Program Notes
Support Lorenzo on Patreon.com
https://www.patreon.com/lorenzohagerty
Guest speaker: Rick Doblin
https://www.fromshocktoawe.com/Date this lecture was recorded: August 31, 2018.]
Today we continue with the second part of the 2018 Palenque Norte Lecture given by Rick Doblin, the president of the Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies. In addition to learning some new information about the current state of MDMA research, Rick ends the Q&A session with some information about mescaline that I’d never heard before. As he says, “Mescaline is the most important psychedelic that isn’t being researched.” Also, there is an announcement about a screening of the film “From Shock To Awe” that was discussed here in the salon three years ago when the producers were first raising the funding for the project. It has now been completed and will be screened in select theaters on November 12, 2018. Full details are at the beginning of today’s program.
[NOTE: The following quotations are by Rick Doblin.]
“We got an agreement letter on July 28th, and what it means is that the FDA is legally bound to approve MDMA if we get statistically significant evidence of efficacy from this design and no new safety problems come up.”
“Mescaline is the most important psychedelic that isn’t being researched.”
Download a free copy of Lorenzo’s latest book
The Chronicles of Lorenzo - Volume 1
Previous Episode
587 - Good News on the Psychedelic Front – Pt. 1
Next Episode
Similar Episodes
- 550 - FDA Approved Phase 3 MDMA_PTSD Research - score: 0.88605
- 487 - Mainstreaming Psychedelics - score: 0.88361
- 402 - Global Psychedelic Research Update - score: 0.87900
- 587 - Good News on the Psychedelic Front – Pt. 1 - score: 0.84959
- 466 - This Is An Incredible Moment - score: 0.84755
- 086 - MDMA for Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder - score: 0.82013
- 013 - Cancer Anxiety Study Tests Psilocybin - score: 0.81233
- 005 - Psychedelics_ Therapy, Recreation & Politics - score: 0.81100
- 471 - Healing For PTSD Is Available - score: 0.80979
- 039 - Mind States Sound Bites and Lorenzo in Venice Beach - score: 0.80607
Transcript
00:00:00 ►
Greetings from Cyberdelic Space, this is Lorenzo and I’m your host here in the Psychedelic
00:00:22 ►
Salon.
00:00:23 ►
And a big thank you goes out to my eight
00:00:26 ►
new supporters via Patreon. As you know by now, next week I officially begin what I’m calling the
00:00:33 ►
Psychedelic Salon 3.0 track. Basically it’s a continuation of this 1.0 track that we’re listening
00:00:39 ►
to right now. However, through Patreon my supporters are going to get a private RSS feed, and that’s
00:00:46 ►
the new 3.0 feed. So from now on, after today’s podcast, all of my new Salon One podcasts,
00:00:54 ►
plus things like selected Terrence McInnes soundbites and readings from me by my books,
00:01:00 ►
well, all of that’s going to first appear on the Patreon RSS feed. Then, three months after a new 1.0 podcast appears on the Patreon feed,
00:01:09 ►
I’ll rebroadcast it here.
00:01:11 ►
So, over time, you’ll still be able to hear everything that I publish from the salon.
00:01:15 ►
It’s just that my supporters on Patreon are going to get to hear them
00:01:19 ►
a few months before everybody else.
00:01:21 ►
As they used to say in Texas,
00:01:23 ►
you ought to dance with the one who brung
00:01:25 ►
you. Now, as much as I’ve tried to avoid doing this, my personal financial situation has, well,
00:01:33 ►
it’s been leaning toward the dire side. And so I’m trying to see if this is a way I can get my
00:01:39 ►
head back above water. So for only $1 a month, you can not only get access to the first run of many of my
00:01:46 ►
podcasts, you’re also invited to join other salonners and me for a live one and a half hour
00:01:52 ►
version of the psychedelic salon every Monday night. And we’ve been doing this all year long
00:01:58 ►
now and it’s developed into a nice little Monday night salon. And this is a true salon, you know,
00:02:04 ►
where everybody who wants to gets a chance
00:02:06 ►
to chime in. And there are other reward tiers. However, I’m planning on eventually only having
00:02:12 ►
5 reward levels. So when one of my larger dollar supporters has to reduce their monthly
00:02:18 ►
donation, I keep reducing the number for that level. But the other day, one of my eight $25 a month patrons
00:02:27 ►
reduced their monthly donation, and I planned on reducing the number for that group to seven.
00:02:32 ►
But I wasn’t fast enough, and before I could reduce the number of slots available at that level,
00:02:38 ►
David A. snuck in and filled it up again. So thanks a lot, David. You’re a real gem.
00:02:44 ►
Now, before we begin today,
00:02:46 ►
I have an announcement that I think you’ll be interested in. It comes from Janine Saget,
00:02:51 ►
who we heard from in podcast 471, which is titled Healing for PTSD is available. And in that episode,
00:02:59 ►
we learned about the Indiegogo campaign that Janine and others had organized to raise funds for the
00:03:05 ►
production of a motion picture that’s titled From Shock to Awe. Well, I am very pleased to let you
00:03:11 ►
know that not only was their financial campaign successful, they have now completed production
00:03:16 ►
of their film and it will be screened in select theaters in just two weeks. As we’re all well
00:03:23 ►
aware here in the salon, psychedelic therapy, which we’ll be
00:03:26 ►
hearing more about from Rick Doblin in just a moment, has finally returned to mainstream medicine
00:03:32 ►
where it was back, well, way back. And when it comes to treating PTSD, well, there’s actually
00:03:39 ►
more than one path available. And while MAPS’s MDMA studies continue to move us closer to proven therapies to treat
00:03:47 ►
post-traumatic stress disorder, there’s also another way that many of us vets have taken,
00:03:52 ►
and that’s through the use of ayahuasca. In the film, From Shock to Awe, you’ll hear women like
00:03:58 ►
Brooke Cooley who says, and I quote, ayahuasca and MDMA saved me, my husband, and my family.
00:04:06 ►
Had psychedelic therapy not come into our lives,
00:04:09 ►
not only would Mike and I be divorced,
00:04:11 ►
but there is a solid chance that one or both of us wouldn’t be alive.
00:04:16 ►
End quote.
00:04:17 ►
From Shock to Awe actually strikes a balance with a taboo topic
00:04:21 ►
that could have tremendous impact on society.
00:04:24 ►
The documentary premieres on November 12, 2018, all across the U.S.,
00:04:30 ►
but with a special one-night event, Coming Home Beyond Veterans Day.
00:04:35 ►
The event includes theatrical screenings in over 25 U.S. cities,
00:04:39 ►
followed by a live Q&A with the cast and filmmakers.
00:04:43 ►
Additionally, the film’s release launches a
00:04:45 ►
social impact campaign aimed at empowering people with information that opens a dialogue about
00:04:51 ►
trauma and supporting scientific research and saving lives. Janine tells me that all 25 of
00:04:57 ►
these venues are theater on demand, which means that we need to reach a minimum number of tickets
00:05:03 ►
sold in each location.
00:05:07 ►
So we have a big job in getting the message out.
00:05:10 ►
I hope that you can help us spread the word, actually.
00:05:12 ►
And, you know, this is an important movie,
00:05:15 ►
one that can change the lives of some of the people who see it.
00:05:19 ►
So if there’s any way for you to make one of these showings, I think that you’ll also find there are many of the others there as well.
00:05:23 ►
And you can get all of the information you need on their website, which is an easy-to-remember URL.
00:05:28 ►
It’s simply fromshocktoaw.com, all in one word.
00:05:33 ►
And there you can watch a trailer as well as find the location of a screening nearest to you.
00:05:38 ►
And maybe in a month or so, we can get Shauna home to do another interview with the people behind this important project.
00:05:44 ►
so we can get Shauna home to do another interview with the people behind this important project.
00:05:51 ►
Now, for today’s program, which also deals with ways in which the suffering from PTSD can be reduced,
00:05:54 ►
and in some cases even eliminated altogether,
00:05:58 ►
well, I’m going to play the rest of the talk that we began last week.
00:06:06 ►
If you’ve listened to the previous podcasts, before that one, the ones number 585 and 586, and while you’re listening to them, you wondered how or if any of the what they were saying affected the MAPS organization,
00:06:12 ►
then I strongly recommend that you listen to this, the second half of Rick Goblin’s 2018
00:06:18 ►
Palenque Norte lecture. In particular, I hope that you pay close attention when Rick is addressing
00:06:24 ►
some of the ethical issues that have, well, they’ve arisen as MAPS pushes the envelope of MDMA therapy even further ahead.
00:06:32 ►
And while you may still have some questions after listening to Rick right now, I want you to know that I am firmly in support of his positions.
00:06:40 ►
He’s had to deal with some very tricky issues, and as a lawyer myself, I’m well aware of the fact that we don’t always get exactly everything we want.
00:06:50 ►
However, in the case of where we are today, with the research that MAPS and Rick are behind, well, I believe that Rick has navigated our psychedelic voyage of discovery exceedingly well.
00:07:03 ►
well. So now let’s return to the playa at Burning Man on a hot Friday night, the night before the burn in fact, and
00:07:07 ►
listen to the last of the 2018 Palenque Norte lectures.
00:07:11 ►
Now, here is Rick Doblin.
00:07:15 ►
What happened to change how I describe it is two different things that changed.
00:07:20 ►
One is that in December there was a
00:07:23 ►
two paragraph little announcement in Reddit that a new fund was being created called the Pineapple Fund.
00:07:31 ►
How many of you have heard of the Pineapple Fund?
00:07:34 ►
Okay, I’d say a small fraction of you.
00:07:37 ►
So it turns out that what this announcement was, this was an announcement that an early Bitcoin investor had all these
00:07:48 ►
Bitcoins, and he of course wanted to remain anonymous, and so he announced in December
00:07:53 ►
that he was going to give away 5,600 Bitcoins, which at the time were worth $88 million.
00:08:02 ►
And I didn’t know anything about this, but several people saw it.
00:08:07 ►
I emailed MAPS staff, and one of the MAPS staff wrote a one-page grant application,
00:08:12 ►
sent it to Pine at the Pineapple Fund,
00:08:15 ►
and the next day we get an email that says, I’m giving you a million dollars.
00:08:20 ►
And then two hours later, the Bitcoin showed up in our wallet.
00:08:28 ►
homes. And then two hours later, the Bitcoin showed up in our wall. And then four days later, we got another million dollars in Bitcoins from who we have no idea who it was from.
00:08:35 ►
And then we get this email from Pine saying, I’d be open to talking to you about a matching
00:08:41 ►
grant. And we’re like, great, okay, that sounds really, really good.
00:08:45 ►
And so we talked a lot about it, but in the process I got to get to know him a little
00:08:50 ►
bit better through emails and trying to find out what motivated him.
00:08:54 ►
And what he said was that he had borderline personality disorder and he had depression
00:08:59 ►
and he decided to go for therapy.
00:09:02 ►
And he wasn’t sure what therapy to go for and he decided to go for therapy. And he wasn’t sure what therapy to go for, and he decided to go for ketamine therapy.
00:09:07 ►
So ketamine is considered the most important discovery
00:09:11 ►
in neuroscience for depression in the last 30 years.
00:09:14 ►
And there’s now 1,000 ketamine clinics in America
00:09:17 ►
for refractory depression.
00:09:19 ►
It’s being seen mostly just as a pharmacological drug
00:09:22 ►
without therapy.
00:09:23 ►
They just give ketamine.
00:09:25 ►
It tends to help people for short periods of time.
00:09:28 ►
They need repeated doses. Occasionally
00:09:30 ►
it’ll help people permanently.
00:09:31 ►
But he went for ketamine therapy.
00:09:33 ►
And under the influence of ketamine, he had
00:09:35 ►
a vision. And this vision
00:09:38 ►
was that there was a simple
00:09:40 ►
way for him to get out of
00:09:41 ►
depression and get out of borderline
00:09:44 ►
personality. And the simple way for him to get out of depression and get out of borderline personality. And the simple
00:09:45 ►
way for him to get out of that was to help other people. And if you’ve ever tried this
00:09:52 ►
when you’re depressed, to help other people is really a tremendous way to get out of being
00:09:57 ►
wrapped up in your own mind. So he decided that the best way he could help other people
00:10:01 ►
was to give away more than half of his wealth in
00:10:05 ►
bitcoins. And so
00:10:07 ►
then he proposed that he would
00:10:09 ►
give us a $4 million matching
00:10:11 ►
grant. And we negotiated
00:10:14 ►
what would the match be, how do we work
00:10:16 ►
that out, and we had from January
00:10:18 ►
10th to March 10th to
00:10:20 ►
raise this
00:10:20 ►
$4 million. And we managed to
00:10:23 ►
do it with a week to spare. And so he sent us $4 million. And we managed to do it with a week to spare.
00:10:25 ►
And so he sent us $4 million more Bitcoins.
00:10:32 ►
This was also at the peak of the Bitcoin,
00:10:34 ►
so the price was going down,
00:10:36 ►
so he would be sending us more and more Bitcoins.
00:10:39 ►
And so in the end,
00:10:41 ►
he gave away $55 million
00:10:44 ►
within two and a half months. And the Pineapple Fund is now gone. the end, he gave away $55 million within
00:10:45 ►
two and a half months.
00:10:47 ►
And the Pineapple Fund is now gone.
00:10:50 ►
There’s a legacy of where
00:10:51 ►
he gave all the money to.
00:10:53 ►
That inspired other people, as I mentioned,
00:10:56 ►
from the cryptocurrency community. So now
00:10:57 ►
what I say, well, I’ll say
00:10:59 ►
one other thing. So one other person
00:11:01 ►
formed
00:11:03 ►
the support that we need for phase three.
00:11:08 ►
And that was someone from the right wing.
00:11:11 ►
And that was a woman named Rebecca Mercer.
00:11:13 ►
And so for those of you who have studied the election,
00:11:17 ►
there’s a lot of concern about a company called Cambridge Analytica
00:11:20 ►
that sort of scraped all this data off of Facebook
00:11:23 ►
and then used it to target ads, maybe even telling some of the Russians
00:11:28 ►
how to target certain places. They were the main funders
00:11:32 ►
of Trump and Steve Bannon. So the Mercers are
00:11:36 ►
responsible more than anybody else for Trump being elected. And Rebecca
00:11:40 ►
Mercer, it turned out, started feeling like
00:11:44 ►
she doesn’t actually agree with everything Trump does.
00:11:47 ►
Thank goodness.
00:11:50 ►
And we had a conversation.
00:11:52 ►
I was introduced to her by a human rights activist.
00:11:56 ►
And during this conversation, it was about her interest in helping veterans
00:12:01 ►
and her interest in showing that she wasn’t such a horrible person.
00:12:05 ►
And so we had this discussion, and then she said that she would be open to the talk of a million-dollar donation,
00:12:13 ►
a quarter million a year for four years, but that just talking to me wasn’t enough.
00:12:17 ►
She had to talk to some senior people in the military.
00:12:21 ►
And it turned out in 2010, after we published our first study with MDMA,
00:12:26 ►
mostly in women, but a few
00:12:28 ►
veterans, that I was
00:12:30 ►
contacted out of the blue,
00:12:32 ►
actually up in the blue, I was contacted by a
00:12:34 ►
brigadier general
00:12:35 ►
flying in a military plane,
00:12:38 ►
calling me from the plane, and saying
00:12:40 ►
I just read your paper
00:12:42 ►
about MDMA for PTSD,
00:12:44 ►
what’s going on here?
00:12:45 ►
And this was a woman, Lori Sutton,
00:12:47 ►
who was the highest-ranking psychiatrist in the military.
00:12:51 ►
She started the Defense Center for Excellence
00:12:53 ►
at the Department of Defense in Psychological Health
00:12:55 ►
and Traumatic Brain Injury,
00:12:57 ►
and she’s become an ally over the years.
00:13:00 ►
Now, I’m a draft resistor.
00:13:02 ►
I was planning to go to jail instead of going to Vietnam
00:13:05 ►
and so all these connections with the military
00:13:08 ►
are kind of astonishing for me
00:13:10 ►
and very healing
00:13:12 ►
I never was a conscient subjector because I didn’t feel
00:13:16 ►
passivism was the way to go
00:13:17 ►
but this connection with Lori Sutton
00:13:21 ►
who really cares compassionately about PTSD
00:13:24 ►
she’s now head of veterans affairs for the city of New York This connection with Lori Sutton, who really cares compassionately about PTSD,
00:13:29 ►
she’s now head of Veterans Affairs for the city of New York.
00:13:35 ►
And so Rebecca said, who could I talk to that would be sort of from the establishment world?
00:13:37 ►
And I said, Lori Sutton.
00:13:40 ►
And so we had this three-way conversation.
00:13:43 ►
It took about ten minutes, and afterwards, Rex said, okay, I’m in for a million.
00:13:55 ►
So now what I say is that we are bringing MDMA to the world as a gift from the psychedelic, burner, cryptocurrency, and right-wing communities.
00:14:08 ►
So we are now at this place where we are trying to globalize MDMA.
00:14:14 ►
We’ve been having a series of discussions with the European Medicines Agency. We just had a meeting in person in London June 10th.
00:14:17 ►
And about three weeks after that, we got the results.
00:14:20 ►
This process started actually in January.
00:14:22 ►
So we have a long process with the European Medicines Agency.
00:14:27 ►
And in the end, what they said is that they will accept the FDA data
00:14:32 ►
and that they just want one study done in Europe
00:14:36 ►
and that they’re very interested in having geographical distribution throughout Europe,
00:14:40 ►
but they especially want us to work with refugees and migrants with PTSD. Because
00:14:45 ►
they see that’s one of the things that’s tearing
00:14:47 ►
Europe apart. And so they’re
00:14:49 ►
saying to us, see if maybe MDMA
00:14:52 ►
can be part of a solution to that.
00:14:54 ►
Now, it’s difficult
00:14:56 ►
for us to work with people that are
00:14:57 ►
in a situation where they’re being constantly
00:14:59 ►
re-traumatized.
00:15:01 ►
Because that’s not going to, they’re just,
00:15:04 ►
it’s not going to work if people are not
00:15:05 ►
fundamentally safe.
00:15:07 ►
So we have to wait for refugees to have been
00:15:10 ►
assimilated
00:15:12 ►
a little bit, and we’re likely
00:15:13 ►
to get a bunch of refugees from Germany,
00:15:16 ►
from Portugal, from elsewhere.
00:15:18 ►
So it’s roughly $9 million
00:15:19 ►
we think to make MDMA
00:15:21 ►
a medicine in
00:15:23 ►
Europe, and we’ve raised $400,000.
00:15:25 ►
So we’re looking for $8.6 million,
00:15:28 ►
and that’s what we hope to raise
00:15:30 ►
within the next four to six months.
00:15:32 ►
I mean, it’s very ambitious.
00:15:33 ►
I don’t know where it’s going to come from,
00:15:35 ►
but there’s a bunch of people here at Burning Man
00:15:38 ►
that write a check for that.
00:15:40 ►
So we’re trying to ask them.
00:15:42 ►
But we’re trying to do this all in a non-profit context.
00:15:47 ►
And what we’ve done is, with the FDA,
00:15:51 ►
we have done a similar kind of a discussion
00:15:53 ►
to move to Phase 3 that we’ve just done with EMA,
00:15:57 ►
and it’s called Special Protocol Assessment.
00:15:59 ►
And what that means is you negotiate
00:16:01 ►
every aspect of your Phase 3 design
00:16:03 ►
and all the other information that they’re going to want
00:16:06 ►
and if you come to agreement, you get an agreement
00:16:08 ►
letter, which we got on July
00:16:09 ►
28th, and what that means is
00:16:11 ►
the FDA is legally bound
00:16:13 ►
to approve MDMA
00:16:15 ►
if we get statistically significant evidence
00:16:18 ►
of efficacy from this design
00:16:19 ►
and no new safety problems come up.
00:16:22 ►
And since MDMA has been
00:16:23 ►
taken by tens of millions of people
00:16:26 ►
in hundreds of millions of doses for decades,
00:16:29 ►
we have a very clear idea of the safety profile of MDMA.
00:16:34 ►
And in fact, people have mostly taken MDMA
00:16:37 ►
in riskier circumstances than in their therapeutic setting,
00:16:40 ►
mixed with other drugs, MDMA with alcohol, MDMA with cocaine,
00:16:43 ►
MDMA with who knows what else, and two days in a row
00:16:48 ►
or three days in a row. So we have a very clear idea of the
00:16:52 ►
safety protocol. And so we have this special protocol assessment. So no matter
00:16:56 ►
what Trump and Sessions want to do, if we get
00:17:00 ►
and they’re not going to want to go after veterans anyway.
00:17:08 ►
Most people that have PTSD are not veterans. Most of them are women from sexual abuse or people in abusive childhoods
00:17:12 ►
or accidents, different ways. We’re focusing on the veterans,
00:17:16 ►
but we’re going to enroll more people who are not veterans in Phase 3
00:17:19 ►
than veterans, but the veterans have sort of been away politically to kind of
00:17:24 ►
change people’s minds. And so recently, I mean in the last panel
00:17:28 ►
George Greer talked about one of the things he was most surprised about
00:17:32 ►
and it was the coverage that we’ve got on Fox News.
00:17:35 ►
So we’ve got incredibly good coverage on Fox News. And there’s one in particular
00:17:40 ►
on May 12th, May 2nd is when we published our paper about
00:17:44 ►
the results from
00:17:45 ►
the Veterans,
00:17:48 ►
Firefighters, and Police Officers study.
00:17:50 ►
And we gave an exclusive to the New York
00:17:52 ►
Times. And in the New York Times, they had
00:17:54 ►
one sentence about how we had a million dollars
00:17:56 ►
from Rebecca Mercer.
00:17:58 ►
Now, they also are major
00:18:00 ►
investors in Breitbart
00:18:01 ►
as well.
00:18:03 ►
So, Breitbart and Cambridge Analytica and all this. So, the Mercers and Breitbart as well. Breitbart and Cambridge Analytica
00:18:06 ►
and all this. So the Mercers and Breitbart
00:18:08 ►
they’re super connected. They’re not the
00:18:10 ►
majority stockholders they like
00:18:12 ►
to say, just a minority, but
00:18:14 ►
connected to Breitbart, super connected to Fox
00:18:16 ►
News. And so the fact that
00:18:18 ►
the New York Times had this one sentence
00:18:20 ►
about Rebecca Mercer
00:18:22 ►
donating sort of gave the Fox
00:18:24 ►
News people the sense
00:18:26 ►
that they could report on this
00:18:28 ►
in a positive way. So the very
00:18:30 ►
next day, there was
00:18:32 ►
this six minute segment by
00:18:33 ►
Greg Gutfeld. There’s a group called
00:18:36 ►
The Five. Jesse Waters are the
00:18:38 ►
two main hosts.
00:18:40 ►
The woman who’s now the
00:18:42 ►
girlfriend of Donald
00:18:44 ►
Trump Jr. was on that panel,
00:18:47 ►
and they’re all talking about how MDMA should be made into a medicine,
00:18:52 ►
and they’re talking about how the strategy of working with veterans is a terrific strategy,
00:18:57 ►
and they’re joking about how if we’d worked with IT workers, nobody would care,
00:19:03 ►
but veterans, they care, and they talked about, they sort of tried to remember who I was, and then it went to
00:19:10 ►
this discussion with the whole group. So it’s, if you do Greg Gutfeld, the five, MDMA,
00:19:16 ►
PTSD, you’ll get to this segment. It’s absolutely astonishing, because then they
00:19:20 ►
started endorsing psilocybin for depression, ketamine for depression, marijuana for anything medical.
00:19:27 ►
So we have this total support from Fox News about what we’re doing.
00:19:33 ►
And we also have all of the military websites, Stars and Stripes,
00:19:37 ►
all the military websites and newsletters are all sympathetic.
00:19:42 ►
So we have managed to build bipartisan support.
00:19:42 ►
and newsletters are all sympathetic.
00:19:44 ►
So we have managed to build bipartisan support.
00:19:50 ►
So now what I want to do is sort of talk a little bit about some ethical issues,
00:19:53 ►
and then we’ll open it up for discussion.
00:19:58 ►
So one of these ethical issues has to do with working with the military.
00:20:03 ►
So one of the psychiatrists that we work with in Europe is from Germany,
00:20:06 ►
and a lot of people in Europe see our military
00:20:07 ►
as a very aggressive force.
00:20:10 ►
And it has been
00:20:12 ►
that in a lot of different ways.
00:20:13 ►
So this fellow was saying,
00:20:15 ►
would you give
00:20:18 ►
MDMA to concentration camp guards?
00:20:21 ►
You know, are you
00:20:22 ►
taking people who are
00:20:23 ►
uncomfortable from traumatizing people
00:20:27 ►
from having killed innocent people or been part of this war
00:20:30 ►
and then patching them up and then they go back to war
00:20:33 ►
is that what you’re doing
00:20:35 ►
and is that ethical
00:20:37 ►
so first off I’ll say
00:20:40 ►
I’ll be also in the questions curious what you all think about this
00:20:43 ►
but first off I’ll say, and then I’ll be also in the questions curious what you all think about this, but first off I’ll say that
00:20:45 ►
this criticism or
00:20:47 ►
potential criticism is due for every
00:20:49 ►
single medical advance.
00:20:51 ►
Everything that you want to do to help people
00:20:53 ►
survive, to help them
00:20:55 ►
be able
00:20:57 ►
to be healthy, sometimes
00:20:59 ►
we can help people go back to the battlefield.
00:21:02 ►
Is that a bad thing?
00:21:04 ►
Or what I feel actually and what I see from these veterans,
00:21:08 ►
first off, it’s not active duty soldiers,
00:21:10 ►
so we don’t have that exact question.
00:21:13 ►
But secondly, we see that MDMA reverses
00:21:18 ►
some of the training they got in the military.
00:21:21 ►
And I just heard a story yesterday from one of the vets that was in our study.
00:21:24 ►
I didn’t hear it from him. I heard it from a therapist
00:21:26 ►
about how he felt that
00:21:27 ►
the military training actually
00:21:30 ►
changed his brain.
00:21:32 ►
And so here, this is the year I robot.
00:21:34 ►
And so he felt that the military
00:21:36 ►
training made them into robots
00:21:38 ►
and changed their brains
00:21:40 ►
and changed the way they operated to their
00:21:42 ►
emotions. And that the MDMA
00:21:44 ►
was deprogramming the military programming
00:21:47 ►
to making them sensitive to the emotional consequences of what they did.
00:21:53 ►
And so I don’t think that we’re making people heartless killers
00:21:58 ►
because then they go, it’s like getting,
00:22:02 ►
you go to confession and now it’s okay
00:22:03 ►
and now you can go back and do whatever you want.
00:22:05 ►
It’s not actually like that.
00:22:07 ►
And I also think that we have an obligation both to victims and to perpetrators
00:22:13 ►
to try to heal everybody.
00:22:15 ►
And I think that’s more of a delicate and a difficult situation,
00:22:19 ►
but I think that we need to look at those people that are perpetrators
00:22:25 ►
are in many cases victims themselves at an earlier stage of their lives.
00:22:30 ►
And that we need to recognize that.
00:22:38 ►
I was, you know,
00:22:40 ►
one of the Israeli psychiatrists that we worked with at one point said,
00:22:46 ►
I understand MDMA, he’d never done it himself,
00:22:49 ►
it only works for victims, not for perpetrators.
00:22:52 ►
And that’s where I realized that our training program wasn’t really working well,
00:22:55 ►
and that it really is for everybody.
00:22:57 ►
So I think this idea of working with the military,
00:23:02 ►
ethically I feel that it’s a good thing to do. And similarly, working with police, or working with other military. Ethically, I feel that it’s a good thing to do.
00:23:05 ►
And similarly, working with police
00:23:07 ►
or working with other kind of first responders
00:23:09 ►
or working with prison guards
00:23:11 ►
or working with people who have sexually abused others.
00:23:16 ►
To the extent they’re willing to enter into our studies,
00:23:19 ►
I think that we should work with both victims and perpetrators.
00:23:22 ►
So that’s one ethical issue.
00:23:25 ►
One of the other ones that we’ve gotten a lot of criticism for
00:23:29 ►
is accepting this donation from Rebecca Mercer.
00:23:32 ►
So for me, it was one of the most important things that we were able to do.
00:23:37 ►
And building bipartisan support is one of the crucial issues
00:23:41 ►
as we move forward to try to move beyond research to make these into medicines.
00:23:48 ►
And so people have said that you’re trying to make her look good, and she should look bad.
00:23:52 ►
And she does all these bad things.
00:23:54 ►
Why?
00:23:54 ►
And then everything is tainted.
00:23:57 ►
So there’s a whole thing in philanthropy that’s called toxic donors.
00:24:00 ►
And do you work with them or not?
00:24:03 ►
Some of the people that have ripped off people in the stock market,
00:24:09 ►
then do you take their money or different things like that?
00:24:12 ►
So I feel like it’s very important for us to build these bipartisan bridges.
00:24:18 ►
And so I think taking the money from Rebecca Mercer was not only helpful for us,
00:24:25 ►
but people don’t recognize that it’s a two-way conversation,
00:24:29 ►
that maybe she will learn something from our work,
00:24:31 ►
and maybe that will change some of her ideas.
00:24:34 ►
People are worried that now we’re going to be controlled by Rebecca Mercer,
00:24:39 ►
and we’re going to be having to do things.
00:24:41 ►
But the only condition that she put on the money was that it go to veterans.
00:24:47 ►
There’s been other donors that have…
00:24:50 ►
The more pressure that I’ve actually received from donors
00:24:54 ►
has been from left-wing donors,
00:24:55 ►
who say, we’re starting to make MDMA to a medicine,
00:24:59 ►
but you’re talking about the need to legalize drugs.
00:25:02 ►
You’re talking about…
00:25:03 ►
So the fundamental point I’ll make here is that
00:25:05 ►
why I’m doing this, why I think
00:25:08 ►
it’s so important that we mainstream psychedelics
00:25:10 ►
is beyond medicine.
00:25:12 ►
It’s that we need to
00:25:14 ►
have millions and
00:25:16 ►
millions of people have a spiritual
00:25:17 ►
connection so that they can
00:25:19 ►
break through these us-them
00:25:21 ►
barriers and then they can
00:25:23 ►
have compassion for the other
00:25:25 ►
and see that we’re all connected.
00:25:27 ►
That’s the fundamental theory of change.
00:25:29 ►
I think we saw that a lot in the 60s,
00:25:31 ►
that people were motivated by psychedelics
00:25:33 ►
and were able then to participate in opposing the Vietnam War
00:25:37 ►
and working on the environmental movement,
00:25:39 ►
the women’s rights movement, civil rights movement.
00:25:42 ►
There is this connection, I think,
00:25:43 ►
between this mystical experience,
00:25:46 ►
the sense of spirituality, and political outcomes.
00:25:49 ►
And there’s
00:25:50 ►
actually been a study recently
00:25:51 ►
at the London College
00:25:53 ►
with Robin Carr Harris, and he’s
00:25:55 ►
actually demonstrated that there’s a correlation
00:25:57 ►
between mystical experience,
00:26:00 ►
nature-relatedness,
00:26:02 ►
progressive views, and
00:26:03 ►
anti-authoritarian views.
00:26:06 ►
Now, all of this is mediated by the context.
00:26:08 ►
So it’s not that you take the drug and you automatically have these things.
00:26:12 ►
You can take the drug and be worse off.
00:26:14 ►
But if you take the drug in a supportive therapeutic setting,
00:26:16 ►
you touch into some of these experiences,
00:26:19 ►
it has very strong, I think, political implications,
00:26:23 ►
and that’s why I’m doing it.
00:26:24 ►
And this, for me, was confirmed in 1983
00:26:27 ►
by the Assistant Secretary General of the UN, Robert Mueller.
00:26:31 ►
I talk about him a lot.
00:26:32 ►
He wrote this book called
00:26:33 ►
New Genesis, Shaping a Global Spirituality,
00:26:36 ►
which I read in 83.
00:26:37 ►
And his theory is that we have the United Nations
00:26:40 ►
to mediate conflicts between countries,
00:26:43 ►
but a lot of those conflicts are actually religious-based.
00:26:47 ►
And that what we
00:26:48 ►
need to do is help all these fundamentalists
00:26:50 ►
and all these different religions
00:26:51 ►
relax a little bit.
00:26:53 ►
And we need a bit of this global
00:26:56 ►
spirituality for them to realize that
00:26:58 ►
religions are like languages.
00:27:00 ►
We have all these different languages.
00:27:02 ►
They’re all about essentially
00:27:03 ►
communicating with each other.
00:27:05 ►
Each language has a different flavor, different words for things.
00:27:09 ►
But a full understanding, a mystical understanding of religion
00:27:12 ►
is that they’re all basically coming from the same place.
00:27:15 ►
We have different symbols, different cultural contexts,
00:27:18 ►
but we don’t need to be so rigid and fundamentalist about it.
00:27:22 ►
And so that was the thesis of this book.
00:27:25 ►
And so I was an undergraduate at the time.
00:27:27 ►
I wrote him a letter.
00:27:29 ►
I felt like I was a shipwrecked sailor on a deserted island.
00:27:34 ►
And I put a little note in a bottle,
00:27:36 ►
and I sent it off into the universe,
00:27:38 ►
and I sent it to him.
00:27:39 ►
And he actually wrote me back.
00:27:41 ►
And then he said, you know, I said,
00:27:43 ►
you didn’t say anything about psychedelics in your book.
00:27:46 ►
And I said, psychedelics,
00:27:48 ►
whether you consider them real or
00:27:50 ►
similar to, they’re a way to
00:27:52 ►
understand spirituality, and would you help
00:27:54 ►
us bring back psychedelic research?
00:27:56 ►
And he actually said, yes,
00:27:58 ►
he would help. And he believed
00:28:00 ►
in that theory of change, and then he
00:28:01 ►
referred me to a bunch of mystics in different
00:28:03 ►
religions, and reading he referred me to a bunch of mystics in different religions,
00:28:14 ►
and reading between the lines, I heard him say, send them all MDMA, which I then did.
00:28:21 ►
Then they would report back to him. Roman Catholic monks who took MDMA to monasteries,
00:28:28 ►
Zen Buddhists who took it in Zen meditation retreats, Jewish rabbis who took it and compared MDMA to the Sabbath.
00:28:32 ►
So anyway, that’s the theory of change,
00:28:35 ►
is that we need widespread mass mental health,
00:28:36 ►
global spirituality,
00:28:40 ►
and that when we think about Trump and we think about what if we gave MDMA to Trump,
00:28:43 ►
for example,
00:28:44 ►
I don’t think it would work and we think about what if we gave MDMA to Trump, for example.
00:28:52 ►
I don’t think it would work because you have to want to change.
00:28:59 ►
And our whole approach is to empower people to change themselves, to heal themselves.
00:29:01 ►
That’s the essence of this inner directed method,
00:29:05 ►
that we are helping people to marshal their own inner resources to heal themselves.
00:29:08 ►
And of the eight hour session,
00:29:10 ►
roughly four hours
00:29:11 ►
on average,
00:29:13 ►
more or less, people’s eyes
00:29:16 ►
are closed, they’re listening to music,
00:29:18 ►
and they’re having incredible
00:29:20 ►
poetic metaphors and imagery
00:29:22 ►
about their own inner
00:29:23 ►
conflicts.
00:29:26 ►
It’s astonishing how metaphorical people are
00:29:27 ►
in the way they tell themselves stories
00:29:30 ►
about what’s going on with their life.
00:29:32 ►
One of the veterans had this story
00:29:34 ►
of he was there for
00:29:36 ►
rage. He never hit his wife,
00:29:38 ►
but he threw stuff at her. He would fly
00:29:39 ►
off the handle all the time. And he had this idea
00:29:42 ►
of the warrior part of himself was locked
00:29:44 ►
in a cage inside of him, and
00:29:46 ►
actually had reached out with
00:29:48 ►
one arm with a knife and had stabbed him in the side.
00:29:50 ►
That he was in battle with
00:29:52 ►
this warrior part of himself that was
00:29:54 ►
uncontrollable, and he had to keep it under control.
00:29:56 ►
And under the influence of MDMA,
00:29:58 ►
he realized that that warrior self
00:30:00 ►
had kept him alive, that that was
00:30:02 ►
an ally, that was part of his patriotism,
00:30:04 ►
that that was something he had to make friends with. And they had this whole imagery of letting
00:30:09 ►
this wild animal out of the cage and becoming friends. So people are having these incredible
00:30:16 ►
metaphors of while they’re going through healing, but roughly four hours is speaking to the
00:30:21 ►
therapist, roughly four hours is having points where people heal themselves.
00:30:25 ►
And so this is this concept
00:30:27 ►
that if we were to give it to Trump,
00:30:29 ►
if he didn’t really want to deal with
00:30:31 ►
what was going on,
00:30:33 ►
he wouldn’t be healed. And I
00:30:35 ►
saw that in a sad way, I’ll say,
00:30:37 ►
with John Lilly. And so
00:30:39 ►
who knows who John
00:30:41 ►
Lilly is?
00:30:44 ►
He invented the flotation tank.
00:30:46 ►
And in the 50s and 60s,
00:30:48 ►
and he was the one that started about dolphin intelligence,
00:30:51 ►
and he was an early LSD researcher,
00:30:54 ►
paid for by the Navy.
00:30:55 ►
He actually did work with flotation tanks,
00:30:58 ►
doing LSD inside the flotation tank.
00:31:00 ►
And his book was called
00:31:01 ►
Programming and Metaprogramming of the Human Biocomputer.
00:31:05 ►
And when psychedelics got criminalized, sadly, he was so ahead of his time and impatient
00:31:10 ►
that he just retreated into ketamine addiction.
00:31:13 ►
And I had an opportunity to work with him later in his life with MDMA for a therapeutic purpose.
00:31:19 ►
And he sort of came into his body and saw all the abscesses that he had
00:31:22 ►
where he was injecting himself with ketamine,
00:31:24 ►
and it was so difficult for him that he didn’t really want to deal with it.
00:31:29 ►
And so he sort of withdrew again. So I learned from that that it’s not about just creating
00:31:35 ►
a safe space and giving people MDMA. They have to have the courage to change. And if
00:31:39 ►
they don’t want to do that, they won’t. And so it’s not about changing Trump, but what about
00:31:45 ►
the millions and millions of people who have given away their power to Trump, who have
00:31:49 ►
been motivated by fears and anxieties and have given away their power. So I think the
00:31:54 ►
ultimate solution for a more peaceful planet is going to be anchoring this sort of global
00:32:00 ►
spirituality in millions and billions of people so that they don’t give away. Because there
00:32:04 ►
will always be people who want to be dictators,
00:32:07 ►
who won’t want to change.
00:32:08 ►
We can never really end all that,
00:32:10 ►
but we can end, hopefully,
00:32:12 ►
this idea of people giving away their power
00:32:16 ►
by helping them process their own fears and anxieties.
00:32:19 ►
And that means going beyond medicine,
00:32:21 ►
going beyond religion to drug legalization
00:32:23 ►
and to a post-prohibition world.
00:32:32 ►
The Zendo here
00:32:34 ►
is about building a model
00:32:36 ►
for a post-prohibition world.
00:32:38 ►
So that here we have
00:32:39 ►
one of the main reasons
00:32:42 ►
for the backlash
00:32:44 ►
of the 60s
00:32:45 ►
was people getting involved with political change movements
00:32:50 ►
and the identification of LSD with counterculture.
00:32:54 ►
Nixon said that Leary was the most dangerous man in America.
00:32:58 ►
And so I think that was people having this mystical, spiritual sense
00:33:01 ►
and then realizing, why do I want to kill these Vietnamese?
00:33:05 ►
Why do I want to trash the environment?
00:33:07 ►
So I think it was psychedelics going right
00:33:10 ►
that caused this conflict with the society so rigid.
00:33:15 ►
Now, 50 years later,
00:33:16 ►
we’re in a much different position.
00:33:18 ►
The society has integrated
00:33:20 ►
much of the psychedelic vision of the 60s.
00:33:23 ►
So people at that time,
00:33:26 ►
you remember the Maharishi
00:33:28 ►
who came with meditation with TM.
00:33:31 ►
He was a strange, weird foreign import.
00:33:33 ►
And now they teach meditation to children in schools
00:33:37 ►
as part of mindfulness.
00:33:39 ►
So we’ve integrated that.
00:33:41 ►
Foreign religions, yoga was considered to be, it was going to convert
00:33:45 ►
people to a different kind of religion.
00:33:48 ►
Now every YMCAT
00:33:49 ►
has yoga classes.
00:33:51 ►
We didn’t really talk about death
00:33:53 ►
in the 60s. The first hospice
00:33:56 ►
was until 1974.
00:33:58 ►
And so now we have over
00:33:59 ►
6,000 hospices.
00:34:01 ►
Birth, women were tranquilized and men were not allowed
00:34:04 ►
in the delivery room for a lot of
00:34:06 ►
births. Now we have birthing centers. So we’ve changed
00:34:08 ►
our attitude towards birth, towards death,
00:34:10 ►
towards spirituality, towards
00:34:12 ►
the environment, and now
00:34:13 ►
the last thing from that is to integrate is
00:34:15 ►
the psychedelics. And so the
00:34:17 ►
main reason for a backlash now would
00:34:20 ►
be parents worried about their kids.
00:34:22 ►
Worried about their family members.
00:34:24 ►
And a lot of that will come from going to festivals and then taking psychedelics and
00:34:29 ►
not being prepared for the depth of the experience, and then coming off, going back home worse
00:34:34 ►
off.
00:34:35 ►
So in 2003, we started the Zendo Project, or we started, we didn’t call it the Zendo
00:34:39 ►
Project, but we started coming here to Burning Man to offer therapy.
00:34:43 ►
We brought therapists who were trained in psychedelics to help people with difficult trips.
00:34:47 ►
And that has evolved from 2003 to now,
00:34:50 ►
where we have over 300 volunteers that staff the Zendo 24-7.
00:34:55 ►
It’s on the Esplanade at 545 and E.
00:34:58 ►
It’s right out in the open.
00:34:59 ►
It’s in the greeter package.
00:35:01 ►
And last year, we had over 660 people came for support,
00:35:07 ►
sometimes while they were tripping,
00:35:08 ►
sometimes afterwards trying to integrate it.
00:35:11 ►
And so the Zendo project is really part of a model
00:35:14 ►
to demonstrate how do we move for a post-progression world.
00:35:18 ►
Because when adults are free to do these drugs
00:35:20 ►
without worry about the police,
00:35:23 ►
people will still get into trouble.
00:35:25 ►
And so we can provide these support systems. So anyway, I’ve been getting a fair amount of criticism
00:35:30 ►
from people for doing that, for talking about prohibition, but I think it actually makes
00:35:34 ►
it more likely we’ll be able to make it into a medicine than last night, because it takes
00:35:38 ►
away some of the fear of where we might go. So the other last sort of ethical issue,
00:35:46 ►
there’s two more.
00:35:48 ►
One is we’ve been getting criticism recently
00:35:51 ►
for there’s a for-profit and a non-profit group
00:35:55 ►
that’s developing psilocybin into a medicine.
00:35:58 ►
And our view as a non-profit
00:36:00 ►
that we have the ability to give tax deductions
00:36:03 ►
to people who give us donations.
00:36:06 ►
We have an obligation to the public to be
00:36:08 ►
transparent, to give out all of our information
00:36:10 ►
and to help everybody
00:36:11 ►
whether that’s for-profit or non-profit.
00:36:14 ►
And so that’s our fundamental view.
00:36:16 ►
And so we’ve been getting
00:36:18 ►
a lot of criticism for
00:36:19 ►
sharing all of our FDA
00:36:21 ►
regulatory documents and all of the
00:36:24 ►
information we know about the drug development system
00:36:26 ►
with this for-profit company called Compass.
00:36:29 ►
And there’s a non-profit company called Usona.
00:36:32 ►
So my view of this is that we should celebrate the fact
00:36:37 ►
that for-profit companies are coming into this
00:36:39 ►
because that means we have succeeded.
00:36:42 ►
For the last 32 years on MAPS,
00:36:43 ►
it only makes sense for the last year or so
00:36:46 ►
for for-profit people to come
00:36:47 ►
because we’ve changed the political dynamics,
00:36:50 ►
we’ve changed the dynamics with the regulatory systems,
00:36:52 ►
and so now it can make sense for investors.
00:36:57 ►
And so I think that makes sense.
00:36:59 ►
And also, though, the for-profit
00:37:01 ►
is not going to be able to block the non-profit.
00:37:03 ►
We will have the non-profit, the head of the non-profit
00:37:06 ►
you saw in it, Bill Litton, is here camping with us.
00:37:09 ►
And so it’s their view that whatever the for-profit does
00:37:12 ►
it’s not going to block them from what they do.
00:37:15 ►
And so I think it’s really good for us. But there’s some people that are
00:37:17 ►
worried about what they might charge.
00:37:22 ►
For those of you who watch about medical marijuana
00:37:24 ►
the FDA just approved a drug called what they might charge. For those of you who watch about medical marijuana,
00:37:28 ►
the FDA just approved a drug called Epidiolex,
00:37:30 ►
which is CBD for childhood epilepsy.
00:37:32 ►
It just got approved.
00:37:41 ►
The pharmaceutical company is charging $32,500 a year for stuff you can get for a couple thousand dollars
00:37:44 ►
from your local neighborhood dispensary.
00:37:47 ►
But it’s going to be covered by insurance.
00:37:49 ►
They did all the research.
00:37:50 ►
So there are problems with for-profit drug development.
00:37:53 ►
But anyway, I think we should help everybody, and that’s what we’ve been doing.
00:37:57 ►
The final ethical issue has to do with where we bring MDMA.
00:38:03 ►
It has to do with where we bring MDMA.
00:38:10 ►
And so in September, I’m going to China with one of our therapists and the leader of our clinical team.
00:38:20 ►
And what has happened is that this young Chinese Internet entrepreneur made hundreds of millions of dollars, left China, lives in San Francisco, and wants to bring MDMA back to China.
00:38:26 ►
And he says that his parents and his parents’ generation
00:38:29 ►
all have PTSD from the Cultural Revolution,
00:38:33 ►
and that you can’t say that in China.
00:38:35 ►
You have to talk about PTSD from natural disasters or other things,
00:38:39 ►
but that he wants to try to bring the healing potential of MDMA to China.
00:38:43 ►
And he thinks, though, that the only way to do it
00:38:48 ►
is to start with the Chinese military psychiatrists
00:38:51 ►
and the Chinese civilian psychiatrists there as well.
00:38:55 ►
So when I think about whether that’s a good thing or a bad thing
00:39:01 ►
to try to bring MDMA to the Chinese military psychiatrists.
00:39:06 ►
It turns out that the Israeli principal investigator was the chief psychiatrist for the Israeli
00:39:14 ►
defense forces. He’s one of the therapists coming to Israel with us. The fellow who’s
00:39:20 ►
with us camping now is going to coordinate our research in Europe, he is the
00:39:25 ►
as I mentioned, he’s the chief psychiatrist
00:39:27 ►
for the Dutch Ministry of Defense.
00:39:30 ►
In England, we’re working with the chief
00:39:31 ►
psychiatrist for the British
00:39:33 ►
military. So that
00:39:35 ►
that’s where a lot of the PTSD is located
00:39:38 ►
and that’s where a lot of the PTSD researchers
00:39:40 ►
are located. And so
00:39:42 ►
there is this
00:39:43 ►
sense that I have that moving into an authoritarian country,
00:39:49 ►
we all know that the CIA and MKUltra, where they used psychedelics for mind control, they
00:39:54 ►
tried to use them for brainwashing, things like that, that developed into such scandal
00:40:00 ►
that as far as we can tell, that’s not happening anymore,
00:40:08 ►
and that these drugs can be misused.
00:40:13 ►
But I think fundamentally, MDMA helps you when you take it.
00:40:15 ►
It helps you feel solid in yourself.
00:40:17 ►
It reduces your pain threshold.
00:40:21 ►
I mean, it increases your pain threshold, so you don’t feel pain as much.
00:40:24 ►
And if you’re sort of a true believer,
00:40:25 ►
I think it will strengthen your ability to resist anything.
00:40:29 ►
So the question is, in this trade-off,
00:40:32 ►
so much of the governments are motivated by people
00:40:36 ►
who are motivated by their trauma.
00:40:39 ►
So it’s this multi-generational trauma
00:40:41 ►
that causes the fear of the other.
00:40:44 ►
So my view is that
00:40:45 ►
I think
00:40:48 ►
on balance it’s a good thing for us to
00:40:50 ►
go to China to try to
00:40:51 ►
influence the Chinese therapists to try
00:40:54 ►
to influence MDMA. And I think that if there’s
00:40:55 ►
any pressure from the Chinese government
00:40:58 ►
from what we’ve seen so far, it’s going to be
00:41:00 ►
to limit the spread of it rather than
00:41:01 ►
to take it over and do it
00:41:04 ►
in other ways. So I think there are ethical issues as we go forward,
00:41:08 ►
and we need to be careful about them
00:41:10 ►
because we have a chance that we have not had in 50 years,
00:41:13 ►
and it’s a tremendous opportunity.
00:41:16 ►
And for those of you that are interested in careers, for example,
00:41:20 ►
in psychedelic psychotherapy,
00:41:22 ►
now is the first time that that’s a realistic thing.
00:41:27 ►
And to give you a sense of how realistic
00:41:29 ►
it is, and then I’ll be done with this
00:41:31 ►
talk and questions, is that
00:41:32 ►
we anticipate that MDMA is going to be
00:41:34 ►
approved in 2021
00:41:36 ►
in the United States.
00:41:43 ►
Planning on the fundraising,
00:41:44 ►
it could be that time, or it could be six months or a year later or whatever,
00:41:48 ►
it’ll be approved 2021-2022 in Europe.
00:41:52 ►
But there’s a program that the FDA has called Expanded Access.
00:41:58 ►
And the Republicans, in their anti-deregulation efforts, anti-regulation, deregulation,
00:42:05 ►
they just passed a bill called Right to Try.
00:42:08 ►
And Right to Try means,
00:42:10 ►
and Trump just signed this bill about a month and a half ago.
00:42:12 ►
So Right to Try means that if you have,
00:42:15 ►
excuse me, if you have a condition
00:42:18 ►
for which the available medicines have not worked,
00:42:23 ►
and there’s a drug that’s being studied for that condition,
00:42:27 ►
you should have a right to try that drug before it’s approved,
00:42:31 ►
at your own risk, because you still don’t know about the full safety of it,
00:42:35 ►
and at your own cost.
00:42:36 ►
You should be able to pay for the drug, pay for the therapy, whatever,
00:42:39 ►
and you should get it outside, simultaneously, actually,
00:42:43 ►
before the drug is approved as a medicine.
00:42:46 ►
So the FDA doesn’t particularly like Right to Try
00:42:48 ►
because it cuts them out of the process.
00:42:51 ►
People negotiate directly with pharmaceutical companies,
00:42:54 ►
and the agreement is that whatever happens in this compassionate use, Right to Try,
00:42:58 ►
the FDA won’t review that data for safety and efficacy.
00:43:02 ►
So the pharmaceutical companies aren’t that worried about making it available.
00:43:05 ►
The FDA has a program called Expanded Access,
00:43:08 ►
which is similar to Right
00:43:10 ►
to Try, but it’s a little bit more paperwork
00:43:12 ►
and a little bit more
00:43:14 ►
data. So we’re going to go the Expanded Access
00:43:16 ►
route. And so what that means
00:43:18 ►
is that next summer,
00:43:19 ►
and we’ve already had meetings with FDA and
00:43:21 ►
DEA about this, because everybody
00:43:23 ►
who works in an expanded access site,
00:43:26 ►
it’s still a Schedule I drug before it’s a medicine,
00:43:29 ►
and they’ll need DEA Schedule I licenses.
00:43:31 ►
But we anticipate next summer, at the end of next summer,
00:43:34 ►
we’re going to be starting expanded access clinics
00:43:38 ►
so that we’re going to be training therapists for expanded access.
00:43:42 ►
So actually psychedelic psychotherapy, legally,
00:43:46 ►
where patients are coming in to pay for treatment,
00:43:49 ►
is going to start in one year from now.
00:43:52 ►
Woo!
00:43:57 ►
And it’s only for PTSD.
00:44:01 ►
It’s only for treatment-resistant PTSD.
00:44:04 ►
But it can be expanded
00:44:06 ►
to, like, for example, we did this study
00:44:08 ►
with autistic adults with social anxiety.
00:44:10 ►
We could end up having
00:44:11 ►
expanded access for social anxiety.
00:44:14 ►
We did a study with end-of-life
00:44:16 ►
people with anxiety
00:44:17 ►
about end-of-life with MDMA. That was helpful.
00:44:19 ►
We could get expanded access for that.
00:44:21 ►
We have limited resources. We’re focusing
00:44:23 ►
on PTSD, but
00:44:24 ►
the good news is that everything seems to be pointing in the direction of success.
00:44:33 ►
And I think it’s incumbent upon us to think as carefully as we can about the ethical issues,
00:44:40 ►
to proceed very carefully.
00:44:42 ►
And if so, I think we will be able to embed psychedelics in our culture.
00:44:47 ►
And then what will happen is from 2021 or so to 2031,
00:44:53 ►
we’ll be able to lay out and spread thousands of psychedelic clinics throughout America and throughout the world.
00:45:00 ►
There’s 14,500 drug abuse treatment centers.
00:45:03 ►
Psychedelics would be very helpful for the treatment of addiction.
00:45:06 ►
There’s 6,000, as I
00:45:08 ►
said, hospice centers. But I think there’ll be
00:45:09 ►
specialized clinics where people will
00:45:11 ►
go to get psilocybin, ketamine, MDMA,
00:45:14 ►
whatever drugs get further
00:45:15 ►
approved. And people,
00:45:17 ►
there’ll be a new profession, a new
00:45:20 ►
professional organization to be
00:45:21 ►
certified to be a psychedelic therapist
00:45:23 ►
with therapists cross-trained
00:45:25 ►
and all these different drugs. And I think
00:45:27 ►
after we have about 10 or 15 years of that,
00:45:30 ►
the population of America
00:45:32 ►
will be ready to
00:45:33 ►
fully legalize psychedelics
00:45:36 ►
and all other drugs.
00:45:37 ►
So our target date for that is 2035.
00:45:40 ►
We’re in a post-prohibition
00:45:42 ►
world. I hope that we’ll all be around to see
00:45:44 ►
if my predictions are accurate.
00:45:46 ►
Hopefully I’m too pessimistic.
00:45:48 ►
But I think that that’s the track we’re on.
00:45:50 ►
And I think it’s not going to be any day too soon
00:45:55 ►
because we are facing such environmental crisis,
00:45:58 ►
such crisis of weaponry,
00:46:01 ►
and our emotions are trapping us.
00:46:03 ►
This trauma of multigeneration is trapping us, this trauma of multigenerate is trapping us,
00:46:05 ►
and so we’re hoping that mainstream psychedelics
00:46:10 ►
will make a contribution to helping the human species
00:46:13 ►
survive and thrive.
00:46:14 ►
Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you.
00:46:25 ►
Thank you.
00:46:26 ►
Thank you.
00:46:27 ►
Thank you.
00:46:28 ►
Thank you.
00:46:29 ►
Thank you.
00:46:30 ►
Thank you.
00:46:31 ►
Thank you.
00:46:32 ►
Thank you.
00:46:33 ►
Thank you.
00:46:34 ►
Thank you.
00:46:35 ►
Thank you.
00:46:36 ►
Thank you.
00:46:37 ►
Thank you.
00:46:38 ►
Thank you.
00:46:39 ►
Thank you.
00:46:40 ►
Thank you.
00:46:41 ►
Thank you.
00:46:42 ►
Thank you.
00:46:43 ►
Thank you.
00:46:44 ►
Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Well, I know I talked a bunch,
00:46:49 ►
but hopefully I didn’t talk too long,
00:46:53 ►
and I look forward now to a dialogue.
00:46:58 ►
Besides dose, dissociation, and desire to change,
00:47:02 ►
what trends do you see in responders versus non-responders?
00:47:09 ►
Well, we don’t know much
00:47:12 ►
more than that. Yeah, so one of the
00:47:14 ►
things that the FDA has required us to do
00:47:16 ►
phase four, post-approval,
00:47:18 ►
is to look at the pediatric
00:47:20 ►
cases. But
00:47:22 ►
they also want to look at non-responders
00:47:24 ►
and relapsers.
00:47:26 ►
So we’re not actually sure.
00:47:29 ►
I think that’s a really crucial question. Because in psychotherapy,
00:47:33 ►
one of the main issues is how do you match the patient to the right
00:47:37 ►
kind of therapy? What is that crossover? And that’s what you want to figure
00:47:41 ►
out. Now, one way people have talked about doing that is with biomarkers.
00:47:47 ►
So maybe there are some genetic or physiological conditions
00:47:50 ►
that will lead some people to be able to, first off, be resilient to trauma,
00:47:57 ►
or if they have PTSD, be able to recover more likely.
00:48:00 ►
So, so far there’s been no real reliable biomarkers.
00:48:05 ►
We know a little bit about what changes before and after treatment
00:48:08 ►
with the reduction of activity in the amygdala.
00:48:12 ►
But part of it is whether people have a safe place while they’re doing this deep work.
00:48:20 ►
So I’d add that, that people need to be safe to process all the pain and the trauma.
00:48:26 ►
And if they’re continually re-traumatized, that’s going to be an issue.
00:48:31 ►
One of the things that the FDA has talked about is that once we give this three sessions,
00:48:39 ►
how long do we wait?
00:48:41 ►
How many times can people go through that?
00:48:43 ►
And so they’ve not yet said about setting an upper limit,
00:48:47 ►
but it’s going to be somewhere in the neighborhood of 10 or 12, something like that.
00:48:50 ►
So if 10 or 12 MDMA sessions have not helped somebody overcome their PTSD,
00:48:55 ►
more is not going to be better.
00:48:58 ►
But I’d say that is one of the, you know, who are the responders,
00:49:01 ►
who are the non-responders?
00:49:04 ►
Mostly I think it is those vectors,
00:49:06 ►
dissociation and the courage.
00:49:09 ►
Oh, one other thing is that we ask people
00:49:11 ►
to taper off all of their SSRIs.
00:49:14 ►
And so when they go into the study,
00:49:16 ►
they have to give up all their psychiatric medicines.
00:49:18 ►
And so we tell people, initially what’s happening is
00:49:21 ►
it’s going to be made worse.
00:49:23 ►
I mean, your symptoms are coming to the surface
00:49:24 ►
rather than suppressing the symptoms.
00:49:27 ►
And so we want you to realize that while it may be getting harder,
00:49:31 ►
that’s actually a good thing because you’re bringing things up.
00:49:34 ►
And so we have found that there seems to be a relationship
00:49:38 ►
between the length of time people have withdrawn from SSRIs
00:49:43 ►
and how well they get.
00:49:45 ►
So that SSRIs also change your brain,
00:49:47 ►
change your processing,
00:49:49 ►
and they operate on the serotonin system.
00:49:51 ►
And so we want more and more time now.
00:49:55 ►
So it’s five half-lives of whatever drug
00:49:58 ►
that you’re on plus two weeks.
00:50:02 ►
And so the longer it is,
00:50:03 ►
that seems to be another factor.
00:50:10 ►
What is your experience with
00:50:13 ►
your experience in a clinical setting
00:50:17 ►
with regards to some of the
00:50:18 ►
known negative after effects
00:50:20 ►
like the serotonin depletion,
00:50:22 ►
loss of magic,
00:50:23 ►
especially if people are having
00:50:24 ►
12 lifetime doses, 12 sessions.
00:50:27 ►
Tuesday blues, how do you guys work with or mitigate or what’s your experience with that
00:50:30 ►
in a clinical setting?
00:50:32 ►
Yeah, well, this Tuesday blues idea, the irony there is that we track that very carefully
00:50:37 ►
because all the concerns that people have about the problems from recreational use,
00:50:41 ►
they’re applying to us for clinical use.
00:50:44 ►
But we find that these Tuesday blues,
00:50:46 ►
the low mood, the depression,
00:50:48 ►
that it’s more prevalent in the control group
00:50:51 ►
than in the MDMA group.
00:50:54 ►
And the reason we think that is
00:50:56 ►
is because in the control group,
00:50:59 ►
we’re asking them to confront their PTSD,
00:51:03 ►
but without the support of the MDMA to reduce their fear.
00:51:07 ►
And it just unsettles them.
00:51:09 ►
And so here they are trying to bring it to the surface.
00:51:13 ►
They’ve never been able to deal with it before.
00:51:15 ►
So one of the things the FDA has said, though,
00:51:17 ►
is they want us to study MDMA by itself
00:51:19 ►
and really understand what the risks are.
00:51:22 ►
So I think what makes us able to not have this problem with the Tuesday blues
00:51:26 ►
or this feeling of serotonin depletion, so we don’t give 5-HTP,
00:51:31 ►
we don’t give any treatments afterwards,
00:51:33 ►
is that we do the MDMA during the day, not during the night.
00:51:38 ►
And people then can sleep mostly that night.
00:51:40 ►
Occasionally we will give people medicines to sleep.
00:51:43 ►
Then we tell them the second day you’re
00:51:45 ►
going to be tired, but don’t do anything about that. Don’t do anything. Don’t have responsibilities.
00:51:51 ►
Don’t have appointments. Go into that tiredness and also use that to integrate what happened the
00:51:58 ►
day before. And that’s really the anchor where people are able to say, here’s the second day, I don’t have to go to work,
00:52:05 ►
I didn’t dance all night,
00:52:07 ►
I can process the feeling.
00:52:09 ►
Now there are cases where people
00:52:11 ►
are having a very difficult time
00:52:14 ►
for a
00:52:15 ►
week sometimes after the
00:52:17 ►
first MDMA experience.
00:52:19 ►
So we can add
00:52:22 ►
extra integrative therapy sessions.
00:52:24 ►
We have therapists sometimes go back at night to talk to people.
00:52:28 ►
We just say to people, do not tranquilize yourself.
00:52:31 ►
We don’t tranquilize, but we say work with us.
00:52:35 ►
And so there are cases where we provide extra therapy when needed,
00:52:40 ►
and that’s called a protocol deviation.
00:52:41 ►
So we keep track of all of that.
00:52:43 ►
We have what’s in the protocol and then what’s extra.
00:52:46 ►
And so I do believe that a lot of people have found that you take 5-HTP after you take MDMA.
00:52:53 ►
It seems today it’s a little bit easier.
00:52:55 ►
But in the therapy and the research, we don’t do any of that.
00:53:01 ►
Hi, Dr. Doppler.
00:53:03 ►
Thank you for what you do.
00:53:04 ►
I am a psychiatry resident at Hopkins,
00:53:06 ►
very interested in this area.
00:53:09 ►
And my question is,
00:53:10 ►
once it’s approved by the FDA,
00:53:13 ►
what is your idea in terms of regulation?
00:53:15 ►
For example, should there be off-label prescriptions?
00:53:18 ►
Who gets licensed to do this and how?
00:53:21 ►
Okay, great question.
00:53:22 ►
By the way, where are you studying?
00:53:23 ►
At Hopkins. Oh, okay, great. Are you the way, where are you studying? At Hopkins.
00:53:25 ►
Oh, okay, great.
00:53:27 ►
Are you part of any of that?
00:53:29 ►
Do you hope to be, or will you be able to be part of the psilocybin project?
00:53:33 ►
Hope to be.
00:53:34 ►
All right, well, so this is a policy question.
00:53:37 ►
That’s what I studied at the Kennedy School.
00:53:40 ►
And so the FDA, generally, when they approve a drug,
00:53:45 ►
anybody can prescribe it for anything.
00:53:48 ►
Any doctor can prescribe it for anything.
00:53:50 ►
And there’s very minimal additional policies.
00:53:53 ►
What happened to start to change that was thalidomide.
00:53:57 ►
So in the 60s, thalidomide was medicine in Europe for morning sickness,
00:54:04 ►
and it caused terrible birth defects.
00:54:06 ►
And the pharmaceutical company was trying to bring thalidomide to the U.S.
00:54:09 ►
And there was a woman, Frances Kelsey,
00:54:12 ►
who’s the only person at the FDA to ever win the Presidential Medal of Honor,
00:54:16 ►
and she won it for being suspicious about the safety profile of thalidomide,
00:54:20 ►
and she blocked thalidomide from becoming a medicine in the U.S.,
00:54:24 ►
and she probably saved tens of thousands of birth defects
00:54:27 ►
before they figured out the connection.
00:54:30 ►
So decades later, thalidomide became a medicine.
00:54:35 ►
It constricts blood vessels.
00:54:37 ►
It’s good for leprosy.
00:54:38 ►
It’s good for certain kinds of cancer.
00:54:40 ►
So what the FDA did is they created a whole set of regulatory policies
00:54:45 ►
to control thalidomide to make sure that there would be no more birth defects.
00:54:50 ►
So they have what’s called a patient registry.
00:54:52 ►
Everybody that gets thalidomide is listed on a patient registry,
00:54:56 ►
and they track whether there’s any birth defects.
00:54:58 ►
There is an education that goes to the pharmacist.
00:55:01 ►
The pharmacist has to be educated.
00:55:03 ►
The physicians who prescribe it have to read some stuff, and there’s a brochure that’s given to the pharmacist. The pharmacist has to be educated. The physicians who prescribe it have to read some stuff.
00:55:06 ►
And there’s a brochure that’s given to the patients.
00:55:09 ►
And under those conditions,
00:55:11 ►
they’ve let thalidomide become a mess.
00:55:13 ►
That process of figuring out
00:55:16 ►
how to adjust the policies for the drug
00:55:18 ►
is now ratified into what’s called the REMS,
00:55:21 ►
which is Risk Evaluation and Mitigation Strategies.
00:55:25 ►
And so
00:55:26 ►
what we’re proposing and what it looks like
00:55:28 ►
both FDA and DEA are
00:55:29 ►
going to agree on is that
00:55:32 ►
once MDMA becomes a medicine
00:55:34 ►
and this will be true for psilocybin as well,
00:55:36 ►
the drug is not
00:55:37 ►
safe or effective by itself.
00:55:40 ►
It’s psilocybin
00:55:41 ►
assisted psychotherapy or
00:55:43 ►
MDMA assisted psychotherapy
00:55:46 ►
so we’re proposing that the only people that are able to prescribe it
00:55:50 ►
or to be actually with patients
00:55:53 ►
doing the therapy
00:55:54 ►
will have gone through our training program
00:55:57 ►
so that they know the therapy that has been
00:56:00 ►
used along with the MDMA
00:56:03 ►
and that these drugs will never be take-home medicines.
00:56:07 ►
They will only be administered in psychedelic clinics
00:56:10 ►
under direct supervision.
00:56:13 ►
So those are the two main aspects
00:56:16 ►
of how we think that they’ll be regulated.
00:56:19 ►
The question that you asked
00:56:20 ►
was also about off-label prescription.
00:56:24 ►
So in 1986, Marinol, the oral THC pill, became a medicine.
00:56:30 ►
It was the first medicine from cannabis.
00:56:33 ►
And there have been all these talks in the 70s and 80s about chemotherapy
00:56:38 ►
and how smoke marijuana helps people with the nausea from cancer chemotherapy
00:56:44 ►
and it can contribute to an appetite. Smoked marijuana helps people with the nausea from cancer chemotherapy,
00:56:46 ►
and it can contribute to an appetite.
00:56:50 ►
And the government didn’t want to approve marijuana.
00:56:53 ►
This was, again, during Nancy Reagan, just say no escalation of the drug war.
00:56:59 ►
But they were willing to approve the RLTHC pill, which does not work as well as marijuana.
00:57:10 ►
But the DEA put a notice in the Federal Register that said that there would be no off-label prescription for the RLTHC-PRO because it was a Schedule I drug.
00:57:17 ►
And luckily, the pharmaceutical, not luckily, but many drugs, around a third of the prescriptions are off-label.
00:57:26 ►
Which means they’re being prescribed for conditions that they weren’t approved for or circumstances they weren’t approved for.
00:57:31 ►
So often it’s drugs that were studied in adults but have never studied in children,
00:57:32 ►
but they’re being prescribed in children.
00:57:35 ►
That’s why we have to do pediatric studies with MDMA.
00:57:40 ►
The FDA is trying to crack down on that and require studies in pediatric populations. But the Pharmaceutical Manufacturers Association, the AMA, all these different groups
00:57:45 ►
protested the DEA, and the DEA had to withdraw it. So there is off-label prescription even for
00:57:51 ►
drugs that have come from Schedule 1. Now, what we’re saying also is that the only people that
00:57:58 ►
can prescribe this are people that we have trained in our method. Eventually there will be other people training them as well.
00:58:06 ►
But what we’re saying is that once they know our method,
00:58:10 ►
they know how the drug was used,
00:58:12 ►
they can innovate and they don’t need to keep using our method.
00:58:16 ►
They can modify it in any number of different ways,
00:58:19 ►
blend it with any other therapies, whatever.
00:58:22 ►
And the problem of off-label prescription,
00:58:26 ►
so that counts as off-label
00:58:27 ►
if you use it in a different therapeutic method.
00:58:30 ►
But the real question is
00:58:31 ►
about all sorts of other conditions.
00:58:35 ►
And so
00:58:35 ►
what I wanted to do
00:58:38 ►
was to have a patient
00:58:40 ►
registry, and then
00:58:42 ►
they have every time a doctor
00:58:44 ►
would prescribe MDMA would be a little
00:58:46 ►
form to say what it was prescribed for. So we would keep track of all the off-label prescriptions,
00:58:52 ►
and eventually we’d say, oh, look at all this use, now let’s study that, and try to make,
00:58:56 ►
because the thing about off-label prescription is that insurance will not cover it. That’s a
00:59:01 ►
big issue for us, because most of the people who are traumatized
00:59:06 ►
come from populations that have
00:59:08 ►
the least resources to pay for treatment.
00:59:10 ►
So there’s a big equity
00:59:11 ►
issue. So it’s very important
00:59:13 ►
that we get this covered by insurance.
00:59:16 ►
So insurance will only cover what
00:59:18 ►
you’ve studied it for.
00:59:19 ►
They won’t cover
00:59:21 ►
off-label uses. The other
00:59:23 ►
thing is that
00:59:24 ►
in order to defend yourself
00:59:27 ►
against medical malpractice,
00:59:30 ►
you have to have what’s called a significant minority of your peers
00:59:34 ►
to support what you’re doing.
00:59:36 ►
So for every off-label use,
00:59:38 ►
if there’s a significant minority of your peers,
00:59:42 ►
which means maybe some prominent psychiatrists
00:59:45 ►
think it’s okay to give MDMA for OCD.
00:59:48 ►
So there will be off-label prescription.
00:59:50 ►
But the pharmaceutical companies are prohibited
00:59:54 ►
from actually encouraging
00:59:57 ►
or even tracking off-label prescription.
01:00:01 ►
So we were told, don’t do the patient registry.
01:00:04 ►
Don’t ask the doctors to tell you what they’re prescribing it for when it’s off-label prescription. So we were told, don’t do the patient registry, don’t ask the doctors to tell you what they’re prescribing it for
01:00:07 ►
when it’s off-label, but just be blind to that
01:00:11 ►
and try to think on your own what other uses that it could be used for.
01:00:17 ►
So our goal is make MDMA into a medicine for PTSD.
01:00:20 ►
Then we will sell it for a profit through the MAPS Benefit Corporation,
01:00:24 ►
because selling MDMA for a profit is taxable.
01:00:27 ►
So we’ve created this benefit corp where we maximize public benefit, not profit.
01:00:32 ►
And we’re working with ethicists at UPED to articulate a whole series of metrics
01:00:38 ►
to evaluate the public benefit.
01:00:41 ►
And then the public benefit corporation is for a profit,
01:00:43 ►
but it’s owned 100% by the
01:00:45 ►
non-profit. So whatever profits are made are going to go for other research. So that’s
01:00:50 ►
our goal, is to try to get money from selling MDMA for PTSD and study all these off-label
01:00:54 ►
prescriptions. But once MDMA is a medicine, as long as you’ve been through our training
01:01:00 ►
program, then you can use it in any way for any condition.
01:01:08 ►
But I do think that we want to roll this out.
01:01:12 ►
So medicalization is not the same as legalization.
01:01:19 ►
We see from medical marijuana that in 1996, Arizona and California passed the first medical marijuana laws, and now 22 years later’s 60% of the American public
01:01:26 ►
is in favor of marijuana legalization for all
01:01:28 ►
uses. So medicalization
01:01:30 ►
will lead to legalization
01:01:31 ►
but we don’t want to
01:01:33 ►
but for medicalization it isn’t legalization
01:01:36 ►
I feel fine
01:01:37 ►
having it highly controlled. So this is
01:01:40 ►
where we get pushback from libertarians
01:01:42 ►
who are a lot of our donors like all these bitcoin
01:01:44 ►
people tend to be libertarians.
01:01:46 ►
And they’re like, why are you suggesting
01:01:48 ►
that it’s only under direct supervision,
01:01:50 ►
only for certain things?
01:01:52 ►
So I think we need to work with the system,
01:01:55 ►
work on incremental change,
01:01:57 ►
and part of that is all these limitations
01:01:59 ►
for the risk evaluation mitigation strategies.
01:02:04 ►
Dr. Dolan, another follow-up question.
01:02:06 ►
Thank you again for all that you do on behalf of humanity.
01:02:11 ►
What would somebody do if they wanted to get involved
01:02:15 ►
and get trained by you and set up a clinic?
01:02:20 ►
Well, that’s a very good question.
01:02:21 ►
So right now we have 5,000 therapists on a list to be notified when we want to start our training program.
01:02:31 ►
So the first thing to do is to sign up on our website to be notified for when we open up training opportunities.
01:02:42 ►
So this is the key bottleneck for us.
01:02:45 ►
And it’s very challenging.
01:02:47 ►
I mean, it’s been so easy for a lot of MAPs for the 32 years.
01:02:51 ►
Most of MAPs was just asking for permission to do stuff and getting rejected.
01:02:56 ►
And so that wasn’t that hard.
01:02:58 ►
Now we’re sort of seeing success, and people are saying,
01:03:01 ►
how are you going to scale up?
01:03:03 ►
And the most important challenge for us now is
01:03:05 ►
scaling up therapists. But we only have
01:03:08 ►
four trainers
01:03:08 ►
so far. So we’re starting new
01:03:12 ►
programs to train more trainers.
01:03:14 ►
So the first thing is sign up on
01:03:16 ►
the website. We’re trying to put more
01:03:18 ►
and more of what we do on the
01:03:20 ►
website. There’s also the treatment
01:03:22 ►
manual that describes our
01:03:23 ►
treatment approach, which is for
01:03:26 ►
free on the website under the MDMA
01:03:28 ►
page at the bottom, so read that.
01:03:30 ►
And we’re starting
01:03:32 ►
to think that we can train
01:03:33 ►
our trainings can be the maximum of
01:03:35 ►
60 people at a time. So
01:03:37 ►
we’re going to have a training for 60 people in Europe
01:03:40 ►
at the end of September.
01:03:42 ►
Hopefully we’ll have a training in November
01:03:43 ►
for Colombia, Chile, and Argentina South American therapists. And at the end of September. Hopefully we’ll have a training in November for Colombia, Chile, and Argentina,
01:03:46 ►
South American therapists.
01:03:48 ►
At the end of January, February,
01:03:50 ►
we’re going to have a training in Israel.
01:03:52 ►
The Ministry of Health has given us
01:03:54 ►
50 people can now take MDMA
01:03:57 ►
on a compassionate basis
01:03:58 ►
and expanded access
01:03:59 ►
while we move through Phase 3.
01:04:01 ►
So we’re going to train a bunch more therapists for that.
01:04:04 ►
And then we’re going to come back to the U.S.
01:04:05 ►
and start training for expanded access.
01:04:07 ►
The first training is going to be in March.
01:04:09 ►
We’re going to have one every two months.
01:04:11 ►
And we’re going to try to pick people who are geographically distributed
01:04:15 ►
in areas where we don’t already have phase three studies
01:04:19 ►
so we can reach more people.
01:04:23 ►
And you’ll have to start building a team. So if you apply
01:04:26 ►
on the website and you can write to Shannon, S-H-A-N-N-O-N, Shannon at mapsbcorp.com, we
01:04:35 ►
have kind of a list of things to do to prepare to have an expanded access site. So you have
01:04:40 ►
to have a doctor. So if you’re a therapist, you have to have a doctor because the DEA
01:04:44 ►
only gives Schedule I licenses to doctors. You have to have a doctor. So if you’re a therapist, you have to have a doctor because the DEA only gives Schedule I licenses to doctors.
01:04:47 ►
You have to have a facility that’s capable of having overnight stays.
01:04:51 ►
Ideally, you would have a team.
01:04:53 ►
You would have two male-female teams at least
01:04:56 ►
so that you can learn from each other as you start treating it.
01:05:00 ►
You’ll have to start thinking about what the fees are going to be charged.
01:05:04 ►
Is there money that we can get from places to subsidize treatments
01:05:08 ►
where people can afford it?
01:05:10 ►
But the key thing is that we don’t want there to be a backlash
01:05:13 ►
because people were treated in ways that were not completely ethical
01:05:20 ►
or not completely effective.
01:05:22 ►
So our pressure is to…
01:05:24 ►
There’s 8 million people with PTSD in America, roughly.
01:05:27 ►
So how do we ever possibly do that?
01:05:30 ►
It’s going to take us a very long time
01:05:32 ►
to try to figure out how to expand our training program.
01:05:36 ►
But we anticipate thousands and thousands of therapists.
01:05:39 ►
And so for now, the best way,
01:05:41 ►
one of the best ways is to volunteer to work at Zendo.
01:05:44 ►
So we use Zendo to train therapists
01:05:46 ►
because you’ve got a flow of people coming in
01:05:48 ►
with all different drugs in different combinations.
01:05:52 ►
And working with them to try to help them
01:05:53 ►
turn that into something productive
01:05:55 ►
is one of the best trainings.
01:05:58 ►
And we have Zendo that works at other events
01:06:00 ►
all over the place.
01:06:02 ►
So volunteer for Zendo.
01:06:02 ►
events all over the place.
01:06:04 ►
So volunteer for Zendo.
01:06:06 ►
And I think really that
01:06:07 ►
it’s a tricky thing for me to say,
01:06:10 ►
but I think practice with your friends.
01:06:13 ►
And practice
01:06:14 ►
with other people.
01:06:17 ►
You know, the MDMA
01:06:18 ►
does a lot of the work.
01:06:20 ►
And so you can create a safe space
01:06:22 ►
and you can learn
01:06:24 ►
with people who are suffering different things.
01:06:26 ►
And we’re all suffering something.
01:06:28 ►
We might not have a clinical diagnosis.
01:06:30 ►
But I’d say practice with your friends and practice with people that are suffering and learn that way.
01:06:37 ►
And then, you know, come out of the closet to the extent that you can to educate people so that it becomes less stigmatized.
01:06:47 ►
And hopefully we will have eventually training programs that you can be part of
01:06:51 ►
without waiting mega, multi, multi years.
01:06:56 ►
So that’s the best way to do it.
01:06:59 ►
Hi.
01:07:00 ►
So you mentioned at some point that the treatment works better with women than men.
01:07:06 ►
Did I get that right?
01:07:07 ►
No, that was the SSRIs.
01:07:10 ►
So the prescription medications for PTSD work better in women than in men.
01:07:15 ►
But MDMA, fortunately, seems to work well in men as well as women,
01:07:21 ►
so there’s hope for us guys.
01:07:25 ►
I mean, the question is, are women closer to their emotions?
01:07:28 ►
And that’s why we think SSRIs work a little bit better for women than men.
01:07:33 ►
But they have kind of a milder effect.
01:07:37 ►
And people have also asked, do you change the doses
01:07:40 ►
so that women get a lower dose than men?
01:07:43 ►
They tend to weigh less so that would be
01:07:46 ►
do you dose 5 mg per kg?
01:07:48 ►
Well, we don’t do that.
01:07:50 ►
And it seems like
01:07:51 ►
the thing
01:07:54 ►
people have often said about the women is that
01:07:56 ►
often many of them have complex PTSD
01:07:58 ►
from childhood
01:08:00 ►
multiple incidents. And so
01:08:02 ►
it does work well with complex
01:08:04 ►
PTSD or war PTSD.
01:08:07 ►
I guess the other
01:08:07 ►
question is, are women better
01:08:09 ►
therapists than men?
01:08:12 ►
So I don’t think that’s necessarily
01:08:14 ►
true, but I do
01:08:16 ►
think that this idea of a male-female
01:08:18 ►
team is pretty
01:08:19 ►
incredible to see it in motion.
01:08:22 ►
And for some reason,
01:08:24 ►
many of our male-female teams
01:08:25 ►
are married or are romantically
01:08:28 ►
involved. I didn’t think it would
01:08:30 ►
develop that way, but I mentioned
01:08:31 ►
we have four trainers. They happen to be
01:08:33 ►
two married couples.
01:08:35 ►
So more and more, it turns out
01:08:37 ►
that these male-female teams are
01:08:39 ►
in a romantic relationship. Because it’s
01:08:41 ►
kind of a very loving situation to be there
01:08:44 ►
nurturing somebody
01:08:45 ►
who’s trying to go through painful stuff.
01:08:48 ►
So they have to have a really good relationship
01:08:50 ►
even if they’re not.
01:08:53 ►
Hi, Rick.
01:08:57 ►
I wanted to reiterate my gratitude
01:08:59 ►
and thanks again for everything.
01:09:02 ►
I was curious about the inclusion of holotropic
01:09:05 ►
breathwork in the training of the
01:09:07 ►
therapists.
01:09:10 ►
Well,
01:09:12 ►
so
01:09:13 ►
holotropic breathwork, again, is hyperventilation
01:09:16 ►
that
01:09:17 ►
reduces your defenses and stuff
01:09:19 ►
comes to the surface.
01:09:21 ►
Holotropic breathwork is more like LSD
01:09:23 ►
than it is like MDMA.
01:09:25 ►
But it’s legal.
01:09:28 ►
And so most of the therapists,
01:09:31 ►
or I’d say many of the therapists
01:09:32 ►
that we’ve worked with,
01:09:33 ►
have been trained by Stan and Christina Groff
01:09:36 ►
in the holotropic breathwork.
01:09:37 ►
So I was trained in that from 88 to 91.
01:09:41 ►
Michael Midover and Andy Midover,
01:09:43 ►
who are our lead therapists
01:09:45 ►
have been trained in the breath work
01:09:46 ►
and so
01:09:49 ►
we have used holotropic breath work
01:09:52 ►
in the middle of the training
01:09:53 ►
because more and more now
01:09:56 ►
we’re working with people who are
01:09:57 ►
traditional therapists and psychiatrists
01:09:59 ►
who don’t have a psychedelic background
01:10:01 ►
and so
01:10:02 ►
we do use holotropic breath work
01:10:05 ►
to try to help people learn about letting go.
01:10:09 ►
That was before we got,
01:10:12 ►
and even still more recently we do that.
01:10:14 ►
Many underground psychedelic therapists
01:10:16 ►
start with a conversation with people
01:10:19 ►
to get to know them.
01:10:20 ►
Then they do holotropic breath work
01:10:21 ►
to see how they respond.
01:10:23 ►
And then they move to the psychedelics.
01:10:25 ►
So I think holotropic breathwork is a really good
01:10:28 ►
way to help train
01:10:29 ►
therapists in their own process of
01:10:31 ►
letting go. The fact that it’s
01:10:33 ►
harder than MDMA is
01:10:35 ►
actually good in the training of therapists
01:10:37 ►
because you see how scared
01:10:39 ►
you are about letting go.
01:10:42 ►
You don’t know what’s coming up.
01:10:43 ►
You don’t have the safety reduction of fear from MDMA that You don’t know what’s coming up. And you don’t have the safety
01:10:45 ►
reduction of fear from MDMA
01:10:48 ►
that you don’t get that with the breathwork.
01:10:50 ►
So it requires a little
01:10:52 ►
bit more courage, you could say,
01:10:53 ►
in the breathwork. So it’s been a very
01:10:55 ►
effective tool for us
01:10:57 ►
in the training of therapists.
01:11:00 ►
And we’re likely to continue
01:11:01 ►
using it that way.
01:11:03 ►
We don’t use it in the treatment.
01:11:05 ►
And I’ll say that the reason that we don’t
01:11:07 ►
is that we only want to have one intervention at a time.
01:11:12 ►
And so the FDA would not look kindly on,
01:11:15 ►
oh, you’re doing this and that.
01:11:17 ►
Well, what is the contributor to people getting better?
01:11:20 ►
So we don’t use holotropic breathwork in the treatment,
01:11:22 ►
even though in underground settings,
01:11:28 ►
people often do go through a series of breathwork before they do the psychedelics
01:11:30 ►
and I would say back about this post-approval
01:11:34 ►
post-approval, once it’s a prescription medicine
01:11:37 ►
I think holotropic breathwork will be used a lot
01:11:40 ►
before people start with MDMA for PTSD
01:11:42 ►
Hi, thanks for everything that you’re doing to advance society as well.
01:11:49 ►
A few friends and I get together a few times a year.
01:11:52 ►
We call it communion.
01:11:55 ►
Getting to the basis of what we’re doing. Sometimes we enter in with
01:11:59 ►
intentions, what we want to resolve at the time. Sometimes we just enter
01:12:04 ►
in and deal with what comes up.
01:12:06 ►
Have you noticed any difference in those kinds of aspects,
01:12:09 ►
going in with intention, I want to resolve whatever my issue is with this,
01:12:14 ►
as opposed to just whatever bubbles can surface?
01:12:17 ►
The approach that we use is a little bit of a combination of that.
01:12:21 ►
So it’s important to have intentions,
01:12:24 ►
and I think these intentions are
01:12:26 ►
focusing and they help your psyche try to, you know, and they mobilize energy. But once the
01:12:35 ►
session starts, we say throw away those intentions and then just deal with whatever comes up. And
01:12:40 ►
that’s this idea of this inner healing intelligence and the inner healer that somehow or other, you may have an intention of one thing and
01:12:47 ►
before you know it, you’re dealing with something completely different. And maybe that’s actually
01:12:51 ►
what you needed to deal with. So I think that it’s very good as part of
01:12:56 ►
the preparation to use intentions. We have an agreement
01:12:59 ►
with the people and we say, if during the MDMA
01:13:03 ►
session you don’t start talking about the trauma
01:13:06 ►
at some point
01:13:07 ►
we will bring it up because it’s our
01:13:10 ►
view that you have to speak
01:13:12 ►
about the trauma, you have to reprocess
01:13:14 ►
it in order to heal from PTSD
01:13:16 ►
and so
01:13:18 ►
we sort of set that intention ahead of time
01:13:20 ►
at some point
01:13:21 ►
if you don’t talk about it
01:13:24 ►
we’ll ask you some questions about the trauma.
01:13:26 ►
But because we have this
01:13:27 ►
inner directive approach
01:13:29 ►
and an eight hour session and we’re quite patient,
01:13:32 ►
we’ve never actually had
01:13:34 ►
to do that. People will eventually
01:13:35 ►
gravitate toward that. But some
01:13:37 ►
people go to happy memories first
01:13:39 ►
or to a mystical, spiritual sense of
01:13:41 ►
connection or feeling love and then
01:13:43 ►
they’ll go to the trauma, so all different ways.
01:13:45 ►
So I think if you hold on to the intention while you’re having the experience,
01:13:50 ►
you’re limiting the experience to your conscious mind
01:13:53 ►
and to what you thought you needed to work on.
01:13:57 ►
So it’s sort of a combination.
01:13:58 ►
Have the intentions and then let it go, and then see what comes up.
01:14:02 ►
Thank you.
01:14:05 ►
Hi, Rick.
01:14:07 ►
So the news of the efficacy of psychedelics is moving a lot faster than the therapeutic
01:14:14 ►
capacity for studying.
01:14:16 ►
And I’ve had a lot of friends ask me recently about self-medicating.
01:14:21 ►
And I’m in an area of the country that doesn’t have these kind of studies happening. So I’m wondering what you would tell people about self-medicating. And I’m in an area of the country that doesn’t have these kind of studies happening,
01:14:25 ►
so I’m wondering what you would tell people
01:14:27 ►
about self-medicating with these substances.
01:14:30 ►
All right, well, let me tell you
01:14:32 ►
what happened to me last year at Burning Man.
01:14:36 ►
So this guy comes up to me, and he gives me a hug,
01:14:39 ►
and he says, you saved my life.
01:14:42 ►
And I was like, well, what did I do?
01:14:44 ►
And he said, well, I’m a veteran, and I had PTSD,
01:14:47 ►
and I was feeling suicidal and terrible,
01:14:50 ►
and I heard about your study,
01:14:51 ►
but I wasn’t able to get in your study,
01:14:54 ►
and I went to your website,
01:14:55 ►
and I saw that you posted your treatment manual,
01:14:58 ►
and I read it,
01:14:59 ►
and I found a friend,
01:15:02 ►
and I found MDMA,
01:15:04 ►
and I took it,
01:15:05 ►
and now I feel better.
01:15:15 ►
So I think that it’s always self-medication in a sense.
01:15:23 ►
So one of the concerns I have about shamanism is that you tend to have the shaman as the one that heals you.
01:15:25 ►
Sometimes the shaman is the only one that takes the drug.
01:15:26 ►
And they go into a different state
01:15:28 ►
and they try to do divination,
01:15:31 ►
different things to heal you.
01:15:32 ►
And they have feathers.
01:15:34 ►
All different kind of things.
01:15:36 ►
But there’s a power dynamic
01:15:38 ►
that’s a little bit concerning
01:15:40 ►
in some shamanistic settings
01:15:42 ►
where they’re the healer.
01:15:44 ►
I mean, this is true with all doctors
01:15:45 ►
and all therapists too.
01:15:46 ►
It’s like, who’s really doing the work?
01:15:49 ►
And so our understanding of it
01:15:50 ►
is that people are always
01:15:52 ►
the ones that heal themselves.
01:15:54 ►
And we’re trying to create
01:15:56 ►
a context for them to do that.
01:15:58 ►
But that we’re not responsible
01:16:00 ►
for healing them.
01:16:01 ►
We’re responsible for creating
01:16:02 ►
an environment where they can heal themselves.
01:16:04 ►
So it’s always
01:16:05 ►
self-medication in a sense.
01:16:08 ►
So
01:16:08 ►
I think it’s very important
01:16:11 ►
though for people to do it in a safe
01:16:13 ►
way, to be willing to
01:16:16 ►
have
01:16:18 ►
the full range of experiences,
01:16:20 ►
not to do it alone. So I would say
01:16:21 ►
you can self-medicate, but do not
01:16:23 ►
do it by yourself.
01:16:26 ►
Have a buddy, have somebody there that’s the mediator
01:16:28 ►
between you and the outside world.
01:16:30 ►
And don’t really think about
01:16:32 ►
it as necessarily one-dose miracle
01:16:34 ►
cure. And
01:16:35 ►
be willing to
01:16:38 ►
give yourself a couple
01:16:42 ►
days, particularly,
01:16:44 ►
to integrate what happened.
01:16:46 ►
And often, you know,
01:16:48 ►
it’s good to start out with smaller doses
01:16:50 ►
just to see if it agrees with you.
01:16:52 ►
But, you know, we’re trying to make it available
01:16:57 ►
as many tools as possible.
01:16:59 ►
The hardest thing about self-medicating
01:17:02 ►
is knowing that you’ve got a pure drug.
01:17:05 ►
So there is one company in America that is called Drug Detection Lab
01:17:10 ►
that has a license from the DEA to accept anonymous samples of drugs.
01:17:15 ►
And then you put in a code name, and then you contact them,
01:17:18 ►
and then you find out what it was.
01:17:21 ►
So it’s called Drug Detection Lab in Sacramento.
01:17:24 ►
And DanceSafe
01:17:26 ►
and Arrowhead and MAPS started
01:17:28 ►
an ecstasy pill testing program, and we
01:17:30 ►
did it with them, with Drug Detection Lab.
01:17:32 ►
So I’d say that’s very
01:17:34 ►
important, because when you get into these difficult
01:17:35 ►
emotional states, they’re
01:17:38 ►
sometimes difficult. And if you’re worried,
01:17:40 ►
oh my god, did I
01:17:41 ►
poison myself? What did I really take?
01:17:44 ►
Am I going to get the support I thought I would get? Maybe it’s not really MDMA.
01:17:48 ►
That complicates things a lot. So I’d say
01:17:51 ►
really make sure that you have confidence that it’s a pure drug.
01:17:56 ►
And it’s a risk because the more severe
01:18:00 ►
the situation, the more support people need.
01:18:04 ►
So the tendency, like even with self-medication,
01:18:08 ►
the fact that in our therapy setting we have overnight stays.
01:18:11 ►
You might say, oh, I’ll spend the day with you,
01:18:13 ►
and then the experience is over, and then the friend goes away,
01:18:16 ►
and they’re left on their own all night, and things could go really bad.
01:18:21 ►
So I’d say you need an even stronger and longer context,
01:18:26 ►
safe context, when people are going to try
01:18:28 ►
to self-medicate.
01:18:30 ►
But that,
01:18:31 ►
I think, starting below doses,
01:18:34 ►
how are we going to reach all these 8 million people?
01:18:36 ►
It’s going to be a lot of this self-medication.
01:18:40 ►
You know, I wish there were more
01:18:41 ►
centers and all set up and we made…
01:18:44 ►
But
01:18:44 ►
the challenge for us is not to grow too fast either.
01:18:50 ►
Not to surrender quality to just have massive numbers of therapists because that would also lead to backlash.
01:18:57 ►
So here’s another story that’s really, really hard.
01:18:59 ►
This is now 10 years ago.
01:19:02 ►
This fellow contacted me and he said,
01:19:08 ►
I’m struggling, I need an underground therapist,
01:19:11 ►
I want to work with psychedelics, I’m very depressed.
01:19:15 ►
And I referred him to my therapist, actually,
01:19:17 ►
who I knew did not do underground work,
01:19:18 ►
but I thought was a great therapist.
01:19:20 ►
And I thought, at least we can try this.
01:19:24 ►
So he had months of therapy with my therapist therapist and then he called me up and he said
01:19:26 ►
it’s not enough I want underground therapy and we talked a little bit and then it turned out that
01:19:32 ►
he said that he had had epileptic seizures in the past. So we don’t let people with epilepsy in the
01:19:39 ►
studies only because this is just the initial phase. People with epilepsy have taken MDMA or LSD without triggering a seizure.
01:19:47 ►
Even if you get a seizure, you can do stuff that’s not fatal usually if you’re prepared.
01:19:53 ►
But I felt like I couldn’t refer this person to an underground therapy center.
01:19:57 ►
So I said I just couldn’t do it.
01:20:01 ►
And I didn’t hear anything for about a month and a half.
01:20:04 ►
And then I got a call from the police. And the police’t hear anything for about a month and a half. And then I got
01:20:05 ►
a call from the police. And the police said, do you know this guy? And I said, yeah, I
01:20:11 ►
had heard from him. He contacted me and he wanted to know about therapy, but I didn’t
01:20:16 ►
have anywhere to refer him to. And the police said, well, that’s, you know, we’re glad to
01:20:22 ►
hear that you knew of him.
01:20:28 ►
And the reason we’re calling you is because he’s committed suicide and he’s left you a suicide note.
01:20:32 ►
And they said they would send it to me.
01:20:35 ►
And so then I got the suicide note.
01:20:37 ►
And it turned out he committed suicide the very next day
01:20:40 ►
after I told him I couldn’t refer him underground.
01:20:44 ►
The note was the most gracious, beautiful note.
01:20:48 ►
He’s like, I’m not blaming you. I’m blaming the system.
01:20:53 ►
And I know you did as much as you could,
01:20:56 ►
but it’s just I can’t live like this. And he said, you can
01:20:59 ►
use this note to tell people that if
01:21:03 ►
these drugs were approved,
01:21:05 ►
I might have been one more person
01:21:08 ►
saved.
01:21:09 ►
So I’m aware that there are
01:21:12 ►
people committing suicide
01:21:13 ►
because they can’t get into
01:21:16 ►
our studies.
01:21:18 ►
And that’s the
01:21:19 ►
pressure to try to do it as
01:21:22 ►
fast as we can, but not too fast.
01:21:25 ►
And so that’s why I’m very sympathetic when people
01:21:28 ►
say, what about self-medication?
01:21:33 ►
One last question.
01:21:37 ►
Hi Rick, thanks again for your work on behalf of
01:21:40 ►
making the world more psychologically
01:21:44 ►
healthy.
01:21:50 ►
I think it’s amazing that there’s people with enough passion to do this and just butt up against just an elaborate bureaucratic regulations for decades.
01:21:57 ►
That said, my friends and I have been recently trying the different psychedelic mescaline,
01:22:07 ►
which there seems to be no studies done by MAPS on it or anywhere that I could find.
01:22:13 ►
And we found one very good therapeutic use case for it,
01:22:18 ►
one very specific one,
01:22:20 ►
because it’s a drug that promotes very authentic communication between people similar to MDMA.
01:22:26 ►
So I was wondering, like, what would it take, if that is at all feasible,
01:22:30 ►
to do a mescaline study, like, by MAPS or some other way?
01:22:33 ►
Can you say what that specific case that you think it’s good for?
01:22:38 ►
Well, yes.
01:22:38 ►
There are a lot of people who just, their main concern is in life.
01:22:43 ►
It’s, like, what other people think about them.
01:22:47 ►
And they just live their whole life worrying about it,
01:22:50 ►
and they have theories based on,
01:22:52 ►
oh, does this person like me or hate me?
01:22:54 ►
And sometimes they’re on either side of the economy,
01:22:58 ►
Wednesday and Thursday,
01:22:59 ►
they’re like, oh no, maybe this person loves me,
01:23:01 ►
oh, maybe they hate me.
01:23:02 ►
These could be people in a relationship together. And they could spend their whole lives like
01:23:10 ►
picking this and never find it out. So with mescaline, like that is like the first thing
01:23:15 ►
that comes out. It like, it limits like anything that’s kind of on your mind, you would like
01:23:22 ►
almost inevitably reveal. It’s like other drugs like almost inevitably reveal.
01:23:27 ►
It’s like other drugs like alcohol or something.
01:23:30 ►
They let you speak your mind,
01:23:33 ►
but at the same time they like incapacitate your mind.
01:23:37 ►
And like what you speak is not very lucid,
01:23:37 ►
not very eloquent.
01:23:39 ►
But in masculine you’re very lucid and you could just,
01:23:41 ►
in like a kind of autistic childish way,
01:23:43 ►
you very much reveal your, like
01:23:46 ►
how you feel about other people, how you feel about
01:23:48 ►
yourself towards other people, and that just
01:23:50 ►
eliminates it. And I’ve taken it
01:23:52 ►
with my girlfriend, who was
01:23:54 ►
not depressed
01:23:56 ►
at the time, but very depressive.
01:23:58 ►
And that very much helped our relationship.
01:24:01 ►
That’s great.
01:24:02 ►
This is a great question to end on.
01:24:04 ►
Masculine is the most important psychedelic
01:24:07 ►
that is not currently being researched.
01:24:10 ►
And so it’s really good that you brought that up.
01:24:12 ►
And I’ll say, when I was 18 years old
01:24:15 ►
and first starting to do psychedelics
01:24:16 ►
at New College in Sarasota, Florida,
01:24:19 ►
again, this is 1971, 72,
01:24:23 ►
somebody came by with a half a pound of mescaline.
01:24:27 ►
And so I bought all of it.
01:24:31 ►
And my friends and I proceeded to use it
01:24:34 ►
over the next couple months.
01:24:37 ►
I had a lot of friends.
01:24:41 ►
Because we didn’t all do it all the time.
01:24:43 ►
But mescaline is fantastic.
01:24:46 ►
And in 1953, the U.S. Army did the chemical warfare service to the Army.
01:24:53 ►
They tested eight drugs for toxicity.
01:24:57 ►
On the one hand was mescaline, on the other was methamphetamine,
01:25:01 ►
and in the middle was MDMA.
01:25:02 ►
So that’s actually the first test that
01:25:05 ►
we’re aware of in the U.S. of MDMA was in this context. So the way to think about MDMA
01:25:13 ►
is that it’s like methamphetamine in that it makes you alert and it can keep you up
01:25:20 ►
all night, but it doesn’t make you jittery the way that methamphetamine will,
01:25:25 ►
or you can sit still and be awake all night.
01:25:28 ►
And it’s like mescaline in that it brings things to the surface,
01:25:32 ►
but it doesn’t have the visuals, it doesn’t have the kind of ego dissolution,
01:25:38 ►
but it has the warmth and the heart of mescaline.
01:25:42 ►
So MDMA, a good way to think about it, is sort of somewhat of a cross between mescaline and methamphetamine.
01:25:48 ►
The reason that mescaline, first off, is very hard to find
01:25:54 ►
is that it’s not that potent.
01:25:57 ►
So you need roughly 400 milligrams or so for a full psychedelic experience.
01:26:03 ►
And so underground chemists are looking to make drugs
01:26:08 ►
that are more powerful.
01:26:11 ►
And so you can sell more and you get more money
01:26:16 ►
per dose. So mescaline
01:26:19 ►
has that disadvantage, you could say, of requiring 400
01:26:23 ►
milligrams or up to a half a gram for full psychedelic experience.
01:26:29 ►
You can have a lot of beneficial stuff at lower doses as well.
01:26:33 ►
That’s also a reason why it’s not been yet us to make these drugs in gmp good medical practices way that um you know
01:26:49 ►
psilocybin you can do in 20 or 30 milligrams and have a full psychedelic dose you know mdma is up
01:26:56 ►
to 125 but then you know you just need to be making way way more and the price goes up for
01:27:01 ►
masculine when you have to give 400 milligrams or half a gram. That’s no reason, no real excuse not to make it into a medicine.
01:27:08 ►
It’s just to say the economics are a little bit different.
01:27:11 ►
And there’s a drug that’s sort of similar to mescaline called MDA.
01:27:16 ►
So it’s methyldioxamphetamine.
01:27:18 ►
It’s like a cross between MDMA and LSD a little bit.
01:27:21 ►
between MDMA and LSD a little bit.
01:27:28 ►
Right now, there is no resources that we’re aware of to work on mescaline,
01:27:32 ►
but I think it has incredible healing potential,
01:27:35 ►
and I can only hope that one day
01:27:37 ►
research will start with mescaline.
01:27:39 ►
Thank you.
01:27:43 ►
Thank you. Rick said just now about having an intention before an experience. Now, while I realized that what he was talking about was their MDMA work,
01:28:09 ►
personally, I found that the same thing works quite well for ayahuasca experiences.
01:28:14 ►
Early on, I learned that even though I began the session with a clear intention of what I wanted to work on that night,
01:28:20 ►
once the session began, I, well, I simply let go of my thoughts about that intention
01:28:25 ►
and let the medicine guide me from then on. And in my case, it’s worked wonders for me. So,
01:28:31 ►
if you haven’t tried that with your medicine work yet, well, maybe you want to consider it.
01:28:36 ►
So, Rick thinks that there will be full legalization of psychedelic medicines by 2035.
01:28:42 ►
Well, how convenient is that, I ask? You see, for reasons that I don’t
01:28:48 ►
fully understand, I’ve always known that I was going to live to be at least 94 years old. Well,
01:28:55 ►
fully understand, I guess I should be honest here. One of the main reasons I believe that is because
01:29:00 ►
on one of my ayahuasca sessions, I had a vision of, well, I had a vision of who was celebrating my 94th birthday with me.
01:29:08 ►
So that’s probably the main reason I think I’ll live to be 94.
01:29:12 ►
But if you do the math, in 2035, I’ll only be 93.
01:29:16 ►
So if all goes well, I’m going to stick around at, well, at least until the drugs are legal once again.
01:29:22 ►
Well, at least that sounds good to me.
01:29:22 ►
Well, at least until the drugs are legal once again.
01:29:24 ►
Well, at least that sounds good to me.
01:29:27 ►
But can you believe it?
01:29:33 ►
After all of the work that the volunteers, the donors, the therapists, and the staff at MAPS have put in,
01:29:38 ►
well, we are now within just a year of legal psychedelic-assisted therapy to become available under the FDA’s Expanded Access Program.
01:29:42 ►
Yes, there still are some things that MAPS must do to fully qualify
01:29:46 ►
for that program, but I think we can all rest assured that Rick Doblin and his merry band are
01:29:52 ►
going to make it across the finish line, and as Terrence McKenna sometimes said,
01:29:57 ►
and not a moment too soon. I can think back, oh say 30 years ago, when I would mention that some of my friends were suffering from PTSD.
01:30:07 ►
Well, people would ask me what that was.
01:30:09 ►
Today, things are quite different.
01:30:11 ►
It doesn’t take degrees in sociology and medicine to look around the world and see that huge segments of our human family are suffering from this malady.
01:30:21 ►
I think that maybe one of the things we all can do is to be aware of the symptoms of
01:30:26 ►
PTSD in our friends, relatives, and neighbors, and then at the very least let them know about
01:30:31 ►
the various psychedelic treatments that are now becoming available and may be of help for them.
01:30:36 ►
I know that doesn’t sound like much, but if you remember back from one of Lex Pelger’s Salon 2.0
01:30:42 ►
podcasts of psychedelic stories from around the country,
01:30:45 ►
there was one woman, I think she was a military veteran,
01:30:48 ►
who was having a terrible time readjusting to civilian life.
01:30:53 ►
And it was just a passing mention of the MAPS Phase 2 study that caught her attention.
01:30:58 ►
She made it into the study, and today she has only a few minor symptoms of PTSD.
01:31:04 ►
Now, had you been the person who told her about that study,
01:31:07 ►
wouldn’t you be feeling pretty good about yourself right now?
01:31:11 ►
So, please do what you can to spread the word about treatments
01:31:14 ►
that are now becoming available for the scourge of PTSD.
01:31:19 ►
And go see From Shock to Awe and take some friends.
01:31:22 ►
It, well, it could be a life-changing evening for some people.
01:31:26 ►
And for now, this is Lorenzo signing off from Cyberdelic Space. Be well, my friends. Thank you.