What Now? with Trevor Noah - Tripping Past Your Ego with Michael Pollan [VIDEO]
Episode Date: September 26, 2024Trevor enlists the help of journalist and author Michael Pollan (This is Your Mind on Plants, Omnivore’s Dilemma) as they try to convince Christiana of the positive impacts of therapeutic psychedeli...cs and their current standing in society. Do they succeed? You be the judge. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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If you're a rat in a lab and you use LSD,
the experience that you have would probably be so all-encompassing
that you cannot fathom using it again.
You're in a lab.
Imagine, there are these giant monkeys making you walk through mazes,
and now you take LSD for the first time, you're like,
what does a maze mean? Where am I going? Why do I like cheese so much? What is it that drives me? And now you're seeing the universe for the first time you're like, what does a maze mean? Like, where am I going? Why do I like cheese so much?
What is it that drives me?
And now you're seeing the universe for the first time,
you're thinking about cats in a completely different way.
If I was a rat in a lab, I'd be like, I don't know,
I need to chill on this.
I just need to think about my life a little bit more.
["The Big Bang"]
This is What Now with Trevor Noah.
Hey, it's Adam Grant, host of Worklife, another podcast from the TED Audio Collective.
As the work landscape keeps changing, Worklife is a show about making your job work for you.
This season, you'll hear about status and what it takes to improve your standing in
relationships and groups.
There's a sequence that we can see that if you're surrounded by people who respect, admire,
and value us, then one, it doesn't matter how much power we have, and two, getting power
becomes a whole lot easier.
Find Work Life with Adam Grant wherever you listen to podcasts.
What's up, guys?
It's your girl Kiki, and my podcast is back with a new season. Work Life with Adam Grant, wherever you get your podcasts.
["Wonderful Wonders of the World"] Do you think this could be the first topic
where we don't agree at all?
Yes, which has made me afraid.
Huh.
Yeah, because normally there's some overlap,
or I can even see where you're coming from.
Oh, you don't even think you'll be okay.
But wait, wait, wait.
So help me understand this.
We say we're going to have a top, we're going to have a conversation.
We're going to, we're going to be speaking to Michael Pollan.
He has single-handedly changed the perception of, of, I mean, like millions
and millions of people when it comes to psychedelics.
It's not only psychedelics.
He wrote the Omnivore's Dilemma, This is Your Mind on Plants, How to Change Your Mind.
And he's written beautiful accounts of how we see the world of what we take.
One of my favorite books of his just even talks about how we see coffee versus how we see something like taking mushrooms or marijuana.
And he goes, coffee, it's just a drug that has suited the establishment.
And so that's why it's allowed to stay around.
So he's explored everything.
But it's interesting how now, and we'll talk to him a little bit about it,
it's like now he has become the de facto go-to
guy on mushrooms and psychedelics and you know, and yes, it's funny you say he's the
guru, but he's not even trying to present himself as a guru. He's like, no, he's not.
He's like, guys, I'm a journalist. I'm just a guy. He's like, no, you're the chosen one.
Everyone's like, you are the guru. Where do I score myself some dope shrooms? Yeah, but
it's funny. You, I've never seen you recoil like this.
I know, I know, and I've been thinking about it.
Even I may have prayed about it.
Oh wow.
Yeah, because I was just like, I don't want people at home to think like I'm like this
lock them up conservatives about people who do recreational drugs.
Okay.
But I may be a little bit.
Okay.
No, I think it just brings
up some stuff for me.
Is this because of your upbringing? Because for me, I think about growing up and my perception
of drugs. So I didn't touch weed my whole life. Okay, so I'll even take it before even
like drugs drugs. My mom doesn't drink, my mom doesn't smoke, my dad doesn't drink, my dad doesn't smoke.
Alright, so I grew up in a home where that wasn't a thing, my grandmother, etc.
And my mom said to me when I was 13, 12, 13, maybe even younger, she came to my room and
she had cigarettes and she had beer and she said to me
Do you want and and I was like, oh, this is a trap
Obviously, this is a trap and I was almost disappointed and I was like, come on lady
A trap like that. You're gonna come into my room and offer me cigarettes
And she was like, do you want do you want to try them?
And I was like no because these are bad things and we shouldn't have.
And then she said to me, listen, you're going to encounter alcohol, you're going to encounter
cigarettes and things.
So if you're going to use it, I would rather know that you use it and then you use it at
home and then I don't worry that now you're out in the world using it, hiding it from
me and then getting into situations where you can't share that you're using it.
Palm reduction.
Exactly.
It's amazing.
Which is wild.
My mom is like super religious and super strict and super...
Very progressive.
Yeah.
And so then she didn't even know how to like light a cigarette.
So we have to go to an uncle of mine and then he was like, Trevor, what's up?
And she said he wants to try cigarettes and the guy was like, okay, you want to smoke? And he gave us the cigarettes and I puffed with him and I was like, Trevor, what's up? And she said he wants to try cigarettes. And the guy was like, okay, you want to smoke?
And he gave us the cigarettes.
And I puffed with him and I was like, this is trash.
This is so, I was like, how is the taste in your mouth,
you know what I mean?
It tastes like someone's like eating everything disgusting
and then farting it into your oral cavity.
And then the alcohol beer just tastes like, like old water that has,
you know, dribbled down a sewer into...
I'm a bad Brit. I don't like, I don't like it.
So I didn't like any of that. And then drugs was almost in the same category for me.
Because of that initial experience.
Yeah.
Okay.
In fact, drugs, the way I grew up was, you are a loser, you are going to end your life.
That's how I knew drugs.
That hasn't changed now. That was just when you grew up. That's how I knew drugs. So that hasn't changed now,
that was just when you got up.
That's how I knew drugs.
That's all I was told.
These are the things that'll happen when you take drugs.
So I didn't touch weed.
I smoked weed for the first time when I was 21.
That's how anti-drug, I used to judge people
and I would look at them and I would say to them,
it is a pity that you've chosen to do this with your life.
I used to say that to my cousin.
So I can see where you might come from.
Okay.
Yeah.
I think it's all of those things and a bit more.
All right.
But yeah, I just.
Are you open to a conversation about it?
I'm open to a conversation.
And I think the thing that bothers me about this,
I'm sad I'm not nuanced,
because I pride myself.
I'm being like gray area, nuanced,
both-side-ism almost. And on this I'm like, no, no, no, no, no, no.
Okay.
So yeah.
The African mom has finally arrived.
And the African mom has just emerged and is just here. But, and the more I seem to read,
the deeper I go into know. That's why I'm really curious about today's conversation.
Oh, that's an interesting one.
Michael, welcome to the podcast.
But like, let me ask you this.
Do you think or do you find that people become more open
to the idea of exploring even the idea of psychedelics
when they read? Or do you find
that people become more closed off? I find when people read, they do become more open.
There are a couple things that make people more open. And by the way, Christiana, I'm not
going to advocate you do anything. I'm going to advocate for that.
I know, that's what Trevor's here for. I'm going to advocate.
I'm going to advocate for that. I know, that's what Trevor's here for.
I'm going to advocate.
It's perfectly okay not to do these drugs.
When I started talking about this,
right when my book came out
and I was talking to various groups of people,
and I would notice when I spoke in positive terms
about psychedelics, I found that unless I started talking
about risk right at the beginning,
there was always a person or two in the room before I said anything more about it.
This person would not open her ears. So I learned in my conversations where I was trying to
get a hearing for what have turned out to be some therapeutically really important
have turned out to be some therapeutically really important substances.
And the key was, let's talk about risk right at the beginning.
Can you get addicted to these substances?
Can you overdose on these substances?
Because I, I came very late.
My, I didn't use a psychedelic till I was in my late fifties.
I was somebody who, you know, with a family who, uh family and lots of responsibilities,
and I did a lot of investigation.
Well, how dangerous are these things?
I found that on the classical psychedelics,
and it's important to define what we're talking about,
LSD, mushrooms or psilocybin, DMT,
but not ketamine and not MDMA.
These are not technically psychedelics.
There is no recorded lethal dose.
That's quite remarkable because you have drugs
in your medicine cabinet.
If you have Tylenol, that is lethal at about 17 pills.
But before we get into that, Michael,
I love the idea of speaking about risk first.
And I've actually seen you do this in more than one setting.
My favorite encounter with Michael and watching this in real life was we were at an event
where it was myself, Michael, and then Oprah Winfrey, Gayail King, and Ava DuVernay.
And we're all, this is like a weird motley crew of people who found themselves around
a table.
And I don't know if it was Oprah or Ava who starts off and says, you're the mushroom guy,
you know?
And I'm like, oh yeah, mushroom, it's amazing, this whole thing, do you know?
And I'll never forget, like, the more I was speaking,
I thought I was convincing people.
Oprah's face got more and more concerned.
Gail looked at me with more and more compassion.
You know how Gail is, like Gail looked at me like,
oh, Trevor, do we need to call somebody?
And Ava looked like the cops were about to swarm in.
And it was interesting to watch,
because when Michael started speaking,
the first thing you spoke about was risk.
The first thing you talked about was,
hey, you cannot guarantee any outcome.
You've gotta be worried about your physical,
the physical aspect you've got.
And I watched them slowly turn their bodies
from the outside of a conversation
back to the inside of the conversation.
And so maybe we can talk a little bit about that aspect.
So what are the risks then?
If you cannot overdose, what are like,
for somebody like Christiana who's going like this,
you guys are putting yourself at so much risk,
what are the actual risks?
Well, if you put LSD in one of those classic setups
with a rat given two levers to press,
and it administers a drug to its veins with amphetamines, cocaine,
they will press that lever until they're addicted and they die.
If you put LSD in that setup,
they'll try it once and never again.
Oh, wow.
That doesn't sound like an endorsement.
No, it's not.
Like the rat's Like, no thanks.
Well, I mean, imagine being a rat
and trying to interpret what's going on.
We don't know what kind of experience they have.
There's actually a study underway to try to figure out
if rats and mice have the sort of mental hallucinations.
All we know now is they head twitch when they take LSD.
And that's not very useful for research.
No risk of addiction, no risk of overdose.
The risks are of a psychotic break.
There are people who have a psychotic experience.
Sometimes it looks like a psychotic experience,
and it's just a panic attack.
There's a wonderful story that Dr. Andrew
Weil tells about working in the Haight-Ashbury Free Clinic in 1968 as a
young newly minted doctor who had had a lot of experience with psychedelics and
the doctors were all saying people are coming in you know having LSD induced
psychosis. Yeah. And he goes into a little examining room and there's somebody who's absolutely flipping out
and he takes a few notes and then he says,
well, you excuse me,
there's someone in real trouble in the next room.
And as soon as he said that, this person realized,
wow, I'm not so fucked up as I thought I was.
There's somebody more fucked up than me and they were fine.
So he understood what was going on in a way that the other
doctors didn't. But people do flip out and these experiences can be mitigated, I think.
If you work with a guide, someone who's with you to talk you down when this kind of thing happens.
But without question, the bad trip is real, and it can be absolutely terrifying.
As Trevor said earlier,
the effects cannot be predicted.
There's a physiological signature to alcohol or cocaine.
That's not true with psychedelics.
Everybody has their own experience,
and a lot of it depends,
as Timothy Leary famously said,
on set and setting.
That you've got to be in
the right mindset and you need to be in a very safe setting where you're not worried
about the FedEx driver coming to the door or a call from your mother.
Michael, let me ask you this.
I distinctly remember, and it's purely anecdotal, how the conversation around weed, cannabis, marijuana,
whatever you want to call it,
changed when white American moms started smoking it.
All of a sudden America was like,
actually, maybe it's not so bad.
Tell me more Snoop Doggy Dog.
You know what I mean?
It started changing.
Well, How to Change Your Mind,
my book about it was in 2018.
And at that point, there were lots of people
who were using psychedelics,
but would never talk about it publicly.
And one of the things that's happened is that that taboo,
and none of the scientists would ever admit
to ever having had an experience on the record.
They would off the record, which was hard for me.
But everything changed in the few years after that, and it became acceptable
for people to talk about their use. But I think the big thing is the taboo
has lifted, the way it did with cannabis. Right. It was moms doing it, but what happened first was,
and this was the activists did this,
they rebranded cannabis from Cheech and Chong,
you know, goofy, to medicine for AIDS patients
and people with wasting syndrome and things like that.
And remember, we started with medical marijuana
and that changed the image.
And it may be that the same thing is happening
with psychedelics, which are getting a lot of attention
as a therapeutic aid.
But as one of my sources put it, they're very important for the betterment of well people
also, not just people who are ill.
So far though, the path that they're on, I think, there are two paths, really.
There's a medical path that we've talked about.
There's also a spiritual path.
There are a lot of people who are interested in religion. There was a really interesting study
that hasn't been published yet that I'm writing about where religious leaders in like 13 different
faiths were given a high dose of psilocybin to see what insight they might have on the religious
visions they had and the mystical experience. And what did they find?
religious visions they had and the mystical experience. Huh, and what did they find?
Well, a lot of these people were burnt out before.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
You're working, dying, and people at really hard times in their lives and congregations
are shrinking.
And many of the ones I talked to had their faith renewed.
They all had divine encounters except for a Buddhist, so that's kind of what you'd expect. The Buddhist said,
when I interviewed her, she's a Buddhist priest, and she said,
I traveled to a realm beyond concept for which there are no words.
Oh, I love that.
It was a very short interview. There was nowhere to go from there.
But others had a, they were really surprised that the divine didn't always conform to their faith and in many cases, I think the majority, the divine was feminine.
And that blew some of their minds.
I love that.
God is a woman.
I can get behind that.
Yeah, God is a woman.
So now we've got her.
Now we've got her.
What's, what, okay, wait, so what's, what's the thing you're most, like when you, when
you think about it, what's-
Do you know what?
It's so funny.
I was going to say-
What's the scariest thing you think of?
What scares me?
The benefits.
Wait, what?
Yeah.
Everything I read about, about the good, and I'd love Michael to go through the benefits
first and then I'll explain why I found it profoundly terrifying.
Wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait. I thought you were going to be like...
Yeah, this is interesting.
Wait, I thought you were going to tell me that you were afraid of...
Yeah, but all of that stuff also exists with alcohol, which I think if it was invented
today, we probably wouldn't sell it so freely. Do you know what I mean? Like,
all of that stuff exists with other substances, but psychedelics for me, the more I read,
it was the benefits that was like, this is some cultist
scary shit. And people should just be Pentecostals. But Michael, I want you to talk through the
benefits, particularly what did take me was end of life care.
This was the most moving work that I saw getting done, which was people with cancer diagnoses, many of them terminal,
having a guided psychedelic session. This happened at NYU in New York and at Johns Hopkins
in Baltimore. And I interviewed a lot of these people and they had their whole attitude toward
death and their anxiety changed. Some had the experience of developed a confidence that
something would happen to their consciousness after they died. Other people had incredibly
naturalistic scenarios in their head about what would happen. I remember one woman describing
that she'd been flying all over the world and then went into the ground
and was kind of disaggregated and her molecules were taken up by plants.
Wow.
And she, now this is not a supernatural idea, this actually happens.
Yes, yeah, but the, but you feel it, I mean.
But she felt it and she identified with it. And she identified with something beyond her ego
that made it easier to think about her death,
that we are all interconnected,
and that in some way she would go on.
And yes, her ego would not, but that was okay.
And this experience of what's called ego dissolution,
of feeling that yourself has kind of been,
I mean, I had, I describe in the book this experience
of seeing myself explode into a cloud of blue Post-it notes,
which then fluttered to the ground
and formed this pool of thick blue paint.
And from some new perspective, I'm observing this
and I was like, okay, this is perfectly fine.
That's okay being a puddle of blue paint.
I don't have a problem with that.
But what happens when your ego dissolves
is that the barrier, your ego is a wall,
is a defensive structure, right?
And when the walls come down,
there's nothing separating you from whatever is out there.
We're gonna continue this conversation
right after this short break.
I have friends who took psychedelics as atheists and then called me and said,
I now believe in a God.
I'm talking about the most skeptical, just like calloused individuals.
They go like, I die and nothing.
It's dust.
You forget about it.
This is stupid. And then they take psychedelics
and they will say to me, look, I don't know what it's called. I don't know who made it or whether
it made me or how it works or doesn't work, but I now know that it exists. And you see them develop
a different connection with themselves and with this idea that goes beyond themselves.
And I always wonder actually, Michael, like, you know, we know that psychedelics affect
or at least mushrooms in particular affect our neuroplasticity.
Right?
So essentially what it does is it interrupts your brain's ability to make assumptions about
things, which is how the human brain needs to work.
Right? The reason a baby is enamored by a box is because their brain is constantly going like,
whoa, what is this? And then at some point you're like, it's a box. That's why when we,
you know when we have like cake, you know that, what's it called again? You know the trend.
You guys know the trend.
And it's not a cake.
Yeah.
Yeah, but cake's not cake.
Yeah, but you know why that messes with us.
You think it's a pencil.
Yes.
But it's a cake.
Exactly.
Okay, yeah. So one of the reasons that messes with us. You think it's a pencil? Yes, exactly. But it's a cake. Okay, yeah.
So one of the reasons that messes with us and mesmerizes us so much as adults is because it's sort of returning us back to being a baby.
Babies are constantly living in a world of is it cake?
You with me? So when you play peek-a-boo with a baby, when you cover your eyes, you know, you're gone to them.
Yeah. Right? So the baby's like, where did you go? And then you open your eyes and- They're such idiots. Yeah, exactly. But that's why they live in so much wonder. That's why they're like, wow,
the world is so big.
Sorry, Trevor. This is, I think, part of my objection. That shortcut to wonder.
No, but it's not necessarily about the wonder that I'm talking. I'm talking about
the brain being interrupted in creating a fixed idea of what it is and what reality
is or isn't, right?
Yeah.
But meditation can do that, no?
No, you've never meditated so much that you thought something was cake.
Don't lie.
Okay, all right.
Don't, everyone who tells me this, you're lying.
Wait, wait.
Everyone.
Do you know what?
I come from a spiritual tradition where people really believe in the transcendent and the
supernatural.
I was raised in the Pentecostal tradition where people speak in tongues, they fall on
the floor.
It's all of this somatic body work.
They see visions all the time.
They have these out of body experiences constantly and they don't use shrooms.
Some of them say they have the experiences, but they don't necessarily-
I mean, if they say it, it's still true. It's true to them.
I don't know, I'll be honest with you.
And it's true to people who take psychedelics,
their insights in the same way.
Yeah, yeah.
They're both subjective opinions.
That can't be proven.
But the people having these religious experiences,
there is brain chemistry involved there too.
Yes.
So we're talking about chemicals produced
by your own brain or chemicals introduced to your brain.
That that's the distinction.
And I don't know how important a distinction that is,
but I think that going back to what Trevor said,
we don't really take in the world anymore as adults, right?
We have a set of predictions and beliefs.
And so that's why we don't think about boxes.
It's just a box and it's just cake.
And that we have stopped having the kind of
what's sometimes called lantern consciousness of children
where they take in information from everywhere
and everything's awesome and wonderful.
We have what's called spotlight consciousness
which is very useful for getting stuff done. But it gives you a kind of focus awesome and wonderful. We have what's called spotlight consciousness,
which is very useful for getting stuff done,
but it gives you a kind of focus
and it's based on the world being as the world usually is.
And so very little new information comes in.
Our senses are only being used to correct
the predictions that our minds are making, that's it.
What psychedelics appear to do
is short circuit that predictive machinery. And what that means is they can help you break out of habits of thinking and habits of behavior that you're stuck in because you're predicting that,
you know, I'm the kind of person who can't get through the day without a drink.
Yeah. I'm the kind of person who can't get through the day without a drink. This is a prediction about who you are
and an identity you're stuck in.
And the psychedelics, Trevor mentioned plasticity,
they make the mind more plastic
and they essentially temporarily
dissolve those habits of thought.
And that's very useful for people struggling with addiction, for
people struggling with eating disorders, people struggling with obsessive compulsive. I mean,
these are all disorders where you're stuck in a loop and you have some habit of thought
you can't break. And psychedelics appears to be able to help people break those habits.
I'm curious, can it, and this is a completely serious question. Can it be used to treat racism?
Because that is a pattern.
No, that is a, to me, that's, I mean.
I know you're being serious.
I'm being so serious.
No, I know you're being serious.
That's maybe what made it funnier for me.
It's not a ridiculous question.
No, but I'm like.
It's not.
That's why it's so funny.
All right, some people have anorexia,
some people have depression,
but a lot of people have racism.
A lot of people have racism, right.
You or your loved ones suffering from racism.
Do you find yourself hating people because of the color of their skin?
No, but like racism, homophobia, these are real like...
Consider shrooms.
Talk to your doctor about shrooms.
I just...
It's a serious question.
I like it, it just caught me off guard.
Okay.
Can it be used to treat racism, homophobia, etc.?
It's a hypothesis that needs to be tested.
They do change people's beliefs.
There's a general belief that the direction of those changes are toward feeling more like other people,
more connected to other people,
more connected to nature,
less tolerance for authoritarianism.
I haven't seen a study looking at racial attitudes,
but it stands to reason that if there is this
very common feeling of I love everybody,
we're all one, you know,
and so it's not out of the question. It would be very
interesting to test. I mean, racism is a habit of thought, right?
Because I actually thought about police officers. When you said that thing about like our minds
making these predictions, I thought of sure, we can look at these institutions as racist and
these are terrible people, but they are basing everything they do based on predictions and biases.
Exactly.
But often that they can't help themselves.
Like to me, it's interesting if shrooms can unravel that,
you know, in a way that I think words and even living
in sometimes diverse environments cannot.
Well, you know, what happens with these experiences
is that people begin to write new stories
about who they are, about how the world works,
but you need to be guided through it.
The guide would talk to you about that after the experience
to kind of solidify a new perception.
Yeah, I think actually that's one of the biggest
misconceptions that I've seen around psychedelics,
particularly mushrooms, is people will go, you take this and your life changes
and everything will never be the same and it's perfect. And to what Michael's saying is, I've
found that people who take mushrooms unintentionally or like without intention behind their action,
don't have the same results. All they do is they experience a moment of joy, they experience a moment of feeling connected,
but then they quickly settle back into all the old patterns because they've been around
for so much longer.
But the people who have a guide or people who do what they call like reintegration,
those people spend more time in the liminal space that is thinking about what you're experiencing.
You know, I object, and that's another reason I didn't like it. Why? spend more time in the liminal space that is thinking about what you're experiencing.
And that's another reason I didn't like it.
Why?
Because as I understand it, the roots of this stuff is indigenous medicine.
It belonged to a people before it was codified and it becomes this thing that academics and
Hollywood elites and white liberal people do.
I don't think it belonged to anyone.
I think people were just taking it, you know?
Sure, but like, it's part of like indigenous plant medicine in a way that it's not connected
to the white American experience.
Am I wrong, Michael?
You're partly right and partly wrong.
I love this.
This is great.
But like, go ahead.
No, psilocybin.
So, some psychedelics have an indigenous history.
Psilocybin is one, it was used in Mexico and Central America
for thousands of years.
Peyote, Native Americans and Mexicans for 6,000 years.
But LSD, MDMA, these are creations of modern,
Western chemistry.
I think that in general,
the indigenous use of these substances
has a lot to teach us.
And that I think one of the places we went wrong
in the 60s was not paying attention
to the wisdom of indigenous cultures.
And we figured we could create a whole new context
and we failed.
Where are we seeing the biggest changes
in the adoption of psychedelics
or even the acceptance of them?
Where are we seeing a thrust coming
from a particular segment of society in America?
I think Silicon Valley has been a place
where psychedelics are in widespread use.
And these are the people who are the philanthropists funding a lot of the studies that are going
on.
One interesting community that I've been working on, I'm writing a book about consciousness
and most of the philosophers and neuroscientists who are working on that issue are experimenting
with psychedelics as an avenue of inquiry.
People who are completely brain centric people who think,
of course, consciousness emerges from the neurons,
are having experiences of consciousness outside of the skull,
and they're having crises, metaphysical crises.
That's really interesting. I don't know where that'll go. and they're having crises, metaphysical crises.
That's really interesting.
I don't know where that'll go.
One community that's really important
in this space is veterans.
It's a community with high rates of trauma.
What is it?
18 suicides a day in America among vets.
And some of them are using it,
often in groups, sometimes going
down to Mexico or somewhere where it's legal or quasi-legal, but that they're getting a
lot of relief from trauma using a series of psychedelics.
I think, you know, you have this interesting phenomenon of microdosing, which is very low
risk and many people do it. Christiana alluded to it earlier. Some people find it very helpful.
We don't have a lot of science on it
to say one way or another.
It may be a placebo effect,
but there's nothing wrong with a placebo effect.
If it works, it works.
Placebos are actually driving changes in your mind.
But that, I think, makes it very easy
for people to enter into this world
at low risk and potentially high reward.
And that seems to be in many, many different circles.
So much to unpack here for me because I do know part of my rejection of this is rooted
in my own sense of ego.
I will own that and having a family with mental illness and addiction issues.
So there's a lot of stuff around substances for me.
And now we
have this drug that is coming more into emergence that some people can afford a fancy guide.
Yeah. Yeah. And it is very expensive.
And it's very expensive and like settings. Like it sounds like this is something that
could be hugely beneficial for people who don't have much money and can't afford a guide.
So first of all, I want to go back to what you said about family and addiction.
I, like you, have family members who have struggled
with predominantly alcohol, you know?
And that addiction, when you see it,
is one of the worst things.
It's one of the scariest experiences you'll have.
That's why when I first encountered any semblance
of something that was even considered a drug,
I was like, oh, this is the escalation of that.
I was like, if alcohol is 10% bad, drugs are 500% bad.
That's how I thought.
And then what I came to find is how these substances, these medicines, I would even
call them, they do the opposite of alcohol.
I always try to explain this to friends. I go, alcohol disconnects
you from yourself and psychedelics connect you to yourself. I've met very few people,
if any actually, who go, oh yeah, I can't believe I did that. And I know alcohol always
have a story that ends with, and then I crashed the car and then I punched this person. Psychedelics
does this, it's theics, it's a strange,
different connection that connects people to themselves and who they actually wish to be,
as opposed to like who they've sort of become, you know?
It sounds so religious.
No, no, it is in many ways, but you know what I like about it is it's not easily manipulated by
a religious figure.
Is that how it's felt for you when you've done psychedelics?
Yeah, that's exactly how it's felt.
So, I think in an optimistic world, in the future, right now it's expensive.
There's guides.
People have made it a little like, you know, like glamping.
They've made it glamping right now.
But I do think there'll be apps.
I do think there'll be a democratization
of the idea of a guide.
I genuinely think it will be very short before you'll have
an AI guide on your phone.
So dystopian.
No, I know it is in some ways, but can I tell you something?
I actually think that that will be what opens it up
to everyone in the right way.
And I think that's gonna open it in the right way.
Because, you know, to your point, Michael, when people have used psychedelics in the right settings,
with the right company, with the right intention, I've witnessed people change their lives.
I've seen people who couldn't build connections with their families.
They had deep traumas that they've held their entire lives.
And they couldn't, with all the talk therapy in the world, they couldn't let go of the feeling. You know the feeling you have
when somebody has traumatized you or when you've experienced trauma because of them
or around them? I've witnessed people lose that. I've seen people shift so much of who
they were to who they could be because of psychedelics. And when we live in a world where so many people do what they
do because they're stuck in the idea of who they are, I think of how magical it could
be to find ourselves in a place where it's not, first of all, it's not a pharmaceutically
controlled thing. There's no like-
Trevor, don't you want to create a world where less people feel they need to escape reality
because they're so depressed, anxious and traumatized.
Like it feels like-
And that's what I'm saying.
I don't know if you agree, Michael.
But I feel like psychedelics are kind of like a plaster
over the mother wound or whatever it is.
You know what, if we weren't in a capitalist hellscape,
right, and we had good housing and good schools,
and more people were healed.
This is the work of like
prison abolitionists, right? Who are like, don't put him in prison, he just needs organic
food and a nice house, right?
No, no, no, but okay, let me challenge you on this real quick. I think it is beautiful
for us to think of psychedelics as a soul for what's happening now. And I think in many
ways it can help with a lot of what society is going through. However, this has been as old as time.
There will always be something that makes time terrible.
You're gonna get eaten by a lion.
That is gonna traumatize you, okay?
Well, and don't forget death.
I mean, you could have the perfect society,
but you're still gonna have death.
But that's very natural to me.
Well, it's very natural, but it makes people crazy.
It does.
I mean, it's very disturbing to us
and we're not very good at processing it.
And so I agree.
I mean, the goal should be to remove causes of trauma
and that's a worthy goal.
And being able to treat people who have been traumatized
does not in any way diminish the need to address the causes of it,
but it's gonna happen.
And so you do have to give some thought
to how you treat people who've had this.
In terms of democratizing it,
yeah, you can, I guess, use technology
and maybe AIs will turn out to be very good guides,
but I think this is why there is so much energy
on the part of researchers in this area
to get FDA approval.
I mean, that's really how you reach lots of people.
And that's what we were hoping would happen with MDMA,
although that approval has been delayed.
Let's talk a little bit about that.
This is my conspiracy theory.
I'll put it out there.
I love it already.
It's a conspiracy theory. that. This is my conspiracy theory. I'll put it out there. I love it. I read it.
There's a conspiracy theory.
My conspiracy theory is that governments won't legalize or won't fully accept these medicines
or these substances or whatever you want to call them.
They won't formalize them until the pharmaceutical industry has figured out a way to synthesize
them.
Okay.
And when they've learned how to synthesize them and sort of like corral what they do,
they're going to sell synthetic versions of it to people at a marked up price that nobody can afford, right?
And then what they're gonna do is they're gonna outlaw the stuff that people work just growing and being able to make and distribute themselves.
That's my problem. Like I'm sure there's some wonderful-
So you don't want FDA approval?
No, no, no, no, no. I'm saying they should just go like, hey, you can use it the same way they let you use
alcohol.
You know?
Because I think, you know, and Michael, I don't know if you have an opinion on it, but
I just go like, once it becomes a formalized medicine and they block out what it has been
and can be for so many people, I think then we actually end up in a world where you can't get it now because you don't
have health insurance or you don't have enough money to buy the medicine, the official FDA
approved.
When the thing grows out of the ground, it's mushrooms.
It's the most resilient thing ever.
Which is why I think it'll be hard to control.
I mean, I think that the means of production are so easily acquired by everyone.
But I think you're right.
I mean, if you compare that what happened with MDMA
whose approval was rejected by the FDA
to the approval of spravato or esketamine,
this is a form of ketamine approved for depression,
it's a nasal inhaler.
They had to do three phase three tests
before they got one that showed it worked at all.
And yet it got through.
Why?
Because it had big pharma behind it.
And it was also a drug that could be administered
without any therapy.
The FDA is totally stumped by the idea
of what really should be called
psychedelic assisted psychotherapy
because you can't remove the therapeutic component.
It's really, it's important to its effectiveness.
It's as important to its safety.
It mitigates the chances of bad experiences
and helps people consolidate what they've learned.
And the FDA is not equipped to regulate therapies, so they kind of threw up their hands.
But when the business model is figured out, and it hasn't been yet for any of these substances,
then Big Pharma will get involved.
And then the sort of scenario that Trevor's describing I'm afraid could welcome
to pass.
Don't go anywhere because we got more What Now after this.
I fit a profile of a person who's typically anti-psychedelics and that's a mother who has young children at home. And I guess like, my kids hit 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, their exploration is just a normal
part of adolescence. If it was sex, I'd be like, here's some condoms. You know, like
everything out. And I'm like, with what we know about how adolescent brains are, their fragility, but also their ability to change
so quickly. How does a parent discuss this with their 15-year-old, 16-year-old kid who's
interested and who's probably going to try it? Is there a safe way for them to do it
or they need to kind of be like Ronald Reagan over here, me, and just say, don't do anything
and stay in your room?
And I'm just curious about what the conversations around shrooms looks like for parents to their
children and is it even appropriate for like, I don't mind my 15 year old smoking some weed,
but like when you say they're going on a journey and they may see vampires.
I'm like, no, no, no.
So Michael, yeah, a long way to go.
I didn't have to deal with this.
My son, by the time I got interested, my son was, you know, well into his twenties, I think.
And he had a couple experiences with-
Before you or after you got into it?
Before me.
Okay, okay.
And, you know, I mean, I'll tell you very quickly what happened because it gives you
some sense of what can go wrong.
He and a friend went up to Tilden Park,
which is in the park above Berkeley where we live.
They drove up there in our car, I should say.
They took mushrooms.
And his friend became convinced that his arm was falling off
and it was about to fall off.
And my son could not persuade him
that his arm was well attached and it wasn't a problem.
They were in, I think, high school, early high school.
And this became a freak out and they get to a parking lot
and my son finds a sympathetic woman there and says,
can you help us?
My friend thinks his arm is falling off.
Can you drive us to his pediatrician's office?
And that's what they did.
And she was able to assure him in a way my son couldn't
that his arm was not falling off
and his arm was well attached
and there was nothing to worry about.
And they got through it.
But my concern in that narrative is the car,
is the involvement of the car,
as it would be if you were using alcohol.
I think, and some people would disagree with me about this,
but in general, you're talking about chemicals
that mess with your ego.
And it seems to me, until you've fully developed your ego,
that might not be a good idea.
And that kids, and boys in particular
are still developing into their early 20s.
And it seems like that might not be the best time to do it.
I see psychedelics as kind of a rite of passage
and cultures are always very specific
about who's eligible for a rite of passage.
And I would say a 13 year old not ready. No, I love that framing though, rite of passage. And I would say a 13 year old, not ready.
No, I love that framing though, rite of passage. I love that framing.
It's funny you say that. So, I remember talking to my youngest brother about it,
and he is 20. And we had this whole conversation. He was like, what is this thing about? Because
he knows me, we've grown up in the same household. And so I said to my youngest brother, I said, you know, the biggest reason I would say to
you, you shouldn't, and this is why I'll say to any young person why you shouldn't do mushrooms,
is because it will not give you, other than like, oh, hallucinations and what, I mean,
but it won't give you the thing that is so important for like older people to get from
it. And that is a loosening of how you see the world young people already have a loose view of the world
Yeah, yeah
That's why they they're the ones who start revolutions and they protest for different ideas and they take companies
Yeah, no, it's true. Yeah, it's all the young who think this could be different
And so I said to him I was like your brain is already so fantastically plastic
Why not keep that keep that until you find that you're stuck and I tell this to anyone And so I said to him, I was like, your brain is already so fantastically plastic.
Why not keep that?
Keep that until you find that you're stuck.
And I tell this to anyone.
I go, you can use mushrooms for fun, but I go, if you can use it when you're stuck, you're stuck in alcoholism.
You're stuck in love and in relationships, and you can't figure out how to break your patterns.
You're stuck in how you see the world.
You're stuck in whatever it is. That's when I would say to somebody, try Jesus.
They're so interchangeable to me.
Okay, I'll say this as somebody who has done Jesus and I've done mushrooms.
I've done both. I've done Jesus and I've done mushrooms. Jesus is amazing. Jesus is the way,
the truth and the light. Trevor's like, my mom's amazing. Jesus is the way, the truth and the light.
Trevor's like, my mom's listening.
I'm doing it again.
Jesus is the way, the truth and the light.
Don't get me wrong.
But I always say, and I always talk to my mom about this, I go, don't forget, Jesus
made wine when the party needed wine.
So even Jesus knew that sometimes people need a little something, something.
You know what I mean?
And by the way, that wine was not just wine. I mean, there's a lot of evidence that the early
communion wine was spiked. Oh, wow. Are you serious?
Interesting. Oh yeah, completely serious. So there's
archaeologists that specialize in chemistry and they've been looking at early communion cups,
and they found one in Spain that had residues of erygot,
which is the fungus from which LSD was derived.
No way.
I know, I know.
So there is a theory,
and it needs a lot more research and proof.
There's a good book on this called the immortality key
by Brian Marescu.
And, but that there is some reason to believe that
there was another drug in the communion cups
and they were trying to give people as you know,
the Native Americans had done many other research,
a big experience.
And what we have left is, you know,
this kind of Manischewitz-y wine,
that's, you know, nothing special.
But once upon a time, it apparently had a real kick.
I think what I don't like is how,
I've seen how presidential advisors during the Nixon era
and, you know, during the Vietnam War and all of that, they specifically set out to target these psychedelics.
Yeah.
Because they felt they undermined what America was trying to be.
And what was America trying to be at that time?
A place where it fights wars, it bombs other countries, it gets their resources,
and it makes people clamor for those resources in their lives.
And they found when people started using these psychedelics, they didn't care about being a manager,
they didn't care about getting more money than the person around them, they didn't care as much,
they cared about other people, they wanted other people to eat. And this, they felt,
undermined what the American dream was built on. And I get the US government in that because I'm
someone that loves order, like I'm an order over freedom type of person.
So all these free people opening their consciousness.
No, no, no, but what I'm saying is, ironically,
that's where I think like the indoctrination has worked.
They've tricked people into believing
that there is only one way to have order.
Do you get what I'm saying?
They've tricked people into believing that the only way we way to have order. Okay. Do you get what I'm saying?
Yeah.
They've tricked people into believing that the only way we can live in a civilized society
is if everybody goes to an office and everybody tries to make as much money as possible and
everybody screws each other over, that's order.
But when it's ancient tribes, whether it was Native Americans, whether it was in South
America, whether it was in Africa, they had order.
Yeah.
And this was a tool that they used ironically to maintain that order.
Because we did maintain that order.
That's right.
Because when people are stuck, that's when there's disorder.
For sure.
You know, this is when people now they break, they, they, they fight,
they hurt each other.
They, that's the thing that actually brings
the order back because you go like, oh yeah, I'm part of something. I'm not alone in this
thing. We're all part of something. Yeah, I think that's my problem. I'm not
comfortable with a society where there's no yearning and like profound brokenness for
people to keep striving. Yeah, but striving for what? No, but striving
for what? Striving for just like this being their best, which is F'ed up.
Actually, actually, no, no.
I want to be the best artist.
I'm going to ask, so I'm going to ask Michael about this, but okay.
You know I'm talking about it, right?
Yes.
And I would love to know Michael from your side, because look at you.
You are one of the most accomplished writers.
Did you find that you didn't have a yearning after taking psychedelics or how did it affect
your perception of what to yearn for? Well, you know, one of the things about psychedelics is you don't immediately a yearning after taking psychedelics or how did it affect your perception of what to yearn for?
Well, you know, one of the things about psychedelics
is you don't immediately wanna do them again.
It's kind of overwhelming.
And that's why they're not habit forming, I think.
It's like, oh, I can't.
That's why the cartel doesn't sell mushrooms.
Yeah, there's no money in it.
These are, I mean, even when these things are used
in treatment modality, it's one or two pills or experiences.
That's it, you know?
And the pharmaceutical model is based on taking
the same pill every day for the rest of your life.
But without question, they're very disruptive.
You know, they're, so every society has drugs, right?
I mean, it's just a given that humans change consciousness.
It's one of the things we do.
Children do it when they get dizzy.
We're just not satisfied with everyday normal consciousness
for whatever reason.
We have caffeine.
We don't even think about that as a drug,
but it's a very powerful drug.
It happens to be a drug that makes us fit
even more smoothly into the machinery
of the capitalist order.
It makes us very good workers,
and that's why their coffee breaks, right?
I mean, think about it.
Your employer gives you free drugs
and time to use them in.
Twice a day.
Oh, that's amazing.
So, and then there's alcohol,
which kind of numbs people to a miserable life,
although they can get into trouble with it.
And there's cigarettes that actually help help make people better workers in
various ways. And then there are drugs that disrupt the whole system. And
psychedelics in the Western context in the 60s were definitely that. There's a
famous quote from President Nixon that his domestic policy advisor John
Ehrlichman gave to a journalist. But basically Ehrlichman said, yeah, the drug war,
which Nixon starts in 1970,
that wasn't about public health.
That was all about politics.
Nixon's great enemies were hippies and black people.
And by making LSD illegal,
he could disrupt the hippie community.
And by making marijuana illegal, he could disrupt the hippie community.
And by making marijuana illegal,
he could disrupt the black community.
So we have to understand that which drugs are illegal,
which ones are not, is always changing.
And it depends on the nature of the drug,
but also the nature of the society.
What's happening with psychedelics now
is it's undergoing a transformation itself from
being this very disruptive force to potentially being something that could help people deal
with various mental health issues.
That's the story that hasn't been completely written yet, whether our society can make
peace with these incredibly powerful and disruptive molecules.
And the jury is still out. Yeah, I don't think, I mean, I'm biased,
but I'm biased because of the writing,
the people I've met, the research.
I don't think it does, you know, to what Michael just said,
it may interrupt people's yearning to be part of a system
that has failed so many, yes.
Yeah, I agree.
I can agree with that.
But look at what it's done to the world.
Do you know what I mean?
Like we're bombing other countries because we want the black goo that's underneath them
and then we'll bomb another country because we want that thing or we feel like we need
that.
And all of that yearning, I don't mind if some of that goes down.
Because I think people will have a different kind of yearning and I think that'll broaden us out again as people. Do
you get what I'm saying?
Yeah, no, I completely feel you. I know that a lot of my objection is on one hand indoctrination
and then it's just like being a mother is fear.
Of course, no, yeah, that I understand.
It's just like this loosening or this loss of yearning or happening all that terrifies.
I couldn't even live through 2020.
That was like, we just had to be in our rooms and black people were like, we want a few
more rights.
And I was like, what's going on here?
Like, it was just like, it was any sort of upheaval, I guess it's the British in me,
we never really had a revolution.
And it's just like, it's just like come from societies are all about order and hierarchy and there's
a king and there's a queen and if you're Nigerian you have a chief.
And so there's a lot of fear on the other side of it and the ego, even if not something
that I should, because I think that even though I'm like, this isn't for me, there could be
someone else in my life that's like, I could say, you know what, you should try microdizing.
This could help you.
Well, exactly. Or, I mean, even if I never wanted to use these substances again, I think I'd want to
live in a world where other people were.
I like that.
Some other people.
Yeah.
Because, you know, what we're doing is, I mean, there's, we haven't talked about creativity
and, you know, some people get great ideas on psychedelics.
They're cultural mutagens, right?
They're like mutations.
I mean, the Beatles.
We don't have the Beatles without psychedelics.
Ringo Starr was the worst drummer
to probably ever live.
Hot take.
So I think we're doing okay.
Hot take.
Terrible at keeping time.
Shots fired.
But anyway.
Sorry, yes, Michael.
Or Steve Jobs, right? Yeah.
Who credited his creative vision to LSD.
I mean, I think that you wanna have a lot of different
kinds of people in your world, in your culture,
and some of them are exploring frontiers of knowledge
or frontiers of the self and interiority, and some are not.
And it's not for everybody.
But I think that it's on balance a good thing they exist and the fact that people can achieve these states of consciousness, which may benefit all of us.
I love that. Michael, thank you. Thank you for joining us. You know me. I could talk to you for hours and hours about this. Because I do believe, not that this is the solve
for everything, but rather that there are many people who are stuck in their lives. And when you
can start to unlock that in people, you just change how people's, when you change how you see
the world, you change how you be in that world. And I don't know.
And the fact that you have a way of seeing the world, we're not even aware of.
We're not aware of this windshield of consciousness, right?
Yeah.
And what psychedelics do is they kind of smudge the windshield and you're always,
oh shit, there's a windshield there.
Yeah.
In fact, I would say-
Why is it that way?
And could it be another way?
I would argue world leaders should be doing psychedelics.
Like you see the UN, one day at the UN, everybody should have be doing psychedelics.
Like you see the UN, one day at the UN, everybody should have to take psychedelics and they
should all get guided and then you can start, you can only start negotiating about how the
world should be when you are fully able to see the world through multiple lenses.
That's what I believe.
So Michael, I'm going to try pitch, I'm going to pitch that and you, you're going to come
in and let's do it. We're going to try pitch, I'm going to pitch that and you, you're going to come in and- You and General Assembly.
Let's do it. We're going to do it like the communion. We're just going to spike all the
water that's in front of them. And then we start guiding them from the front. Michael Parlin,
thank you so much. Thank you so much again for joining us.
Thank you, Michael.
Thank you guys. And thank you, Christiana, for adding some hybrid vigor to the conversation.
I love it. I love it. I call it hating,
but you call it hybrid vigor. That's going to be the new term we use. Hybrid vigor. She's
a hybrid vigor. I love it. I'm going to put that in my Instagram bio. I love that. Thank
you so much, Michael. All right. You guys take care. Okay. So okay so let me let me ask you this. So first of all if
we were at a hundred percent no. For me personally or for society? No for you
personally. Oh yeah. Oh okay we can do both you had a hundred percent no for both. Okay.
Okay so let's go let's go with society. Where are you now? For my society, I'm at like 50%.
No, because I think-
That's a good jump though.
I think most people should not be anywhere near this shit.
This is fine.
I'm willing to take 50%.
But like when you're telling like end of life care, veterans, you know, people need relief.
People need healing.
And however you find the healing in a way that's not harmful, I don't want to be in the way of that.
But for everyone else, you need to figure it out.
I beg. Figure it out. Grow up.
Everyone's traumatized.
And for you personally?
For me personally, got me down to maybe 100% no to like 95% no.
Because I don't want to augment my reality.
So there's nothing in your life where you go like,
I'm stuck and I haven't been able to unstuck this. Oh, my whole family situation is crazy. I can't want to augment my reality. So there's nothing in your life where you go like, I'm stuck and I haven't been able to unstuck this.
Oh, my whole family situation is crazy.
I can't fix them.
No, but I'm-
I can't fix my extended family, but like-
No, but I'm saying what about you in there?
I agree there are like blocks and stories
that we tell ourselves.
I feel like someone that I encountered the divine
and I have like a sense of wonder and nature, my children.
I don't have that yearning for it right now.
And that's why I wouldn't say you should do it.
I have things that do that for me.
But like, I can say, I see the benefits, but Michael's great, you're great.
You have changed my mind on-
I'll take it.
Five percent.
I have moved somebody who is extremely vigorous.
I'll take my five percent.
Hybrid vigor.
Hybrid vigor.
Hybrid vigor. extremely vigorous. I'll take my five percent. Hybrid vigour. Hybrid vigour.
What Now with Trevor Noah is produced by Spotify Studios in partnership with Day Zero Productions.
The show is executive produced by Trevor Noah, Sanaz Yamin and Jodie Avigan. Our senior producer is Jess Hackl, Claire Slaughter is our producer.
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Thank you so much for listening. Join me next Thursday for another episode of What Now? Thanks for watching!