The Dan Le Batard Show with Stugotz - PTFO - The Ayahuasca Era: How Neal Brennan Finally Found Joy (and God)
Episode Date: January 25, 2024For all of the Aaron Rodgers-ization of psychedelics, they remain revolutionary, and the co-creator of Chapelle's Show turned standup comic has the ultimate endorsement: Sure, Amazonian plant tea migh...t make you cry for two hours after drinking it with Chris Rock. But ayahuasca is a mental-health medicine that will also help you fall in love and, you know, feel the presence of God. So relax about the throwing up. Fear not the toad venom, and embrace the white void before the Big Bang. Ignore the football players yammering about "ego death," and consider the possibilities of a road-to-Damascus experience. Or not. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
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Welcome to Pablo Torre, Finds Out.
I am Pablo Torre, and today we're going to find out what this sound is.
I only use these broad terms because I was in a white void before the Big Bang.
Excuse me.
Right after this ad.
You're listening to Giraffe Kings Network.
I
See a little Pablo, but he's in the corner so oh, you know there he is there's my guy
This is full make me big around the horn make me big. Yes
Am I centered or ish is my island? Neil looks fantastic is what?
Thank you. So people here are saying.
Many are saying that Neil looks fantastic.
Pretty.
What else is now?
Am I right, ladies?
What are the people who bother Neil Brennan for interviews mostly want to talk to you about?
Well, for a long time, it was a show.
And then people said I talked about that too much.
And then then it was mental health. people said I talked about that too much and then
then it was mental health, people said I talked about that too much and now we're into the ayahuasca era.
So, pretty great. That should be the first comment, not this again.
So Neil Brennan did co-create and co-write one of the greatest television shows of all time.
We should reaffirm this. You might actually remember him from his role alongside Dave Chappelle in their sketch about
the blind black dude who did not know he was a white supremacist. You can go on brother. You will see that face. Don't make for AJ.
Huh?
You're talking about that.
Don't make for AJ.
Alright.
Alright.
Alright.
Alright.
Alright.
Alright.
Alright.
Alright.
Alright.
Alright.
Alright.
Alright.
Alright.
Alright. Alright. Alright. Alright. Alright. Neil is also responsible, by the way, for one of my favorite Netflix stand-up specials,
Three Mikes, which I saw him perform live in New York in 2016.
Yeah, I was lucky enough to have dropped out.
Because I realized early on that these student loans are basically small business loans, and
the business is you, and you're maybe not such a great business.
Look if they call them small business loans no 18 year old kid would ever get
the loan because it's a bad idea for a business. If you had to go to the bank to
the small business desk and ask me like yeah I'm gonna need $150,000 to be like
alright what's your business idea? Alright here's the idea. For the next four
years I'm gonna get blackout drunk.
But also, I'm gonna get a degree in sociology.
But what Neil is here to discuss today is, in fact,
his plant-based psychedelic era.
Because the way sports always talks about ayahuasca
is through Jets quarterback
and casual internet conspiracist Aaron Rodgers,
as Rodgers just informed Pat McAfee earlier this month.
I can speak from my own experience,
it was life-changing, has been life-changing,
and it's gonna be something that I look forward to doing
in some form or fashion, soft seeding as well.
And so I figured it was time to commune with the person
that I know who is most passionate and most experienced
about this very subject.
Pablo, you said something to me a long time ago
that stuck with me.
Well, it didn't stick with me then.
Came back around.
You needed a quote for like a LeBron article or something
or maybe deep
background. Sometimes I do deep background, Neil Brennan, the king of deep background.
And we did the phone call and you go, all right, just go back to the Neil Brennan lifestyle of
comedy and sketches and great, all the great life. And I was like, he doesn't know
great, a great life. And I was like, he doesn't know anything about my life. And then I've recently come around to your, your point of view on my life, which is way, a way better
point of view on it than, than you shouldn't often think about people's perception of you.
But if it's better than your own, maybe there's something to it.
Yeah. You want to be the Neil Brennan that I've always imagined you to be.
I've finally accepted that. You are on the ayahuasca subject by the way.
The person I now know and genuinely like am curious about because you testify to the
profundity of the change that it that it wrought upon your life in a real way I
Testified about it in the court of Joe Rogan the highest court in the land of course
Imagine if God was real and you could get in front of God, but the only way to do it is to eat mushrooms
He'd be like wait what I would argue
It might be I mean
Experience but it might be you it's the only. It might be. It sounds so crazy. It might be.
It's the only way.
Now, the good thing is, it's in me now.
I have credibility in that I was a smug atheist.
And now, I'm still, look, the smugness hasn't changed one bit, guys.
But now I believe in a God based on my experiences
with ayahuasca, which is like pretty significant. It's about the greatest endorsement one could give
about profundity. That's possible. I agree. And now I would like to say before I say anything about it,
like to say before I say anything about it, because you were, you, you, I think you're couching this in the, in the Aaron Rogers, under the Aaron rover Rogers umbrella.
And now we are.
Yes.
But there's a thing in 12 step programs and AA and all the other ones that you don't say
you're in them.
Because if you say publicly, I'm in AA, and then your people see you drunk,
they go, well, A, it doesn't work. A lot of this, don't listen to any of the spokespeople.
Will Smith's been a spokesman, you know, it's like people that have come out and said they did it,
and then everything they do, you go, well, that clearly doesn't work. So Aaron Rodgers goes after
Kimmel and you go, well, clearly the Siowazka is not working.
Don't credit or blame Iowazka for anything, including my own conversion, my own road to Damascus experience. That's just mine. There are 8 billion people on earth and I'm, I'm,
there's going to be 8 billion different experiences around what we call the medicine.
There it is. Yeah. I hope that you would, that you would start calling call the medicine. There it is. Yeah. I hope that
you would start calling it the medicine. Yes, I call it. You can't not once you've
done it. You've been on a quest for something that long predates this
specific medicine. So for people unfamiliar with your quest,
with your uvra, how would you have described
your relationship with the concept of joy?
So I have a type of depression or had a type of depression.
Wink, don't wanna spoil it, punchline.
The, called dysthymia, which means you don't experience
a lot of joy, if any.
So I'm depressed, and not the way you normally hear that.
Like, I'm so depressed, Kobe retired.
I mean, like, I have clinical depression, the mood disorder,
and I've had it for as long as I can remember.
I think my brain, whereas most people have,
you know, oxytocin and dopamine and serotonin,
I had a shortage of that.
I had a lot of cortisol, so I,
meaning I'm very harsh,
I'm obsessed with justice and fairness,
and I think it's the thing you see in a good amount of people.
So I would take SSRIs, which is a serotonin,
selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor,
which means serotonin, the little I have
gets shot onto my brain plate.
And the SSRIs, they'll often in this case,
would leave it on the field longer
before it would reuuptake it.
So that'll get you into a slightly improved mood. But I just wasn't. I was like,
there's got to be something better. There's got to be something better. I did a thing called TMS,
Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation, where it's firing magnets, basically MRI magnets at a portion of your brain, did it
in LA seven years ago, did it in China right before COVID.
Again all slight improvements, but I felt like there was something better and then somebody
texted me an article about ayahuasca and was like we should do this and we did it. And it's been transformational in terms of my overall mood
and my kind of perception of most things.
I just have better values and I don't take things
so literally and I'm just,
it's a better experience for me day to day.
We're talking about pandemic era experimentation.
A lot of people bake bread.
I drank a Amazonian plant medicine.
With who, Neil?
I want to be specific and transparent.
Oh, I don't want to say with who.
Just with-
You've said it before.
Why are you not saying that?
I don't know, because it just seems fishy. But are you not saying it? I don't know because it just seems fishy.
But can I say it? She got to say it. I can't stop you. But a comedian friend of mine sent me
the thing. It was like we should do this and we did it. Correct. Correct. So it was Chris Rock.
So listen, what I wanted to figure out with you, Neil, is that first time, okay?
How immediately obvious was it that this was the thing
that was the skeleton key that would somehow unlock
whatever image you had, the vault behind which Joy
was kept from you?
The first time I did it was like a private, like just at somebody's house.
And what I got felt like a sampler of the of ayahuasca in general, meaning I got, I saw the speed with which my thoughts could go.
With mushrooms, you'll have like a 10 hilarious thoughts
in a minute.
Yes.
And this was like 50.
And I actually went like, wow.
Cause it was like,
hra, hra, hra, hra, hra.
Then I cried for two hours about groups of people.
I'm not the most social guy, not more of an introvert,
something about like group's view.
It just felt like something tribal and it was really nice
and the cry was like pretty thick.
It was like one of those things where like,
how was this still happening?
And then it was kind of over.
I didn't feel like I had much of a spiritual breakthrough, but it was very pleasant.
I told somebody it's like when you check into a hotel and there's an ad for the hotel on the monitor,
like welcome to the Bayside Hilton or whatever.
It was like that, but for Iowaska.
Like welcome to ayahuasca. Here you're gonna have a sense of tribalism
and a thing that you've never felt
in terms of connection to all of humanity.
That's right, Mario Lopez, by the way,
still selling movies.
No, he comes on after, yeah, he comes on after.
And by the way, always louder than you want it to be.
Always. When X-rays, playing,
it's always louder than you want it to be and you can't find
the remote. And when you do, you have some questions about why it's sticky. Now. That
was first time. So then did it another, then found somebody, found a ceremony in LA, went,
did it, you know, 30 people, more official, you know, more ceremony,
and didn't feel anything.
Drank it, didn't feel anything on the first night.
So I said to the guy on the second night, I'm like,
hey, we need to kind of recalibrate
because it's worked for me before.
And then I drank, I think a little more,
and bullseye was like right there.
And I was experiencing a lot of joy, and bullseye was like right there.
And I was experiencing a lot of joy,
like unbridled joy, like grinning joy, grinning hot face joy,
that you might experience on other medicines.
Cops call them drugs, I call them medicine.
And then I opened my eyes at one point and I was like,
oh, I'm in the presence of a God right now.
It felt like the end of Raiders of the Lost Ark when they opened the covenant,
opened the Ark and the stuff flying around. It's not evil yet. It gets evil.
Once it gets to the Nazis, I don't want to ruin
Raiders of the Lost Ark for star for people. Spoiler alert.
The Nazis didn't get a connection to God.
If you're in the, if you're, I'm spoiling it.
I'm not going to say how they did.
You did.
Neil Brennan got the connection.
I actually got, and I felt like, oh, I'm in the presence of a God right now. And pretty much since then,
my belief hasn't wavered.
And again, it's not religious.
It's not, I don't need you to not eat certain meats.
You can sleep with whoever you want.
Whatever you need to do, you go ahead and do it.
But I personally believe that there's a central creation
force based on the experience I had drinking ayahuasca, but it's carried itself through.
I imagine it's incredibly difficult to fully articulate or intellectualize what it is that
was the stimulus that sparked that specific central cosmic force that you now actually have conviction in.
But what do you want people to know about that feeling such that we others may benefit from
feeling it? I'm approaching it kind of from a place of self-interest, which is I would it's
given me not even the God part per se. I kind of believe my nervous system has been
rerouted which
if scientifically
ayahuasca the the studies that there haven't been a ton of studies, but the ones they have done it is something called
Neurogenic where it creates new brain cells, which is kind of the only substance that does that that on earth
other than
this podcast. And, and, uh, so I can't very well say you're a sucker if you don't believe
it or you should or any of that stuff. And I don't need anyone to confirm it or deny
it or just like, that's what happened. So I don't, it's a bit of a UFO thing.
I don't need to, like I know I was on a UFO,
like whether you believe it or the government,
I don't care.
Is it comforting?
Like the feeling of this knowledge, this conviction,
is that a comfort to you as the notion of joy
or whatever you're requesting for is concerned?
It is, and it's really, it can be very scary.
And which is kind of an unexpected thing.
Like there's a, I feel like sometimes in movies
when like a
theater or whatever force appears or is experienced,
people throw up.
I get it. I get it.
I get it.
Because I'm like, boy, this is a lot.
This is a lot to sort of think you think.
Because I can't say I know it.
It's a lot.
It's just that sometimes it's like, it's a lot.
How much for you was their actual throwing up?
Oh, yeah.
People are always very concerned about throwing up. How many people threw up their actual throwing up? Oh yeah, these people are always very concerned
about throwing up.
How many people threw up from alcohol last night?
Just ballpark, ballpark, ballpark, just do America.
How many people never say alcohol?
Is that that stuff that makes you throw up?
But that's people's first question.
I was, because though I'm always like,
no, you're thinking of alcohol.
That's the stuff that makes you throw up.
I was, because I've thrown up once in 15 times
and that's cause I drank too much.
You drank too much of the medicine.
Yeah, I drank too much of ayahuasca.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So I can't, but any other time, never,
you, you crap your pants.
No, I've never, I've never seen anyone do it.
I've never, I've seen people throw up. It's not uncommon, but it's not
guaranteed.
No, no judgment on the barf.
Great.
I am, though, curious about how you go from trip number two to three, four, five, six,
seven, eight, nine, ten, eleven, twelve, thirteen, fourteen, 15. So how does your quest continue such that you're like, this is a thing
that I want as part of my actual upkeep. Yeah, because I was sort of of the mind that I needed to
solidify it. The sort of thing that had been revealed to me or opened up in me or however you want to say
it. So that's kind of why I was doing it so much. Okay. And it was, it was COVID. Nothing
else going on. And it's a beauty. It's like somebody asked me, why do you do it so much?
I'm like, cause I get to meet God. Sorry. A lot of people go to Florida that much during COVID.
Sorry, I got to meet God, you suckers. Anti-depressants and SSRIs. Where are you on that regimen after you're ayahuasca?
You can't do them if you drink ayahuasca, so I've been off them for two years.
Well how in your brain do you distinguish between the mental health benefits and the
existential sense you have of what you're here to do.
So because I believe in God, is that affecting my mood? Or what is it, what is my existential purpose?
I don't think it's changed because I had a friend, my friend Bajon and I,
when he did it with me, he was like,
are we going to be able to be capitalists after this? And like, I know what he meant,
but yeah, I'm still a capitalist. Neil, are we, are we about to be poor?
No, I mean, that's, he was kind of, he was just kind of like, are we going to believe in Western
values? But the thing is, you do believe in them less.
I do believe in them less as a guiding light.
Like I think I'm apt to want to grow every quarter less than I was before Iowa.
I mean, it's like capitalism tells you, like, if you're not, did you make more
money this quarter than the last quarter, then you're a failure.
Like I'm less on that. I still have a lot of it
in me though. But in terms of like my purpose, I don't think my purpose has changed. Other
than, ironically, I think one of my purposes is to have fun and be and have joy. That's
one that I feel like I can actually accomplish a little bit.
As in you now can believe with conviction that you're put on this planet to actually enjoy it.
Yeah, I think that that's what my, a lot of my professional goals now are emotional.
Meaning I would like to just be pleasant and in a good mood most of the time.
And like, well, what are you going to do for work? I don't know.
Like if I, if it's, like I could run a juice shop and like, well, what are you going to do for work? I don't know. Like if I, if it's, it's like I could run a juice shop and be, obviously I'm invested in this competition
I'm a part of, but I also am, I'm more concerned with, and then how's it, how am I going to
feel?
Right. The competition is where I wanted to go next, because this notion that, again, there is a mental processing
speed, at least during the experience of taking ayahuasca, that was, I guess, mind-blowing
in all of the senses. To what extent do you consider this a performance-enhancing medicine,
let's call it?
Ayahuasca didn't necessarily make me funny, or DMT did, but that's a whole other issue.
That may be the next chapter or something.
That's the thing called Bufo that I did once in New York.
Am I wrong when I say this is the Toad related thing?
Yes, this is the Toad.
I believe this is the one that Mike Tyson talks about.
It takes you to another level.
How you watch this, nothing compared to this.
The Toad in this, in the Sonora Desert,
it has a venom in it.
And you smoke it. Once I tried it, boom!
My brain would still function, my thoughts I could still talk to myself,
I could hear my mind, and I would say,
I f***ed up and I killed myself.
I'm dying.
It was just really mind-blowing.
Five MEO DMT bufo alvareas is what it's called, or just DMT.
And so, like a natural, it's a toad secretion.
They dry it out and you smoke it.
It always seemed too severe to me.
And then it's-
It sounds severe, Neil.
Yeah, it was too severe.
So I didn't know that though.
All right, I did know it and then I forgot.
I don't want to say it destroyed my brain.
I'm, it my brain.
I, it was crazy. It was very crazy. And it brain. It was crazy.
It was very crazy.
And the experience was crazy.
And then I had a reactivation a week later.
And that was the craziest thing I've ever experienced by a factor of a thousand.
As in you were just going about your day and then you were back in.
What they call it, what they use to call an acid flashback.
Right.
This was like a DMT flashback or reactivation.
So now I'm in life and half of me is on DMT a little bit.
And the thing that they don't tell you,
and I found out later is that 70, 70% of people
that smoke DMT, 5MEO DMT have a reactivation at some point.
Some are short, some are mine was not short. It opened
something up in my mind. Again, it was like a God-centric creation force, what I believe
is caveat, caveat, caveat. It opened that up too much.
What did you see though, Neil? What did you sort of encounter if you could verbalize what
too much was the actual experience the 25 minutes or so was I was in a white void
And it was what Michael Pollan who wrote how to change your mind. Yes, it's a great book
Yep, but he smoked 5mao DMT and he described the place that he went to and it was a perfect description when I
When I read it afterward He went to before the Big Bang. How's that sound? Does that sound comfortable?
So I was there and I didn't know anything. I was an I. It was a first-person
experience but I didn't know breathing, sight, direction.
I didn't any space, any, I didn't know anything.
It was a blank slate of my own comprehension of consciousness.
Again, these are all very big.
It was, I only use these broad terms because I was in a white void before the big bang. Excuse me.
That was like manageable.
The 25 minutes.
The reactivation is where it started to get crazy because I'm, I'm in my life. I'm walking around in the village.
Yeah.
Where were you?
I was in New York.
I was doing blocks in New York.
Yeah.
Your show, your, yeah, your last one-man show.
Yes, my award-winning Netflix.
It is your life going smoothly.
Are you just floating from event to event,
feeling good about yourself? Because I'm not.
So I'm there doing it, and I'd be walking down the stage to the show going, why are steps?
Like just stuff that you're it's like things that I would take for granted. I was re had to
remind myself like no you're a person in life. It was like real back to basics of fundamental
chest pass bounce pass life stuff. And yeah and I at one point I thought in my and God's imagination,
just stuff that's not real helpful.
But, but, but yeah, and, and it was hard.
And it took me, what I thought it took about seven or eight months to get through.
And then it turned out, it didn't really end until an ayahuasca ceremony last
March where I felt the door close that had been opened by DMT like in my mind,
sort of like a door closed.
And I was like, I was in that that whole time.
Like I didn't realize I thought it was over like a year and a half ago.
And it turns out it was over like eight months ago.
So it was, but now here's the upside. Funnier, more loving, sharper,
honestly. More energy. Because the door got closed you now have residual.
The one was the door was open. I was I was better the whole time. Oh. I was better
the whole like I I didn't yeah the I thought the door was closed and I was better the whole... Like, I didn't... Yeah, I thought the door was closed and I was better, but the door was still open and
I was better.
So I was better.
Audiences liked me more.
Just all intangibles.
And somehow I was freer as a person.
Something that I want to probe a bit is just the difference between your perception of something
and the actual thing you are perceiving.
Because what you're describing are seemingly
benefits that you have noticed.
And I'm wondering, how are you pressure testing
these notions?
How do you square that circle for yourself?
Fallen in love more often like literally statistically
Felt in love twice last year and a half and
The year and a half before that didn't fall in love at all. Maybe we blame the ladies
I'd like to blame me my spirit the big. I get bigger laughs from crowds.
I can tell I'd never in my life ever felt like Bill Burr on stage before.
And there were a few moments where I was on DMT and I was like, Oh,
this is what Burr must feel like on stage.
The other way though, to feel whether this is working in the way that you're imagining of course,
is to hear it from the people whose relationships
you are now more open to or nurturing
or how do the people around you, Neil,
whether it's friends, family, you're your girlfriend,
what do they say about you now?
They say, I mean, I had people that didn't know anything.
They were like, what did you do?
Like that would just come up to me like, what did you do? Like almost like I got surgery or something.
I'm also just less angry in general. Just less argumentative. Just stuff that again, I can't
quantify per se, but I can tell you firsthand that people that know me well have been like, hmm.
What is different about you as a person in a relationship,
a person in love?
I don't want to win as badly.
It's the thing of like, what am I trying to get to?
And it's, I'm trying to get to understanding and peace and less recrimination and less...
What am I guilty of? What are you guilty of?
Because I'm all... I'm Catholic. I'm Irish Catholic, you know, ten kids, whatever. It's all combat.
I don't know if you know anything about me, but I'm the youngest of 10 kids.
And I don't know if you know much about math or kids,
but 10 kids is too many kids.
Everything's combat. So this is the plan.
Right, scarce resources, conflict.
Yeah, yeah. So, and, and retribution and blame and self-pity
and like all of these things that are like my currency
are less, I just don't feel the need to do them.
The notion of how this intersects with therapy
is something that I'm curious about too.
Because I think a criticism from afar
from people who have not dabbled in psychedelics
or certainly done
I wasca 15 times or or the toad venom once
I think there is this suspicion that this feels like an attempt to get a shortcut
There is some shoots and ladders in past the work. Yes, and you are somebody of course who has
Gondat therapy. I don't know where you are in your therapy now,
but how does this all fit together?
I used to hear that about medication.
Right.
And again, so what I would say is,
all right, how's that ozempic treating you?
Like, you know what I mean?
Like, I don't, why make, why the Judeo
or the Protestant work ethic of like,
you gotta earn this.
Well, I didn't earn the problem.
I didn't, meaning the problem was either like abused into me.
My parents were old when I got here, I'm the youngest.
So they were in their 40s when I got here.
They were born in the 1930s.
So they were from the, we did the best we could generation.
If you criticize their parenting in any way, they would just go, oh, we did the best we could generation. If you criticized their parenting in any way,
they would just go, oh, we did the best we could.
And I felt like, really, that was the best you could?
So dad, you'd get drunk, hit your kids and think to yourself,
no, this is me at my best.
Or humanity has real, just walking around issues from jump.
You come out the shoot, you're conscious and you're like why am I why do I have a tick?
It's not so so then it's you got to work to get rid of it
You didn't work to get it. It was just given to you
So and I went to need therapy for 20 years it what and I used to yell at my therapist
I can't keep talking about this. It's in my body
I've done a lot of different kinds of therapy and this is the one that's worked the best my therapist, I can't keep talking about this. It's in my body.
I've done a lot of different kinds of therapy
and this is the one that's worked the best.
It's not gonna work for everybody.
Some people are, it can also, it should be noted,
have severely negative effects.
So...
What do you know about those?
Do you know about those
because they've happened to friends of yours
because you've read about the negative effects.
I do want to read about them significantly more than I even.
I mean, my own DMT experience.
Sounds pretty scary.
You know, as much as everybody wants to open up the floodgates of like,
it's a revolution.
And then and then you there's certain MDMA studies.
Another thing that I've gotten a lot of benefit from MDMA,
where like some of them are a little fishy.
You know, some of the studies are a little,
the cook in the books or the therapists
aren't being appropriate.
And or with with ayahuasca or mushrooms,
like some people have short-term bad experiences,
whether it's just, it's too much.
They're incredibly disoriented.
And then I think some people can, you know,
quote, lose their mind.
Ayahuasca is not the most pleasant experience
you're ever gonna have.
Meaning on the medicine, it can be nauseating, it can be overwhelming, it can be psychologically
difficult in terms of like what you're experiencing. Just in terms of even dealing with a central
creation force in my own experience, it's a lot to go inside the fabric of humanity and consciousness.
It's not the easiest thing you can do on a weekend. Now, I don't think it makes me a hero for doing
it because I have, there's a ton of upside and I am kind of predisposed to be interested in it, but
it's not easy. It's not a party. ["Ego Death"]
What does the concept of ego death mean here, Neil?
Because I've heard that term.
Aaron Rodgers has said it.
I have too, yeah.
And I'm curious because ego, of course, when it comes to anybody who works in the spotlight
in public, you know, I remember hearing you say this or reading about you saying it, but
the notion that like reviews of you co-wrote half baked with Dave Chappelle. Yep. And reviews were so scathing that that helped push you towards anti-depressants.
I don't know if that's the Western
crucible in terms of what someone in any business has to deal with of like,
I don't want any extra, I don't need any external validation. We're social animals.
That's, I don't think you're honest if you say you don't need external validation.
You don't want your mom to love you? That's external validation. You don't want your husband,
your wife. It's like, it's all your brother, sister's community, respect. I think it's dishonest to
say that we don't, a person doesn't need external validation.
In terms of ego death,
that's not something I've experienced.
I've gotten DMT flattened me
to the point where I was like,
I don't know what's happening.
That's pretty close to, I mean, it,
I don't know if it's ego death,
but it makes ego totally irrelevant
because your priorities change to like, I would
just like to kind of understand what steps are intuitively. And so I haven't experienced ego
death. I have experienced a reorientation in terms of values, but again that's just me. I also think it's a lot of it's just people talking,
meaning ego death. One person says ego death, and then everyone wants to say it. It's like a new
term. It's like trauma or toxic or anything. It just becomes a cool thing.
Or woke.
becomes a cool thing, any of it. So like, ego, I don't know, it sounds cool.
If you say I had an ego death, you're kind of saying like,
so I'm pretty much set in terms of personal behavior.
Cause it's not coming from a place of ego cause it died.
So I'm going to do everything I want from here on out.
And it's going to be justifiable to me and it's gonna make you doubt
doubt
When you think I'm wrong you're gonna be like, but he had an eco-death. So I don't I almost don't trust anything people say
including myself about it I
Wonder about
The placebo effect. I think it's one of those fascinating concepts that exists.
This notion that we don't fully understand
how this works.
The black box.
But somehow our brain, if persuaded of something,
can actually enact that something in the absence
of actually the literal something that is imagined.
I suppose what's so encouraging listening to you sort through your own
self-scouting report is you have a conviction that this is making your life
better. And in the end whether this is the venom of a toad or the sacred
substance that is
a vine that they basically just make tea. Yeah, that's ayahuasca.
Or a sugar pill. Yeah. I would like everybody to feel better.
If it actually means you are better.
Yes. The I would like that as well. I'm of the mind that if there's a revolution coming with psilocybin and ayahuasca and all
that stuff, that a lot, a lot, a lot of people are going to get help.
And some people are going to get very harmed. Now, for mushrooms, for
example, a couple of months ago, guys on mushrooms rushes to cockpit.
Following breaking news, I know you're following this on an off-duty pilot accused of trying
to turn off the engines mid-flight during an Alaska
Airlines flight over the weekend. I know we have new documents. What have we learned?
This story just took a bizarre turn, Kate. A new federal complaint says that this off-duty
pilot, Joseph Emerson, may have been taking psychedelic mushrooms. If that plane crashes,
this revolution's over. It's over. It's a hard thing to spin for the mushroom lobby.
Yes, and also the fact that I hadn't slept in two days.
No one's going to say we need to mandate sleep.
They're going to say we need to mandate an absolute prohibition on mushrooms.
So I'm with you and as someone who's done it a number of times,
I don't know if it would
help you.
I can't guarantee any outcome.
It's just a thing that I felt, and again they say like felt called to do.
I don't know.
Chris sends me the text.
I'm like, all right, like I can figure this out.
But in terms of like was it divine and was it I that stuff
I have no idea like I I think to even think you know is your line yourself. It's ego death
So it's an ego. It's from the from the people who brought you ego death. I was called I
Do think it's funny though how preemptive all of us who are in favor of
People getting help and and the science and really the law catching up to the science and the science catching up to the spirituality.
Whoever's in favor of all of that we must be I consider myself in that population is why I'm having you on the show. I like how preemptive we all are about the ways that this politically can just crash into a ditch.
Because you started this whole conversation by pointing out,
you may be aware, listener, that Chris Rock and Will Smith have both enjoyed ayahuasca.
You may remember them from such scenes as the time one of them slapped the other.
In a way that felt like the ego was very much alive.
And with the Aaron Rodgers thing,
Aaron Rodgers now the face of this,
I wonder what you, Neil Brennan,
if I were to appoint you political strategist
for the thing that we're here to talk about,
ayahuasca more than any of the other psychedelics.
Yes.
Who would you want in the commercial?
Which person do you think is most persuasive
to a larger population of people
as to the very notions that you're describing?
Of course it's the rock, but...
In some ways, there is something so private
and personal about it, Even with in terms of Chris Will and Aaron Rodgers, like I don't even know if I should
talk about it.
I mean, like I don't know if I'm a good spokesman or if I'm painting a picture or if I should
paint any picture whatsoever. Like I don't know because in some ways it is as personal as
a religion. Like meaning who am I to tell you about it? Right. My Catholicism is not yours. We
can practice. Eat at the buffet of spirituality quite differently under the same restaurant name.
Yeah. And people don't even read the Bible the same way. You know, like there are,
there is no book and there is no, like read the, there's no, there's nothing. There's just like,
you just try it. Try and it might, it might change your life significantly.
You would though, like the rock to be sent to a time before the Big Bang. Well, I feel
like he's there most of the time anyway. A time before SummerSlam. The, the, no, I, again,
the rocks that, or Kevin Hart, one of the, one of the other. What I am marveling at is
that there is a certain clarity. I'm not gonna psychoanalyze you through the Zoom screen,
but I do notice that there's a certain clarity
that makes me wonder about the stuff that you used to say
about your, I won't call them previous with knowledge,
but at the very least,
you're preexisting anxieties and neuroses.
I remember in one of your specials in three mics,
you talk about how you used to carry an index card around
so that you could feel better about yourself.
To say I have low self-esteem is not true.
I have no self-esteem.
Like, I don't have the architecture for good feelings.
You give me a trophy, it'll just slide right down.
Like, I just don't have the shelving.
In fact, I used to have to carry around an index card
of funny things I'd written or said or directed
just to try to remind myself that I was okay.
I'm still doing that, but it's totally different.
Now I do it. You want to know why I do this?
I started doing this like a month ago.
I do a fact check of my life out of gratitude to more to the thing
that you said earlier, like go back to the Neil, but I have to remind myself
because my brain will still try to tell me, despite all the ayahuasca of drag,
that things are people are out to get me or people don't respect me or did it all the stuff
All just the negative the negative feedback loop. So yeah, I'm I still do that
I do it four times a day. I just check just check in like a reality check of like no, this is what's happening
That was it was really touch and go back then in terms of
Self-esteem now it's the thing I do now is more just to like sweep, just to sweep any sort of lingering,
like no, get out, no, no, no, get out of here, get out, no, no, no, no.
Like my, my girlfriend said it's like cats in a deli, like where I'm just like cats in,
I'm like, no, get out of here, no no no no go that's basically what I'm doing yeah
yeah it's part of the thing and when I do my reality checks where I go like you
have this stop it stop I'm like hallucinating enemies and hardships. I have no problems. I have no real problems.
Have you watched, did you watch that Beyond Utopia North Korea documentary?
No. It's about people escaping North Korea kind of in real time on and they have a
handheld video. It's like you, I don't have a real problem. I don't have problems.
There's a World War II thing on Netflix and you go
I think this I have problems the Russians are eating their own horses. I
Don't have problems
Someone not responding to my text is not a problem
So so I don't know if that's ayahuasca gave me that or I came to it on my own
We'll never know guys. it's all far too late.
Neil Brennan, I just want to say thank you
for being the Neil Brennan finally,
that I've always imagined.
I'm finally living your dream.
That's right.
Pablo's American Dream, right after this. So as I sit here at my keyboard wondering what it is that I found out today, I realize
that I have fallen short of my mission here.
Because I'm supposed to find out all I can about ayahuasca.
And I could have done ayahuasca.
I could have done DMT.
I could have better explained all of this to you.
But I didn't.
And I'm sorry."
Because for all of the Aaron Rodgers'ization of psychedelics, I do believe they are actually
revolutionary.
ayahuasca is legitimately on my to-do list at some point. Neal even said that he would
consider joining me. But in the meantime, in an attempt to just better convey what the experience might actually
feel like, which is hard to describe, what Neil did instead was text me a link to a song.
A song that is incredibly difficult to categorize itself, but it is a song that to him resembles how ayahuasca
feels.
And so at the end here, I just hope that you can join me in closing your eyes and sitting
down somewhere and enjoying the song, playing inside Neil Brennan's head. మార్లులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులులుల� du sigasimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimimim వారారారారారారారారారారారారారారారారారారారారారారారారారారారారారారారారారారారారారారారారారారారారారారాారారాారారాారారారారారారారారారారారారారారారారారారారారారారారారారారారారారారారారారారారారారారాారారాారారాారారాారాారాారాారాారాారాారాారాా� ʻʻi ʻʻi ʻʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻi ʻebneb den pōri.
ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻār ʻʻi ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe ʻe � This has been Pablo Torre finds out a Metal Metal Arc media production. And I'll talk to you next time.