Huberman Lab - Dr. Matthew Johnson: Psychedelics for Treating Mental Disorders

Episode Date: September 20, 2021

This episode I discuss medical research on psychedelic compounds with Dr. Matthew Johnson, Professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine. We discuss the biology a...nd medical clinical-trial uses of psilocybin, MDMA, ayahuasca, DMT, and LSD. Dr. Johnson teaches us what the clinical trials in his lab are revealing about the potential these compounds hold for the treatment of depression, addiction, trauma, eating disorders, ADHD, and other disorders of the mind. Dr. Johnson describes a typical psychedelic experiment in his laboratory, start to finish, including the conditions for optimal clinical outcomes. And he explains some of the potential hazards and common misconceptions and pitfalls related to psychedelic medicine. Dr. Johnson explains flashbacks, the heightened risks of certain people and age groups using psychedelics and the ever evolving legal and pharmaceutical industry landscape surrounding psychedelics. Dr. Johnson also explains how the scientific study of psychedelics is likely to set the trajectory of psychiatric medicine in the years to come. Dr. Johnson is among a small handful of researchers who have pioneered the clinical study of these powerful compounds. He has unprecedented insight into how they can be woven into other psychiatric treatments, changing ones sense of self and of reality. For the full show notes, visit hubermanlab.com. Thank you to our sponsors AG1 (Athletic Greens): https://athleticgreens.com/huberman LMNT: https://drinklmnt.com/huberman Supplements from Momentous https://www.livemomentous.com/huberman Timestamps (00:00:00) Introducing Dr. Matthew Johnson (00:02:27) Sponsors: AG1, LMNT (00:06:40) ‘Psychedelics’ Defined (00:14:09) Hallucinations, Synesthesia, Altered Space-Time Perception (00:19:56) Serotonin & Dopamine  (00:23:50) Ketamine & Glutamate  (00:28:00) An Example Psychedelic Experiment (00:37:30) ‘Letting Go’ with Psychedelics (00:44:10) Our Mind’s Eye (00:48:00) Redefining Your Sense of Self  (00:58:56) Exporting Psychedelic Learnings to Daily Life (01:04:36) Flashbacks (01:12:10) Ayahuasca, & ASMR, Kundalini Breathing (01:15:54) MDMA, DMT (01:26:00) Dangers of Psychedelics, Bad Trips, Long-Lasting Psychosis (01:38:15) Micro-Dosing (01:56:45) Risks for Kids, Adolescents & Teenagers; Future Clinical Trials (02:03:40) Legal Status: Decriminalization vs. Legalization vs. Regulation (02:18:35) Psychedelics for Treating Concussion & Traumatic Brain Injury  (02:27:45) Shifting Trends in Psychedelic Research, Academic Culture (02:44:23) Participating in a Clinical Trial, Online Survey Studies, Breathwork  (02:50:38) Conclusions, Subscribing & Supporting the HLP, Supplements Title Card Photo Credit: Mike Blabac Disclaimer

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:00 Welcome to the Uberman Lab podcast where we discuss science and science-based tools for everyday life. I'm Andrew Uberman and I'm a professor of neurobiology and ophthalmology at Stanford School of Medicine. Today I have the pleasure of introducing Dr. Matthew Johnson. Dr. Johnson is a professor of psychiatry at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, where he also directs the Center for Psychedelic and Consciousness Research. As many of you know, there is extreme excitement about the use of psychedelics for the treatment of various disorders of the mind.
Starting point is 00:00:34 Dr. Johnson's laboratory is among the premier laboratories in the world understanding how these compounds work, how things like psilocybin and LSD and related compounds allow neural circuitry in the brain to be shaped and changed such that people can combat diseases like depression or trauma or other disorders of the mind that cause tremendous suffering. Dr. Johnson is also an expert in understanding how different types of drugs impact different types of human behaviors such as sexual behavior, risk-taking, and crime. Dr. Johnson and his work have also been featured prominently in the popular press, such as articles in the New York Times, and Michael Paulin's book Had a Change Your Mind,
Starting point is 00:01:14 and in a feature in 60 minutes about psychedelics and the new emerging science of psychedelic therapies for treating mental disorders. During the course of today's conversation, Dr. Johnson and I talk about psychedelics at the level of what's called microdosing, whether or not it is useful for the treatment of any mental disorders. We also talk about more typical macrodosing, what those macrodoses entail,
Starting point is 00:01:37 and he walks us through what an experiment of a patient taking psychedelics for the treatment of depression looks like in his laboratory from start to finish. The conversation was an absolutely fascinating one for me to partake in. I learned so much about the past, present, and future of psychedelic treatments and compounds. And indeed, I hope to have Dr. Johnson on this podcast again in the not too distant future so that we can talk about other compounds that powerfully impact the mind and human behavior and perhaps can also be used to treat various diseases.
Starting point is 00:02:10 Before we begin, I'd like to emphasize that this podcast is separate from my teaching and research roles at Stanford. It is, however, part of my desire and effort to bring zero cost to consumer information about science and science-related tools to the general public. In keeping with that theme, I'd like to thank the sponsors of today's podcast. Our first sponsor is Athletic Greens. Athletic Greens is an all-in-one
Starting point is 00:02:31 vitamin mineral probiotic drink. I've been taking Athletic Greens since 2012, so I'm delighted that they're sponsoring the podcast. The reason I started taking Athletic Greens and the reason I still take Athletic Greens once or twice a day is that it helps me cover all of my basic nutritional needs. It makes up for any deficiencies that I might have.
Starting point is 00:02:48 In addition, it has probiotics, which are vital for microbiome health. I've done a couple of episodes now on the so-called gut microbiome and the ways in which the microbiome interacts with your immune system, with your brain to regulate mood, and essentially with every biological system relevant to health throughout your brain and body. With athletic greens, I get the vitamins I need, the minerals I need, and the probiotics to support my microbiome.
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Starting point is 00:04:52 delicious. So again, if you want to try element, you can go to elementlmnt.com slash Huberman. And now my conversation with Dr. Matthew Johnson. Well, Matthew, I've been looking forward to this for a long time. I'm a huge fan of your scientific work and I'm a year to learn from you. Likewise, big fan and happy to do this with you. Very well, thank you. My first question is a very basic one, which is, what is a psychedelic? We hear this term all the time,
Starting point is 00:05:21 but what qualifies a substance to as a psychedelic? Nomenclature is a real challenge in this area of psychedelics. Starting with the word psychedelic, if you're a pharmacologist, it's not very satisfying, because that term really spans different pharmacological classes. In other words, if you're really concerned about receptor effects and the basic effects of a compound, it spans several classes of compounds. But overall, so it's really more of a cultural term or it does have a relationship to drug effects, but it's at a very high level. So all of the so-called psychedelics
Starting point is 00:06:06 across these distinct classes that I can talk more about, the way I put it is they all had the ability to profoundly alter one sense of reality. And that can mean many things. Part of that is profoundly altering the sense of self acutely. So when someone's on the psychedelic, so the different classes that can be the specific pharmacological
Starting point is 00:06:34 classes that can be called a psychedelic are one that what are called the classic psychedelic. So in the literature, you'll see that term. And hallucinogen and psychedelic are all have traditionally been used synonymously. I think there was a little bit tendency to stay away from psychedelics at the baggage, but there's been a return to that in the last several years. But the classic psychedelics or classic Hallucinjins are things like LSD,
Starting point is 00:07:03 psilocybin, which is in so-called magic mushrooms. It's in over 200 species that we know of so far of mushrooms. Dymethyltryptamine or DMT, which is in dozens and dozens of plants. Mescalin, which is in the peyote, cacti, and some other cacti, like sand, Pedro. And even amongst these classic psychedelics, there are two structural classes. So that's the chemistry. There's the tripdomine-based compounds like psilocybin and DMT. And then there's the fenethylamine-based compounds. These are the basic two to basically building blocks that you're starting from, either a trip to mean structure or a finethylamine structure. But that's just the chemistry.
Starting point is 00:07:49 That all of the, what's more important, or at least to someone like me, are the receptor effects, and then ultimately that's going to have a relationship to the behavioral and subjective effects. So all of these classic psychedelics serve as agnist or partial agnist at the serotonin two-way receptor, so subtype of serotonin receptor.
Starting point is 00:08:09 Then you have these other classes of compounds that you could call psychedelic. Another big one would be the NMDA antagonist. This would include ketamine, PCP, index from a thorphin, something I've done some research with, which folks might recognize from like robot tripping, guzzling, like, you know, culsar, which is something kind of like high school kids are known to do and they can't get a hold of real drugs that type of thing. So a large overlap in the types of subjective effects that you get from those compounds compared to the two A agonist classic psychedelics
Starting point is 00:08:48 But then you have and by the way this description this framework I'm describing not everyone will agree Some people will say no psychedelic only means classic psychedelic So there's different opinions here, but you have gosh salvin Salvin Orinay, which is a Kappa opioid agonist, which, again, Salvia Divinorum, it's a plant that became 20 years ago, it's sort of popped onto the legal high scene. And there's a long history of this, predating the internet, going back to like the stuff on Gurdor in the back of High Times magazine. And most of this stuff like never worked, you know, or like the smoke enough ofore in the back of High Times magazine. And most of this stuff like never worked. You know, it's like the smoke enough of anything, maybe a little bit light-headed.
Starting point is 00:09:29 But this is one of those things that popped around 20 years ago when it quickly got the reputation like holy shit, the stuff actually works and works really strongly. In these smoked extracts particularly, people have these reality altering experiences on par with smoked DMT, the classic psychedelic. So often, and we did the first blinded controlled human research with Salvan Orne. So lots of entity contact, so feeling that you, in the experience of one is actually interacting with autonomous beings, that type of thing. And then you have another big one, I probably should have mentioned even before the you know, Salvin or Ne, but you have MDMA, which really stands in a class by itself. So it's been called an antagonist and... What does that mean? It means like touching within, it's sort of that lutes the idea that it can really put someone in touch with their
Starting point is 00:10:25 emotions. It's also been called an empathogen, meaning it can afford empathy, but I think in tactogen, it's probably that's the term that I tend to focus on. And I know I'm not telling you anything, you don't know, but for the viewers, the primary mechanism of MDMA is serotonin release and to a degree other monoamine release dopamine serotonin. And so structurally, that's also in the phenethylamine class, which contains mescalin, the classic psychedelic, but also emphetamine. So just like Adderall is in that fenethylmene class.
Starting point is 00:11:09 This is another example where chemistry doesn't dictate. You can tweak a molecule and might have that same basic structure, but now you've profoundly changed the way it interacts with the receptor. in mdma does not you know exert its actions by like to say by by by you know mimicking the baseball entering the glove the post uh synaptic receptor side you know acting as an agonist so mimicking the the the endogenous neurotransmitter serotonin, like the classic psychedelics do, MDMA works on the picture side of just basically throwing out more of the natural, the endogenous serotonin.
Starting point is 00:11:51 Don't be more serotonin flooding the synapse. So I get the impression that the psychedelic space is a enormous cloud of partially overlapping compounds, right, meaning some are impacting the serotonin system more than the dopamine system, others are impacting the dopamine system more than the serotonin system. Given that the definition of a psychedelic
Starting point is 00:12:14 is that it profoundly alters sense of self, at least that's included as a partial definition. Can we break that down into a couple of subcategories? So for instance, hallucinating, either auditory or visual, synesthesia, perceptual blending. The sense that you can hear colors and see sounds, for instance, a common report of people that take psychedelics in sufficiently high doses. So hallucinating synesthesia, and then in terms of sense of self, you know, as a neuroscientist, I think, okay, what does it mean to alter a sense of reality?
Starting point is 00:12:56 Really what the brain does in a very coarse way is to try and figure out what's happening in space, physical space, and that physical space could be within us or outside us, and what's happening in time. And as a vision scientist, the simplest explanation is when I move my hand from one location to another location, it's measuring the space, the location of my hand in space over time. And then you get a rate and a speed and all that kind of stuff, right? Yeah. That gets more complete as you get a rate and a speed and all that kind of stuff, right? That gets more complete as you get into the emotional realm. But is it fair to say that psychedelics are impacting the space time analysis that the brain is performing and thereby creating hallucinations
Starting point is 00:13:39 and thereby altering the blending of senses. Is it fair to say that? I think it's fair to explore that area. And here's what I'm thinking. The clearly there is a change relationship, certainly at the right dose of orientation and space time. I think as a, I'm primarily a behaviorist, and in terms of human behavioral pharmacology, I always go to comparative pharmacology.
Starting point is 00:14:11 What can we say that is it truly unique about the classic psychedelics, or psychedelics, in general? So with that description, I'm thinking, okay, alcohol can really screw up your time space, orientation, your balance. Alcohol can really screw up your time space or orientation. And total perception, your balance. Properiusessicular. Yeah. And in many ways, and in those gross motorways,
Starting point is 00:14:31 like far worse, of course, everything's dose dependent, but in the classics like that, obviously, the benzodiazepines being very similar. Alcohol. Same thing. So I'd want to dig in a little more in terms of like, maybe there's something more specific we could say about that relationship to time and space that the psychedelics are tinkering
Starting point is 00:14:53 with. But I'm not sure. It's an interesting hypothesis, the idea that that's a mediator, that's something that there's something fundamental about changing that the representation in time and space, there might be something to that. I think of these as psychedelics as profoundly altering models. We're prediction machines, and that's so much of that is top down. And psychedelics have a good way of loosely speaking, dissolving those models. And one of the, the, the, the, the, the, we give this an example of one of, like, a model,
Starting point is 00:15:35 like, like, I know that when I throw a ball in the air, it falls down, not up. That's, that's a prediction that I learned as a child. I did not come into the world with a brain that knew that relationship between objects and gravity, but one of the first things that a child learns is the relationship between objects and gravity and their trajectories. Yeah. And with a four-year-old, I mean, I saw that at earlier ages, like that experimentation of like, Oh, yeah, that's what happens, you know? Right. So if he were to throw a job or to throw a ball and it went up into the sky,
Starting point is 00:16:13 that would be absolutely mind-blowing. It would be for an adult too. It would be a pretty psychedelic experience, probably. Right. And so there's a spate, there's a rule there you're saying. There's a kind of a prediction, there's a rule that underlies a prediction that when that rule is violated, all of a sudden the circuit presumably for that prediction go like, it does not have a mind of its own. But somehow it creates a surprise element or a recognition element.
Starting point is 00:16:42 And it's not filtered out, you know. And this might sound extreme, but there are these cases. It was overblown in sort of the propaganda the late 60s, early 70s, but there are credible cases of people. I think it's very atypical of sounds like they really thought they could fly. And you know, jump out of a window. Now, far more people every year fall, I mean, who knows?
Starting point is 00:17:11 They fall and die out of from height because they're drunk. So it's as extremely rare. But there are some pretty convincing cases. There was one research volunteer in our studies that she looked like she was in one of our studies like she was trying to dive through a painting on the wall. She was fine, but she, reviewing the video, it looked like she really thought that she was going to go through that painting and, you know, so she was the other dimension.
Starting point is 00:17:48 Yeah, so the violating these predictions. Yeah, the reason I ask it, the question the way I did is because given the enormous cloud of different substances and given the range of previous experiences that people show up to a psychedelic experience with. I feel like the ability to extract some universal themes is useful, especially for people who haven't done them before, right? Who might not have an understanding of what their effects are like. We just briefly touch on the serotonin system and the dopamine system. I want to acknowledge it, as you already know, that there are many neuromodulator systems in the body, and the dopamine system. I wanna acknowledge it, as you already know, that there are many neuromodulator systems in the body,
Starting point is 00:18:28 and the opioid systems, cannabinoid systems, but there's something so profound about the serotonin system and the dopamine system because the way I define a neuromodulator is, it's a modulator, it changes the way that other circuits behave, and essentially it increases the probability that certain circuits will be active and decreases the probability that other circuits behave. And essentially it increases the probability that certain circuits will be active
Starting point is 00:18:46 and decreases the probability that other circuits will be active. In a general sense. So compounds like LSD, my surgery acid, Diathlete, and psilocybin. My understanding is that they primarily target this serotonin system. How do they do that at a general level?
Starting point is 00:19:08 And why would increasing the activity of a particular serotonin receptor or batch of serotonin receptors lead to these profoundly different experiences that we're calling model challenges, challenging pre-existing models and approaches? I mean, at the end of the day, it's a chemical, and these receptors are scattered around the brain with billions of other receptors. What do we think is going on in a general sense? Yeah, and this is really the area of active exploration, and we don't have great answers. We know a good amount about the receptor level
Starting point is 00:19:45 formacology. Some things about post-receptor signaling pathways. In other words, just fitting into the receptor. Clearly, you know, serotonin itself is not psychedelic. You know, the world's we'd be tripping all of us all the time. Because when I eat a bagel, I get serotonin release, right? I mean, there's a- And we're trying to get in there. There's a fan, right? My understanding of serotonin is that in very broad strokes that it generally leads to a state of being fairly, it pushes the mind and body towards a state of contentment within the immediate experience, whereas the dopamine system really places us into an external view of what's out there in the world and what's possible. Yeah, I mean, to do something. I mean, system really places us into an external view of what's out there in the world and
Starting point is 00:20:25 what's possible. Yeah. Need to do something. I mean, that's consistent with my understanding. And I'll certainly not in terms of, I don't primarily identify as a neuroscientist. I definitely tell the, you know, the viewers that were far more neurodomain here than mine, but in terms of how psychedelics and other drugs, you know, interface at the neuroscience level.
Starting point is 00:20:48 Well, feel free to explain it at the experiential level. Yeah. I think there probably are some audience members that are interested in, is that the 5H2C is at the layer 5 neurons and cortex. That conversation we could hold, and that's an interesting conversation, but just in terms of the experience of serotonergic
Starting point is 00:21:05 versus dopaminergic drugs, they do seem to create distinct classes of experience. So I think that's the appropriate level for us to discuss them. And in terms of how they, and I'd like to explore the biology a little bit here and tell you what's known and what some of the ideas are. You have this path, you know, as you know, these are levels of analysis and it's not which
Starting point is 00:21:31 one is going on. It's almost like for the particular question, which level of analysis is most appropriate? Is a question best addressed by the biology, the chemistry, or the physics? That's how I think of receptor level, post receptor signaling, downstream effects, other neurotransmitters, and then activation level effects, and then coordination of activation. So, you got clearly with the classic psychedelics, the two-way activation, we do know that there are downstream effects in terms of increasing glutamate transmission.
Starting point is 00:22:08 So this is likely a commonality why ketamine is very psychedelic in a slightly different way. Do people hallucinate on ketamine? Yes, yes. It's more dissociative, so someone is more likely to sort of be less behaviorally active. They have a really high dose. They go into a K-hole and they go into a really high dose, they go into a K hole and they go into really high dose, like you get in search of all the K hole.
Starting point is 00:22:27 That's what I'm conscious. Yeah, not an A hole, but a K hole. Yeah, and it's very different. The K hole, and Ken needs interesting, because people can take kind of bumps and kind of dance on it with the sort of an alcohol level, strength of a effect, and that's sort of the classic kind of raving, you know, use of it.
Starting point is 00:22:45 But then those folks want to titrate their dose because if they do more of like a line, you get up to like 7,500 milligrams, then you're talking about, you know, if you're on the dance floor, you're on the floor and your friends are trying to make sure people aren't stepping on you. So that's like, you know, why would somebody want to take a dissociative anesthetic? Like to me, it's completely mysterious as to why someone will want to dissociate from their body. People claim that these, these, these, these, these NMDA and tag into psychedelics are extremely insightful, you know, in a very similar way to the experiences with the classic psychedelics.
Starting point is 00:23:24 So. And ketamine is now legal for therapeutic. Right. Right. in a very similar way to the experiences with the classic psychedelic. So... And ketamine is now legal for therapeutic. Right, right. Spravato, the intranasal form marketed by Janssen, which is esketamine. It's perspiration. Yeah, it's prescription. And so people are taking in the nasal spray.
Starting point is 00:23:40 Yeah. And then are they undergoing talk therapy while they're doing this? Typically not. So it's this is very interesting. And there's so much work that needs to be done. It's not treated as psychedelic therapy. And by that psychedelic therapy, I mean, you tell the person they're going to have an altered experience. You tell them to pay attention to that experience.
Starting point is 00:24:00 That they might learn something from that experience. And afterwards you discuss that experience. With Spravato, the model is... Spravato is... Is esketamine. Okay. It's the, yeah, the spray form of ketamine that's been FDA approved for treatment resistant depression. But it's, you'll probably feel different, ignore that. That's a side effect. That's an adverse effect. Just ignore it. We don't think that has anything to do
Starting point is 00:24:28 at the way it works. But just get this thing. It's a direct, you know, sort of chemotherapeutic effect in a sense. It's not facilitating a learning process. Now, there's older work. There was a guy Krupitsky in Russia that did extensive work with higher
Starting point is 00:24:45 doses of ketamine. I should say spravato at prescribed doses isn't very, it's a pretty low dose, it's in the mild psychedelic range, but it's not very strong. But this older work that happened in the 90s and early 2000s in Russia, they were using very high doses and treating it like a psychedelic, treating it as if it was a psychedelic therapy. You know, they were telling people, you're going to have this experience. It's going to, you know, we're hoping you learn something from it.
Starting point is 00:25:13 We're going to help you through it. We're going to discuss it afterwards. And they found incredibly high rates of success and some pretty well-controlled trials for both heroin addiction and alcohol addiction. So I think a whole lot of work needs to be done now. And you see some of the ketamine clinics that are using ketamine off-label, a lot of them aren't treating it like psychedelic therapy.
Starting point is 00:25:33 There's essentially no research at this point on that. Do you get better results? Straight abusive spravato, there's some good variability, but it's antidepressant effects last about a week But the kickin immediately now a week is a long time for like most most psychiatric drugs like you take it every day You know, so that's amazing, but it's still just a week. We're seeing effects You know a year or more later with with with psilocybin and and some of the classics Psyched out that could be a pharmacological difference
Starting point is 00:26:06 or it could be that they get a lot more mileage out of ketamine if they treated it like psychedelic therapy. And so that's some- So what were that look like? Really just like our psilocybin sessions, which I know I haven't described, but briefly, you have anywhere from four to eight hours of preparation, getting to know
Starting point is 00:26:25 the people who are going to be the guides or the therapist in the room. Yeah, maybe you could walk us through this. So let's say I were to come to one of your clinical trials, because these are clinical trials, right? And in your lab at Hopkins. Yeah. And would I need to be depressed, or could I just be somebody who wanted to explore psychedelics? We've had studies for all of these and a number of other disorders. So healthy normal studies, the code for not a problem to fix, but we're all here. That's what's amazing about psychedelics, though, because if you administer them under this model and you develop a relationship and give a high dose of psychedelic, you can be healthy normal without a diagnosable issue.
Starting point is 00:27:02 But man, we're all human and the issues seem to come to the surface. But we've done work with smoking cessation, so people trying to quit tobacco and haven't been successful. So a variety of reasons. So maybe I'll just ask some very simple questions that would kind of step us through the process. So let's say I were to sign up for one of these trials and I qualified for one of these trials. I'd show up.
Starting point is 00:27:24 You said I would do several hours in advance of getting to know the team that would be present during this psychedelic journey. Right. First, there's screening. So it's kind of like a couple of days of both psychiatric, like structured in psychiatric interviews about your whole, your past and symptoms across the DSM, the psychiatric Bible, to see if you might have various disorders that could disqualify you.
Starting point is 00:27:48 Like the main ones being the psychotic disorders, schizophrenia, and we're also including bipolar, so the manic side of bipolar. So after that's in also cardiovascular screening, heart disease, after that screening, then the preparation where you get, you're both, you develop a therapeutic rapport with the people who are going to be in the room with you, your guides. But you're also then
Starting point is 00:28:10 didactically sort of explained about what the psychedelic could be like. And that's kind of a laundry list because they're more known by their variability than, you know, it's going to, it's not like cocaine, like you're going to feel stimulated. You're gonna feel like you can do any, it's like, or alcohol, you're probably gonna feel more relaxed. It's like I call them uppers, downers, and all arounders, and the psychedelics of all arounders. It's like, yeah, you could be,
Starting point is 00:28:38 you could have the most beautiful experience of your life or the most terrifying experience of your life. So it's this kind of laundry list of like the things that could happen. So there's no surprises. I think it's so important for people to hear because the all-arounders, they, you really can't predict how somebody is going to react internally. Right. I want to just briefly touch on something because we left that topic, but it occurred to me that a lot of these effects
Starting point is 00:29:08 of psychedelics and how they function, et cetera, is still very mysterious, but then I recalled to mine that how most prescription antidepressants work is also very mysterious. They increase serotonin or dopamine or epinephrine, et cetera, but why they take weeks on and several weeks to kick in, et cetera, is also mysterious. But going back to the experience of coming to your laboratory. Okay, so let's say that somebody passes all the prerequisites and it's the day.
Starting point is 00:29:38 Comes the day that they're going to have this experience. Are they eating mushrooms like going to have this experience, are they eating mushrooms like you hear about or are they taking it in capsule form? And what sorts of doses are you prescribing as they're a dose response curve? And then secondary to that, I'd like to talk about microdose versus macrodose. So how do they get this stuff into? How do people receive it and how do they get it into their body? So they receive pure psilocybin. So the mushroom and there are many species, the most prive people have taken mushrooms in the United States. It's most likely psilocybin Cubenses. They're easy to grow, they grow in cow patties, it's easy for any body to grow them in their closet. It doesn't take a thousand watt light like cannabis, it takes like a little, you know, ten-watt light bulb and a Tupperware bin.
Starting point is 00:30:29 So those are what, those are the types of mushrooms that people typically tape. We're not administering those. Siliciven is the compound. You could draw a molecule, psilocybin, again, based on the trip to mean structure. Like that's a single molecular entity. So it's a white powder. Does it look like serotonin molecularly? Yes, yes, yes.
Starting point is 00:30:49 So if I look to show people the chemical structure of serotonin, the chemical structure of psilocybin, it would look quite similar. Right, right. And there's basically taking serotonin. A modified version of serotonin, which makes sense. But then again, this repeated theme of the chemistry doesn't always neatly line up because like mescaline looks more like dopamine than it does
Starting point is 00:31:14 like serotonin, but yet at the receptor activation level, the pharmacological effect, those are similar. But yeah, I mean, and what it does at the receptor is an alternate, it's hitting the same switch, but then having an alternate response at the receptor. Yeah, so for people that don't necessarily understand the relationship between what we call ligand, the thing that parks in the receptor, and the receptor is the parking spot, one of the reasons that you can get such a variety of effects from different compounds is, for instance, serotonin might affect a certain pathway at a particular rate and psilocybin might trigger activation of different components of that pathway,
Starting point is 00:31:56 different rates, since you can get vastly different experiences from two things that look chemically similar. This is also a good reason why people shouldn't just assume that they can cowboy their own chemistry, right? That what you see on paper and what you can mix up in a while is often vastly different than what you predict. Right. And there's a dose effect curve that's really interesting. Some of our early work with psilocybin in healthy normals looked at a true placebo plus four active doses,
Starting point is 00:32:29 five, 10, 20, and 30 milligrams of psilocybin. Body weight adjusted, so those milligrams per 70 kilograms of body weight, we've recently published a paper in our newer trials, we're dropping the body weight adjustment because our going across hundreds of volunteers, we've kind of figured out that you shouldn't really be, you don't need to be adjusting by body weight. So, yeah. Well, brain size doesn't vary that much between individuals. Yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:32:59 The end, this is a brain effect mostly, probably body as well well Okay, so the person ingest the powder It a little pill okay, yeah, and it doesn't take 30 milligrams as a small He could fit it into a tiny little capsule and it'll take about a half hour What mean we're from 15 minutes to an hour to kick in and have a dose range was Most of our studies are looking at where we we want a psychedelic effect or in the 20 to 30 milligram range. Again, because we have adjusted by body weight and the average American is over 70 kilograms, about 150 pounds, like people in fact have gotten more like 40, 45, in a lot of cases.
Starting point is 00:33:45 But it's still a small pill. The session day itself is not full of, for most of our studies is not full of tasks. We really wanna look at the therapeutic response, obviously, if it's a therapeutic study. We want it to be a meaningful experience and research has found not surprisingly that you get a less meaningful
Starting point is 00:34:05 experience when you're in an FMRI or when you're doing a lot of cognitive tasks. We've done some research on, you know, of that type for sure and plenty of colleagues have, but when you're in a therapeutic study or if you're trying to understand the therapeutic effects, you have to recognize there's this tradeoff of what you can do. So our typical therapeutic model, which again, isn't just limited necessarily to the therapeutic studies where we're trying to treat a specific disorder, it is to have that preparation,
Starting point is 00:34:37 so the person feels very comfortable with their guides. I mean, ultimately, what I tell people is like like any emotional response, it's all welcome. I mean, you could be crying like a baby hysterically. That's what you should be doing, if that's what you feel like. And a lot of ways sometimes people with psychedelic experience on their own, it can be harder to train them in this model because in the real world people with psychedelic experience, a lot of times the rule is, you know, hold your shit. So, you know, several friends go to a party, they split a bag of mushrooms, it's like, you
Starting point is 00:35:13 know, there's a social pressure for good reason not to be the guy, you know, in the corner of the room where everyone's trying to just have a good time relax, like crying about your mother, your other friends, or they're having an experience too, and you're being a drama king and blah, blah, blah. And so like, yeah, compose yourself, hold your, you're doing therapy for people. This is, it's not just about the experience.
Starting point is 00:35:37 Right, and the experience itself is very much shaped by that container, by the environment. And there's a great, which one allows it to happen. Like, one should let go of control. Yeah, let's talk about the letting go of control. And then as we march through this hypothetical experience, that does take place in your lab. So we're using a sort of generic case example, if you will.
Starting point is 00:36:03 The letting go of control is an interesting feature actually, because one of the common themes of good psychoanalysis or psychotherapy of any kind is that there's a trust built between the patient and the analyst, and that relationship becomes a template for trust more generally and trust in oneself. It's actually the end goal of good psychoanalysis is that the patient actually one of the end goals is that they develop an empathy for themselves which almost sounds like an oxymoron but if you spend a little time with that statement it actually pans out. So the psychedelic experience is one in which chemically you're under a new set of conditions, right?
Starting point is 00:36:45 But, of course, the space and time are altered in some way, sense of self. For instance, I might be going to a strongly interoceptive mode where I'm focusing on everything within the confines of my skin, whereas normally we're sort of interacting in space and pens and conversation. And I'm sort of, if I had occasionally
Starting point is 00:37:03 I'll pay attention to my breathing, but I'm sort of dilating and end, contracting my focus for different things all the time. The letting go of control, it seems to me, could be sort of the expansion of one perceptual bubble to the point where you're not actually worried that that perceptual bubble is going to pop, or that meaning you're not worried about what people think of you. Yeah. You're not worried whether or not your brain is going to explode even though a thought could
Starting point is 00:37:31 feel enormous. If I keep going like this, it almost sounds like a deliq. But that's the idea here. Or if I'm paying attention, for instance, to some somatic experience like the coursing of waves of heat through my body that I'm not suddenly saying, you know, is that weird? I'm actually just going deeper and deeper into it. So it's essentially expanding a perceptual phenomenon.
Starting point is 00:37:56 How do you convince people to go further and further down that path? What do you think allows them to do that? Because I think that that to me is one of the more unusual aspects to psychedelics is that normally the the social pressure, but also just our internal pressure from our own brain is pay attention to many things at once, not just one. Is that especially these days? Yeah, multi task, yeah, multi task. And the more that we focus on one thing the more bizarre that thing actually can appear to us, right? Right. I mean, even if it's the tip of your finger and you're not taking any psychedelics, you spend a long enough looking at the tip of your finger. You will notice very weird things, right? I think that is the classic psychedelic effect or one classic effect and one of you's many times of this example of why people should necessarily,
Starting point is 00:38:46 you know, these aren't, these, one should be judicious in putting themselves in these circumstances. Someone could be, you know, having a very strong civil-civen experience and they're trying to navigate their way in Manhattan, cross in the street, and they might be staring into the hand. And real, like, that's their hand is the most amazing miracle. Like, the entire universe has essentially conspired to come to this one point to make this absolutely breathtaking. It's almost like, I think, of the simplest form of, well, we know, the simplest form of learning is habituation.
Starting point is 00:39:22 Simply keep applying stimuli and there's less response. Like, this is what organisms do. learning is habituation. Simply keep applying stimuli and there's less response. Like, this is what organisms do. This is what we have to do. And it's like there's this habituation component that like- Dishabituation. Yes.
Starting point is 00:39:34 Like, we wouldn't be able to get through life. We wouldn't be able to cross that street if we were like, whole, like, this is a miracle. Like, so good of you. No, I'm so glad you brought this up. I mean, here I'm reflecting my biases of vision scientists. But most people don't realize this, but if you look at something long enough,
Starting point is 00:39:47 it eventually disappears. It doesn't actually disappear, but perceptually it disappears. You have these little microsecodes that ensure that it doesn't. But most of us don't look at any one thing for very long. Right. The brain's default is to perceptually jump around like crazy
Starting point is 00:40:04 with the visual system, with the auditory system. We all, ADD, then people talk about ADD a lot, is sort of baked into our underlying networks at some level. And then we can force attention. But it sounds like on psychedelics, one of the primary goals therapeutically is to really drill into one of these perceptual bubbles
Starting point is 00:40:23 and expand that bubble. And the safety, it seems, is the safety, it's sort of like a permission to do that without worrying that something's gonna happen. Right, because, you know, I've had people there on the couch, yeah, I remember one lady said, this is probably 13, 14 years ago, said, Matt, tell me again, I can't die.
Starting point is 00:40:46 I feel like my heart is going to rip through my chest. I mean, she was feeling... And I should say, typically cardiovascular response is modest. The pulse and blood pressure go up somewhat. It can be dangerous for people if they're at severe heart risk and we do... You monitor in this... We do... Yeah, we do.
Starting point is 00:41:04 So the virus... So the virus we do a variety of devices. Yeah so every half hour or so we we take their own protocol we you know space that a little further further into the time course but we take their blood pressure and their pulse and if it goes over a certain level we have a protocol and we've had to do this only a few times but physician comes in gives them a little nitric glycerin under the tongue and you know knocks the blood pressure down a little bit, doesn't affect the experience. So we have it all in place, even though they'd probably be fine
Starting point is 00:41:28 out of an abundance of caution. Sure. But yeah, but someone can feel that, I got, I'm gonna die. Like I have never felt my heart beat like this before. And like the experience of the breath can be just, you know, absolutely fantastic. And the experience of the breath can be just absolutely fantastic. And the breath is obviously interesting
Starting point is 00:41:49 because it's this automatic control, but it could also be voluntary. So people begin into a sense of like, oh my god, what if I forget? It sounds silly. Like a story of a breathe. Exactly. But people, that can be so compelling. And so one of the
Starting point is 00:42:05 retain it, get back to one of your questions. It's like, what do we do to kind of allow them to go further into these bubbles? It's like, one is is wearing the eye shades. We don't call them blindfolds because that has a negative connotation like being kidnapped. And they're probably seeing a lot in there anyway. So blind isn't the appropriate. Right, right. I've never thought of it. These should be like inner sight shades. But when you close the eyes, the levels of activity in the retina actually are maintained.
Starting point is 00:42:33 It's just spontaneous activity. And it seems, and I'd be curious about your thoughts on this, I mean, but the way I describe it is that the mind's eye, this kind of loose term we use, can be on rocket boosters. So a lot of times, for some people, like a compound like psilocybin, for some people, there's no perceptual effect. Like if they're looking at this room, it would pretty much look the same.
Starting point is 00:43:00 Sometimes folks say, yeah, things seem a little bit brighter. Now, some people will say, oh my god, there's waves that wall is waving and these curtains that, you know, on these compounds, people don't typically see pink elephants. You do actually get that in another class. I didn't mention the anti-colonurgics, sort of like, atropine and scopolamine, those drugs. Those are the true hallucinations where you thought you were having a conversation with someone who was never there. You know? We will definitely get to those, but the reason I kind of cringe is that, oh my,
Starting point is 00:43:30 when you talked about those is that knowing a little bit about the pharmacology of a seat of calling, the idea of manipulating that system to me sounds very uncomfortable, Because like the whole idea of, well, witches and flying, there was a whole history there, hundreds of years ago, so called witches taking these agents and then thinking they were flying around on broomsticks and things of that sort. And there's a lot of mythology around the broomsticks that's complicated, but that sounds very unpleasant.
Starting point is 00:44:01 One thing I, about the serotonergic, let's just, with psilocybin, so there's a person, an expansion of a particular fairly narrow percept. It could be sound, it could be an emotion, it could be sadness, it could be a historical event or a fear of the future. And you've mentioned before that there's something to be learned in that experience. Yeah. There's something about going into that experience in an undeterred way that allows somebody to bring something back into more standard reality.
Starting point is 00:44:42 Given the huge variety of experiences that people have on psychedelics, given the huge variety of humans that are out there, but what are now very clear therapeutic effects in the realm of depression, what do you think is the value of going into this fairly restricted perceptual bubble? What we are calling letting go or giving up control? restricted perceptual bubble, what we are calling letting go or giving up control. Because if the experiences are many, but the value of what one exports from that experience is kind of similar across individuals, that raises all sorts of interesting questions. And this is not a philosophy discussion.
Starting point is 00:45:18 We're talking about biology and psychology here. So let's say I decide I'm going to focus on the tip of my pen. I mean, in a psychedelic state, I could fall in love with this pen. I do happen to like these pilot V5s and V7s very much, but I could feel real love for the pen. That's not an unreasonable thing to expect on a psychedelic journey. And in the context of your laboratory model, which I think is a great one, that experience would be just as valid as me going into the experience of some of the deep friction that I might have with a family member
Starting point is 00:45:52 over my entire lifespan. Yeah. And yet the export from that, those two vastly different experiences is one of feeling a better relationship to the world and one cell. Right. So what does this tell us about? How can the pen and the processing your childhood trauma both lead to?
Starting point is 00:46:08 Right. Yeah. So what does this, I mean, at that level, it raises this question like, first of all, how, why? I mean, or just what are your thoughts on that? So this is definitely, and this is in the terrain we're figuring out, you know, so there's no educated speculations the best I can provide. But I think the best, I think the common denominator
Starting point is 00:46:36 are persisting changes in self-representation. OK. Tell me more about self-representation. That's the way one holds the sense of self, the fundamental relationship of a person in the world. I mentioned earlier that these experience seems alter the models we hold of reality. And I think that the self is the biggest model.
Starting point is 00:46:59 I am a thing that's separate from other things. And that's, I am defined by certain, I have a certain personality. And I'm a smoker that's having a hard time quitting, or I'm a depressed person that views myself as a failure and all of these things. Those are models too. And I think I think that change in self-representation may be an point for these different experiences. I mean, maybe the falling in love with the pen, the whole idea that you're especially in contemplation afterwards, and obviously I'm speculating here, but the whole idea that you could have such a deep connection with this random, obviously random aspect of the universe could potentially lead to this the universe could potentially lead to this transformed understanding of the self and like the pen may be a proxy
Starting point is 00:47:48 for the miracle of reality. In a way that relies nothing on no supernatural thinking, you can be a hard atheist and take this ultimately, oh my god, like that, just like the pen, this is amazing, the fact that we exist and so there could be an extrapolation chair. And you use the pen, but I think it sounds similar to Aldous Huxley's classic description
Starting point is 00:48:12 and the doors of perception of the chair and the drapes, like he took 500 milligrams of mescaline, he was just like- Is that a high dose of mescaline? Yeah, yeah. And that's a heroic dose for sure. And he's just going off on the chariiness of the chair. Like this chair is exuding the quality of being a chair.
Starting point is 00:48:33 And this expansion of the perceptual bubble, a narrow percept that then grows within the confines of that narrow percept. So sense of self is a very interesting phenomenon. If we could dissect it a little bit, there's the somatic sense of self, so the ability to literally feel the self into this process we call interoception.
Starting point is 00:48:56 And then there's the title of the self, the I am blank. And I know as you said that several times, it's intriguing to me, a good friend, I don't think I can or should mention his name, but he had a very long and successful career within one of the more elite teams and within the SEAL teams. And he's a fairly philosophical guy, also a very practical guy, but he has said many times to me that the most powerful words in any language are I am because whatever follows that tends, if you repeated enough, tends to have this kind of feedback effect on how you
Starting point is 00:49:36 are in the world. And the first pass, it sounded to me a little bit like, you know, kind of like internet psychology type thing, like the secret or something, which frankly I'm just not particularly. I'm, yeah, you know, say if you kind of like the whole fake it till you make it, like I don't actually subscribe to any of that. But in dissecting that a little bit further with him, I came to realize that these words I am are very powerful. I don't think you reprogram your brain just by saying them, but how one defines themselves internally, not just to other people, but how one psychologically and by default and defines themselves, I think is very powerful,
Starting point is 00:50:17 like, and depressed people, as well as happy people, seem to define themselves in terms of these categories of emotional states. So I think it's so interesting that letting go and going into this perceptual bubble, which is facilitated by obviously a really wonderful team of therapists, but also the serotonergic agent allows us to potentially reshape the perception of self. That's a tremendous feat of neuroplasticity. Right.
Starting point is 00:50:47 And I think certainly more work needs to be done. This is the horizon. And I should credit Chris Lethaby, a philosopher, in Australia who has a forthcoming book. It might be out right about now or soon within the coming months, psychedelics and philosophy. That's the title of the book. It might be psychedelic philosophy.
Starting point is 00:51:10 It's really crystal etherbeating. Well, we'll put a link to it. Right. And so his conclusion in this, it's a really great book and he really plays with the idea. It's like psychedelic experiences come along with a lot of supernatural stuff,
Starting point is 00:51:24 experience, it can certainly go along with that lot of supernatural stuff, experience. They can certainly go along with that, but the idea is, can these experiences, including a therapeutic effect, be explained from a naturalist point of view? And his conclusion is that changes in self-representation may be the commonality. Now that could go along with plant spirits and the Buddha and Shakras and whatever your model, you know, system in Jesus, all of that, but it could also be completely devoid of any supernatural and your religious, and we do, in fact, see all of these varieties.
Starting point is 00:52:01 So, I think there's something about this change in sense of self. There is, it seems to be something on the identity level, both with, I think, the work we did with cancer patients who had substantial depression and anxiety because of their cancer, and also our work with people trying to quit cigarette smoking. I mean, there's this real, there seems to be when it really works this change in how people view themselves. Like smoking, like really stepping out of this model, like, I'm a smoker, it's tough to quit smoking cigarettes, I can't do it, I failed a bunch of times. I remember one participant during the session, but he held onto this afterwards, said, I, God, it's like, I can really just decide, like flicking off a bike.
Starting point is 00:52:47 I can decide not to smoke. And it's, I call these duh experiences with psychedelics because people often, like in the cancer cell, you say, I'm causing most of my own suffering. Like I can, I can follow my appointments, I can do everything, but I can supplant for the vehicle. I'm not getting outside, you know, in the sunshine, I'm not playing with my grandkids. I'm choosing to do that. And it's like, they told themselves that before.
Starting point is 00:53:09 And the smoker has told themselves a million times. I can, so it sounds, when it comes out of their mouths, any folks will say, this is part of the ineffability of a psychedelic experience. Folks say, I know this sounds like bullshit and this sounds like, but my God, I could just sigh. Like they're feeling this gravity of agency, and which I think is interesting,
Starting point is 00:53:29 because regardless of the, the, you know, debates on the reality of free will, I think the philosophy of that, whether it's ultimately free will, like pure agency if that exists, which I'm skeptical of, or just the idea that clearly we have a sense of agency.
Starting point is 00:53:48 There's something there, whether it's the sense of agency even, that is the human being has, and that seems to be, at times, fundamentally, like supercharged from a psychedelic experience. This idea, like, I'm just going to make a decision, like normally, like, you tell a depressed person, like, don't think of yourself that way. You're not a failure. You're like, it's just, yeah, it's like, and you can actually, in one of these states, having an experience where you realize, like, my God, just like using MDMA to treat PTSD, and we're going to be starting work with psilocybin and treat PTSD. Someone could really reprocess their trauma in a way that has lasting effects.
Starting point is 00:54:29 And clearly, this is probably something that, you know, reconciledation of those memories. They are altered, you know, very consistent with what are understanding of the way memory works. So the whole idea of people can actually, in a few hours, have such a profound experience that they decide to make these changes and who they are and it sticks. There seems to be something like that. And that's profound. I mean, I think a few moments ago I was, I made some semi-dispiraging
Starting point is 00:55:00 statements about things like the secret and affirmations. And the reason I do that with a nod to the fact that the people who are putting those ideas forward are well-intentioned people is that the neural networks of the brain put language last. We tell stories, you know, and stories are very powerful. But I think one of the most cruel aspects of the whole self-help literature and popular psychology is this idea that everything you say, your brain and body, hear it. That's actually a very unkind or even cruel thing for people who are depressed or anxious to hear, because if they hear that and believe that and I want to be clear, I don't think it's true that they think that it's very hard to control thoughts. Is it very hard to control thoughts? So somebody says, you know, I can't and then somebody says, well, now every time you say, you can't,
Starting point is 00:55:57 your brain hears that and it reinforces it. That's a very treacherous place to live. And language is powerful, but neural networks, the brain, and the networks that underlie emotionality and perception and sense of self, they don't change in response to language. They change in response to experience. And it's just fundamentally, there's some prerequisite, you need certain neuromodulators present, like serotonin or dopamine. You need to be at sufficient levels, you don't need to drug necessarily do it, you could, you know, you give a kid a kitten or a puppy, their first kitten or puppy and the levels of dopamine and serotonin, I've never measured them, but we can be pretty sure that they are higher than baseline.
Starting point is 00:56:41 And that experience will reshape them, right? Likewise within adult in a certain sort of circumstances. higher than baseline. And that experience will reshape them, right? Yeah. Likewise, within adult in a certain circumstances. So I think I'm fascinated by this idea that a somatic and a perceptual experience, but a real experience of the sort that you're describing is what allows us to reshape our neural circuitry and to feel differently about ourselves. And us to reshape our neural circuitry and to feel differently about ourselves. And I know there's been really tremendous success in many individuals of alleviating depression, of treating trauma with these different compounds. I wanted to step from the experience under the effects of the psychedelic.
Starting point is 00:57:21 So the person there with your team, they go into this expanded perceptual bubble if things go well, they're able to do that to a really deep degree. Maybe it's the relived trauma, maybe it's the beauty of their ability to connect to things in the world. Now I want to talk about the transition out of that state and then the export into life. Because this is really where the power of psychedelic seems to be in the therapeutic sense. The ability to learn, truly learn from that experience so that the learning becomes the default. That one doesn't have to remind themselves, oh, I am, you know, they don't have to do an affirmation.
Starting point is 00:57:55 I am a happy person. I am a, you know, I was thinking of Bart Simpson, like writing on the chalkboard. I didn't work for him. It doesn't work for this other stuff, too. But so as they transition out of this state, I know that there's a kind of a heightened, there's a so-called peak where everything seems to be kind of cascading in at such a level that the person just, they can't really turn it off at that point. It would be challenging.
Starting point is 00:58:19 And then they start to exit the effects of the drug. Are those transition zones, are those valuable, much like is the transition between a dream and the waking state valuable because you're in a sort of mishmash of altered reality and new reality. What do you do to guide people through the out the tunnel as they exit the tunnel. And I had to say, this is where we need more experimentation. Really the clinical model goes back to literally the late 1950s. And there's been virtually no experimentation on,
Starting point is 00:58:59 let's say randomized people to we're going to talk more during the latter half of the session versus not, versus we have them write a essay after their session, versus not, versus we have this amount of integration. What's the discussion in your studies? Are they writing or talking as they're doing it? And it's called very Lucy-Gusi, term integration,
Starting point is 00:59:20 but for us means, as they're coming back from the experience, a sort of five, six hours in. So this is the afternoon, they've been dosed around nine o'clock. So this is like four o'clock or so. Just some initial, tell us about the experience. Do you want to not unpacking it totally, but kind of initially just have a little bit discussion before they go home.
Starting point is 00:59:40 So there's a little bit of that. But then that night their homework is to write something. So it could be a few bullet points. It could be 20 pages. And we get everything in that range. But try not to be self-critical. It's not great. It's just to process.
Starting point is 00:59:59 And for a point of discussion the next day, so they write something that come in the next day for a one to two-hour on the study, integration session. Basically, let's discuss your experience and depending on what study it's in, like what, you know, what might that mean for you're dealing with cancer, what might that mean for you're smoking or becoming an on smoker. So you encourage them to simply take it seriously. And I think this is, again, a sort of one of the points that could be the antithesis of what some just kind of social users use.
Starting point is 01:00:33 I mean, this was written about by Houston Smith, the scholar of religion in terms of these mystical experiences that can happen from psychedelics and how, a lot of times, the attribution to a drug effect is dismissed. Like even if one has this, you know, this sense of being one with the universe and it totally like shakes their soul so to speak, you know, but the next day their friends like, Oh, dude, you are screwed up too much asser for you. Woo, you know, like, man, next time you needed to have a few more beers to like bring that down. You know, like this sort of like, you know, social, you know, reinforcement for dismissing the experience.
Starting point is 01:01:12 Oh, God, you're talking out of your head, man. Like, you know, even if it's, you know, good natured, but it's this dismissal, it's not like, you know, what you want to do, you know, is like is tell me more about that. You were crying at one point, talking about your mom. Let's talk about that. What was that like? Do you remember that? Are you doing that follow-up?
Starting point is 01:01:34 Are you there in order to do that in their own life with the various people in their life? Both. So we do that explicitly in the follow-up where we have these discussions. And depending on what the situation is, you might encourage the person to follow-up where we have these discussions. And depending on what the situation is, you might encourage the person to kind of follow up. It's really, the basics of it is, is supportive therapy.
Starting point is 01:01:55 It's non-structured. It's, you know, use all the reflective listening and the sort of the humanistic psychology that, you know, unconditional positive regard for the person. But I think if someone feels inclined to apologize to their sibling about some things, like yeah, go ahead and call them up.
Starting point is 01:02:18 When it is something big, like a relationship change, I'd be like, sit on that two weeks, don't make any big, don't end any relationship, don't that two weeks. Don't make any big. Don't end any relationship. Don't quit your job. Don't make any big. You also tell them not to start any relationships. I don't remember that ever coming up. What is it? I'm not, Joey, I was just wondering, you know, it's, but it makes sense why you know what? Like if they're dating and they're thinking like, hot, I might be time to take it to the
Starting point is 01:02:43 next level. Should I ask this girl to marry me? If it did come up, I would say there too. Why don't you sit on that a week or two? Yeah, don't get a puppy. And let your sober mind. Don't get a puppy. Certainly don't get four puppies until you're, I have a question about flashbacks.
Starting point is 01:03:00 Uh huh. You know, one of the kind of things you hear is, you know, flashbacks and that people, do people get flashbacks? And if so, one of the kind of things you hear is, you know, flashbacks and that people do people get flashbacks. And if so, what is the basis of flashbacks? The on the street lore about this is that somehow some of the compound gets stored in body fat tissues and then released later like a, is that complete nonsense? No evidence for that.
Starting point is 01:03:24 So probably complete nonsense. Flashbacks are nonsense or the storage in body is that complete nonsense? No evidence for that. So probably complete nonsense. Flashbacks are nonsense, or the storage in body fat is complete nonsense. The storage in body fat. So to answer whether flashbacks are complete nonsense, we have to define it. So I really think these are multiple constructs that are going on.
Starting point is 01:03:38 It's not the same thing that fall under that term. There is a phenomenon that appears real that's called hallucinogen persisting perceptual disorder. It's in the DSM. A certain number of people, very small number of people, you know, percentage-wise who have used psychedelics, will have these persisting perceptual disorders, like they'll see hayloes around things. They'll see some trails like, you know, like the after images following an object in motion. They'll see distortions in color and it'll be like anything else that's a disorder in the DSM.
Starting point is 01:04:15 It has to be clinically distressing and it has to be persisting over some number of months. And so very rare, very mysterious. Some of the keys to that are amazingly, it's never been seen in the thousands of participants, either from the older era, from the late 50s to the early 70s. People in psychedelics studies with LSD, psilocybin masculine, and it's never been seen in the modern era. Again, now with thousands of participants at a number of centers like ours throughout the world.
Starting point is 01:04:46 So it seems to be something that is, for some reason, happening in illicit use. So that brings in, okay, is there polypharmacology, you know, like, could you drink and during any time? Did you take what you thought you'd do? Yeah, what's the dose? What's the purity? But then also, what I think is actually even more so than that, what's likely going on is some sort of very rare neurological susceptibility.
Starting point is 01:05:10 There is one paper that is a case series of individuals reporting these symptoms and they didn't limit it to the, to just people who had hallucinogen history. And the amazing thing about this is that a number of people seem to have straight up HPPD diagnosis. What is HPPD? A hallucinogen for assisting perceptual disorder who have never taken a psychedelic. So it's often prompted by alcohol, benzodiazepines,
Starting point is 01:05:42 cannabis, even tobacco. And I believe in one individual, no lifetime history of any, it wasn't preceded by any of those substance use. So I think it's, I think of it like the precipitation exacerbation of psychotic disorders. It seems pretty clear through observation
Starting point is 01:06:04 that some people with either predisposition or active psychotic disorders, it seems pretty clear through observation that some people with with either predisposition or active psychotic disease that this can destabilize them. The same way that a life experience can destabilize us person more easily. I think of it like that there's probably some pretty rare neurological susceptibility. We have tended going this goes back to the 80s, you know, clinical practice, it ended up in the DSM, focus on hallucinogen because I relate it to the psychology of xenophobia. It's always the weird other thing that gets the attribution.
Starting point is 01:06:36 You don't attribute to the thing like, oh yeah, did you smoke cigarettes? Did you drink? It's like, well, yeah, but I see lots of people drinking and not ending up with this. Like you take a crazy drug and you can get people to believe all sorts of crazy stuff. The biggest example of that is the, the, the, There is a homeless guy that like literally eight
Starting point is 01:07:05 part of someone's face off. Like yeah, it's all the crazy. It's all the crazy. While the person was alive, and all it took was one shared stepity to say, well, I don't know, but I bet it was some of that bath salts stuff that's been going on. The only thing.
Starting point is 01:07:19 What was it? The only thing in his system. Maybe we could set the record straight for people. What was this? Why would he say bath salts? And was it bath salts? It wasn't. And so the only thing in his talks was cannabis, which we all know typically people don't
Starting point is 01:07:35 eat people's faces off after they get stuck. That's your hunger here, but not that. Right. Right. So it's just an example of the xenophobia. Like today, if you get on Google images and look up, you know, bath salts, one of the most common images you'll see is this poor guy's face being eaten off. So we're just so ready to latch on just like the people of another culture that we don't
Starting point is 01:07:56 know of. It's very easy to assign attribution to a class that you're very unfamiliar with. So I think the psychedelics got that attribution with this very rare neurological susceptibility, the way that alcohol didn't. So I think it's not specific to psychedelics, but we don't really know. We need, but we look at it and our research have never seen an example of it. But flashbacks can mean a number of other things. I think the most common thing people experience is what we call state dependent learning.
Starting point is 01:08:29 It's returning yourself to a similar context, can bring back the same thoughts and emotions as the experience. So, you know, someone used to me a mushroom a week ago, now they do something like they smoke some cannabis or they take a warm bath or they're simply relaxed. It seems to come out of the blue and all of a sudden these, or they follow a thought trail that reminds them of their, and they find themselves in that same experience again. I think that's more of state dependent learning. It's not the distressing component that is in,
Starting point is 01:09:05 and it's typically not perceptual. And then another class are just sort of perceptual anomalies within a day or two following the experience, which is not HPPD. Most people have, you know, joke that this is a free trip, like you might see a few trails or halos the day afterwards. It doesn't last longer than that, And it doesn't screw you up. It's kind of fun. Like, oh,
Starting point is 01:09:30 yeah, I'm still seeing some trip. Most people will say, so it could mean any of those things. So flashback is, yeah. Interesting. No, I appreciate you, you clarifying that. I mean, one very common misconception about neuroplasticity is that it's an event, and it's not an event, it's a process. And we have no understanding of the duration of that process. However, the experience of any drug or any life experience, even if trauma or a wonderful experience or a psychedelic experience doesn't matter, sets in motion a series of dominoes that fall and it's the falling of those dominoes
Starting point is 01:10:09 that we call neuroplasticity. I mean, the reshaping of neural circuits could take years. We don't know. It's the trigger and then there's the actual change. And so I think that some of what you describe could be literally the reordering of circuitry that in some individuals might extend longer than others. And there is one phenomenon that I've been told people experience. And I'm wondering whether not any of the patients you've worked with or people in your trials have reported this.
Starting point is 01:10:41 I've never done ayahuasca, which I'm assuming has some overlap with the serotonin system, probably hits a variety. So it's DMC system, yeah, it's orally active. That's right. And of course, it's going to allow the DFT to be orally. Right, I should have recalled that. Absolutely. Well, I've never done it.
Starting point is 01:10:58 But a number of people I know that have done ayahuasca, as well as people I know who have done MDMA,, an increase sense of what I sometimes called ASMR, these autonomic sensory meridian reflexes, which is, and it's interesting, a lot of people have these naturally, and they hide these. These are, it's actually something that many people keep hidden into themselves. I'll just ask you if you can do it. So, some people are able to pass a like a shiver down their spine or up their spine consciously. You know, like you can kind of,
Starting point is 01:11:31 I'm able to actually pass a shiver up my spine. I actually learned how to do this when I was a kid on a hot day, I was standing on a field in sports camp, I was like, it's really hot here. And I could actually create like a cooling perception, cool perception. Some people, I told someone this once, and then this led to a discussion of, oh, I can do it, but I always hid that from people because it's actually somewhat pleasurable. And this is a well-known phenomenon ASMR.
Starting point is 01:11:55 And some people I know who have taken MDMA therapeutically or Iowaska will report that they feel great relief from this, they can generate these autonomic reflexes through their body more readily. Probably I'm guessing because they were able to tune in to a kind of deeper sense of somatic self. Now on the internet ASMR, if you look it up, it's a little bit like the basalt thing,
Starting point is 01:12:19 but in the other direction, like there were people that pay, let's just say there are accounts on YouTube that have many, many millions of viewers of people that will whisper to them about, for instance, there's a people that will go listen to, it seems to be women in particular whispering about like car mechanics or something or about or scratching. So there are certain sounds will do this, whispering, tapping, finger tapping, and people experience immense pleasure from it.
Starting point is 01:12:47 It's not really sexual pleasure, but it's this kind of deep core of the body. It's the autonomic nervous system down the course of the course. Probably what a certain number of people would call Kundalini, which is another... Right, scientifically. Yeah, that's right. People who do long duration Kundalini breathing sessions,
Starting point is 01:13:03 many of them will report later feeling as if their perception of self is outside of their head, that they're literally walking. It's very uncomfortable for them, that they feel like they're walking around with their sense of self extended beyond the body. And this is a clinically described neurologic phenomenon. Have any studies been done? I would imagine that person might actually, like, would they duck? Oh, what?
Starting point is 01:13:28 That would be an interesting experience. That would be the kind of thing my life would want to get into. That's right. The other body could clear, but their projection wouldn't. Yeah, the sense of self, I mean, there's a well-known phenomenon. It's very, in a few individuals, very sad where people actually avidly seek out amputation
Starting point is 01:13:44 of their limbs because their limbs they feel don't belong to their body. Oh, yeah. This is very sad and fortunately very rare, but also very sad condition. Anyway, I think the core of this conversation that we're drilling into is this notion of reordering the self.
Starting point is 01:14:00 And it's a relief to me to know that flashbacks are not something that is kind of forgive the term baked in to the psychedelic experience. And I suppose that's a good segue to ask about other sorts of drugs. Having said baked in, the temptation is to go to marijuana cannabis. But if we could, I'd like to just ask about some of the more dopaminergic compounds. In particular, MDMA. My understanding is that MDMA is a purely synthetic compound, that you're not going to find MDMA in nature.
Starting point is 01:14:36 So far. So far. DMT was for synthesized in the lab and then we thought it didn't exist in nature and then Richard Shulti's found it like everywhere. Who knows a plan out there might be making MDMA but as far as we know now, no. Right and we'll talk about DMT and its sources within the body. But MDMA could exist in elsewhere but has been synthesized and my understanding is the MDMA leads to very robust increases in both dopamine and serotonin simultaneously, which from a neural network's perspective is a very unusual situation.
Starting point is 01:15:17 Right? Normally because dopamine puts us in this exteroceptive, looking outside ourselves, seeking things in the world beyond the skin, our own skin. And dopamine, excuse me, serotonin tends to focus us inward. Those are almost mutually exclusive kind of neurochemical states, although they're always at different levels. So why would it be that having this increased dopamine and increased serotonin would provide an experience that is beneficial.
Starting point is 01:15:46 And how do you, to the extent that you can describe it, how do you think that experience differs from the sorts of experiences that people have on psilocybin or more serotonergic agents? Just broadly speaking. Yeah, yeah. In terms of that balance, in terms of the effects generally on serotonin and dopamine, I can only speculate, is that dopamine-inergic component necessary for, let's say we know that the amygdala is less reactive during,
Starting point is 01:16:18 under acute effects, and that may play a role in, there's less control from the amygdala in terms of one's experience of memory, so it may be part of this sort of reprocessing this reconciledation of these memories in a different way, where the amygdala is not like going crazy, saying freak out like, you know, fight or flight. Well, and I should have said, it seems like MDMA is being used clinically anyway mainly for trauma, not just for depression. Although part of that we really don't know, and maybe that MDMA is great for depression and some of these other and it may be that and I'm going to be looking at this soon that psilocybin
Starting point is 01:16:59 is great for treating PTSD. A lot of underground therapists say that, underground psychedelic therapists. So we don't really know. We might under ground, oh, because we're doing illegal, but more like, you know, a professional therapist would, it's just illegal. And this is a kind of a growing thing. So we don't really know which it, it speculating, but it may be that MDMA for a broader number of people is better for trauma because the chances of having an extremely challenging experience, what I call the bad trip, like really freaking out, is much lower with MDMA. People can have bad trips, but there're of a different nature. It's not sort of like freaking out
Starting point is 01:17:48 because all of reality is sort of shattering. And it's less of this, it can take so many forms with the classic psychedelics, but like typically you'll hear something like, I didn't know what was gonna be like this. No matter how hard you tried to prepare them that like this is like like get me off this. You're trying to be an LSD or so.
Starting point is 01:18:10 LSD still has high blood. I watch. Yeah, yeah, and just this sense of like, I'm going insane. This is so far beyond anything I've ever experienced and it's scaring the shit out of me. I can't have a toe hold on anything, even that I exist as an entity.
Starting point is 01:18:29 And that can be really, I think, frankly, experientially, that's kind of the gateway to both the transcendental mystical experiences, the sense of unity with all things, which we know our data suggests is related to long-term positive outcomes. Wait, I want to make sure I understand. So you're saying the bad trip can be related to the transcendental experience? Right, I think those are both speculating, but you have to pass through this sort of like,
Starting point is 01:18:57 you know, reality shattering, including your sense of self. And one can handle that in one of two ways. You can either completely surrender to it, or you can try to hang on. And if you try to hang on, it's gonna be more like a bad trip. So again, I wish there was more, and hopefully there will be more experimentation. There's a lot going on here in the black box in terms of the operant behavior of how you are within yourself choosing to handle letting go.
Starting point is 01:19:27 And eventually, we'll be able to see this in real time with brain imaging. Ah, they are surrendering to the psychedelic experience. Here they are trying to hold on, but we're not there yet. But I think it's a good clinical observation. Seems pretty clear that something like that is going on. And certain drugs like DMT, smoke DMT can be so strong. The reason I think that can be so extraordinary, you can compare to the others because it like forces people. Like there is no choice to think about it.
Starting point is 01:19:54 I've never done it. I was told that DMT is like a high speed locomotive into the psychedelic experience and out of the psychedelic experience. Yeah. And there's no ability to hold on to the self while you're in the kind of peak phase. Is that correct? A lot of people say that, but Terence McKenna, who is kind of the classic bard on DMT effects, he would say the sense of self was intact, but everything else, the sensorium and what you navigated, what you orient it towards, everything else change basically. But it's hard to win everything's changing, it's hard to say like what is the self that's
Starting point is 01:20:31 changing, what is the rest of the world? Well, in language is totally deficient to describe, experience any way, much less on a psychedelic. What is McKenna's background? What is this qualification for being this, as you referred, this bard of DMT. So, and we're talking about Terence, and there's also the brother Dennis, whom I know who's, who's, can only imagine what the brother is like.
Starting point is 01:20:55 Terence passed away years, a couple decades ago now, but he's sort of the one who's known as being a bard, and you can find hundreds, if not thousands of hours of him, on the lecture circuit in the 80s and 90s on YouTube. But his background was really, oh gosh, I don't recall what his college degree was in, but he basically, when he was like 19, he traveled to South America
Starting point is 01:21:19 and actually on the initial trip with his brother who was even younger than him, with some other friends and just, in search for a DMT snuff that they had read about from in the Harvard archives, from the work of shalties, from a generation before, but they had discovered all of these mushrooms growing
Starting point is 01:21:42 that down there, the psilocybin mushrooms, what they recognize and just took a lot of mushrooms and talked about it. And Terence was basically a very intelligent, very well-read in literature and culture person that could be. He was sort of the next generation's Tim Leary, someone who could really speak, get a little closer to the magnitude of what the psychedelic experience was like for people. And he serves, like Leary, somewhat of an advocate.
Starting point is 01:22:13 I mean, he would tell people, folks, you could see, you know, the equivalent of a UFO landing on the White House lawn, like it's right there, it'll take five minutes, it'll shake everything in your reality. You know, he would sort of go to people and then doing it. Well, certainly science and clinical medicine are just but two lenses with which to explore these things in life. But what part of the reason I ask is I feel like,
Starting point is 01:22:39 you know, in the world of health and fitness, you have this very extreme world of health and fitness, you have this very extreme condition of like Arnold Schwarzenegger's and body builders who have like 2% body fat and they look like, to most people, they look kind of freakish, especially now, right? Oh, especially now. Especially now.
Starting point is 01:22:58 And yeah, made Arnold look like regular. Exactly. Back in his day, yeah. And you have contortionists who can put themselves into a small box and wrap themselves into a pretzel. But from those two very extreme subculture practices, that I don't know anything about contortionism really, but except that they get really bendy. But it's a community that included lifestyle practices and nutritional practices and drug practices.
Starting point is 01:23:26 From those very extreme subcultures, there's been an export, which is that, you know, weight training is healthy, right? The general public has done that, or that yoga is healthy. So contortionism to yoga, et cetera. And I feel like a similar thing is happening in the realm of psychedelics,
Starting point is 01:23:43 where it was leery and hoxley. I mean, I'm from the day area, I'm not far from the Menlo Park VA, where one flew over the Cougars is basically a based on, right? Can Keezy and those guys end up, you know, there's been an attempt at creating this movement toward openness about psychedelics
Starting point is 01:24:04 and their positive effects. This has happened before. The difference is that now there are people like you inside the walls of the university or publishing peer-reviewed studies and things of that sort. The reason I asked about McKenna was, you know, it seems like McKenna and his brother are, but you know, just two of many people, Michael Paulin, etc, who have no real formal training in biology or psychology, the other guys who were at universities lost their jobs. They were actually removed from places like Harvard and other universities for their kind
Starting point is 01:24:40 of cavalier explorations, right? And now things are kind of returning. So in the same way that bodybuilding led to weight training in every corner gym, yeah, men, women, and children. And contortionism is one extreme, but people generally think that yoga is a pretty healthy practice, right?
Starting point is 01:24:57 These are matter of degrees, right? And now here you are inside the walls of a very highly respected university, John's Hopkins. You're on the medical school side of the undergrad. So in the med school, which is a serious health institution, the question is to me, what are the valuable exports, right?
Starting point is 01:25:27 And where does the extreme lie? I mean, clearly there's a, there's a problem with tinkering with reality through pharmacology. And there's a benefit. It sounds like to tinkering with reality through pharmacology. And what's so striking to me is the elements of atypical experience, atypical representation of the self. So for the average person, right, or for kids that are hearing this,
Starting point is 01:25:58 kids that are in their teens, right? What are the, I wanna talk about, what are the dangers of psychedelics? There's something you don't hear a lot about these days? It's not because I'm anti-psychedelic at all, but what are the dangers? If a kid or adult has a predisposition toward, let's say, psychotic thinking or auditory hallucinations, or is on the asperger side of the autism spectrum. Is there an increased risk of bringing the mind into these states? Because it sounds like a very lay-by-all situation.
Starting point is 01:26:34 So could we talk a little bit about that? And are there classes of these different drugs, whether or not be MDMA, LSD, or DMT that you think are particularly sharp blades and therefore need to be wielded particularly carefully. Yeah, so these can be profoundly destabilizing experiences and ones that ideally are had in a safe container, where someone, sort of where someone, you know, what are the relevant dangers and what can we do to mitigate those? So there's two biggies. One, and I've already mentioned, it's people with very severe psychiatric illness, not depression, not anxiety. I'm talking about psychotic disorders like schizophrenia or mania is part of bipolar disorder. So and diagnostically, this is shifted.
Starting point is 01:27:32 So it's a little hard to say how many people today with bipolar would have been labeled as schizophrenia back in the 60s when some of this early research or just clinical observation was done. So it seems very clear that folks with the predisposition or active disease, they could be destabilized. And so some of the cases that we know have always think of Sid Bear at the first singer of Pink Floyd seems pretty clear, although I think the family... I don't know what happened there. I should be sorry, Pink Floyd fans. I've never, the songs are just really long. Yeah, you're more of a punk guy, right? Yeah. So I've got my foot in a lot of worlds, definitely
Starting point is 01:28:11 in part in the Floyd world. But he basically went crazy early on. He, it seemed, I don't think his family ever admitted it, but he developed schizophrenia, classic pattern. And he was doing a lot of LSD. But, you know, like a lot of these cases, it looked like he was showing all of the signs of, you know, some hints of that he had that susceptibility before. And often this is hard to disentangle what causes what, because when do people typically, not always, but develop, wins the modal period for first break, it's adolescents early adulthood, yeah.
Starting point is 01:28:54 And when do people start playing with drugs? Same exact time period. So it can be hard to disentangle, but it seems pretty clear. Now I should also say, there are cases of folks with schizophrenia that say psychedelics have helped them. There's anecdotes for everything to the people around.
Starting point is 01:29:11 Those schizophrenics say it's helped them. I don't know. Because when schizophrenic say things, you have to, I mean, with all due compassion and respect for schizophrenia, it's a disorder of thinking. So if they're saying it, help them. Yeah, can you trust them? Yeah. I wouldn't be surprised if there was some kernel truth in some cases, but they're just so it seems very clear that the other side is there too and that there ever is a therapeutic potential there for those disorders that that shouldn't
Starting point is 01:29:40 be the first thing on our list. We need to learn a lot more because of the level of risk before we start doing research to see if, you know, cell-sciving and can help with schizophrenia. Like, I don't think that that may never be the case, but even if it is, you'd have to be even more cautious and figure some more things out first with some of these other disorders. Because it seems bipolar bipolar disorder can it be exacerbated by these? Yeah, and it may be that sort of the manifestation of people having prolonged psychiatric issues after a psychedelic experience as atypical as that is when that happens, it may be that might be more like
Starting point is 01:30:22 a manic episode than a psychotic episode and that can be a blurry line. And it's, the folklore is that people go on a trip and they never come back. That's clearly not the case because the drug is metabolized like for anyone else in the next day. There's not, it's virtually nothing. It's just a circuitry.
Starting point is 01:30:41 Right, and I really do think, you know, much like the positive ex you know, long-term effects that, you know, this class of problems is related to like the to the experience and the destabilization that can happen from that experience. If it's not in that in the right container, and again, like these people are susceptible to, some people with that psychotic predisposition, they're lucky to be born to a great family, stable environment. They maybe never have a full break
Starting point is 01:31:16 or the one that they have is not nearly as bad is what someone that is homeless and is coming from all kinds of early childhood trauma, like the disease is probably going to be far worse. So having a psychedelic experience is like one of those destabilizing experiences. Now fortunately, it's really easy to identify those people. And we even air in the side of extreme caution by eliminating people with, like say, a first degree relative, and some states, even a second degree relative, given the heritability, there's some increased chance, if your brother or your, yeah.
Starting point is 01:31:54 So in an abundance of caution, even eliminating, I think eventually, if it's approved for use, FDA use, we could dial back on that as we learn more. I think it's again over overly cautious, which is, but you're doing an appropriate, clean and full trial. Yeah, it's the appropriate place to start at this point in time. But, you know, if you, you know, give a skid or another structured psychiatric interview with a clinician seeing now in this person for a few hours, to delve into their history and, and, like, you can vary your reliably determined at this person has either a psychotic disorder or bipolar disorder or a strong predisposition. So that's, you know, that you can screen for that
Starting point is 01:32:34 and that's how you address that. The far more likely danger is the bad trip. Anyone can have this. The most psychologically healthy person in the world probably, you jack the dose high enough and especially in a less than an ideal environment, you can have a bad trip.
Starting point is 01:32:50 You even get it in an ideal environment like ours at a high dose of around 30 milligrams of psilocybin, after the best preparation we can provide. About a third of people will say, essentially, at some point, they have a bad trip. At some point within the entire journey Right now they could have one of the most beautiful experiences of their life sometimes like a couple minutes later But at some point they had a sense of strong anxiety fear losing their mind
Starting point is 01:33:18 Feeling trapped something like that now Typically when people have that and the you and when they're just taken on their own, like a lot of things, they're fine. They get through it. They're more likely to be better off if they're not having to navigate the streets of Manhattan. And if they're with other people with friends, better that those friends aren't also dealing
Starting point is 01:33:41 with their own psychedelic experience, but probably having some friend of any type, but what other on there is better than having nothing. So very dependent on context. And so the tough thing here that in conveying to the public is that a lot of folks will say, then I've taken psychedelics hundreds of times, and this is like your fear mongering, and you know, there's no, you know, you're exaggerating the danger there. So I want to say it is atypical, but sometimes, and I have a file folder that grows larger every year of these cases, either in the medical literature or from the news of people that freak out on a psychedelic, and they get hurt or they die. They run into traffic, they fall from a height, whether they thought they could fly or
Starting point is 01:34:29 whether they just felt like you can do when you're drunk or you're intoxicated on any substance. Sometimes that's unclear. Or, gosh, one of the craziest cases was a kid, like an 18-year-old or so in Oregon several years back that just he even wrote about, I want to take the biggest, he had done mushrooms for, I want to take a heroic dose, the biggest dose I've ever taken. He ended up just totally out of it, ended up in a neighbor's house. He was just totally disoriented, disconnected from reality and the cops ended up killing
Starting point is 01:35:00 him. And it was just tragic, obviously, an over use of force in that case, because he was actually naked at the time, this naked like 120 pound, I think, as a recall kid that ended up dying. But well, it's analogous to the, you know, the reason I use the examples of like bodybuilding culture, I mean, people there have taken excess amounts of antibiotics and diuretics and died. Then the contortionist culture, people have put themselves in a low-plexy glass boxes to do, you know, at the extremes, you're going to get deaths. And at the extremes, and one of the extremes is
Starting point is 01:35:32 the sheer number of people with different biological makeups taking the same drug. And so you can create extremes through numbers, you can create extremes through dosage, right? It seems. you can take extreme, you create extremes through dosage, right? It seems. Well, this is why I'm such a fan of the fact that people like yourself are doing clinical trials inside the walls of universities, not because I think that psychedelics only have utility in those environments, but because it's so important toward creating their transition to legality, but because it's so important toward creating their transition to legality and to understand what legality means for a compound like this, right? Right. What model?
Starting point is 01:36:11 Right. I mean, again, we'll stay with the anabolic steroids. There's now testosterone and estrogen replacement therapy. Hormone replacement therapy is a common medically approved practice, but that's vastly different than people taking their own stuff or diet or deciding how much they need to take, right? Like we said, there's yoga and there's contortionism in a Plexiglass box and thinking, you know, Houdini or something. So there are, these are a matter of degrees.
Starting point is 01:36:35 Speaking of dosage, I definitely want to ask you about microdose versus standard or macro dose. Tell me, tell me that I'm wrong, but I'm always a little bit, I sort of, a little, I'm microcynical if you will, about this term, microdose. The reason is that many people that I know who talk about microdosing are taking dosages of compounds that work at microgram levels. So the word micro I think can be a little bit confusing to people because microdose implies less than something. It's a mini dose, right?
Starting point is 01:37:19 And yet some of these compounds are tremendously powerful at microgram concentrations. So, what constitutes a microdose and what is the value of so-called microdosing if any? And how does it differ from standard or what I can normally assume is called macrodosing? Yeah. And so, LSD would be the prototypical example of that super potent How much my what what size dosage of LSD will lead to hallucinations and kind of standard so through the entry point for psychedelic type effects which may not involve hallucination actually
Starting point is 01:37:59 Most classic psychedelics don't lead to true hallucinations as defined in psychiatry of you know See thinking you're talking to the person that's not there seeing the pink elephant psychedelics don't lead to true hallucinations as defined in psychiatry of, you know, thinking you're talking to the person that's not there, saying the pink elephant. It's more like traceers and things like that. Right. And it's perceptual. Some people never get that even at a very high dose. So I think more broadly in terms of the psychedelic effects, which isn't just perceptual, unless
Starting point is 01:38:20 we get into the level of, as you were alluding to earlier, a broader definition of perception, like one's models of the world, the model of the self, you can consider all of that perception in terms of, you know, truly not sensation, but perception, the construction of putting together reality. So yeah, yeah, yeah. So, desigordellic effects are typically considered to start for LSD, around 100 micrograms. So, a 10th of a milligram is 100 micrograms. So, when taking 100 micrograms of LSD, they, on the nowadays, people might mistakenly refer to that as a microdose because it's micrograms,
Starting point is 01:39:00 but that's actually a macrodose of LSD. Right. And that's one of the most common mistakes or situations that people get into with microdosing is they intended to be a microdose, but it ends up being a full-blown dose. Now, people do, when they're working with LSD and they're microdosing, they'll shoot for something like, say, 10 milligrams, something in that range, 10, 20 milligrams of LSD. So a 10 to fifth something of your entry-level psychedelic dose. People's ability on the street to do this, I say the street as if they're on the corner. But anyway, outside of the medical profession to do this, varies as you can.
Starting point is 01:39:40 They're not measuring purity and mobility or things like that, specifically. And there's ways to do it. So even if you don't ultimately know the dose that's in like the blotter paper of acid, one could at least get a sense of like, yeah, having one of those tabs is one of those hits is a psychedelic experience. They could do something like put in water,
Starting point is 01:39:59 it's 100% aqueous soluble. You could vol, you know, make sure it all gets into solution and then volumetrically measure. It's going to become modestly distributed so you can take one tenth of that volume of water after it's fully dissolved. You know, that whatever you start it with, you're going to have a tenth of that dose. So the people that are more sophisticated will do things like that. And when they're working with mushrooms, they'll grow a bunch of mushrooms and then they'll, say, put it in a coffee grinder. I'm not telling people to do this.
Starting point is 01:40:25 By the way, I'm just describing. So I don't do this at home, but grind it all up so it's homogenous because you can have like, you know, sort of taking two caps in a stem. Hey, this two caps in a stem that this buddy takes is, has a different potency than this two caps in a stem that the other buddy takes. So people that are kind of in the know will grind it all up into a homogenous powder and they'll pack it into whatever size capsule. And they'll know that.
Starting point is 01:40:49 And again, even if they don't have, sometimes they might have a buddy that'll sneak it into the HPLC at their, at their job or whatever, if they have not your life. Not mine, not mine, not never have, seriously, never happened. But, but they'll at least know that, hey, I've got a sense of what two capsules do. I've got a sense of what five capsules do. But in reality, that's not what people do. They'll take a piece of blotter paper and they get a tiny little pair of scissors, Swiss Army knife pair of scissors, and they'll cut up the tab of acid, which is like, you know,
Starting point is 01:41:22 a quarter inch square or something. And they'll cut it up in 10 little pieces. And it's like, I got, you have no idea, like if it's equally distributed in that media. Yeah, and we can chuckle about it. And, but to me, one of the reasons why this experiment around psychedelics, this cultural experiment and this legal experiment,
Starting point is 01:41:43 we're seeing this now, but this was all attempted once before in the 60s and 70s. The difference was it was all out in the street, the people in universities who were dabbling with this stuff, most of them lost their jobs or were asked to leave through. They lost their funding for this research, anonymally, and they had to move on to other topics.
Starting point is 01:42:03 That's right. So these are precarious times. I mean, we're in a key moment where everyone assumes that this is all gonna be legal in a few years, but I think that that's a premature assumption, frankly, but, and let's touch on the legality and some of the things that are happening now, but what is microdosing psilocybin versus the sorts of dosages that you described before in the
Starting point is 01:42:29 10 to 40 milligram range? I've heard of people taking one or two milligrams of psilocybin every day as a way to quote unquote, and for those listening, I'm just making air quotes with my fingers, increase plasticity, which is a term that I personally loathe because what does that mean? I mean, you don't really want your brain to be plastic because you need to maintain your ability to make predictions. Yeah, I mean, you need models of the world that you need heuristics like plasticity is never the goal or plasticity is never the goal. Or plasticity is never the goal. The goal directed plasticity is the goal, right?
Starting point is 01:43:08 Learning a language, reshaping your experience to a trauma, altering the perception of self, but plasticity is a process. Like, is it? Yeah, it's a frenia is a lot of plasticity. Exactly. Right, and it might even be, there's one theory that it's extreme ongoing plasticity and that's why people never create stable representations of anything. That's a kind of a minority view out there. But so what's the business with microdosing and is there
Starting point is 01:43:37 any clinical evidence or peer-reviewed published evidence that it works, quote-unquote, to make people feel better about anything? So microdosing is the aim of taking, again, something around a tenth of what would be sort of an entry-level psychedelic dose for whatever compound. So like, yeah, with psilocybin, usually people, almost never do people have like pure psilocybin, like one milligrams of psilocybin would be in the range of a microdose. More likely people are going to have you know mushroom so like something like a half of a of a gram of mushroom. I know people that are doing this every day. They're doing these every day. It's like in there like the same way that I take like I'm personally I'm not recommending other people do this but I take some I'm a fan of L.C. D'Elle carnitine lately.
Starting point is 01:44:25 I've been kind of experimenting with that a little bit, which is not a psychedelic compound. I take it every day, and they're taking their... That's their cell size. ...sides and every day. That's their supplement. Yeah. So, yeah, the claims are, in their number of them, there's two general ones. One is sort of acting in place of the ADHD treating drug.
Starting point is 01:44:45 So the psychometer stimulants are like a better version of Adderall. The other claims are essentially a better version of the traditional antidepressants, a better version of Prozac. So we want to take both for attention deficit and for depression. Yeah. And the aspects of those disorders that, we all have a degree of, just like in fetamine is gonna increase the focus
Starting point is 01:45:10 of, at the right dose of anyone who takes in fetamine pretty much, whether you're ADHD, diagnosed or not, the idea is that there may not be a necessarily a clear divide between the therapeutic need and positive psychology, even improving mood and focus. So it's not necessarily correcting ADHD, but improving focus to supercharge your life.
Starting point is 01:45:39 And so those are the claims. I am, so none of the peer reviewed studies that have much credibility, none of them have shown a benefit. And they've tried. Now there's only at this point four or five studies that, and I think for things like this you really need double blind research because the effects, I mean, there was one study done in Amsterdam where people knew they were taking psilocybin truffles, basically same as mushrooms, and
Starting point is 01:46:09 we're like the roots of the mycelia. Microdose, and what would be considered a microdose and then doing some cognitive measures before and after. And the types of things that, you know, like a lot of cognitive measures are measured on the order of reaction time and after. And the types of things that, you know, like a lot of cognitive measures are measured on the order of reaction time and milliseconds. I mean, in the types of effects you get, as you could imagine, are ones that, like, would be, you would totally expect, could be there from, like, their practice effect or an expectancy effect, a placebo effect. So, you know, for something like these claimed, you know, you can imagine a sort of an increased
Starting point is 01:46:45 focus, you know, enhancement of cognition. These are like going to be more subtle effects that you really need a good placebo control for. The handful of studies that have done that have shown they've ranged from finding no effect whatsoever to just a little bit of impairment, like impairing someone's ability to do time estimation and production tasks. So you want an accurate sense of time, at least if you're navigating in the real world.
Starting point is 01:47:14 It's different if you're on the couch on a heroic dose for therapy degrees and it's where you're safe, but if you're crossing the street, if you're getting, you know, in your work life, yet which is the way people are claiming to use that to help some be a better CEO,
Starting point is 01:47:28 like you want an accurate sense of time. So if anything, the data suggests that it makes it a little bit less accurate. And there's evidence that someone feels a little bit impaired and they feel a little bit high. So in terms of, you know, you call that abuse liability and research not surprising. You take a little bit of a drug that can result in a,
Starting point is 01:47:50 some type of a high and you take a little tiny bit of it, you'll feel a little bit high. So, you know, none of the so far, no studies have shown, you know, any increase in creativity, enhancement of any form of cognition, or a sustained improvement in mood. Now, no studies have actually looked at the system of microdosing that the fissionados
Starting point is 01:48:18 are claiming. And there's a couple of models out there, but folks like Paul Stammett and others, they'll have particular formulas. They're like, you need to take it one day, then take so many days off and take it every four days, and I don't want to get into who's model is what. But it's always something like that, some pattern of use, usually not every day. And the claim is that it's not just, you know, sometimes people get benefit that first time when they take it, but they really say you need to be on it for a while.
Starting point is 01:48:47 Like, a few weeks in, you may start to notice through this pattern of using it. And you're feeling the benefits on those off days, like the three or two days in between your active doses. So those are the claims. Again, we don't know that there's any truth to that working, but studies have not been done to model that. So that's a big caveat. We as a field, as a scientific field, have not done the studies to really model
Starting point is 01:49:17 what the real aficionados are claiming, where the therapeutic benefits come from. That said, it's almost assuredly there's a good amount of placebo there, but the caveat to that is almost everything in medicine or therapeutics. There's, and it's gonna have some degree of placebo there. The relief effects are, I have a colleague at Stanford,
Starting point is 01:49:39 Alia Crom, who has published really beautiful work on belief effects that show that essentially you give the same milkshake to two people. Two groups of people, you tell them that one contains a lot of nutrients. The other is a low calorie shake. The insulin response. Amazing. Very dramatically between the two or two groups rather doing equivalent amounts of physical
Starting point is 01:50:03 movement. And you tell one group that it's going to be good for them and help them lose weight. And they lose on average 8 to 12 pounds more doing the exact same patterns of movement. So, and I think that these belief effects boil down to all sorts of kind of network-wide, neuromodulation, things that sort of- And then the work at Harvard suggesting that even if you don't have deception, you give up placebo and say, this is a sugar pill. Right.
Starting point is 01:50:26 You know, tell them that. Right. And they could still treat things. I think irritable. Well, it was the first thing they looked at. Right. And so there's a huge, so there's a reality there. Right.
Starting point is 01:50:35 There's an necessity in developing drugs to make sure it's not only that, but in the actual practice of medicine, hopefully what you're always getting is some underlying direct efficacy plus the placebo that it enhances that. practice of medicine, hopefully what you're always getting is some underlying direct efficacy plus the placebo that it enhances that. Now, it could be that this is, the real question is, is the microdosing are those claims 100% placebo or are they only part placebo and part real, quote unquote, effect? My bet is, and this is totally based on anecdotes, that I think there is probably a reality to the antidepressant effects.
Starting point is 01:51:08 I find that more intriguing because of the suffering with depression. Even if it's a, it wouldn't be as interesting as, I think, what we're doing with high dose psilocybin or psychedelic to treat depression. It would be, if this is developed in this reality, it would be more like a better, you know, perhaps a better SSRI, a better pro-ZAC, which are
Starting point is 01:51:30 similar. That would be more tools than fewer tools in the toolbox. And it shouldn't be that surprised, like even before the as going back to the tricyclix and the M.A.O. inhibitors go back to the 50s, like augmenting extra cellular serotonin in one way or another, for many people leads to a reduction in depressive symptoms. It wouldn't be that crazy for chronically stimulating a subtype of serotonin receptor
Starting point is 01:51:56 that you have an antidepressant effect. So I think, if I put my bets on it, that there's anything real, it is in that category. Although I'm very open to like maybe there is something to the creativity to the you know improved cognition which covers many domains in and of itself, but my my greatest hopes are on the on the antidepressant effects. That said in the big picture, I think all of the most interesting thing about psychedelics are the heroic doses. I mean, the idea you can give something one, two, three times, and you see improvements in depression months later.
Starting point is 01:52:32 And in addiction, you know, over a year later, and with these, you know, people dealing with potentially terminal illness, I mean, it's, I mean, I'm interested in big effects. And I don't think you're ever gonna get the really big effects. There's also some concern that almost all of these the more common psychedelics, even county, MDMA, they have serotonin 2B agonist effects. And agonizing serotonin 2B has been shown to lead to heart valve formation problems,
Starting point is 01:53:07 morphology issues, so valve lulopathy. And so this is why FENFEN was pulled from the market. The diet drug. Yes. Very effective diet drug. Right, right. And it was the portion of that combination that had the serotonin 2B activity that was the problem.
Starting point is 01:53:24 And so we don't know. So all of the toxicologists I've ever spoken to about this would say and cardiologists say like, look, hey, if there was some concern there, it's not applicable to the whole idea of you taking something a few times therapeutically within a lifetime. But the idea of taking something like, you know, twice a week for years. I mean, even the hippies back in the 60s weren't doing that, right?
Starting point is 01:53:52 Like, there's not even these natural, and even if they, even if there was some heart valve disease, problem that stemmed from psychedelic use, who's connecting those dots? That's not showing up in the clinical charts for anyone to figure out. So there is, and just theoretically, there is more of a concern. If something's gonna happen with heart valves, it's more likely that those issues would arise
Starting point is 01:54:18 when someone's taking these things, like yeah, like say twice a week for the next five years. And so I do wanna throw that out to people to really consider. Right. Yeah, something I hadn't heard before that in micro sounds safer, micro dosing as opposed to heroic or macro dosing.
Starting point is 01:54:34 And yet, unless, in the context of your lab and other labs doing similar work, you've got this, people checking blood pressure, you've got people that are really monitoring your psychological and physical safety. When people are out there micro-dosing, it sounds like there's a potential either through this serotonin 5-H to be receptor or other mechanism that there could be
Starting point is 01:54:57 some kind of cumulative negative effects. They, and I think that's a really important consideration. So I'm glad you brought it up. What about kids? So the brain is very plastic early in life. It becomes less plastic as we age, although it maintains some degree of plasticity throughout the lifespan. The year 25, but rather the age 25 years is sort of an inflection point where the rigidity
Starting point is 01:55:29 of the neurofist system seems to really take off. Of course, people don't wake up on their 25th birthday and find they have no neuroplasticity whereas the day before they had a lot, these are, you know, it's plus or minus whatever it is a year or two, but depends on the individual. However, the young brain is very plastic. And I could imagine there could be great risks. Who knows, maybe even benefits, but I'm
Starting point is 01:55:57 certainly not thinking about those. I'm mainly thinking about the risks for young people taking psychedelics. Are there any trials looking at people in clinical trials? This would be under the age of 18. Has anyone explored this in a rigorous way? Given the potential to exacerbate psychotic symptoms and bipolar symptoms and some people, is there heightened risk of that? What's the story with age of use and psychedelics for therapeutic purposes? There's no formal research, although there's a very high chance that there will be.
Starting point is 01:56:33 And so this is one of the very interesting things folks may not realize or appreciate about the FDA approval process. So the FDA already in multiple instances has signaled that they want to see those studies. Before. Well, not before it's approved as necessarily for adults, but they're going to eventually want to see in fact, so the maps group that's developing MDMA for PTSD, they've already signaled that that's kind of a list of interest. And there's even some incentives in the FDA pathways for incentivizing folks to explore that use in young people.
Starting point is 01:57:15 I know in some of the work that I helped with in pushing psilocybin into phase 2B clinical research, the FDA, you know, said, well, why can't you give this to kids? It's like, are you aware that the depression has a problem with adolescents? Like, you know, like, and it's really interesting because this FDA is very concerned about pseudospecificity. What did you define pseudospecificity?
Starting point is 01:57:44 You put out a drug and say, oh, this is good for men but not women. This is good for black folks but not white folks. And now sometimes there's a very good rationale for that. When we're talking about hormones and for a specific, for men versus women. And there's certain issues, certain disease rates, like maybe sickle cell anemia, that's more relevant. It takes an accident. Yeah, exactly.
Starting point is 01:58:11 But absent of something that, they're very concerned about saying, oh, this is for this type of person, but not that type of person. So age is one of those things. And also this recognition, much like the emphasis at NIH with rodent studies and human studies, like you can't just say you're studying men or just went, you need to rush now if you're only step forward. Yeah, to be clear to people, there's a recent switch, but there's a stipulation in every federally funded grant that both sexes, we don't refer to gender in scientific studies
Starting point is 01:58:43 unless it's a study of gender per se, we refer to sex, meaning biological sex, so that there's a stipulation that in order to receive and continue to receive funding, you have to do a studies on both males and females of that species, including humans. And even if you're not powered for it, at least looking at that in exploratory analysis, like as a grant reviewer, I'm charged with looking at, did they address sex as a biologically relevant variable? Does the same drug have different effects in males versus females?
Starting point is 01:59:16 Right, and you could at least look at the trends, even again, if you're underpowered to look at those between subject type effects. Which is a great shift that didn't exist in 10 years ago. Sounds like we're both on grants panels. As study section members, you didn't have to do that. Now it's an important biological variable. If you don't look at that,
Starting point is 01:59:36 you essentially won't get your funding. And age is a similar thing. So it's the whole idea, like, man, if something could help kids, like, what's the rationale? So I think there's gonna be, now obviously, you're going to have in those studies, at least just as much, probably more, it should be more, you know, of a cautionary approach. It's probably going to be, you know, would certainly whatever disease states are looked are going to have to be probably treatment resistant, at least as a first step, you know,
Starting point is 02:00:02 hey, it's a right. It's a right question. Yeah, yeah. And so all of that in the mix, but hey, you know, if this stuff really helps people, you know, that are 25 or 30, like, what's the rationale that it won't help a younger person? You know, and there's these generic kind of concerns about the developing nervous system is more susceptible to... I mean, it cuts both ways because it's also more plastic,
Starting point is 02:00:28 generally, and adaptable, maybe resilient to injury in certain ways. But, you know, you hear the rhetoric about kids, their brains, and drugs, and it's like the developing brain is a special concern. So, yeah, but I think we're going to be seeing research eventually. That's interesting. I went to the high school that is infamous, sadly, gun high school for having the highest degree, at least at one point of suicide rate. Wow. Very large number of suicides.
Starting point is 02:00:58 This was written up in the Times and elsewhere. Is it a very academically successful school? It's a very academically-dip pressure. Yeah, very academically demanding school? It's a very academically deep. It's a very academically deep. Yeah, very academically demanding school, to the point where they've restricted. The kids will meet often at 6.30 a.m. or 6.00 a.m. before school for study groups and things of that sort. So some of it may relate to that, but I have to say that even prior to all that academic pressure, when I went there, the pressure wasn't like that.
Starting point is 02:01:26 We had an unusual number of suicides for whatever reason. And so the idea of kids being prescribed, and I want to be emphasized, prescribed, not just using prescribed psychedelics for therapeutic purposes, I think might make some people bulk, but the idea of kids killing themselves should also make people bulk.
Starting point is 02:01:50 And so I'm relieved to hear that there's going to be a rational, scientific, safe, clinical trial-based exploration of this. I want to ask you about the current status of these drugs and compounds. I'm pretty active on social media, more so on Instagram than on Twitter, but as I have been on Twitter a little bit more recently, I've noticed that there's a lot of dialogue around your account and other people's accounts around a couple of themes related to psychedelics. First of all, what is the status of the transition to legality for prescription purposes? So medical doctors, MDs, prescribing it legally for therapeutic purposes. That's the first question.
Starting point is 02:02:38 The second question is what is the status as it relates to possession and criminal charges. So for a long time, I lived in Oakland where we were one day told not to long ago, it is now, quote unquote, decriminalized is what I was told, double check people. But what does that mean? And then the other issue, and the third question and we can parse these one by one,
Starting point is 02:03:03 is this issue of, let's just say I'm aware of a lot of investor dollars going into companies that are essentially companies focused on psychedelics as therapeutics or psychedelics generally. I have to assume that they are investing in anticipation of a shift in the legal status. And there's a lot of interest now like will psilocybin become a taxable thing just like marijuana. So let's start with other question. Like what is going on in the US legally? Is it illegal to possess and sell and use these compounds? My understanding is you can still go to jail for having these compounds in your possession or for selling.
Starting point is 02:03:51 Right. So even though the legal landscape is very different than with cannabis, there are some similarities. So one of the similarities is that regardless of what local municipal, you know, but the city or state has decriminalized and that word itself can mean many things. So the devil some forms of decriminalization
Starting point is 02:04:13 is close to what folks would call legalization and others are like pretty weak, you know, just saying we suggest that the police make it their lowest law enforcement priority. That's the sort of thing. They turn the other choose kind of thing. Right, but even that the cops can still choose too. But someone who could get pulled over for one thing searched and then by definition, if it's illegal and they find it, and they have to do something about it. And that'll probably be determined by both judicial precedent is it going to be thrown out and just the local prosecutor,
Starting point is 02:04:45 you know, even before, like, are they gonna choose even at post arrest, are gonna pursue to really, you know, go after those charges, make those charges stick. So I think that's still in play and is gonna depend on the municipality, but like cannabis, federally, these are all schedule one compound. Which means they're illegal.
Starting point is 02:05:01 Which means they're illegal. The caveat to that, just as has always been the case since Prop 215 in California with cannabis in 96, is that, hey, 99% of drug enforcement is done at the local and state level. The DEA, which is the federal level of law enforcement, is a tiny fraction of the arrests that, I mean, most people that are arrested for any drug
Starting point is 02:05:24 are done by local or state level authorities, but it's still technically illegal. And so you can, and they could potentially, depending on the ambiguity of the local law, even those local officials could charge you with a federal crime. And theoretically, the feds could always come in. Now, although you'll, again, a similar case with the whole cannabis history, it was the, the feds came in in the early days with the folks that were basically highly visible.
Starting point is 02:05:59 They went after Tommy Chong for selling bongs, but I remember him being on the tonight show one time and I think it was back in the Jay Leno days, he says, but long, Santa Monica boardwalk. Like every shop sells bongs. How did you go to prison for half year for bongs? It's because he was, and they're, he's trying to make it famous.
Starting point is 02:06:15 Because he was, you know, Tommy Chong, and there were some high profile cannabis groups of, you know, that were distributing it, and they were very vocal. Those were the ones rated by the DEA in the early days, not the ones keeping to themselves, keeping it quiet and just doing their thing. There's always the potential for selective enforcement. In this initiative in Oregon, which is a state level, legalization of psilocybin therapy,
Starting point is 02:06:42 which is really interesting. Part of their plan for two years is to figure out how to integrate with the federal level. And I don't know how that's gonna go, because like, unless you rewrite the controlled substances act, it seems like the best you're gonna get is a tolerance from the federal government. And, you know, and that could be very, you know, hey, you change administrations.
Starting point is 02:07:08 And this is psilocybin by prescription from a medical doctor or you're talking about therapists who have master's degrees or PhDs or self appointed coaches or something like that administering psilocybin, but without any oversight. So this is all getting figured out in the Oregon case, and again, there's that two-year period of basically we're going to figure this out. What is it with Oregon? There are a lot of, you know, youth in the Asia. I love the state of Oregon.
Starting point is 02:07:39 But it's interesting how you have these pockets. Oregon Vermont seems to be one. You know, you get these kind of pockets where people are experimental with plant compounds. They seem to be green woodsy areas, at least in my mind, but there's sort of a culture around plants and the use of plants as therapeutics. And combine that with the West, just more geographically of more of the anti-feteralism, the anti, I mean, the Oregon ranchers from several years ago that held up the, you know, the whatever wildlife place, you know, and that was a big showdown with the feds, you know, and the car, you
Starting point is 02:08:16 know, just kind of the West is kind of known for, you know, more of those issues. So you combined the two, the hippie-dippy, California organ vibe, with the kind of orientation. Although our youth is becoming less hippie-dippy, the, then, although it was, that there's always been a tradition, not just in the culture around drugs, but certainly in academia and in tech, et cetera,
Starting point is 02:08:38 that the West has been a place where people have tried to throw off traditionalism and kind of lineage and like who your parents are, what school you went to and the past as a determinant of what's next and exciting about the future. Whereas, and here we are an East Coast institution guy and an West Coast institution guy, I think that it's this idea of kind of innovation and the future versus
Starting point is 02:09:07 do we stay grounded in history and tradition. Right. And of course there are great institutions on both sides. What's interesting is that Hopkins, Johns Hopkins Medical School, I think of as a real like East Coast academic institution. It is on the coasts, but here you are doing these very pioneering and important and exploratory studies in a certainly not a hippy-dippy environment. Very concerned about psychiatry department. Even amongst psychiatry departments, and as a psychologist in the psychiatry department, psychiatry is certainly more conservative than psychology, even within academics, but even amongst psychiatry departments, it's a very conservative department.
Starting point is 02:09:50 So we've got the law at the federal level. We've got the law at the state and the local level. And then we've got this question of whether or not it's going to be physicians. So MDs, people with PhDs or master's degrees, or whether or not it will be kind of a free for all right for for consumption and the life coaches The life coaches and and and the general public. I mean, I'm a bus. Yeah. I'm not a pot smoker I just it's never appealed to me That's just me and my my pharmacology, but You know, you can buy cannabis most places in the US without a ton of risk.
Starting point is 02:10:27 It seems, right? Are we going to see a time in which you can essentially go into a shop on Abbott-Kinney Boulevard in Venice, California? And right now, you can go by marijuana if you have a marijuana card. It's my understanding. I see a lot of people going in out of these stores. The police certainly have no problem with it. Is there gonna be time where people
Starting point is 02:10:50 can just go buy psilocybin? Do you think, do you, do you an Amsterdam and have for long time as they, do you think that time is coming? I think so at a certain point, and I don't know how long, it's hard to imagine our current level of drug criminalization holding up for,
Starting point is 02:11:16 and I'm thinking like large spans of time, like really in 100 years, are we gonna be doing this 500 years? Like how could that? It's not gonna be sustained. But in five years, for instance. So I don't think so in the United States. I do think eventually you're going to see something like that,
Starting point is 02:11:33 because there's going to be no way. And I think we're going to, I hope that we're going to eventually come so strongly. We're going to move on from this model of criminalizing drugs that we're really going to focus on regulating drugs at the right level for that drug. And I like the word regulation better than legalization. So, I mean, I could imagine what one day regulation, smart regulation might mean for psychedelics.
Starting point is 02:11:59 Maybe it could mean that there will be, whether or not you have a diagnosis of a problem, it may be that even for personal exploration, you can do this legally. But you first have to maybe take a court, get a drive in this, I'm not the first to say this, but get equivalent of a driver's license. You have to go to get some sort of training, maybe your first number of experiences need to be with trained guides who can facilitate it. And then the public health information for anyone
Starting point is 02:12:27 using this, that this is what riskier uses, all use is going to have risk. This is what riskier uses. This is less riskier use. These are the factors. So I think eventually we're going to be getting for any, but I would see the same thing for like methamphetamine and heroin and cocaine.
Starting point is 02:12:43 Like all these drugs, it's hard to imagine the current approach of just feeding a black market and really exacerbating a lot of the harms from drugs. You know, that happens under the current model. It's hard to imagine that maintaining. That isn't to say, I think it should be in all of the 7-Elevens sold to kids at the other extreme. I would hope not. But I do think it's probably not going to be soon in the United States.
Starting point is 02:13:09 I do want to make the major point that even if Psychedogs had never been made illegal, I think the exact, the trajectory of the medical research right now would still need to happen. If it's effective as an anti-depressant, like we need it to be, there's all the evidence suggesting that whatever disorder we're talking about, the efficacy is gonna be increased, and the risks are gonna be mitigated drastically, and the types of models we're talking about
Starting point is 02:13:37 with the screening, with the preparation, with the integration of cognitive behavioral therapy, or what have you, depending on the disorder you're treating, with the integration afterwards, with the integration of cognitive behavioral therapy or what have you depending on the disorder you're treating with the integration afterwards with professionals. So it, it, it, we would be doing it anyway. So it's not like this versus that. So I don't see it as a race between the decriminalization or legalization of these compounds
Starting point is 02:13:58 versus their medical development. Some people who are psychedelic fans get all into a bunch about the medical development. They say, you guys want to like, you want to keep it only for your medical research and ivory tire, and you want to be in control of it as academics, and my take is, I didn't make it illegal for anyone. We're only moving the needle in one direction.
Starting point is 02:14:23 And again, even if it was already illegal, and I've done plenty of survey research of people reporting, they took mushrooms for fun or for personal exploration. And they said, my God, why am I smoking? And they quit smoking 20 years because of it. Or it's helped with their depression, or it's helped with them overcoming alcoholism or these different. Sometimes that happens out of the blue when people use psychedelics. Nonetheless, obviously the efficacy rates are going to be higher when you bring it into
Starting point is 02:14:49 these medical models and it's going to be safer. So we need to be pushing that. And my best guess is that MDMA is going to be approved within the next three years. For prescription by a physician. Yes. And not just take two and call me in the morning, but in the clinics, the way that those PTSD trials are being run. So the MDMA would be approved for PTSD and every disorder needs to be looked at separately
Starting point is 02:15:14 and it's going to only be approved for those things. Now, there's new questions. There's new questions. There's new questions. Right. The truth is legalized and regulated or now we're getting into the nuance. I think when people hear it's going to be approved into years, they think that they'll be able to buy and sell and use MDMA without legal consequences.
Starting point is 02:15:29 And I do not think that's going to be the situation. It's not the way it is. And I will say that I think the quote-unquote psychedelic community, I mean, they've been doing what they want to and will carry on doing what they want to anyway. It's not like the legal status has prevented them from doing what they're doing. In fact, unlike Lee Erie and Timothy Leary and Huxley and some of the others that were very vocal and lost their jobs and some of them went to jail, etc.
Starting point is 02:16:02 You got a lot of public figures now like McKenna and others who are just basically out there talking about psychedelics. Michael Paulin, who is more of a writer, Foudie guy, gone psychedelic, Dabler, writer guy. I know he's got a polymath, but you know, the legal status didn't seem to hinder their, at least online careers. I don't know, I don't know, I haven't looked
Starting point is 02:16:24 at their bank accounts, but I'm imagining they're doing just fine, right? So the fact that work is happening inside of big institutions, I think it's important that you point out, and I'm just trying to underscore that that's in no way antagonistic to what people are doing. It's in support of a different sort of mission, which is to explore the validity in different contexts in a really controlled way, which I really, you know, it's, I think it's a really important mission. I want to make sure that I ask you about the other really important mission that you're involved in with respect to psychedelics, which is not about depression per se, but is about neurological, the neurologic injury,
Starting point is 02:17:06 or head injury. I realize it's early days for this, but I think there's a lot of concussion out there, sadly. There's a lot of TBI, traumatic brain injury. Yeah. Not just from sports. I think people sometimes forget that it's not, the major source of traumatic head injury is not football.
Starting point is 02:17:24 It's not hockey. it's not boxing, it's not any of that stuff, it's construction workers. And if you've ever seen the helmets, the construction workers wear. I mean, the jackhammer. Yeah. The jackhammer, the hammer that not be just. Yeah. I have a colleague that works on this in bioengineering and when you look at the, you
Starting point is 02:17:41 know, we always think sports, but there are many people who make a living in a way that is over time is detrimental to their brain and they don't have the option of just not being a professional athlete or something that sort. And if they're not doing the construction, someone else needs to do it. Someone else has to do it, right? And we forget, for some reason, and I too,
Starting point is 02:18:01 it didn't occur to me until I heard it, like the people who are doing construction and of course with bike accidents and falls and things like that as well. So military? Military? Absolutely. So what do you think is the potential for these compounds, particular psilocybin but other compounds as well for the treatment and possible even reversal of neurological injuries.
Starting point is 02:18:27 What sorts of things are you excited to do in that realm? Yeah, so this is definitely on the more exploratory end, so it's based upon, so this is sort of beyond the improvement of psychiatric disorders like depression, or depression anxiety associated with a terminal illness, or a substance use disorder, the addiction. So those are sort of psychiatric disorders. So this is, there are anecdotes of people saying that psychedelics
Starting point is 02:19:05 have helped heal their brain. They've been in one of these situations, like in sports, a sport where there's repetitive head impact and they're claiming that using psychedelics has actually improved their cognitive function, for example, improved their memory, including it improved their mood. But it's kind of more of the cognitive function,
Starting point is 02:19:29 things like memory are, now, caveat is if you successfully improve someone's depression, you can get some cognitive improvement too, but that's a more of a weaker, more indirect effect. But if you take these anecdotes and you combine it, way across orders of analysis to the rodent research from several labs like David Olsen, Brian Roth, these folks that have shown different forms of neuroplasticity unfolding after, like sort of post-acutely.
Starting point is 02:20:01 So after in the days filing the administration of psychedelic compounds, a variety of psychedelic compounds, and even some non-psychedelic structural analogues, that you see these different forms of neuroplasticity. So the growth of dendrites and new connections being formed with different neurons. So that those effects may be at play and they improve in the psychiatric treatments that we're dealing with. We don't know that. It seems like a decent guess, and we're going to be figuring out whether that's the's going on with these claims of improvements from
Starting point is 02:20:48 near- neurological issues, that there's actually a repair of the brain from injuries underlying things that situations where those repetitive head impact, perhaps there's a potential for helping folks recover from stroke and disorders like that. It's a wide variety of disorders. Now, it's a bit of magic and a bit of like, it's something that the enthusiast can do some hand waving and claim that this is already known. It is more exploratory, but what I'm hoping to do is some work with retired athletes who have been exposed by the nature of their sport, for example, in an A athletes in the UFC, who have been exposed to repetitive head impacts like a lot of sports,
Starting point is 02:21:40 a lot of sports exposed people to and who are retired from the sport and are suffering from, say, depression, which can impart result from those types of that history of head impact. See if we can fix the depression, but then also as a cherry on top and a more explored torrent toriane, see if we can have evidence of improvement and cognitive function and associate, like using MRI, see if it affects great matter over time, these types of things, to see if there are actually some evidence of this improved, like, this more direct repair of the brain.
Starting point is 02:22:21 But again, it is very sort of like, we've got some rodent data, we've got some human anecdotes. We will acknowledge its early days and we look forward to seeing the data. I appreciate how cautious you are, intentative you are, you're not trying any conclusions. I think from a purely logical and somewhat mechanistic perspective. I mean, if we assume that lack of ability to focus or degradation and mood is the reflection of neurons in the brain, I think we're going to agree on that. Some dialogue between neurons of the brain and that what needs to be changed is the nature of that dialogue, aka neuroplasticity. We know that reordering of neural circuitry
Starting point is 02:23:07 required in the adult requires these things like intense focus followed by rest, et cetera, but the basis for that, like beneath focuses, the mechanism is a mechanism rather, beneath the bin that we call depressed is a mechanism and those mechanisms are neuromodulator driven. So to me, you're, I'm not reviewing your grant, but from a rational perspective,
Starting point is 02:23:33 it seems that drugs that increase certain neuromodulators, like serotonin or dopamine, in a controlled way, and then coupling that with learning of some sort, sensory input of some sort, it makes sense that that would lead to, I should say, lead to reordering of circuitry that would allow for better thinking, better mood. Many of the same things that you've observed in the clinical trials for depression. So the rationale is really strong. I think that's a very
Starting point is 02:24:05 exciting area. I get asked all the time about TBI and traumatic brain injury. And right now, it's kind of, there isn't a whole lot that people can do and people are dabbling in the space of hyperbaric chambers and people do sauna and breath work. And people are kind of clipping at the margins of what really is a problem that resides deep to the skull. So I think I just want to applaud that the exploration, I think it's great provided that exploration is being done in a controlled way. It sounds like that's what you're doing with the UFC. Yeah. So that, you know, we, we, they, they were really gracious and had myself and if you have my colleagues out to their headquarters in Vegas,
Starting point is 02:24:46 impressive place. Right. And it's in process. You know, there's a dialogue going on there. I'm hopeful that there's going to be some work with them. But it's, it's in process now in terms of exploring that there's a real interest. And I'm, I'm just really impressed by the organization and their commitment to athlete health and, um, athlete health. And I am. We'll see. Yeah, I am too.
Starting point is 02:25:07 We, uh, we have a, uh, colleague out there, uh, we're doing a little bit of work with them. Duncan French, who's a serious academic in his own right. And I think when people hear UFC, they just think about the octagon and fighting and, you know, pay-per-view fights and things. But in talking with them, and I'm sure you've had these discussions as well, that they are very much interested in the health and longevity of their fighters. They are also interested in the health and longevity of their fighters, being a template for how to treat traumatic brain injury and improve human performance in other sports,
Starting point is 02:25:38 and in the general public. And I think it's not an image of the UFC that is commonly comes to mind because they haven't been particularly verbal about it in the press, is commonly comes to mind because they haven't been particularly verbal about it in the press, but I think it's great they're bringing in academics, I mean geeks like us going out to the UFC Performance Center, I mean you do MMA, but I'm basically just a geek walking through the place.
Starting point is 02:25:57 But the fact that they're interested in talking to scientists is really, I'm biased here, but a point in their favor. Along the lines of other groups and individuals that have impacted the space that you're working in and this pioneering of the psychedelic space, you know, a few years ago, I think if someone submitted a grant saying I want to study how psilocybin
Starting point is 02:26:21 impacts human depression, I'm guessing, having worked on these panels before that the response might have been closer to well. We need to do a lot of studies in rodents and a lot of studies in primates. And then maybe, just maybe we could explore these drugs because the National Institutes of Health actually has a whole institute devoted to addiction,
Starting point is 02:26:42 right, of exploring compounds only in terms of their negative effects, right? Which is where I've gotten all of my NIH funding. Which is so interesting, right? And it's a super important institute. I want to be clear. There are amazing people there. But philanthropy and foundation have been very important in supporting pioneering research. And so maybe we just talked a little bit about that. So your lab receives funding from taxpayer dollars through the National Institutes of Health. Is that mainly where your funding comes from? So our group has gotten some funding from, like I say, the National Institute of Drug Use NIDA for for some a small subset of the psychedelic work,
Starting point is 02:27:26 but only for some work geared towards understanding these things as drugs of abuse. Of course, when you do a study though, you can get at the best. Show us how they're bad. Explore how they're bad. Right, right. But when you're doing that, you can explore like,
Starting point is 02:27:39 add, you know, the good stuff too, you know. But, but the large majority of the work and the most interesting work has been funded by Philanthropy. Private Philanthropy. Now I still have some great support from NIDA outside of psychedelics. I'm shifting more and more of my time towards focusing only on psychedelics.
Starting point is 02:28:03 And in fact, us getting the center level funding from some really big picture philanthropist like helped me to start to make that transition. But groups like the Hector Research Organization, Dennis McKenna, which is one of the founding members, the brother, Terence McKenna, who's, by the way, an ethno botanist, that's what is essentially easy. What does that mean?
Starting point is 02:28:23 That's the botanist, that's what is interesting. What does ethno botanist? Studying the, essentially the anthropology of psychoactive plant use. So you can get a degree in that? Yeah, yeah, yeah, you know, hanging out with cultures and studying their use of these compounds in the traditional ways. That hopkins.
Starting point is 02:28:41 There's that degree exists at Johnson's. I don't think that degree exists at Hopkins, but I mean, the kind of the most, as you'll, as you know, from academia, I'm not, you know, sometimes folks, I'm not sure how many people's PhD is actually in ethno-botany or something else, but the real focus is like my degree is general experimental psychology. 10,000 kids out there just decided they're going to major in ethnobotany, but you know, the I mean, one of the pioneers of the psychedelic area before leery and before and actually he was late even for the human researchers like folks like Humphrey Osman and Avermohoffer and Sydney Cohen were earlier, but even before those folks, Richard Shultz at Harvard, he was, I mentioned him earlier
Starting point is 02:29:25 in the conversation, discovered all of this now. There's these various tribes using ayahuasca or yage, a different name for the same thing, throughout South America, and these DMT-containing snuffs and all of this. So that was, you know, ethno-botany, this kind of intersection of anthropology and these psychoactive plant compounds. So they have to research Institute, which Dennis is a founding and active member of, a board member. They have funded a lot of our early work. There's also an organization called the Beckley Institute, based in England that a lady, Amanda Fielding,
Starting point is 02:30:09 is the has been the head of, that has, they provided the first funding for our civil, civil, civil, smoking, cessation research and the hafter came in and provided subsequent funding. But it's, and then there are other groups that counsel on spiritual practices, a great guy named Bob Jesse funded some of the original work at Hopkins looking at
Starting point is 02:30:29 the nature of mystical experience outside of treating disease states or disorders, but just understanding these like, like people take these compounds and astonishingly, you know, frequently we'll say that was the most important thing I've ever experienced. I'm like, what the hell is that? Yeah, I had someone mentioned recently, I think this might surprise people a little bit. Certainly, it's surprised me. I had a friend who adores his children. He's got three children.
Starting point is 02:30:56 Yeah, adores his children. Happy marriage and great, great father. They're both great parents. And he told me that as part of a clinical trial, he had a DMT experience that he claims, he said, I'd love to tell you that the birth of my children was as profound, but that was a more profound experience in the birth of my children. Any one of them and all of them combined. And I was like, wow, now I've never done DMT,
Starting point is 02:31:21 but I was like, wow, that's a pretty strong statement. Now, he did it in the context of one of these, you know, clinical explorations. I assume that was part of a legal clinical trial, but the, I mean, that's saying something. It's saying something. I mean, he's a very rational, very grounded guy, otherwise.
Starting point is 02:31:39 But so philanthropy, foundations, and then in this. Most recently, sorry, just a fact, because I can't skip it. Our center-leaf, you can't skip it. You can't skip it a, and then industry. Most recently, just because I can't skip it. Our center, we can't skip it. I see. That's like, we, I mean, the Hefter group, the Beckley group, I mean, these are wonderful. I mean, these are people that have been holding the flame alive during the darkest hours, like the red.
Starting point is 02:31:59 Same thing with MD with the maps organization on more on the MDMA side, like holding that candle during the darkest years. That, you know, so we've, but, you know, smaller organizations connected to smaller, but growing over time, you know, pockets of wealth. But, you know, we basically limped on, limped along on a wing in a prayer,
Starting point is 02:32:19 until recently when we got the $17 million gift so that we could create a nominal center. And as you know, basically to the university, that means you get a certain number of dollars and a lot of them, you can call yourself a center. It's a capital investment, staff, equipment, salary support, which has always been the huge thing for us.
Starting point is 02:32:40 But the $17 million gift, which was split between the Cohen Foundation, so Steven and Alexander Cohen, and they covered half of it. And the other half, the Tim Ferris Collaborative, basically Tim, and a few friends, ponied up that divided the rest of that half of that $17 million gift and came together to just, I mean, it's completely transformed the work that we've done in our ability to, like to fully delve into this area and not worry that like, oh, if I focus on this
Starting point is 02:33:16 rather than putting another three, not a grants on some other topic that may or may not get funded, like if I focus too much on the psychedelics am I putting my career at jeopardy? But like so. But you're now not only a tender professor, you're also a full endowed.
Starting point is 02:33:30 Right, so that can't be. By the way, when you say somebody is a fully endowed professor, I want to be very clear what that means. That means that there's fun. Well, I might mean all of the above, but now, I have no knowledge of your particular situation, but you probably do. That's good.
Starting point is 02:33:46 But sure, the, what we're essentially saying is that funding, which does not change somebody's salary level, I just want to be clear because I think the general public isn't, there's no reason why they would understand all the nuts and bolts of how this works. Academia is weird. Academia is weird because we're not talking about increasing, we're not talking about an endowment that or philanthropy that went to increase Matt's salary. That's something that's set at the university level. It's always been said and it is at least it's still true now, which is that nobody goes
Starting point is 02:34:20 into science for the money, at least not at the academic level, not in academia, but allows people to devote more of their time and energy to these exploratory realms like psychedelic research, or in the case of my lab, the work that we're doing with David Speagles Lab on respiration, breath work, and hypnosis for modeling brain states. These are not typically areas that the National Institutes of Health and other major organizations have institutions set up to support.
Starting point is 02:34:52 Now, there is an exciting initiative, which is the NCCIH, which is complimentary health. Right. Used to be in-cam. Yeah, I had a chance to name. And now we're not just throwing out acronyms just to, you know, to bat back and forth acronyms, but I think what we're looking, what we're seeing now is a movement toward science and scientists and clinicians and the general public and philanthropy being engaged in this dialogue, which says, okay, there are problems in the world. Depression, head trauma, psychological trauma, PTSD, ADHD.
Starting point is 02:35:28 These problems clearly exist. The solutions are going to involve behaviors. They're going to involve nutrition, supplementation, social connection. However, there are drugs. There are compounds that can change the brain and allow the brain to change its circuitry through experience and psychedelics are one of Several others, but one of the you know powerful levers it sounds like and and I just want to say that I think
Starting point is 02:35:57 The reason I reach out to you and I'm and so excited to sit down and chat with you is because I see very few people inside the halls of academia who have thrown their arms around this issue of psychedelics in a way and gone through the trouble of trying to find the funding to get it done, gone through the trouble of trying to set up clinical trials. I know what's involved in doing this. It's so complicated, it's so time-consuming
Starting point is 02:36:25 and painstaking. And you've made real progress. I mean, you guys are publishing papers. There's a new dialogue emerging that isn't just books on bookshelves and psychedelic, psychonaut gurus on the internet, who also play an important role, but you're really moving this field forward. And I know there are others as well. There are colleagues in England and others as well. We acknowledge them. But I just want to say personally that I'm like inspired and impressed by the way that you've gone about this and the level of rigor.
Starting point is 02:36:58 I mean, when I ask you a question about serotonin, most people just kind of kick back to me. Well, yeah, you got receptors, you got a ligand, but I mean, it's clear to me that you care about the details and that you care about the future of this area. And you also really care about these patients and these individuals. So I know I'm speaking on behalf of a ton of people now and in the future, they don't even know what they're going to receive as a consequence of this. I just want to voice a real sincere thank you for that effort. It's like your lab and your work matters. And that's a really special and unique thing. I appreciate that. I had a good colleague, in fact, shared some grand support under the multi-PI system years ago. She actually took a job at NIH as a review officer.
Starting point is 02:37:51 I remember her telling me, and she actually left when she had multiple RO1s. So, it's like she didn't know the RO1s are the bread and butter, big grants that every card carrying. It's a mark of respect in our community to have a one or several of these. Yeah, yeah. I mean, you know, and it's like you eat what you kill in academia gets to what we're talking about later. It's like you don't make more money
Starting point is 02:38:13 by pulling more grants, but you're able to pay the salary that like the university doesn't pay you your salary. You're, it goes through them. You're just able to do more work. Yeah, you're able to like, and if you don't pull in the grains to cover your salary, your job can come to an end. Even if you're tenured at a place like Hopkins, they can do tricks like slowly lower your salary over these.
Starting point is 02:38:35 Or they just take away your space. Yeah, they put you in a closet and give you no support for trainees and basically make life hell for you. So you can drive a cab and Baltimore and call yourself a full professor at Hopkins truthfully, but you may not have no ability to get anything done. But yeah, I remember one of the things this colleague said who is successful, but left on top said, I really don't know that I'm making a difference in the world. And she did some great memory really don't know that I'm making a difference in the world. And she did some great memory research and connected to drugs, also connected to aging.
Starting point is 02:39:08 But she said, I don't feel the impact of what I'm doing in the real world. And it's unfortunately there for a lot of acudeme. What we do, it stays in the ivory tower. The world is a beautiful, messed up place. And a lot of this doesn't disseminate. And because of the various structures, the way the world is set up.
Starting point is 02:39:29 And thankfully, this, I mean, because the work that our group, as well as a few others around the world over the last 20 years, it's like, you do have an emerging psychedelic startup industry now with billions of dollars of investment. And yeah, that's gonna turn into both good and bad. Like, you know, it's upping the ante. Like, there's going to be a lot of good and bad that comes from that.
Starting point is 02:39:52 But any new technology is going to result in that. But we've got psilocybin designated for two separate entities as a breakthrough therapy by the FDA and people may not realize, and MDMA is designated as a breakthrough therapy for PTSD, this is a really big deal. That's a very high. I mean, pharma companies would pay millions of dollars to get their new drug a designation like that. What it means is it's early research is saying it shows a high potential for treating disorders
Starting point is 02:40:24 that don't have very good treatments. So we're probably, again, a few years away from both MD and main, probably a year or two after that, still aside from being treated for PTSD and depression respectively. This is, you know, we have to wait for the phase three studies, but if the results hold up any, even if the effect size is like halved of what we're seeing now, it's still going to be a lot larger than what you're seeing with the traditional medications.
Starting point is 02:40:51 And so it's going to be approved if the data hold up and it probably will for my judgment. So I feel like what I'm doing is actually having a positive impact in the world in a way that, and I feel lucky that I got interested in an area that happens to plug into a place in the world where there is that opportunity, where some great colleagues and friends are focused on areas where I wish they had the opportunity for their work to be disseminated. I wish that I was lucky to be interviewed on 60 minutes because of this work. And I was like, oh my God, I know so many,
Starting point is 02:41:25 there's a bit of, you know, imposter syndrome. Like, oh my God, I know so many scientists that deserve, you know, more so than me to be, have that level of exposure. But if you happen to be in that place where, you gotta do your best to make it work, to take advantage of that luck and that intersection of the world and to push it.
Starting point is 02:41:49 And, you know, I've been lucky, but also did take a bit of a leap of faith early on. I did have some advisors that told me, like, you've got a really promising pedigree early on. Like, are you sure you wanna focus like your life time on the psychedelic stuff? You've embraced risk. I mean, I think that, I mean, the world's changed
Starting point is 02:42:07 since 2020, certainly, but channels like social media, podcasts, and things that sort, you know, your exposure is because people are interested in these topics, and that's why people like myself are interested in talking to you. I mean, at Stanford, there are now a few labs starting to explore psychedelics more at the mechanistic level. But so in animal models, some excellent labs.
Starting point is 02:42:34 But also, I can imagine, and because of the pioneering work that you've done at Hopkins, it'll start to become more common. I'm certain that people are going to have questions about how to get in contact with you and learn more if people have trauma PTSD, depression. It's likely that they're going to start seeking ways in which they can potentially participate in clinical trials. You're very active on Twitter.
Starting point is 02:43:01 Active, I should say. You've got other obligations, but where you are active on social media, you're active on Twitter. It's drug, it's at drug downscore researcher. Right, right, right. Okay, so the underscore researcher, that's how to find me. Great account, by the way, Matthew and I recently got into a dialogue there about some of the deeper effects of psychedelics in the literature versus how they're being discussed in the general public. And I follow his account. It's a really wonderful account for whether or not you have a science background or not. If people are in and I'm going to try and persuade you to be more active on Instagram,
Starting point is 02:43:37 but I don't know if I'll succeed in that. I'm trying to get my interview. You're a busy guy. And I get it. I'm running a lab too. I get it. You're busy. But drug downscore researcher there as well. Same handle.
Starting point is 02:43:48 The same handle. Your lab at Hopkins is pretty straightforward to find through a Google search of your name, Matthew Johnson, Johns Hopkins University. Are there portals for people to explore clinical trials, participation in clinical trials of various cases? to explore clinical trials, participation in clinical trials of various kinds. Yeah, and so in our group, so you go to hopkinspsychedelic.org, that's the website, and if you can't remember that,
Starting point is 02:44:12 just John's Hopkins psychedelic. Yeah, we will. And you're gonna find us, it'll be the first thing that pops up. And we have, trust me, if we have a study on something, it's gonna be on that website. That means
Starting point is 02:44:30 He's there being very polite so I will be a little bit more aggressive and say don't email him directly He won't see that email wait until there's a posting for a study and then sign up through the correct portal And I try to get back to those emails, but frankly, and it's a it's cuz you know I'm lucky the area has taken off so much, but there are many days where I simply get so many research. You have to do research. You have to do the research. You have to do the research. Yeah, if I answer all the, so yeah, trust me. And something that a lot of folks don't get
Starting point is 02:44:54 in being in academia like we are, it's easy to forget how people don't understand, don't realize this. This is experimental research. It's FDA approved as an experiment, so we're working towards formal FDA approval for straight up clinical use. But right now, someone can't bring me a case of some idiosyncratic thing and say,
Starting point is 02:45:15 I'm suffering from this complex constillation of depression. And even if I was, I wouldn't be able to treat them with psilocybin or to send them anywhere that was legal to take it. So if we're going to be treating you, it has to be, or anyone else in the United States or most other countries for that matter, it's going to have to be under the guise of a very specific protocol.
Starting point is 02:45:42 This number of milligrams to treat PTSD, to treat major depressive disorder, to treat, you know, treatment resistant tobacco use disorder. So nicotine addiction, very specific studies. This is not one-off treatment. You know, folks say like, oh, I can pay to go out to Baltimore if you see my, oh, my son has this, you know, complex, like in their tragic cases. So if you're interested in a study, go to our website. If it's not on their website, we don't have a study on it. There are going to be forthcoming studies. So I'm going to be starting studies on opioid addiction and PTSD and an LSD study for chronic pain.
Starting point is 02:46:23 The day that those are open for recruitment, they're gonna be up on our website. So that's where you look to see everything. And in fact, I would just recently, a couple days ago, put up a couple of surveys. So there's also where we post links to our survey study. So if you've had psychedelics and you've taken them for therapeutic intent for PTSD or for depression
Starting point is 02:46:41 or anxiety, you can find a link. And also if you've done breath work for those reasons, we have a link for a study of that type up there now, which is a holotropic style, very psychedelic type of breathing technique that can lead to some of these similar experiences. So it's up there more broadly outside of our group, because there's a growing number of groups in the US
Starting point is 02:47:02 doing this, and in Europe doing this research, but you can go to clinicaltrials.gov. And if you look in for the main search term of psilocybin or MDMA or psychedelic plug in those terms, you can get a list of the growing number. I mean, I think there's over 40, maybe it's been a while, there might be over 50, you know, I don't know, but studies there's over 40, maybe it's been a while, there might be over 50, you know, I don't know, but studies with just
Starting point is 02:47:27 still a sivine going on right now on clinicaltrials.gov. So check out clinicaltrials.gov to see what's going on, but it's gonna be, if you're gonna do anything legal, it's gonna be in the context of a very specific study, it's not gonna be one-off treatment. Right. And I should say, it's not just legal, but also supported in the right framework that you described of having a team, et cetera.
Starting point is 02:47:52 Obviously, people will do what they will do. And this is... Oh, yeah. I will say, if people... I never encourage people to take drugs of any... I don't encourage caffeine use. Every drug has its risk. I encourage my own caffeine. I'm... I'm drinking up right now. This is great.
Starting point is 02:48:09 This is a very strong mate. It's what we're drinking. It does not lead to a alteration of my perception of self to the extent that we talked about earlier. However, this conversation wasn't a good example of how we can enter a perceptual bubble. I learned so much about psychedelics and the future of this for sake of mental health and other aspects of health. Matt, thank you so much for your time, for your knowledge. I think you put it best earlier for holding the candle in a very dark time and then now there's light. Thank you. Well, thanks and then now there's light. Thank you.
Starting point is 02:48:45 Well, thanks for helping to spread that light. I really appreciate what you've been doing. This is a great, great medium that you have going on. So thank you for doing it. That's my pleasure. Thank you. Thank you for joining me for my conversation with Dr. Matthew Johnson.
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