keezy and not only that, but then the grateful dead who began at the
acid test that Keezy was helping to organize and out of that emerged, you could say just
this incredible psychedelic culture. And you look at the bands that began in the 60s.
And which ones have really survived to this day?
And the grateful debt has survived longer than most any other band.
I mean, some of them have died and all, but it was like the tightness,
the sort of telepathy we talked about before,
that they could just get so tuned in to each other,
and each other's energies,
and they could do improvisations,
and they could do this incredible,
work that I think the sustainability of the great-fold data
as a group was a testament to the power of the LSD
experiences, and that might have never happened
if not for MK-Ultra.
the LSD experiences and that might have never happened if not for MK-Ultra. But can we talk about the darkness a little bit?
Yeah, yeah.
Tekkizinski, the Unibom was allegedly part of the MK-Ultra studies while at Harvard.
Do you think this is true?
Do you think had an impact on him psychologically, intellectually, and so on?
I do think it's true and I do think it had an impact.
So we talked before about are these drugs somehow or other
producing a certain kind of drug experience or do they bring out what's within?
So we have this experience on the one hand, Ken Keeizi, and he sort of took positive things out of this.
On the other hand, you know, we can get this opposition to the modern world to technology
and to the point of creating bombs to try to go after it so that the experience is not
in the drug.
It's this interaction between the drug, the person, the context.
And so we can heal people with psychedelics, or people can be driven crazy with psychedelics.
It depends again on the context.
And so I think both these things can be true.
And I think it was really good that you kind of highlighted this, that there is this
polarities and that it's not in the drug. It's in the other factors and it's who they were beforehand and then how you use that experience. So all that's to say is if we put LSD in the
water and everybody were going to get it, it doesn't mean that all of a sudden everybody's
going to have a mystical experience and then that's, you know, all we need to do and humanity is spiritualized and we're in all of this.
It's not about the drug.
That actually is why for me, we've also talked about engineering new psychedelics and all
the people that are going to be trying for profit companies to develop and pat new psychedelics. For me, the most important challenge
is new cultural contexts
that can create legality, safety, support
for the existing psychedelics that we already have.
I mean, we have so much incredible tools
in these existing psychedelics
that it's more about creating context for them to be used
in safe medical or personal growth or recreational even with harm reduction, all these different
ways. That's more important to me than finding some new molecule that's somewhat similar or
somewhat different, but you know, it can be patented. So it's the social context. So I
do believe that Ted Kaczynski was part of NK Ultra, and I think it affected him in a negative way.
And that's a cautionary tale that it's not in the drug, it's in the context.
The context, the person, still, it feels like if viewed from a therapy perspective,
perhaps there was a way to use psychedelics to help Ted Kaczynski find a path out of the darkness.
I think so.
And I think that this is where I think MDMA comes in
in a way that MDMA is,
he felt very isolated
and very much out of society in some ways.
MDMA stimulates oxytocin, which we haven't mentioned, which is the hormone of nursing
mothers, of love and connection.
It provides a lot of this sense of self acceptance and safety and wanting to be in relationship.
There's ghoul dolain is a neuroscientist at Hopkins.
He's given octopuses.
MDMA, they're solitary creatures except mating season, which is not very often,
but you give them MDMA and they become more interested in hanging out with other octopuses.
So I think this, for people that have had difficult psychedelic experiences, MDMA helps them
integrate them. We've worked with people that had a difficult LSD experience 40 years before
and are still able to get back to that under the influence of MDMA and work out some of the conflicts
that they weren't able to resolve all those decades before.
So I think that psychedelics could have been helpful in a different context for Ted
Kuzinxi.
But the other big part of it is that people have to be
willing to cooperate with the experience.
We talked about resistance.
So people can resist these things.
It's, you know, the saying is you can drink
a bring, bring horse to water, but you can't make them drink.
This is about how people have to be willing
to go to these spaces.
So one of the essence of our therapeutic approach is that
we help people to heal themselves. That we are not giving them the healing. It's a flip
on the power dynamics that existed, you would say in the 50s and 60s, my dad was a doctor
and the doctors were gods and whatever they said was right. We know a lot of, of course, believe that.
But for a while, psychoanalysis with Freud, that they gave the interpretation to the patient.
The patient couldn't help themselves, but they would do the free associations.
And then psychoanalysis would see these conflicts and would be the one that does the healing,
would give this interpretation, and that would open things up.
So I think it's this idea of
empowering people to heal themselves. And so if Ted Kuznicki had been in a therapeutic setting
with psychedelics, and if they'd had something like MDMA available or MDA, which was popular during
the 60s, which is a more like MDMA-Lesty combination, the outcomes might have been different.
Let's take a step into the world of studies. Timothy Leary, who was he, and what were the
most important ideas you've learned from him? Well, I did have the opportunity to get to know him personally and to spend some time with him.
Timothy Leary, well, let's start with Nixon saying he's the most dangerous man in America.
That's a good place to start.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And why did Nixon say that?
It's because of this tune in, you know, turn, turn on to an end, drop out.
Timothy Liri was just an incredible advocate for
think for yourself, a question authority.
Those were things he said all the time.
Think for yourself, question authority.
He was a rebel.
He was kicked out of West Point.
He was a psychologist who was at Harvard for three years, from 60 to 63.
Before he got to Harvard, he had an experience with mushrooms in Mexico.
And he said he learned more in that experience than he'd had in his entire academic career
before that, about how the human mind works. And so he came to Harvard wanting to do research into psychedelics.
And he did some very important studies, both of which, well, one was called the Good Friday
Experiment, which was whether psychedelics in religiously inclined people taking psilocybin
in a religious setting, whether it could produce a mystical experience.
That took place at Mars Chapel at the Boston University.
Because it's a little bit subjective, or you could say entirely subjective, what people describe happens to them.
He wanted to do another study, which would be a more objective measure, and that was called the Concord Prison Experiment. And that was the thought, if you can give people
psilocybin mystical sense of connection type experiences while they're in prison, when they get out,
they'll be more pro-social, and they'll have reduced recidivism.
So Tim did that. He also did the naturalistic studies of giving loads of people psilocybin and
sort of writing down what their experiences were, the range of experiences. Later on, in his time at Harvard,
he just, they started doing LSD. And LSD is more cerebral, longer lasting, not as reassuring
in a way, as psilocybin. Sometimes he used to say that if they'd never got into LSD,
they'd still be at Harvard with the
psilocybin. So he was a great American psychologist, but then he got tired of the psychology game,
you could say, or he would say that, he got more and more interested in cultural change and various
musicians and artists, and all sorts of people started coming to them for the
psychedelic experience that they are in a way for creativity for other things. So he started hanging out with
all sorts of famous people or creative people and
he stopped going to classes all a lot and
Ramdas Richard Albert, you know, had going to classes all a lot and Ramdass Richard Alpert had given LSD to a student that Ramdass was
courageous enough to admit that he had sexual interest in. They weren't supposed to give it
under graduates. That was about the only time that they ever did it. And psychedelics just getting
more and more controversial
even in the early 60s,
eventually got kicked out of Harvard
and then he became kind of a cultural icon
for the counterculture and was hounded by the police
and Nixon and spent a lot of time in jail.
I mean, he's an incredible person.
One thing that Ramda said is that
Richard Albert Ramda said,
I'm a rascal, but Larry is a scoundrel.
What's the distinction?
Rascal's like in good fun. A scoundrel is like, you can't quite trust them.
I think.
I think the spectrum of sorts.
Yeah, I think that Liri was someone who a little bit
got addicted to media attention.
But I think that overall,
he gets blamed a lot for the backlash against the 60s,
the shutdown of psychedelic research.
I think that he is unfairly blamed for a lot of that.
I think when you look back at the 60s, the common narrative is that it was because psychedelics going wrong.
People took psychedelics, they weren't prepared, they had emotional breakdowns, they went
psychotic, they killed themselves, they did this or that, different problems of people
taking psychedelics in context that they didn't feel fairly safe in or
or just they weren't prepared or they didn't know how much they were taking or all this. So
the backlash was because psychedelics go on wrong. But I think the real reason, well that did happen.
I think the real reason is psychedelics going right. And people having this sense of connection.
And then the opposite of what the CIA was
hoping that it would kind of turn people inward and take them away from political struggles,
it actually motivated people. Once you actually have these psychedelic experiences,
your attitude towards death changes also. This idea of death becoming an intrinsic part of life. It's a natural cycle. It's not so much.
So I think people realize that, you know, while there's this billions of years of evolution,
you know, infinity, whatever that means in terms of time, that we're here for a very limited time,
and they end up wanting to use their time well. They have a lessened fear of death,
and they want to build this paradise on Earth here now,
instead of later.
So a lot of people really did get motivated
to challenge the Vietnam War to work
on the environmental movement, civil rights movement,
women's rights movement, anti-militarism.
And it was that challenge to the status quo
that caused the backlash.
So Leary is someone who, in 1990, we had a, the maps I started in 1986.
So in 1990, we had this conference to raise money out in California, and Liri was there,
and Ramdus was there, and Ralph Metzer was there, and Andy Wiles was there, and Terence
McKenna was there, and Dennis McKenna was there, and all these.
But there was one point where Tim was speaking, and afterwards I was asking him some questions.
And I said, do you have any advice for us on how to work with the government and how to bring
these psychedelics forward? That's what we're trying to do. I've got this nonprofit for it.
You know, we're trying to do this research. What is your advice on how to bring this forward and how to work with the government. And he said, uh, fuck
the government. He said, I am so far past asking for permission for anything, but I'm glad
that you're doing it. And then he held up my hand like, you know, like passing the torch.
Wow. And that's one of my favorite photographs of me and Tim where he's sort of like, but
it was the after this, fuck the government. of me and Tam where he's sort of like, but it was the after this fuck the government
I'm so far past asking for permission for anything, but yeah, I'm glad that you are now
I did follow-ups to the good Friday experiment and I did follow-ups
25-year follow-up to the good Friday experiment about a 34-year follow-up to the Concord Prison Experiment
What I discovered in some ways I would say is the key to the 60s
What I just told you but in the the follow-up to the good Friday experiment that I did in some ways I would say is the key to the 60s, what I just told you,
but in the follow up to the Good Friday experiment that I did in the 80s for my undergraduate
thesis at New College in Sarasota, Florida, I eventually found 19 out of the 20 people.
It was just, it was an enormous challenge because their names were all lost and just
to forever years and years and years to find them all.
But I discovered that those people that had the psilocybin experience in the midst of 25 years
later with Nancy Reagan and Ronald Reagan, and if they're ever, were there a social pressure
to disavow the validity of the psychedelic experience, that was then.
And instead they affirmed it that they thought with all of this years of hindsight, now looking back,
they thought it was a valid mystical experience, but I discovered that one of the persons
who had the soul siphon had this experience during the Good Friday service that
Reverend Howard Thurman was the minister. He was Martin Luther King's mentor.
And Reverend Howard Thurman was the minister at Boston at Mars Chapel. Martin Luther King got his
PhD at Boston University. And Howard Thurman had spent time with Agondi. And so he was really kind of
this hidden person behind the Civil Rights Movement about non-violence as their strategy.
But he was interested in the political implications of the mystical experience.
So he permitted this experiment to take place, and there were 20 Divinity students, from
Andrew Renoutin in the basement, and 10 experimenters, all the people on religion and psychology,
the Houston Smith and Maltese and Clark and Leary and Rob Duster and Mr. others were there as a
support part of it. And the sermon was like three hours later. We actually have a three hours long.
We actually have that original sermon from the Good Friday Experiment, from Howard Thurman up on
our website. It's incredible. But part of it was tell people there's a man on the cross and this one
person sort of heard that and he thought, okay, I gotta do that.
I think I got it to the hard term
was such a dynamic speaker.
He said, I got it, tell people there's a man on the cross.
And so he said, what am I doing here in this basement chapel?
Listening to the service, I gotta go tell people
there's a man on the cross.
So he went, he thought he was just going to bathroom
and he ran out the door.
He's running down Commonwealth Avenue
and Houston Smith and Tim Leary go after him.
And he had thought that since he should tell somebody, he should tell the president.
Like, why not? But then he realized, well, the president is in Washington.
You know, here in Boston, I'll just tell the president of the university.
So anyway, he's running down the street and Leary and Houston Smith go after him.
And he doesn't want to go back inside. They finally get him. He's not hit the street in Leroy and Houston, Spethco, after him. He doesn't want to go back inside.
They finally get him.
He's not hit by a car.
But they end up giving him a shot of thorazine.
What's thorazine?
Thorazine is like a major anti-psychotic.
It's a horrible drug.
But it knocks people out, tranquilizes them.
We would never do that today.
We don't abort a difficult experience like that.
But in any case, they hid that.
That was not part of the right up of this experiment.
So what they did as in a sense,
a little bit exaggerated the benefits.
It later became, three years later,
after the experiment or four years in time magazine,
it said everybody that got to psilocybin had a mystical experience.
Like, it was not true, not everybody ate out of the tent did, but not all tent, not
this guy.
And they minimized the risks.
So there was a bit of that.
I think Tim was reckless in that way.
It was underplayed the risks and overpromised the benefits. And then the Concord Prison Experiment, it turned out that
Tim had fudged the data completely and it wasn't really successful. So I fault him for that.
The outside world was doing the opposite. It was exaggerating the risks and blocking research.
He felt justified to fudge Yeah, because the outside world was
Fudging in a sense the other response to the yeah, yeah, yeah, exactly. Yeah, so
So that that that presents a very nice context
Fuck the government, but I'm glad that somebody is
Fighting the good fight from within and doing it the right way, which is where you are.
So the 80s, let me ask, what is maps, the multidisciplinary association for psychedelic studies,
and what is its mission throughout the years, throughout the decades?
Yeah, so maps is a nonprofit organization.
I created it as a nonprofit pharmaceutical company.
I created in 1986, after a DEA, the Drug Enforcement Administration, criminalized MDMA in 1985.
And that was after they started trying to do that in 1984.
And as I mentioned, this Terence McKenna sponsor, you know, motivating us to do this safety study. So we did that
in preparation for this eventual crackdown, because MDMA was
called Adam, used as a therapy drug, but it was also beginning
to be sold as ecstasy as a party drug. And that was taking place
in public settings and bars. And so it was inevitable that
crackdown would happen. And so I had a nonprofit connected debuckminster fuller, an earth metabolic design lab that we
used to support this lawsuit against the DEA to block them from criminalizing MDMA.
We were winning in the court of public opinion and winning in the court.
The DEA freaked out and the emergency scheduled MDMA in 85 the handwriting was on the world
But they were not going to permit the therapeutic use to continue because it gets in the way of the narrative of the drug war and these are terrible drugs
So in 86 is when I started maps as a non-profit firm up because the the strategy that I realized is that
Americans are open to medicines
you know that is that Americans are open to medicines,
that tools to ease suffering, that was the opening wedge,
the opening door to changing attitudes.
And it would be through science, I would say,
that my religion is more science than anything else.
And culture and religion are metaphorical,
but often too much they become literal.
But I felt that through science, through medicine, there would be a way to bring these drugs
back to the surface.
And the mission was always this mass mental health, this idea that what we need is to spiritualize
humanity.
Einstein said, the splitting of the atom has changed everything except our mode of thinking.
And hence we drift towards unparalleled catastrophe, which will be required if mankind is to survive,
is a whole new mode of thinking. So what is that new mode of thinking? My presumption is that it's more of this mystical sense of thinking that we're all
connected. And then if we realize that we're all connected, we're not going to blow the world. So
a lot of people say that, you know, if we could just give LSD all the world leaders, that would be,
you know, then they'd have these spiritual experiences, the world would be better. But actually
had a ketamine experience the day after that DMT experience I described with the inner Hitler. This ketamine experience was, I was
above and behind Hitler as he was giving a speech, like in the Nuremberg rallies.
Mm-hmm. Kind of thing, and I was trying to think, how do I get into his head? How do I undo
what he wants to do? How can we deal with him? And I realized this whole new thing about the Hylhilt or salute, and he would like push energy out, and
then everybody would do the salute back to him.
And so it's like the one to the many and the many to the one,
giving all these people giving way there were.
And then how it would just sort of ratchet up an intensity,
like these vibrations.
And I realized there's no way to get into this head.
This idea we've talked about before about you have to be willing.
Yes.
So what that sort of helped me understand is that the strategy has to be mass mental health.
It's not about changing a few leaders.
We need to change the mass of humanity to this new mode of thinking, this new spiritual way.
So maps was a non-profit from Sudaq suitable company focused on psychedelics.
Big pharma wasn't doing this work, government wasn't funding it.
So the only source of funds I thought would be through nonprofit donations.
And that's been true up until just a couple of years ago now that we have the rise of these four profits.
But that's because we've cleared out the regulatory obstacles.
We've got more scientific data about the benefits funded through philanthropy.
We've changed public opinion. And there's a lot less zeal for the drug more.
So all of those things have changed, but at the time, it was mass mental health,
was the goal. Two tracks. One was drug development, the other was drug policy reform.
So then it's not just available to people who have a clinical diagnosis,
but people who are personal growth
or they should have access to it as well. I did not know at the time that no drug had
ever been made into a medicine by a non-profit. That was really good. I didn't know that.
I might have been a little bit more daunted. Actually, that didn't happen for 13 more years. It happened in 1999. And
that was the abortion pill. Are you 46? That was approved in Europe, but a controversial,
nobody, no pharmaceutical company would take it. And it was John D. Rockefeller III, through
the population council, with the major donor being Warren Buffett. And the Rockefellers,
and the Buffets, and some of the pritzkers were involved in
funding this. So that was the first nonprofit. But the maps was designed as from the very
beginning, not academic research into psychedelics, but drug development. And that's a fundamental
distinction. And that's why I think we're years ahead now with everybody else in terms of making a psychedelic
assist at therapy into a medicine.
Because our goal from the very beginning
was not knowledge, not academic research.
It was practical.
It was drug development.
How do we create new social structures?
How do we create legal access to these things?
Now, in December of 2014, we created
the MAP's public benefit corporation. So MAPs is a nonprofit. Now, in December of 2014, we created the Maps Public Benefit Corporation.
So, maps is a nonprofit, but in our 35 years, we've raised about $110 million in donations.
What I didn't know when I started Maps, and it took me quite a few years, I didn't even
know this till about eight, nine years ago.
Was that in 1984, Ronald Reagan had signed a bill to create incentives for
developing drugs that were off-patent. So MDMA was invented by Merck in 1912.
It's in the public domain. These incentives are called data exclusivity, which
means that if you make a drug into a medicine that does no patent protection, nobody can use
your data for a period of time to market a generic. And that
will effectively be, well, it's five years, you do pediatric
studies, you get six months extension, and we are being
required if we succeed in adults to work with adolescents
with PTSD. It blocks a generic competitor from applying for
until that five and a half
years, it over takes FDA at least six months to review. So more or less six years of data
exclusivity, 10 years in Europe is data exclusivity. So the story then became to the donors that
you're not going to have to give us money forever, because we can make money selling
MDMA, but we wanna do two revolutionary things,
you could say, one is psychedelic,
assisted psychotherapy, but the other is marketing drugs.
When you market it with the profit maximization motive,
we end up in the extreme getting the distortions
that we have in America,
where we have the most expensive healthcare system
in the world per capita, but our outcomes are down like 40 or 50 among the countries our average outcomes
We don't have third of the people are so don't have insurance and it's just very inequitable
so
What we're trying to do is show a different way to market
Drugs and it's a modification of capitalism is called the benefit corporation
Where you maximize public benefit not not profit. You still make a profit.
So selling MDMA for a profit is not something we could keep inside the nonprofit, because
it's taxable, it's a business.
So we created the Maps Public Benefit Corporation, which is 100% owned by the nonprofit.
So we have a nonprofit that owns a pharma company. And the mission of the pharma company is to maximize, not profit, but maximize benefit
for society.
Yeah, yeah.
Although, there still will be profits, and the profits that we're going to make are going
to be used towards the mission of maps, which is, again, is this mass mental health and ending
the drug war.
And in fact, we've hired the Boston Consulting Group to help us plot our commercialization strategy.
There are some suggestions based on so many different assumptions in this, the number of
therapists that we train, the price that we set for the MDMA, whether insurance companies
will cover it.
There's the possibility of somewhere in the range of
three-quarters of a billion dollars in profits during this period of data exclusivity, just from
the U.S. and we're talking about trying to do this research around the world as well. So that's
what the benefit corporation is. The benefit corporation is our firm Sudaclour arm. We're about 130 people now.
Somewhere in that fluctuates, but one third of them are in the nonprofit.
We do harm reduction, psychedelic harm reduction.
We help create programs for people with difficult psychedelic experiences.
Ed Burnie, man, at festivals all over the world, even in cities.
We're now negotiating with the
police, the city of Denver, because Denver has made the mushrooms, the lowest enforcement
priority. You know, we, Oregon has passed the Oregon Silasibon initiative. So in those
areas where maybe more people are going to gravitate to do psychedelics, we want there
to be harm reduction so that we don't have bad stories coming out that would change that.
So maps does the psychedelic harm reduction.
We do public education.
We do a lot of it.
That's what you and I are doing right now.
We're doing that now.
But also research towards...
The research now is done in the benefit corp.
In the benefit corp?
Yeah.
So what happens is people donate to maps, get a tax deduction.
Maps transfers the money, or you could say, invests in the benefit court.
Yes.
The benefit court will do the research,
and then maps is the sponsor,
but then we will license the sale of MDMA
to the benefit court.
Got it.
But the research are done with a night
towards creating something that has a big impact
versus just research for knowledge sake.
Yeah, because I'm interested in political change. You can, the other part
of it, which is that the brain is the most complex thing we know in the universe, it's
going to, it's endless. I mean, when are we going to really like this idea of will we figure
out telepathy, will we figure out tapping into the clock to unconscious? What is the extent of our brain?
How does the brain actually work?
Do you ask chemistry questions?
So if it's just the pursuit of knowledge,
that is an endless thing.
And how does that end the drug war?
How does that help people directly?
So that's why we're focused on drug development
more than mechanism of action.
Before I ask you about one, but several really exciting studies, let me ask sort of
a personal question for me.
So if I wanted to get psychedelics from the maps, public benefit corporation and explore
my own mind, how do I get to do that?
And when?
You won't be able to.
You'll never be able to.
This is very unfortunate.
Because the reason is because the benefit corp
is designed as a pharmaceutical company.
So we can only work on clinical indications.
So let's say you come to me and you just say,
oh, I'm really depressed.
Can I get MDMA to overcome my depression or overcome my PTSD?
You know, we'll have to do research in those indications.
And by when you say me, me like a doctor.
So this would be prescribed in theory by doctors with this would go through a doctor.
Yes.
Yes.
And the prescription, okay, let me, let me ask another question.
Oh, well, but to further answer.
So that's where the drug policy arm comes in.
The drug policy arm comes in.
The drug policy reform.
So you should be able to get access to psychedelics for your own personal growth.
Yes.
But that's not medicine.
So that's why we need to medicalize, to have things covered by insurance, to change
people's attitudes, the public attitudes.
And then we get this subsequent drug policy reform,
and we're talking about it in terms of license legalization.
So my view is you should get a license to psychedelics,
you get a little education stuff,
and then you should be able to buy it and do it on your own.
So let me rephrase the question in more specific.
So when can I, if I happen to have ailments of some kind,
what the doctor size that psychedelics
could help?
When would you be a loose estimate for you of when a doctor will be able to prescribe
to me something from a map's public benefit code?
And then when for my personal growth and creativity would I be able to get something?
So like just looking out, this isn't like guarantee, but like your vision your hope
for
Yeah, for for psychedelics in society. Well, the end of 2023. So two and a half years from now
We anticipate FDA approval for the prescription use of MDMA for PTSD
because the FDA does not
regulate the practice of medicine, there is what's called off-label
prescription.
What that means, the label is what it's approved for.
So the label is, this is approved for PTSD, but let's say you come in anything else, social
anxiety or whatever, you can go to the doctor, they can give it to you.
It might not be covered by insurance, they have to be a little bit careful about malpractice if they're, but I think the end of 2023 is when you will be able
to do that. Now, there's actually another program, very limited, called expanded access,
which is compassionate use, which means that, and we have approval for 50 people for compassionate
use right now, we think that'll grow. So that's gonna open up in about two months.
And so those are people with PTSD,
they have to be treatment resistant,
nothing has worked for them,
and they can access MDMA while we're doing the phase three
studies.
Well, but they have to pay for it themselves.
We're not the sponsor has to pay for all the research,
but expanded access, because there's no control group, everybody gets the MDMA, people can pay for it themselves, and we think that'll start
in a couple months.
But it's very limited, it's limited to certain cities.
There's also a program called Right to Try, which is passed through Congress.
It's similar to this idea of compassionate use, but it cuts the FDA out of it, and patients can negotiate directly
with pharma companies to get access to their drugs.
That's starting to happen, I think, in Canada now, they're letting people have compassionate
access to psilocybin for life-threatening illness, because there has been studies with
psilocybin for cancer patients and others with life threatening illness. As far as your question about when will you be able to access this
for personal growth outside of medicine? I'll take that to mean, you know, fully legally where you
can just go by pure drug somewhere or when will that happen. You know, we are ready are starting to
see the decriminalization in certain areas of plants like psychedelics. And we see overall drug dream crime like that passed in Oregon so that any drug is now,
it's not legal.
You can't really fully set up clinics to offer it to people or there's no legal supply
like that, but it's decriminalized.
So my sense of things is based a lot on watching what happened with medical marijuana and marijuana
legalization. So we're sitting with medical marijuana and marijuana legalization.
So we're sitting here in Massachusetts, where marijuana is legal, but what happened first was medical marijuana.
So what we see is that medicalization by demonstrating that under certain contexts, the risks are much less than the benefits,
and then there are benefits. And then people hear stories about people
that have gotten better,
and then that changes their minds,
and then eventually that builds up too.
Why are we throwing people in jail?
It's just a culture, yeah.
Yeah, so I think that what we're gonna have,
2023 is MDMA approved by the FDA.
Chances are,
psilocybin will be a year or two after that. Then what we're
going to need is a decade of psychedelic clinics that are going to roll out across America,
also other countries as well, thousands of these psychedelic clinics. We already have hundreds
of ketamine clinics that are ketamine for depression. More and more people are realizing that
ketamine when it's used with therapy, it's better than when it's not.
But the therapist want to be psychedelic therapists.
They don't want to be a ketamine therapist or an MDMA therapist.
So those are the cross-trained.
So we will have a decade of these thousands of psychedelic clinics and all these stories
of people getting better in 2035 is when I think that we will move to licensed legalization,
which is when you will have the option of just going somewhere,
once you've done this educational stuff,
potentially, I also think it would be better
to have the opportunity for people to go for free,
paid for by tax money, to these clinics,
and you have your first experience with psychedelics under supervision.
And you know what you're getting into,
you've, you know, to ask the questionnaire,
what the risks are with the drugs,
then you get your license.
So 2035 is what I think that'll happen,
and the clinics will be sites of these initiations.
Yes.
And so it would be a safe environment,
just like you said, all the things that are actually
maximized the likelihood of a pleasant experience
and all those kinds of things.
It is a frustratingly slow process.
And the FDA being part of that process is very frustrating.
Of course, there's benefits, but boy, I wish it could move a lot faster.
Yeah.
Well, one thing that I've learned from being a parent is that when you have little kids, it seems
like they'll be with you forever.
But then when they grow up and they go to college and they leave, you look back and like,
where did that 20 years go?
We're still dealing with the legacy of the Civil War and slavery in America.
So actually a 20 year plan is not that long.
So while we say it's frustratingly slow and it is,
I mean, it's 50 years since the psychedelic 60s.
And right now, it's 36 years since MDMA was criminalized.
And you think about all those people that committed suicide from PTSD or from anything
else.
And all those people that could have been helped, if the DEA had accepted the administrative
law judge or recommendation that MDMA stay in schedule three, it's tremendously sad.
At the same time, culturally, vocally, you read the Bible or you read all this stuff,
we're not that different from people thousands of years ago.
So how are we going to really evolve enough over the next couple decades
so we don't destroy the planet and don't kill each other?
That's why I think psychedelics have an important role to play.
That's why I've devoted my life to psychedelics.
And it is frustratingly slow. And what I said to myself
is our whole effort has not been fast enough. Can we talk a little bit about PTSD and MTA?
Yeah. There's this fascinating paper came out on a fascinating study that you're a part of.
That's a phase three study. Can you describe what the study is? Can you describe what phase three means?
Can you describe what the findings are
and why it's in fact so important and impactful?
Yeah, this study came out May 10th in nature medicine.
So one of the highest impact factors in medicine,
journals, it was tremendous.
So to make a drug and do a medicine,
the first thing you need to do is what are called
non-clinical or pre-clinical studies,
meaning safety established in animals.
What does the drug do?
What are the side effects in animals?
Where do you see the risks?
And then you negotiate with FDA to do phase one studies.
And phase one studies where you move from animals to humans.
And those are more safety studies and trying to describe what the drug does so that you
can determine if there is potential medical value there.
Certain drugs like cancer drugs are so toxic that you don't have phase one studies in
healthy volunteers.
That's like phase one slash two,
where you bring in the patients,
but you still are doing sort of dose response safety studies,
but you use patients.
But most phase one studies are healthy volunteers.
Phase two are where you start bringing in the patients
and you start experimenting with various different things.
The purpose of Phase 2 is really just to design Phase 3.
Now, again, I'm sort of putting out of the picture in another area, mechanism of action,
how do these drugs work?
Phase 2, you're trying to figure out what they do, who your patient population is, what
are the risks, who do you include, who do you exclude? What are the doses? What is your treatment? What are your measures? In our case, it was, you
know, how do you do a double blind study? That was a big part of phase two. That's a big
challenge for psychedelic drugs. Any kind of drugs that have a real strong effect, you
know, how do you do a double blind study? Double blind study to interrupt would mean that the patient should know, should not be aware
whether it's a placebo or not.
And the research should, and the research should, does not, is not aware.
And so for that lack of awareness, when the effect is really strong, it's very difficult
to do on both the research and the patient side.
Yes.
And sometimes they talk about triple blind.
So the other part is the raiders that evaluate the symptoms
and before and after.
So you ideally want triple blind.
You want the patients, the researchers,
and the evaluators of the outcomes,
and all of them not to know what the drug,
whether it was drug or placebo,
and that's to reduce the experiment or bias.
So, and then you move to phase three.
Once you've figured out how to design the phase three
studies and phase three are the large-scale
multi-site placebo-controlled double-blind studies
where you must prove safety and efficacy
in order to get permission to market the drug.
Now, for us, when we started maps in 86,
as I said, it was one year after the criminalization
of MDMA in 85, we had five different protocols
that were rejected by the FDA for studying with MDMA.
And these were all various phase one studies.
They came from Harvard, from UC San Francisco,
from the University
of Arizona, and Albuquerque, New Mexico, all over, and they were all rejected. 1992, six
years after we started, we got the first permission for phase one. And that took us through
much of the 90s. Again, things are slow because we have to raise the money through donations and then in 1999 is when we started the work with PTSD. And that then took us till November 29,
2016, which is when we had the end of phase two meeting with FDA. So it took 30 years from the start of maps
to the end of phase two meeting with FDA.
And what we had discovered during phase two
was several different key points.
The drugs that are available right now for PTSD,
the SSRIs, Zolloft and Paxil,
that have been approved by FDA and regulators in Europe as well, the European
Medicines Agency for PTSD. They work better in women than in men and they failed in combat-related
PTSD. So what we learned is that MDMA assisted therapy works just as well in men or women and it works
in combat-related PTSD. It works in regardless of the cause of PTSD.
We also discovered that even though there are stories
that people take MDMA at raves, and they dance all night,
and they overheat, and they get hypothermia,
and they die from overheating, which is true,
and can happen from pure MDMA,
or that sometimes people have heard about
needing to cool down, and so they drink drink water and then while they're dancing all night
and then they drink too much water
and then they dilute their blood
and they die from hyponitremia.
So there are risks of MDMA,
but we discovered that in a therapeutic setting,
we can control all those risks
no thing don't happen at all.
So we discovered safety.
We could demonstrate safety. We also figured out that our
measure, the caps, the clinician and administrative PTSD scale, that it's the gold standard all
over the world for measuring PTSD symptoms. It's what the FDA and the EMA require. We discovered
that it was a good measure for us and that we could show changes in that. The other big thing that we
learned is that, and we haven't mentioned this yet, but the work in the 50s and 60s with
LSD and psilocybin in the modern research over the last 20 years with psilocybin and classics
like et al. It says demonstrated that there's a link between this mystical experience, this
unit of mystical experience and therapeutic outcomes for the treatment
of addiction, for working with people with life-threatening illnesses, you know, that for OCD,
for obsessive-compulsive disorder, that there's, with the classic psychedelics, both in
the 50 years ago and then the research now has been, that there's a link between the depth
of the mystical experience and therapeutic outcome. What we discovered is that that's not the case for MDMA, that people do score fairly high
on the scales of mystical experience.
Not as high as they do with the classic psychedelics, but they do score pretty high on average.
And a significant number of them have over the cutoff for what we consider to full mystical
experience.
So enough to say that we could look at a correlation and we didn't find any.
The other thing that we discovered, and this was more humbling, I would say, for me personally,
is that my dissertation at the Kennedy School, a big part of it was on the, you know,
it's about the regulation of the medical use of psychedelics in marijuana.
Big part of my dissertation was how to do the double blind study.
I thought I'd solve the problem and I persuaded my dissertation committee that I'd solve the problem.
The solution was therapy with low dose MDMA versus therapy with full dose MDMA.
Everybody knows that they're going to get MDMA.
Most of these people have never done it before.
They'll be confused about is it full dose or low dose.
And then the challenge is to pick a dose that's high enough so that there is this confusion,
but not so high that it's so therapeutic that we can't tell the difference between the groups.
So we studied zero, meaning inactive placebo, 25 milligrams,
30 milligrams, 40 milligrams, 50 milligrams, 75 milligrams,
100 milligrams, 125 and 150.
What we discovered is that my dissertation was wrong
and that there is no good solution to the double-fine problem.
What we found is that to our surprise actually was that 75 milligrams was an
effective dose. We didn't think that. I mean, the normal doses like full doses like 125 milligrams
something like that. But 75 milligrams was an effective dose. And we discovered that the lower doses, so I was half right, you could say, the doses
of 25, 30, 40, 50, they could produce enough confusion that you could say that they were
successful at blinding, not perfectly, but enough confusion so that people therapists couldn't
know for sure, so that there was this reduction of bias, you could say. But what we discovered, again,
to our surprise, was that the load doses made people uncomfortable. They stimulated them,
but they didn't reduce the fear. And so people still got better with the therapy with low dose MDMA, but if we gave them therapy with inactive
placebo, they did even better than if we gave them therapy with low dose MDMA.
So we call it an anti therapeutic effect.
I don't mean to imply that they got worse, but it made people uncomfortable.
People didn't like it, but we would still help them make some progress.
So we had the blinding, but what it meant by reducing the effect of therapy
with inactive placebo is that it would make it easier for us to find a difference
between the two groups.
And so the real question is, if you can do it with therapy, why bother add a drug?
So we went to the FDA, and so this was what we discovered
during phase two.
We went to the FDA at this end of phase two meeting,
and we said, we can give you blinding,
but it will make it easier for us to find a difference
between the two groups.
And so we suggest that we do therapy
with inactive placebo versus therapy with full dose MDMA.
That will cause a problem because most people
will be able to tell what they've got. What Tom Lawffron, a doctor who used to be head
of psychiatry products at FDA, is our main advisor. So the first thing he said is that the
double blind fails in practice a lot, even with SSRIs, because there are certain side effects
that you have with
these drugs, and the doctors who are doing these research when you're reporting your side
effects, they can say, oh, that's probably you got the active drug instead of the placebo.
So the double blind is in theory is terrific, but in practice, it doesn't always work
quite as well.
And so what Tom said is that there are two main approaches that they think are
important to reduce bias. The first one is easy to do. It's called random assignment. So,
you know, sometimes there are studies where, you know, you'll treat a bunch of people with
something and some fraction of them will get better and some won't. And then you say,
okay, all those who didn't get better, who volunteers to get this new treatment?
And then you give them the new treatment.
But the people that volunteer are more likely
to want to get better.
They're not representative sample of everybody that has.
So when you have random assignment,
everybody is similarly motivated
and has meets the same inclusion exclusion criteria.
So that's what we told, of course,
we need random assignment.
The other part was, when the bias double blind
doesn't work as well, then the system of independent
Raiders is especially important of how you do that.
So we have a pool of Raiders, over 20 of them,
and we do this monthly inter-rater reliability tests
to make sure that they evaluate,
so that they're given a videotape of PTSD patients
and then they're supposed to rate them
according to their symptoms.
And then we sort of make sure that we've got
this calibrated Raider pool.
And it's all done by Zoom, by telemedicine,
and they're randomly assigned to the next person
that needs a rating.
So they said 20 Raiders.
Yeah, so we've got like 20 Raiders.
And what we want to do is make it so that each Raider sees each patient only once, maybe
twice, but not tracking them through the study.
So that guy's to reduce the bias in the Raiders, that they don't know where this person is in the study. So that guy's to reduce the bias in the Raiders that they don't
know where this person is in the study. And so there's a fellow Bob Temple who's like the old wise
man at the FDA. He's been there since 1972. He was in charge of the Office of Science Policy and
they brought him into the final meeting of this process where we are
trying to design phase three. So once FDA said yes, you can go to phase three, that was November 29th,
2016, we then negotiated for eight months on the design of phase three and all of the other
information is fascinating. This process of design, to the extent that I have any artistic creativity, it's in protocol design.
I really love that. So you enjoy this process. I love it. I love it because it's always trade-offs
and it's, you know, and I acknowledge, you know, that we are all biased. And so how do you,
there's something beautiful about the scientific process, designed to get you to the truth.
Especially when that scientific process is trying to get to the truth of the human
organism, which is so complicated, it's very difficult to dissect, to get the strong effects.
And when you're analyzing, when you have like a raiders, they're watching a video,
when you're analyzing, when you have like a raiders, they're watching a video,
there's removing subjectivity from that
is very, very challenging.
Yeah, very much so.
And so we came to this agreement with FDA, though,
that we would use this independent radar pool.
And so we learned in phase two again, that the double blind, there was no solution
to the double blind problem. And in both the FDA and the European medicine agency in the
end agreed that the best design was therapy with inactive placebo versus therapy with
Fildos MDMA, accepting the fact that most people will be able to tell whether they got nothing
or they got Fildos MDMA. Most therapists will be able to tell the difference, but that makes a harder test
for us to show a difference between the two groups because we're giving them inactive
placebo and not the anti-therapyutic effect of low dose mdma.
So once we started phase three, so then we were able to start in 2018 Phase 3.
And the paper in Nature Medicine that just came out was the results of our first Phase
3 study.
We came to agreement with FDA that we would do two Phase 3 studies, each would have 100
persons in them.
And what the FDA said to us is that they thought that we could prove efficacy with smaller
numbers than they wanted to see for safety.
The reason they said that is it in phase two, we had a large effect size.
So from a statistical point of view, the bigger of an effect that you're looking for, the
fewer number of people you need to get statistical significance.
When you're trying to find small differences, you need large numbers of people to sort of work out the noise.
So we were, we came to agreement on two 100 person phase three studies.
And the idea is that it's very possible that the first part, the first study, would show
the efficacy because the effect is so strong.
Yeah, yeah, and the second, but also safety as well.
So, you know, one of the things we also realized when you work with a highly stigmatized
drug in the midst of still, you know, the drug war and prohibition, that we need to highly
sympathetic subjects.
And we need to make the best case we can,
which means we need to work with the hardest cases,
so that this is really needed.
And so we end up enrolling people.
The first study was Chronic severe PTSD.
And unlike many studies of PTSD,
we enroll people that have previously attempted suicide.
So we have multiple people that have tried to kill themselves that we felt like if we were to exclude them,
what are we doing? Those are the people that need it the most.
So we came to this agreement with FDA.
We're going to work with chronic severe PTSD patients, including those that had attempted suicide,
and we would do these two 100 person studies.
And we also negotiated what's called an interim analysis.
So what that means is that when the study is underway,
and often big, big studies, they have this kind of interim
analysis, where what you do is, and for big, big studies, they have this kind of interim analysis, where what
you do is, and for us, we negotiated when we had 60% or 60 people had reached the primary
outcome measure, and all 100 had been enrolled, then we would take a look at the data.
And if the statistical analysis that we did was showing, you know,
based on a certain effect size that we chose based
on what we saw in phase two.
The interim analysis is for what's called sample size
reestimation.
So what it means is if the results aren't as good
as you thought they would, you can add more people.
And then you'll get statistical significance.
It means that your effect is in as strong as you thought. It'll be harder to get insurance to cover it, but FDA will still
approve it, because FDA also believes that these are group averages. There may be
some people that will later figure out respond better than others. So they'll
approve it if it's statistically significant, even if it has a low effect size.
That SSRIs have low effect size. So we did the
interim analysis in March of 2020, and what we discovered to our delight was that
we did not need to add any subjects. That's all we were told. We weren't told like what is the
results, we were just told all we were going to get a number, zero or you need to add X numbers of people
to the study to get statistical significance.
That's right around the time that COVID hit
and the lockdowns happened
and we ended up negotiating with FDA
that we would end the study with 90 people
instead of 100.
It took a while for us to end up doing that.
So the paper that we just published
is on the results of 90 people.
I think it was 46 in the MDMA group, 44 in the placebo group.
And what we discovered was that the study worked better than we had even hoped.
So the first thing is that you look at statistical significance. You have to get .05,
which basically means a nickel out of a dollar, one in 20 chance
that the difference between the two groups
is due to some random factor rather than to your intervention.
And in this case, the placebo group gets therapy
and then with inactive placebo
and then the group gets MDMA with active placebo.
So you have to get .05.
There's another measure that the FDA uses sometimes
called bro bust, which means 1 in a thousand.
Instead of 1 in 21 in a thousand.
And if you get a robust results, .001,
and you meet some other criteria,
they might agree to approve the drug on the basis of just one phase three study instead
of two.
Because when you think about it, a one in twenty chance for your first second phase three
study, a one in twenty chance for your second phase three study, you multiply that together.
It's one in four hundred point zero two five. That's pretty good. So robust. 0.001 is even better than two independent phase
three studies each at 0.05. What we ended up getting was one in 10,000. 0.001 outrageous.
You know, incredibly. So that's a measure of both the difference between
the two groups and the variability.
And so what it meant is that we had minimal variability that most people who got to, I mean,
I got quite a large amount of benefit from it.
And most people who got to placebo were more or less in the same range as well.
So exciting, by the way. I mean, I suppose it's exciting from a perspective of approval by the FDA.
Maybe perhaps that's the way you're seeing it, but it's also the exciting because it has
a chance to help people that are truly suffering.
Yeah.
Well, if we can get one in 10,000 in the first phase three study, chances are we can get
one in 20 in the second.
So it's really going to be about safety for us in the second phase three study.
Now you can have a large p-value, large significance, but you could have an effect that's not
very significant. It's not very significant.
It's not clinically significant.
You can have statistical significance
without clinical significance.
And as I said, the more people you get in the study,
you can find smaller and smaller differences
between two groups.
Now, we showed that we had a very large effect size.
So effect size is based on...
That's scale you mentioned? Well, the scale of the effect size is based on
standard deviations. So an effect size of one
means that your results are one standard deviation away from the norm.
That's considered very large.
The SSRIs, because they were like 0.3, 0.4 effect size.
That's considered small effect size.
Medium is starting to be around 0.6 and 0.8 and above are large effect sizes.
We had what's called placebo-subtracted effect size.
There's two different ways to look at it.
Placebo-subtracted means you kind of look at the difference between your two groups.
And what that is for us, since one group had therapy and one had therapy plus MDMA, the
placebo subtracted effect size is basically the effect of just the MDMA, because you've
kind of washed out the therapy. That was 0.91. So we had a large effect size, which
was different.
Wow. Over. So 0 one, over just the therapy,
so over the placebo.
Yeah, wow.
Now, when we do the within group,
meaning the group that just got the MDMA plus therapy,
look at their baseline and their outcomes,
that's another way to look at it.
And that's the what's gonna actually happen in practice,
because people are gonna get MDMA plus therapy. That's 2.1 of effect size, two standard deviations away from the norm as
enormous effect size. The other part is that we had no effect by sight, which is very important.
So we had 15 sites, two in Israel, two in Canada, 11 throughout the United States.
So we had 15 sites, two in Israel, two in Canada, 11 throughout the United States. The FDA looks at, is there a side effect?
Because what that might mean is maybe you've got all your patients, or most of your patients,
going to this one site, which is these highly experienced therapists, and they're like,
you know, hippies from way back, and their super experience with psychedelics, and, you know,
and they're getting great results, but nobody else gets good results.
So we had no effect by sight, which means that we've been able to train all these new
therapists.
We had about 80 therapists working at all these 15 sites.
We also discovered that there's a group that's considered to be very difficult to treat,
which is called the dissociative subtype. So when people are traumatized,
one of the ways to psychologically survive that is you dissociate. It's like you're not there.
When you do that, though, it's hard to come back because when you come back, then you get all
these painful memories and fearful. And so the extreme of that is called dissociative identity disorder,
kind of like schizophrenia, almost dissociative identity.
So we let people in who are on the dissociative subtype,
and those are considered to be the hardest to treat,
because the theory is that you need to be ego-intact,
as I said, the mystical experience is not correlated with therapeutic outcomes, and you need to be talking-intact, as I said, the mystical experience is not correlated
with therapeutic outcomes,
and you need to be talking about what traumatized you
and working through that
and expressing it, letting it out, not keeping it in.
So the dissociative subtype seems like it's harder
for them to get back into the event
because they're so dissociated.
What we showed is that those people
did even better on average than everybody else.
So that MDMA is integrative. It helps people who are so separate that they make even more rapid progress.
So it's almost like the MDMA made it more difficult for them to dissociate. Yes. Yeah. Or you could
say it made it easier for them to remember. Yes, exactly. To reverse the dissociation. Yeah.
And we find that MDMA enhances memory for the trauma.
So that you can have these unconscious memories
or memories that you cannot remember
or that you've suppressed so much,
but they distort your view.
Your filter of the world is distorted
by these fearful memories that the world can't be trusted.
People can't be trusted.
It's always about to happen.
So we find that MDMA increases memory for the trauma, but by reducing the fear, then the
memories can come to the surface, then you can process them, let out the emotions, cry,
scream, shake, whatever.
And then through this MDMA effect on the amygdala and the hippocampus, it helps you store
these memories into long-term storage, so that they're not always about to happen.
They're in the past.
They're part of your story, but they're not the whole story.
So we discovered that the social of subtype works better.
Now, none of this would be enough unless safety.
So from a safety perspective, what we discovered is that there was one woman in the study that
attempted to kill herself twice
During the study there was another woman that was so
Worried that she might kill herself that the therapy brought these things to the surface that she's been pushing away that she
checked herself into a hospital in order to avoid self harm
At the end of the study, you know what we learned is both of them were in the placebo group. We didn't have anybody in the MDMA group attempt to kill themselves. So the MDMA is really helpful for giving people a sense of hope, and that they can somehow
process this. Now, it's not to say that nobody will ever commit suicide.
And that's our big concern in the second phase three study.
As I said, it's more going to be about safety
than about efficacy.
We think we'll get the efficacy, but we're
very concerned about safety.
Because we had problems in the first phase three study
of somebody trying to kill herself twice in the placebo group, you know, it's the background for having PTSD. So there have to be a disproportionate
number of people in the MDMA group, try to kill themselves or succeed in killing themselves
then in the placebo group for the FDA to say, oh, this MDMA, it's too dangerous. We don't
think that's going to happen. So those are the other findings are that this from safety is that
the side effects are transitory. They're minor. They're sweating or jaw clenching or it's
like temperature increase and everybody that's been to a rave knows about taking X to Z. There are
some side effects, but they're minor, they're transitory, and there has been this massive problem of
during the 80s, the 90s, the night of the National Sun Drug Abuse was trying to say that MDMA
was neurotoxic, and that you take it and it's going to cause neurofeminal degeneration.
It's going to be major brain damage.
It's going to be significant functional consequences.
And back then, they were saying that MDMA is too dangerous, it should never even be researched. Nobody should even get it once because it's poison and brain damage. Well,
we no longer believe that. That was exaggerated. That was, you know, in service to the drug
war, but we've done in phase two neurocognitive tests before and after in two of our different
sites and showed no decline in cognitive functioning.
So we don't think that there's any neurotoxicity happening and the doses that we use, there's
no obvious functional consequences, people are getting better.
The other thing that we've learned in phase two and that we still have to learn from
this study.
What we showed is that is the durability of the effect. We showed that 32% of the people that got the therapy without MDMA at two months after the last experimental
session no longer had PTSD. Just with the therapy, which is phenomenal because these are on average
14 years PTSD, one third had PTSD over 20 years. And just with the therapy, 32% no longer had PTSD at the two months.
However, those people that got MDMA was 67% no longer had PTSD, you know, more than twice as good.
In phase two and in phase three, we're also going to do the 12 month follow-up.
That's not for the FDA. That's not for
approvability. That's more for insurance companies because this is expensive. A lot of therapy time.
If it fades, you know, if it's great results initially, but then it fades after six months,
what's the point? And what we showed in phase two is that people keep getting better. At the two month follow up, they're doing pretty well,
but at the 12 month follow up, they're even better.
So it's durable.
People have learned how to process trauma.
They keep getting better.
So we've not reached that point in this phase three study,
where everybody's got their one year follow up.
But we have also done three and a half year follow-ups
to some of the groups that were in phase two,
and showed that it was durable. And we're doing a long- year follow-ups to some of the groups that were in phase two and showed that it was durable.
And we're doing a long, long term follow-up now to everybody, to many of the people in
phase two, some of them treated 15 years ago.
So that's all more for the insurance companies.
So basically, what we found in the paper that we just published is that it was highly
efficacious, highly significant, no effect by sight, works in the the hardest cases and the safety record was great
It's an incredible success and that's really exciting especially given that the people who've committed
Who attempted to commit suicide were let into the study and so these are these are people who are truly suffering
I mean that is the people who are truly suffering.
I mean, that's incredibly exciting. And I mean, just to speak to the frustration
why things can't move faster, but for what it is,
it's incredibly exciting.
Is there other studies of this nature
that you foresee enabling that same kind of
positive impact, whether it's MDMA for other things like treating addiction or maybe it's
so cybern for other conditions? Is there something else that's promising?
Yeah, I think that what we've discovered I don't think is unique to MDMA. So it's MDMA-assisted psychotherapy.
MDMA is ideal for PTSD.
Maybe it won't work as well for OCD or other things.
It's very strategic why we chose MDMA and why we chose PTSD.
But I don't think that the results that we've got are so unique to MDMA-assisted therapy.
I think that psilocybin-assisted therapy is going to be great for people with life threatening
illnesses, cancer, you know, who are anxious about dying.
It looks like it's really good in the treatment of addiction.
Again, these are in combination with sort of the psilocybin tobacco, it was cognitive behavioral
therapy with psilocybin tobacco was cognitive behavioral therapy with psilocybin.
I think that it's going to be a little bit more difficult psilocybin for depression.
I don't know if it'll be quite as good.
There are some biological aspects sometimes to depression, but I think that they'll be
really good results for psilocybin for depression.
I think it'll be approved.
It's considered a breakthrough therapy by the FDA. I began as phenomenal for opiate addiction, helping people go through withdrawal and then
giving them this chance to deal with the material that they've
that drives them for addiction. There was Ben Cessa, Dr. Ben Cessa in England, did MDMA for alcohol
use disorder. And that was really great the results he got. And it's the case that he ended up
basically treating people for trauma. It's the trauma that people run, the emotional challenges
that people run from into a quieting that pain through drug addiction or alcoholism.
So trauma is behind a lot of addiction. I think that we are going to see a revolution in psychiatry and that there will be a lot of
conditions that have
Left a lot of people still suffering that psychedelic assisted therapy different psychedelics different approaches
But I think that we will see a lot of hope for psychiatry and psychotherapy, and that psychedelics would be a big part of changing
the practice of psychiatry and psychotherapy.
Yeah, this is really to me fascinating.
So I actually, when I was younger,
for the longest time, one to be a psychiatrist.
So I was excited by psychotherapy,
but then I, perhaps incorrectly, maybe you can correct me,
but became more and more cynical
because it felt like it was more about prescribing drugs than psychotherapy.
I'm not going to correct you. That's, I mean, right now, there is a crisis in psychiatry that
there are so many psychiatrists that are so fed up because they have been pharmaceuticalized.
Yes. They meet people for 15 minutes. They adjust their medications. This is the way they make the most money.
But they've lost the art of talking to people.
And that's why we see that so many young psychiatric residents are so thrilled by psychedelics
that they really want to get back to treating people as individuals, not just the bunch of
chemicals.
Yeah, that's truly fascinating, because the reason it was appealing to me,
it was a way to study the human mind and to see ways through talking that you can
make people feel better, make people better,
you know, make people suffer less, and
that was really exciting at the time.
I ended up then going to AI because then I can understand the mind from that angle.
But, um, it's exciting that that, that could be also, uh, revolutionize the field
of psychotherapy, take it from its, uh, back to its origins to where, um,
a psychiatrist would be a scholar of the mind.
Yeah, well, Freud talked about dreams as the royal road to the unconscious.
And there was a lot of, you really spent a lot of time with people.
Now, right before he died, in his last book, Freud wrote something,
and again, this will be a rough paraphrase, but he said that in the future, we may learn about the energies of the brain, and there'll
be ways with chemicals to influence that that will help the therapeutic process.
Yeah.
So you could say he was ahead of his time.
Yeah. You could say he was ahead of his time. This study paints a fascinating picture of a future where first for medical applications,
but then also in general psychedelics of various forms could be used by the broader society.
Forgive the perhaps ridiculous question, but if much of society, including our politicians, are taking psychedelics and dissolving their
ego and going through this whole process, how do you think the world may look different
in 20, 30, 50 years?
Okay.
So, I said that I think license legalization happens in 2035.
Yes.
And I think by 2050, we will have enough people hopefully spiritualized.
We're also talking about, we hear so much in terms of climate change about net zero
carbon. So our goal about net zero carbon.
Our goal is net zero trauma.
When do we have a world with net zero trauma?
Right now, we have two sites in Israel.
We help a few people, but the recent war with Gaza has traumatized millions of people on
both sites.
We are a long way away from net zero trauma. But that's the hope.
And that's, I think, possible. I think humanity as a whole is like lemmings heading over a cliff
with climate change and with the nuclear proliferation
and just the religious hatreds
and the more the retreat to authoritarianism
and fundamentalism and tribalism.
So I think that there's a very good chance though
that psychedelics used wisely.
So it's not just makes psychedelics legal
and everybody takes them.
And as you talked about Ted Kaczynski,
it's the context that people take it in.
But I think that there's a reasonable chance
that enough people can sort of, you could say,
clean their filters to see people as more similar
to them than different, not to label them as the enemy.
Stan Groff, again, had this beautiful phrase about transparent to the transcendent.
So for our ego, can we be transparent to the transcendent?
Can the filter that we look through the world at be cleaned to, you could say, cleansing
the doors of perception.
Can it be cleaned at the point where we can see the humanity and everybody and see that
one way to say this is that can we get to the point where religions are seen as like
languages where we all have this need to communicate.
There's thousands of different languages.
We don't say that this language is fundamentally better.
Then this language, this language is the only right language.
Everybody must speak English and Russian is bad
or German is bad.
Maybe we'll get to that point that religions are like that.
There are different cultural backgrounds,
different symbol systems, different saints
and heroes and messiahs and all this,
but that Jesus is the son of God, but so are we so is everybody
You know or yes, you know the Jews are the chosen people, but so is everybody
so
Can we get there? I think that we can and I think that we need to to survive the challenges that we're facing and
the hope is that by bringing
Psychedelics as tools forward and trying to bring the context around them
to be one of responsibility rather than just profit maximization and just get as many
people to do them from all these for-profit companies, can we, and then also drug policy
reform and embed knowledge in the society, Can we get to honest drug education?
You know dare the drug awareness resistance
Education, you know is fundamentally twisted. I mean, but it's the program that's using a lot of schools now
So can we get honest drug education pure drugs harm reduction and
Knowledge about therapeutic uses.
And on the one hand, and more of these thousands of psychedelic clinics, I'm hopeful, and
that's our goal.
But in this landscape of pharma companies, they make a lot of money.
Some people are worried about the impact of those, you know, a big
farmer on the landscape of human trauma. Yeah. Yeah. So there's, of course, some
companies could do good, but that's not inherent. Like many of these companies
are not optimizing for good. They're optimizing for profit. Exactly.
Exactly. Does this rise for profit farmer companies?
Were you, how do you navigate it?
Do we still have for profit companies that basically do what MAPS does, which is like fight the
good fight for the benefit of humanity?
Like, how do we proceed in this, in landscape work, what drugs can make a lot of money. Well, I am concerned. Overall, I think the rise of the for-profit companies we have to realize
is a sign of success. That we have overcome the regulatory prohibitions. We've overcome a lot
of the public attitudes that are against it. We've demonstrated some success.
So the rise of the for-profit companies
are a sign of the progress that we've made.
On the other hand, turning things over
to profit maximizing companies,
the big concern is that they're gonna try
to minimize the amount of therapy
and make it so the cost is less.
So insurance companies are more likely to cover it
and then that they just sell the most drugs.
Yeah.
The other thing we've seen as an example of this
is S. Ketamine by Johnson and Johnson for Depression.
And it's done by a profit maximizing company.
They don't know anything about psychedelic psychotherapy
or psychotherapy at all.
And so they've gotten approval for S. Ketamine
on the basis of it's just a pharmacological treatment.
And it's not delivered with therapy. The results fade pretty quickly, so you need to get more
Ketamine. And so it's designed in a way to maximize the profits for the pharmaceutical company,
but it doesn't maximize patient outcomes. What we're seeing though in these various clinics that are being set up is that a lot of people
are realizing that it works better with therapy.
And so the clinics are run by people that are therapists, so that when they provide therapy,
they're making more money.
And then you need last ketamine.
Also ketamine itself, S ketamine is an isomer of ketamine
that's been patented for depression,
and they sell it for hundreds of dollars,
but ketamine itself is one of the world's
essential medicines.
It's off patent, it's been around for a long time.
It was the main battlefield,
anesthetic, and Vietnam.
And it's only a few bucks because it's generic.
So a lot of the ketamine clinics are saying, great, thank you, Johnson and Johnson, you've
helped demonstrate that ketamine is good for depression, but we're not going to buy it
from you.
We're going to buy it for a few bucks and we're going to add therapy to it.
Now, there's a bunch of ketamine mills you could say that are just prescribing the ketamine
and people are making a lot of money there.
So I am worried about that. I think the best thing that we can do
is create an alternative narrative,
a different kind of example.
We can lead by example.
We can't make for profit companies
into benefit corporations unless they wanna do that.
We can't make them to really maximize patient outcomes.
But if we create an example of something that's different,
the hope is that people gravitate towards that
and some of the other companies.
Like even now we have X on
and other companies, oil companies saying,
oh, we're big into alternative energy.
And we're, you know.
And that starts with companies that show an example
that then communicates to the public
that this is something exciting and then they demand of the same of Exxon and so on.
The public demands that and you could say the same thing for the public demanding the
big pharma to optimize for benefit versus optimize for profit and maybe giving power to the therapists,
more power to the therapists,
more power to the doctors that ultimately want,
I think incentives are interesting,
but I think doctors ultimately care more
because they're in direct contact with humans.
They want to make people better.
It's not, you know, sure they want to make money,
but they ultimately want to make people feel better
because they get to look at people and it's so joyful
to make people feel better at the end of the day.
So giving more power to them is also,
or perhaps one of the ways that you then incentivize
the, the, the pharma companies that are trying to do good because the doctors will
choose those companies.
Yeah.
Now, the other part of this is drug policy reform.
Right.
So that if we make it so that you can buy MDMA for 10 or 20 bucks on your own and we've
trained people on here's our therapeutic method.
Here is our ways for peer support. Then people have an alternative
from buying it from the pharma companies. So most of the for-profit companies have come to this
conclusion that drug policy reform is bad for their business model. I think they're making a fundamental
mistake. And I think the reason is that the more that we destigmatize this, the more that we sensitize
people to this is an approach.
Even when people can get it on their own and do it with their friends or do it with themselves,
there's going to be even more people that say, oh my god, I've got real serious issues.
I would rather go to trained professionals covered by insurance and I think it'll increase
the business.
But most of the for profit companies don't see it that way.
And so as a non-profit that owns a benefit court, we're not trying to maximize sales or
profits.
But I do believe that drug policy reform creates this alternative access point for people and
that will help keep the for-profits in check to some extent as well.
I love it.
Is there, let's put on your wise visionary hat and ask when you look to young folks,
is there advice you can give to young people today, whether in high school or college, about career, about life?
You've lived quite a non-linear and fascinating life yourself.
Is there advice you can give, either on career or more generally on life?
Well, I would say what people often hear is that, you know, we're not actually here for that long a period of time.
And so to the, and the world is on fire. And whether humanity survives is not clear. And whether,
how many species are we in a kill before we figure out not to do that before. So I would advise you to really try to develop a combination of what do you need in terms
of income for your own survival, but what does the world need in terms of help to make
the world better?
And Howard Thurman, who we talked about,
who ran the Good Friday Experiment, the minister there,
he said, he's got a famous quote attributed to him.
He says, and this is exactly it, to young people.
He said, you know, there's nothing particular
that you should do, but find what makes you come alive,
because what the world needs is people that have come alive
and are passionate.
So I would say that beware of this trap that you need vast resources that you need all
this stuff.
I keep thinking of the super wealthy people in first class on the Titanic as the
Titanic is sinking. Their money is not going to help them. The earth is like Titanic. We're
sinking, we're destroying the planet's strung environment. You need a certain amount
of money to be comfortable at that edge survival. Because once you're at that edge of survival,
it's hard to think about anything else.
But I'd say to young people,
to the extent that you're able to do this,
and again, student debt and all this kind of stuff
is a big problem there too.
But really just try to find this combination
of what the world needs and what you need.
The other thing to say to young people is life is a lot shorter than you think, and a
20-year plan is not really that long.
So if it takes you 20 years to get into position to do what you want to do, go for it.
You know, have long-term plans.
The other part that was so important for me to keep doing what I've been doing, basically
now it's 49 years that I've sort of been devoting my life on psychedelics since I was 18.
When I started, I didn't think it would ever work.
I just thought, this is the only idea I have in this crazy world.
You know, this is what I want to work on.
Luckily, I had support from my family that took care of my survival needs.
So I could do that.
But I realized that if my happiness was dependent upon accomplishments, that I might never be
happy.
That I was able to reframe happiness in terms of effort. So if I'm trying hard to get stuff to be better, whether
it's better or not, I can be happy at the end of each day I tried. And so I think you
try to separate out the goals that you have and your happiness to whether you're trying
hard. The other thing I would say is that everybody has this humanity within them, so be very
careful about dividing the world into us and them. So one of the things that I've done that
has taken a long time, because I feel like I feel like, you know, drugs are illegal.
I always felt like, you know, the police were the predator and I'm the prey.
Yes.
You know, but now we're working with the police and the police have tremendous trauma
from the work that they do.
We have one police officer who is now going, he's a full-time police officer.
He's also a psychotherapist and he's going through our training program to learn how to give MDMA therapy to other police officers
and I met his police chief a couple times he got permission from his police chief to go to the second part of our training program
Which is where we give MDMA to therapists who volunteer as a patient
So we have just a couple weeks ago, dosed the police with MDMA.
Yeah. And so I think this idea of those people that are on the quote other side, try to see
through that to their humanity, to what their pains and suffering, what their struggles are
to the extent that you can. And that I think, and build long-term relationships. You never know what's going to come around 20 years or so.
So you help some people try to keep these relationships going 20 years from now, something
could come.
And also be persistent.
Yeah.
I think that's been the key to success. I mean once the FDA or DEA figured out
We're not going anywhere. They're gonna have to deal with us
Then we started getting some progress. So that makes a patience and stubbornness
That gets things done
Is there something you've figured out
Through your journey with psychedelics about some of the big why questions about life.
Like, what the heck's the value of love? Why does it suck so much that we die?
And for some of us, maybe it's the Russian and me, but it's quite terrifying the notion of it,
or the biggest why question or the mall, which is what's the meaning of it all?
Well, yeah, what I've discovered is that we don't need to answer to those questions.
The fact that we can feel happy, that we can love, that we can have moments of happiness, that's enough.
Figuring out these big questions, you can get lost in that.
We all can come up with our answers.
What's the meaning of life?
Why is there life?
Why is there consciousness?
I don't know that we need those answers.
What we know is that we're social creatures that
other people can make us happy by certain things, we can make other people happy, that one
life is enough. So this other part about why is it so tragic that we die? I don't think
it's tragic that we die. So first off, if you believe in this collective unconscious, but we have an impact at last.
But I think that for me at least, I've been of the view that we should be grateful for
death.
That death makes life precious.
That if we had an infinite amount of time, I'm a bit of a procrastinator about stuff,
particularly things that are really, you know, hard to do.
And you just, you know, you just don't do it. And then like, where'd the day go? I was gonna do this.
So, so if we had infinite life, we never died.
You know, would life be precious? Would we do anything? I don't think so. So, my parents
gave, you know, every Jewish Year they would they would make their
New Year's card. And and one of the quotes was fantastic. It was just we have to make up for
the brevity of life with the intensity of life. Oh man, that is good. While the end makes things precious death makes life precious.
The end of this conversation makes it precious and which is a great way to end.
Rick, I wanted to talk to you for a long time.
I share.
You were very excited about the study.
I can now understand exactly why this is really promising.
This is really exciting.
Gives me hope about the future even if it doesn't come fast enough.
But like you said, have to be patient and stubborn.
Thank you so much for wasting all your valuable time with me today.
It's truly an honor to meet you and talk to you.
Not at waste at all.
I really appreciate it this time together.
Thank you for listening to this conversation with Rick Doblin.
I thank you to TheraGun, ExpressVPN, Blinkist, and A Sleep.
Check them out in the description to support this podcast.
And now let me leave you with some words from Terrence McKenna.
Nature loves courage.
You make the commitment and nature will respond to that commitment by removing impossible
obstacles.
Dream the
impossible dream and the world will not grind you under. It will lift you up. This
is the trick. This is what all the teachers and philosophers who really counted
who really touched the alchemical gold. This is what they understood. This is the
shamanic dance in the waterfall. This is how magic is done by hurling yourself into the abyss and discovering that it's
a feather bed.
Thank you.