Mayim Bialik's Breakdown - Part Two: Paul Stamets on Why We’re Not Meant to Be Sick: What Fungi Teach Us About Consciousness & the Future of Human Health
Episode Date: October 22, 2025Could Mushrooms Save the World? Join the world’s most renowned mycologist Paul Stamets—author of Psilocybin Mushrooms in Their Natural Habitats—as he dives deep into the astonishing power of ...fungi, mycelium, and psychedelic mushrooms to transform not just our health, but our consciousness, society, and planet. In this mind-expanding episode of Mayim Bialik's Breakdown, Stamets reveals: - How psilocybin therapy is helping people overcome trauma, anxiety, and even the fear of death - How a heroic dose of mushrooms changed his life, helped cure his stutter, and opened his spiritual awareness - Powerful anatomy of fungi vs. mycelium vs. mushrooms, and how they mirror the structure of the universe - Why mycelium networks prove the health benefits of random acts of kindness - Humans are descendants of mycelium (and what that means for our evolution!) - Crucial role mushrooms play in biodiversity, ecosystem survival, and as the "lungs of the planet" - Difference between microdosing vs. macrodosing, and the creative, emotional, and neurological benefits of each - Why a "Mycelium Revolution" is sweeping the planet, and how it could unite humanity - Why Stamets believes psilocybin may be the key to curing our global creativity crisis - Sacred cultural history of mushrooms, and why honoring Indigenous wisdom is vital to our future - How mushrooms could help us clean pollution, build sustainable materials, revolutionize agriculture, and even colonize space So why isn’t psilocybin therapy more accessible? Why are thousands of mushroom species psychedelic? And how can fungi rewire society for healing, empathy, and planetary survival? Discover how mushrooms might not just change your mind, but also save the world. Watch now and prepare to see fungi in a whole new light! Paul Staments’ book, Psilocybin Mushrooms in Their Natural Habitats: A Guide to the History, Identification and Use of Psychoactive Fungi: https://fungi.com/products/psilocybin-mushrooms-in-their-natural-habitats Follow us on Substack for Exclusive Bonus Content: https://bialikbreakdown.substack.com/ BialikBreakdown.com YouTube.com/mayimbialik Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hi, I'm I'm Biolik.
And I'm Jonathan Cohen.
And welcome to part two of our conversation with my psychologist Paul Stammats.
We hope that you heard episode one of our conversation with Paul.
He's an incredible advocate not only for an understanding of fungi, mycelium, and mushrooms,
but in particular the psychedelic components of these mushrooms and how other traditions have used them for consciousness expansion and how he believes that it can live.
literally change the world. We're going to get into all of that and more in part two of this
conversation. Break it down. Why would nature produce something that has these effects? And I mean,
I think the earliest art that shows, you know, mushrooms that we think were possibly used in some
sort of ritual, you know, capacity. It's 7,000 years old. And all of the, you know,
Almost every culture that can grow them, right, is showing art and there's mythology, there's
literature supporting this for thousands of years.
So what do you believe is the intelligence of the universe that produced a mushroom that has
this transformative capacity?
Well, let me broaden it.
I like that question a lot.
And these are all cultural representations of, I think, that have been very helpful for
those societies.
They're also called vision quest mushrooms.
And they're definitely, you know, make you a more spiritually aware of person.
But we live in a tryptamine consciousness.
Nature is full of tryptomines.
A thought experiment I'd like to tell people is that if you're living in a farm in Pennsylvania
right now listening to this and on your porch and beautiful, I grew up,
I spent a lot of time in Pennsylvania at a prep school there,
and you looked at the fields and the trees,
and if you took away all of the lignine,
all the hemacellulose, all of the cellulose,
all you can see is tryptomines.
What would you see?
You'd see the same thing.
There are tryptomines in grasses, in trees.
There are tritamines throughout nature.
We live basically on a foundation of tryptomines.
So when people ask, why this is just one elaborated tryptamine that creates the spark that I think, you know, is resident in nature and makes us more nature aware.
It goes to the quorum effect that I talked about earlier.
If you are more nature aware, you will protect nature better.
Isn't that an evolutionary successful strategy for the mushrooms that live in an ecosystem that is dependent upon the biodiversity of the ecosystem?
You destroy the biodiversity, you destroy the mushrooms.
And also, just to clarify,
tryptomines are the chemical class of hallucinogenic compounds, correct?
Serotonergic hallucinogenic compounds.
And when we say triptamine, you know,
if you've ever seen like a chemical description of what, like,
caffeine looks like or really anything,
it's literally how many nitrogens are there,
how many hydrogens are there.
You know, I'm looking at the form right now.
It shows where the bonds are, where the kind of free, you know, electrons.
Like, it's a chemical compound that essentially is the foundation of a tremendous part of our evolutionary destiny.
We're talking right now primarily using serotonin.
You know, serotonin is a tryptamine.
Melatonin is a tryptamine.
All these things are, you know, there are so many triptomines.
So we lived in the state of a triptamine-based consciousness.
And nature is based on these tritamines.
The ebb and flow of these compounds, I think there's, you know, this is where if people listening to this podcast, I think we're a little woo-woo.
Do not underestimate what we were saying.
Once you have this experience, it can be revelatory.
and many people only have it once in their life one time.
That's phenomenal.
As Michael Paul said, it's not a very good business model for the pharmaceutical industry.
But microdosing is.
Microdosing is.
You know, we speak to a lot of physicists who are interested in extrasensory ability
and expansions of consciousness.
We speak to a lot of people who have had near-death experiences.
And in Mayam's question, you know, the idea of why would this exist, why would the universe bring us mushrooms to help us expand our consciousness?
For me, there's a question of does it want to reveal the larger reality?
You know, is it that we're in a game where we've come here to remember and that this regular reality that most of us live in until we have an awakening, however that might be, whether it's through psychedelic.
delics or otherwise is, you know, just the process that we're all in to sort of reconnect
and become more aware of a larger conscious reality.
Well, I mean, I think we are right now talking and we are alive.
And the people who are contemporaneously listening to this are alive.
We didn't exist before we were born.
Well, wait a mean, we did exist.
We existed as atoms and molecules that have assembled.
into the form that we have now. We're one giant coincidence of nature. And then we will die.
We will decompose. Make friends with the fungi now because they're going to get you. And then these
molecules go out, the atoms, they're reform into new molecules. We're in this stream of a molecular
universe that has a continuum that goes through billions of years. I want to give a shout out to
Roots to Thrive is the most advanced, in my opinion, non-profit is in Canada.
And Dr. Pamela Criscoe is one of the co-founders, who's a medical doctor, licensed by Canada
Health for a high dose of psalcybin.
What they did, I think, is very pertinent to many of people listening here is they have
a program, typically with about eight people who have been given a stage four diagnosis.
typically cancer, or are traumatized law enforcement officers, soldiers, or firefighters.
Now, this is really important to me.
If you are traumatized and you have PTSD, I met some veterans.
He told me some stories about Afghanistan, which I wish I didn't hear.
They were traumatized.
They made a mistake.
Will you be judged by the worst day of your life?
And if you are angry at yourself, the potential for you is very likely for you to extrovert
that pain that you feel to others because you're angry.
And you are in an inflammatory state of anger, which depresses your immune system, which
causes a cascade of other problems.
At Roots to Thrive, eight individuals, lots of therapy, preparation, typically on indigenous
land, you know, with indigenous people involved in well in British Columbia.
And what has come out of this program is really amazing is that they're there, they're worried
about anxiety, they're depressed because their prognosis, they're going to die soon,
their family is on high alert.
They're traumatized by this.
What's going to happen on mom and dad or brother and sister die?
And typically what happens is they're bonded together because they have the same diagnosis.
We're about to die.
And they do a high dose of psilocybin in a very carefully constructed environment.
And typically what happens is after the experience, the patients become the therapist to their family, saying, I'm okay about dying.
I have a better understanding about life and death.
My purpose in life, don't worry.
One woman had a classic, I'm not going to swear, but she swore on the, on, on, I'm not,
her recording of this and with permission.
He says, I don't care about cancer.
F in cancer, I'm going golfing.
I want to touch on something that you indicated
as a significant component of the hallucinogenic,
the psychedelic, and the kind of transcendental components
of these higher doses of psilocybin.
And, you know, therapy-assisted psilocybin journeys.
It's becoming more of a thing.
We live in Southern California.
I always say you can't swing a dead cat, you know, without finding eight people who have done an ayahuasca journey or this, that, or the other.
Right.
I've never heard that phrase before swinging a dead cat.
I haven't done that yet.
That's an expression.
No, I'm from the 1940s.
Anyway, when I hear you talk about, you know, what it is to journey with someone and to be part, not as a party drug, but to be part of someone's really expansion of consciousness,
as a guide, as a partner.
Obviously, I can't help but think about the numerous indigenous cultures
that use plant medicine as part of not really even just a therapeutic journey.
In many cases, it's part of the awakening consciousness of being human,
is to come of age with an opening that is assisted by plant medicine.
And in this book, in psilocybin mushrooms and their natural habitats,
There's this wonderful map of the world, and it shows the distribution of psilocybin mushrooms.
And as Jonathan points out, in all of the places where it's very, very cold, there is no psilocybin.
So, you know, Siberia.
Well, there are sulfide mushroom Siberia.
Remember, those are reports.
Basically, you know, it looks like central, northern Europe, Western Europe, those are very rich with psilocybin mushroom.
rooms, parts of the United States, the west, the east, and some in the middle, but, you know,
huge concentration down into Yucatan, you know, that whole peninsula scattered across South America,
an interesting concentration in southeastern Australia. Japan has a little cluster there,
and some in central and southern Africa. But I wonder if you can talk about kind of given that
consciousness of where on the map we tend to see these larger concentrations of psilocybin mushrooms,
what does that tell us about the cultures where this was used? And what do we know historically
about the function of these journeys as transcendental and transformative?
Well, first of all, we have to look through the filter that these are observations.
Sure.
Right? Observations of scientists who've recorded the presence of these mushrooms.
The reason why Siberia doesn't have a lot is there's not these reports.
It's from the 1800, there are several thousand reports of psilocyte mushrooms and specimens that are collected in herbaria that have been deposited.
So now because of this massive awakening, we're finding numerous new species all over the place.
And some of these pieces are really hard to find, and some of them aren't.
Salosomy Cubenses, you can see at 50 miles an hour going down the highway in Louisiana,
you know, or golden tops, they're huge.
Solosomy pelliculosa in the northwest here is difficult to find.
It grows only pretty much, you know, along trails and whatnot,
but it's a nondescript species that looks very similar to deadly poisonous species.
So don't underestimate the intelligence of indigenous people who are in themselves scientists
making observations in nature.
And that's why, by the way, for the record, I dedicate my book to Maria Sabina,
a mazatech, knowledge keeper, a sabia.
She said, I'm not a shaman, that's too much work.
She's a knowledge keeper.
to Kit Skates, who is a renowned mycologist in Idaho who mentored me, and Tina Wassen,
R. Gordon Wausen's wife, who died in 1958. She was a Russian physician. These are three
hugely important women who literally open up the doors that many of us have walked through.
Women do not get enough credit for their pivotal influence. And the lesson from psilocybin,
Even from Mazatech shamans recently, I hear this all the time.
The message from psilocybin is to share.
Now, psilocybin mushrooms are sustainable.
They can be grown.
And psilocybin mushrooms that are being grown now,
Sloslovakubensis, which we think came from the old world, Africa,
are being grown in Oaxaca for the Mazatec shamans
so they can have access to solstide mushrooms when it's not the rainy season,
so they can continue their practices.
So this is a fusion of Western and Eastern coming together.
It speaks to something called Two-Eyed Seeing,
which is something Albert Marshall and his wife,
Moderna came up with this concept of two-eyed seeing
when they're Eastern Canadian First Nations people,
and they're confronted by a mother who asked,
why should I send my indigenous child to a Western school?
And Moderna and Albert Marshall came up with this fantastic analogy
saying one eye we can see with indigenous wisdom
and the other eye we can see and help with Western technology.
With two eyes we can see better than one.
So this is respecting indigenous wisdom.
We don't want to influence it, but we want to have to have.
help access so they can continue their practices so they can preserve their culture.
You know, this is so important that indigenous communities are respected and protected.
They're not marginalized, but the Western science of being able to grow these things,
and my book in particular, I think will go down in history as a book that will support
indigenous cultures by allowing them to be able to have a supply of these.
in an ecologically sustainable way.
And moreover, you know, humans migrate, right?
You pick your number, 25,000, 100,000, 200,000 years ago.
There was no humans in the Americas, right?
So humans migrated into the Americas.
Knowledge threads were frayed, broken, some survived.
So exchanging knowledge is the way of human.
of humans. We meet someone on a trail. It's much better to be a friend than a foe,
just from infection. If you get a wound, you're likely to die. But exchanging and the,
again, random acts of kindness is what has built our societies, is the foundation of our societies.
So sharing and respecting, but not marginalizing, not colonizing their culture,
even though migration is a form of biological colonization,
the two are very distinctly different.
But the panspermia, humans like to travel.
We're adventurers.
We go to new lands.
We take the skills of our ancestors.
We go to new lands.
Hopefully meet a friend, not a foe.
You collaborate, you exchange gifts,
and you both are better for it.
And that I think is the lesson of these mushrooms is that these are so such beautiful peacemakers.
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I think we have a crisis of creativity right now.
These solosybin mushrooms, I believe, are Einstein mushrooms, Einstein molecules.
They inspire creativity.
And I think, you know, we, this is where artificial intelligence, according to Sam Altman, can't really create.
They can assemble.
They can have derivative assemblies.
They can do things much better than humans can do.
But we need to have a quantum leap in consciousness.
And I think psilocybin inspires creativity for that quantum leap.
It certainly has been true in my life.
Yeah, it said AI can only do derivative action of what it's been programmed to do,
but net new ideas it struggles with.
I just spoke at the United Nations the day before yesterday,
and we had the biggest AI people there.
There was a disruptor audacity conference that's up on the web.
And there are 100 disruptors, and I'm one of them,
who think outside of the box.
And again, this is the idea of leapfrogging,
And so this is the whole concept of mycelium is a deep well of intelligence of the earth and the universe.
It makes so much sense to so many people now.
This is one of these aha moments.
There are some things in life.
I think we all would agree that we just know intuitively are true.
You know, you don't have to be convinced with logic.
You just have this aha moment where you realize it is true.
And I think this is, you know, mushrooms bring that aha moment to the forefront.
I think these are Einstein molecules that can help build bridges over chasms of division, religion, politics, you know, culturally.
The ecosystems want to survive, folks, and we're, for better or worse, you know, we are shepherding these ecosystems, and we're not going to have a very good job of it.
Well, I think one of the things that is a challenge for many people, you know, when people look at the world, forget about our interpersonal worlds and how many of us are suffering from depression, anxiety, loneliness, in many cases trauma with a lower case T and in some cases trauma with a capital T.
When we think about what society looks like, when we think about the countless wars and conflict and nonsense.
and just even in the United States,
you know, what goes on in the government
and shutdowns and, you know, all of this kind of craziness,
what's true is that if more people had an intuitive sense
of a desire to share,
to be open to more love, more acceptance, more compassion,
it could potentially shift the entire landscape
of the world that we live in.
And in addition, you know,
talk about with the awakening in the 60s, in the 70s, you know, people who have had a sense
of an awakened consciousness do not want to put on uniforms and be sent to other countries to fight
wars for a government that they don't support. Is that part of the threat that this kind of
consciousness expanding medicine holds? Is this why we are not allowed access to it? And it's not
supported and advertised? Like what what is the block to us being able to expand our consciousness
and our potential as humans? What doesn't the government want us to have? It's the inertia of
ignorance. You know, so many, I mean, dealing with government, we have many examples of this.
bureaucrats don't want to change. It jeopardizes their career and puts them in danger. Easier for
bureaucrats in government to say no, then yes.
You know, change comes at an expense.
But I want to, you again, to give a shout out to veterans and law enforcement and to
physicians and firefighters.
They see the healing properties.
Look at Rick Perry, the former governor of Texas.
He's had this awakening.
And the fundamental Christians in the fundamental Jewish community and Muslim community,
I mean, it's the golden rule, do unto others as you wish them to do to you.
I mean, this is something that it's the vitriolic extremes and the narrative.
I just, I turned off comments off all my social media today.
Because I went to rock, Gemini, chat, GBT, all these different things.
And you can ask the question, how many comments on social media are bots?
or foreign nation states that are trying to create divisions in America.
The number is?
Up to 80%.
I mean, we're fighting a war that doesn't even exist in many cases.
When people realize that the comments are there to manipulate you,
to cause inflammation that harms your immune system,
as well as the social fabric of our society,
People are being manipulated by AI that's being weaponized in the comment sections.
I just gave a talk on saving the bees and upreguling immunity to a huge paradigm shifting discovery.
And someone make comments about something that's totally unrelated.
It's just to poke you and to cause reactions.
It's a viral infection on our society.
And this is where we need to fight back.
One way to fight back is just turning off the comments
and going outside with your children into nature
and take photographs of flowers, mushrooms, and insects
and go to eye naturalist and get back into the natural world, folks.
That's where we came.
People have to recognize it as a viral infection,
as a manipulation, as something that is being done nefariously to them
because it's been normalized.
And then they just ride this wave and get inflamed and get distracted and don't want to go outside.
And it's having the intended effect if we are not calling it out and recognizing it.
I'm guilty as well, folks.
I'm like, why am I not going for a walk right now?
Because I went down this wormhole, you know, and it's like I think we're all suffering from that.
So, anyhow, I'm optimistic because this is literally.
a revolution from the underground,
whether it's gourmet, medicinal, or psilocybin mushrooms.
It brings parents together with children.
It's multi-generational, multicultural.
It's sweeping the planet.
It's the quote-unquote forbidden fruit
that we were told not to consume
and weird, edgy science.
But all of that now is so much more robust
in the foundation of science.
And that's people follow the science.
You know, you, you, this is the other thing I heard at this UN conference I was at, is that you want to be the pilot of artificial intelligence.
You don't want to be the passenger.
This is where that we need to take control.
We need to establish the ethos that artificial intelligence will have its origin story in the best of humanity, in kindness, thoughtfulness, cooperation.
building guilds of individuals who contribute to the commons.
This is our power.
We can do this now.
Don't become subservient.
Don't become a victim of AI.
Become a pilot of it.
And so I just challenge everybody.
Ask all AI platforms about the importance of random acts of kindness
as the origin story of the human species that gave rise to artificial intelligence.
I did this last night, actually.
I went and I had that prompt and I put it into chat GPT and it gave me five paragraphs asking me if I also would like visions and scenarios in which it could be applied to AI in hospitals, AI in the workplace, AI in communities and where algorithmic acts of kindness could change measurably health outcomes.
So it is moving in that direction.
I would like to say I've never used any of these platforms.
I don't even know where to find them.
I never have done any of these things.
But I did want to give a shout out.
I don't know much.
I can't speak to the Christian community or the Muslim community.
But there is a growing Jewish psilocybin community.
And there's an organization called Sheffa
that a friend of mine runs.
And they cater psilocybin journeys therapeutically,
but specifically coded for the cultural specificity
of the Jewish exesphemy.
because for many of us that were raised in a traditional way,
we have different imagery, we have different language.
You know, there's a lot of, you know, Hebrew as an important language
for many components of a mystical experience.
Anyway, so just wanted to give a shout at that that is something that exists and is growing.
Again, I can't speak to it for Christians and Muslims.
Well, the conservative Christian community, it's a very big right now.
It's very big with the Mormons.
It's, there's an, for law enforcement people,
people out there. It's a great model. It's called the Healing Warrior Church out of San Antonio, Texas.
I'm sorry, out of Austin, Texas. It's a nonprofit. They take veterans, law enforcement,
officers, seals, special forces, et cetera, who've been living traumatized. They have such high suicide
rates. And it's been very, very helpful to them. And so both in the religious subsets and the
professional services subsets, we need better law enforcement. Imagine if you're a law enforcement
officer at two in the morning that you pull over a car and you have two seconds to make a decision
whether this person is dangerous or not. You do that 100, 200, 300 times. Are you going to make
the right decision every time? No. No. But that wrong decision, should that determine the rest of
your life? And then because the insular community of law enforcement, they share the start
with themselves, but they don't want other people.
So it becomes more closeted.
Be able to break the shackles of shame
to forgive yourself and realize I'm really a good person.
I screwed up.
But I'm going to do extra better now.
I'm going to pay it forward.
I'm going to make sure I'm the best law enforcement officer I can be.
That's who we need.
That's what we need with doctors, firefighters.
Well, and also people who lead with compassion
and people who are looking to find the best part of people,
so that we can maintain also this.
I mean, my children, God bless them,
they have very negative perceptions
of all helpers in society.
You know, people that we grew up, you know,
I mean, I still wave at firefighters still as a grown woman.
But, you know, we grew up that like these are the heroes,
these are the protectors,
and I completely understand why that has shifted.
But I also think of the amount of time they spend on social media
and what's being fed to them.
And I said there are still good people,
but just the notion that we want to have more people
in those positions of power, right?
Meaning they're in situations
where they have the ability to make these kind of decisions
leading with compassion.
I was at Burning Man, Mudvan.
I've been there 19 times.
I got lost in the plight on my way out at 3 in the morning
and I saw a law enforcement officer away in the distance
and I drove up to him and said,
hey, man, I'm lost. I don't know where I am.
And he routed me the right way.
And I just said, hey, I just want to say, you know, you folks have a difficult job.
I really respect and appreciate what you do.
But I believe 99% of people are basically good.
They looked at me and smiled and he said, 97.
But he said, yeah, that's his experience, too, is, you know, let's not the most extreme negative
experiences be amplified into the commons to create a viral infection of our society of
inflammation that then foments anger and retaliation. You know, this is really important. These are,
these, I really believe the functionally people are good and we should not let extremists
steer the future of our society. I'd love to touch on your 2005 book and also talk about
what's changed since then, because a lot of people talk about the health benefits. We're talking
about PTSD recovery and all the other areas in which it can help us physically.
but I think less people understand the implications to all the different industries that it can benefit
and that the, like, I forget the number, but I heard the number of patents that you have,
and it's like, wait a second, there's something else going on here far beyond the story of just ingesting
psilocybin or...
Yeah, if patents, put patents in perspective, we wouldn't be having this conversation with them for patents.
You know, and 17 years, actually is less than 17 years.
It's usually about 12 to 14 years.
It all becomes open-sourced, right?
So it's to give people a competitive advantage so they can make the investment and take the risk.
It's risk reduction.
I have many patents that have expired.
They're open-sourced.
One that could replace the majority of mass exercise.
Folks look it up, you know, it's open-sourced.
You can't protect yourself against competitors with intellectual property.
That's what open source means.
But the novelty factor, which means it is unexpected, is not logically sequential.
It's not obvious.
It's called unobviousness.
But so much of that is open source now.
I only use patents to say that there's breakthroughs and great things that have been discovered.
I don't mean to sort of have any negative connotation to it.
I'm like, wow, there's...
A lot of people, I have a D-jerk reaction.
And one person challenged me, and I said,
you know, you're challenging me on a phone that's...
If you didn't have patents...
You wouldn't have the phone, yeah.
There's roll back the clock.
We wouldn't have this conversation.
Woof!
You know, it would disappear.
Or it set back society by a decade.
All patents should be open-sourced.
All patents should be benefiting the commons.
It just gets a head start for a small group of people.
So, but that just means there's a deep well of unexpected knowledge that humans, you know, I frankly think nature owns everything, you know.
I just said it's a temporary custodian of knowledge trying to advance this for even so many other people.
You know, that's wonderful.
We need to culture the, you know, invention.
And so we need to incentivize people to have invention.
But there are so much stuff now that's coming out.
And you alluded to it is fundamentally changing insulation materials, packaging materials, building materials, fermented foods.
I was interviewed, I met an editor of Scientific America, and I go, I have an idea, but you'll never publish it.
He goes, what's your idea?
I said, well, two things.
One, if you go to Mars, build an igloo made of mycelium, they're mostly nanofibers of carbon,
85% of mycelium is carbon.
Then you put solar panels on top and your igloo can only insulate, but it could be a battery.
I said, someone should take this and run with it.
And he goes, I said, but there's a problem.
He goes, what's the problem?
I go, people will be sad.
They'll be depressed.
They'll look back at our blue planet going, why am I living in this tiny little building?
and I can't smell flowers or go in the woods or swim in the oceans.
I inside the way, Elon Musk.
If you're watching Elon, you go to Mars first, okay?
You tell us about it.
You're six months to get there.
You can send us 15 minutes.
You can send us a message back to us, whatever it is.
But I said, if they took Solzibin with them,
they would have this incredible spiritual experience.
They look into the cosmos.
They'll be back on mission.
So I think Solzibin in space is important for the psychological.
health of astronauts.
And lo and behold, they published it.
I couldn't believe it.
But that's one thing is the interplanetary colonization of space.
You know, you only have to take two spores of a sulfide mushroom to grow
sulfide mushrooms in space.
It's a very low payload, you know, and two spores of oyster mushrooms.
You know, obviously you can take test tube cultures, but the payload mass is very low.
And then you can exponentially expand it on agricultural waste, human waste,
you know, debris fields created from construction, et cetera, et cetera.
So this is a paradigm shifting technology for helping us leap into the cosmos.
I mean, fascinating.
I want to circle about crops for a second in agriculture.
You know, there was recently a article that says, oh, yeah, eating roundup is totally fine,
no problem, which is a little baffling.
Can you talk about some alternatives of helping crops grow and stay safe without chemical treatment?
Well, it's a dance right now.
I mean, you know, better living through chemistry, you know, it's a single molecule, you know, targeted approach, which has this usefulness.
You can't argue against it in some ways, you know, protecting crops.
So there's better yields and there's more food to feed the world.
that narrative is a little bit dated now because we know the after consequence and the non-intended
effects can be deleterious for the long-term.
So when you're looking at short-term gains versus long-term benefits, that's the balancing act
that we're facing now.
The chemical industry has inflicted so much harm to biodiversity.
It's unraveling the very foundation of the ecosystems in which we've evolved.
So the short-term grab for money is the...
incentive for a lot of these chemical industries and they inflict harm in the ecosystem for the commons of your descendants,
do you have the right to rob your children's future? Some people will say, I don't care about my children. I'm not going to have children. I want it all now. It's kind of adversarial to the health of the commons.
So what the fungi do is they eliminate the need and the necessity and the intensity of using these chemical solutions.
This is why conventional medicine and conventional agricultural practices and mycelium-based solutions can marry together.
And what it does, it lowers the need for toxicity or increasing the innate immunity of the ecosystem.
And we see this in agriculture.
We see this in medicine.
This is what I'm so excited about.
There is a shift going.
I come from a wheat farmer family.
My family had 10,000 acres a week in eastern Washington.
I inherited 200.
I was talking to my uncle, and this is the Pallus country in eastern Washington that used to have 20 feet deep topsoils and blue from eastern Oregon, you know, over 10,000 years, you know, from the volcanoes and the winds, deposited the Palluse beautiful hills.
And now that 20 feet of topsoil shrunk to about, you know, 12 inches, 10 inches because of repetitive farming.
So he went to no-till.
My cousin actually did, went to no-till.
And he said, and the no-till practice basically, you're not plowing the fields.
He said there was a loss of production for the first few years until the carbon was built up.
And now, because of no-till farming, he's regenerating.
So re-gen agriculture is a key, but you have to pay the expense of investment of actually having fewer returns and profit.
for a period of time until you hit that sustainable threshold where it becomes more economical.
I think that's a general rule, is that we have to have patient capitalism, patient investors.
We need to look beyond the time horizon of our immediate return on investment and accept a longer
time horizon.
Is there like ways to introduce mycelium into farming practices, not just happening all the time?
Yeah.
It's happening all the time.
It happens in 14.
You can't go to a nursery without getting microasal fungi in soils.
I mean, go to go out in your local nursery and get a bail of soil.
It's all with mycorrhizia now.
So that's wonderful.
Because with a microaise and these other fungi they're introduced, it increases the host
defense immunity of the plant.
So it's not susceptible to insect characterization.
There's a fungus called meteryzium that's in grasses.
Why aren't all grasses consumed by insects?
is this entomopathogenic fungus, that's a fungus that kills insects, is also an endophyte that's
growing inside of grasses.
So using the endophytic fungi that have a natural anti-inspect predation property means
you don't have to use as many as excocytes.
This story, I'm telling you, repeats a hundred, a thousand times.
And this is why the field of mycology, I believe, should be funded as much as the field
of the computer sciences.
This is why we need a huge new generational shift.
towards environmental science using fungi,
because it's applicable, it's sustainable,
is scalable, and it's immediate.
That, to me, is not something that's a pie in the sky concept.
It says it deliverable that we can deliver, you know,
literally this next season.
Does it have applications to clothing?
Yeah, Stella McCartney is really big on that.
Stella McCartney's daughter.
So, yeah, they're also clothing.
And look at my hat.
My hat's made from this Amadou Mushroom.
This is called German felt.
You put this mushroom into water with ashes for two weeks, and you can pull it apart to make this hat.
And this hat was made by some people in Transylvania.
So it's a tradition that's gone over several hundred years.
This allowed for the portability of fire.
So this was an inappropriate technology.
You can put embers of a fire in this mushroom and carry it for days.
So by the way, if there's a spark that gets onto his hat, it's like a fuse, the whole hat will burn up.
Whoa.
So it's Amadu is the name.
So it revolutionized warfare.
In the Napoleonic times, this was when the spark from the Flint went into the punk.
It was made of Amadu.
That's what fuses came from.
So Amadu has a history going back to all the way back to Hippocrates, 420 BC as an anti-Eusis.
anti-inflammatory. Again, these mushrooms have a multiplicity of benefits. So it's an anti-inflammatory
for carrying fire to making garments. And it's also used for smoking around beehives to subdue the bees.
For hundreds of years, Amadu was used also for being able to calm bees down. And we found
that to have extremely strong immunob benefiting properties that reduces the deformed wing virus,
which is sweeping the planet. I published in my colleagues from the USDA and Washington,
at University in Nature, scientific reports.
The title of the article is extracts of polypore mushrooms reduce viruses and honeybees.
The alt-metric score is extremely high, but that is a natural product.
It's not an antiviral drug that upregulates innate immunity.
So look it up.
Nature of scientific reports, extracts of polypore mushrooms, reduce viruses and honeybees.
That's the tip of the proverbial iceberg of how these can upregulate your innate immunity
to be able to fight diseases.
I mean, it's amazing. Last question on this topic, any application for fuel as a bio-available and renewable fuel source?
I went down that rabbit hole. We produced what I call it myconol, like ethanol, like myconol. But I have to admit it was not as efficient as other
fermentation technologies using like Saccharomycese servacii, you know, mix beer, alcohol,
yeast. There's many other microorganisms that are more from my limited experience.
Prove me wrong. There could be some out there that are superstars. And that's the importance
of microdiversity. So yeah, I was not able to, I couldn't uncover the species that was a
hyperproducer of alcohol or hydrocarbon-based fuels, not just alcohol. So,
So that's, again, there's just not enough time in life to do all these things to explore.
Before we let you go, you know, we'd love to just ask you to as concisely as you'd like to.
What is the message that you believe you were placed here to share with people?
Well, the message I'd like to share is that we are born in this beautiful life that we share.
kindness and forgiveness and cooperation builds communities that are healthier, stronger.
Our descendants are depending upon us to make the best decisions.
Our ancestors gave us this opportunity.
We're all part of one giant consciousness.
All religions are steering towards the same unanimity of being.
It makes me feel better about my own mortality.
that I'm going to enter into the state of unanimity
and whatever religious or spiritual discipline
that you're following,
we're all in this together,
and it's a great thing.
It's absolutely beautiful.
As I said, I've been waiting a long time
to get to meet you,
and it's just such a pleasure.
And I think you're the greatest spore
that has ever been produced by this planet.
So thank you so much.
much for being here with us. Well, bless you both and thank you all. And, you know, be kind.
Random act with kindness are really important. And they're practical in the long run. Be forgiving,
you know. Take a deep breath. Go out in nature. Enjoy life. We brought mushroom hats that Valerie gave
us to show our love for you. I'm so curious what he would talk to us about if we spoke to him again.
dropping little hints.
What did he say?
About his 80 milligram, microgram, macrogram?
I don't know.
Hero dose.
But superhero dose.
Growing new neurons.
With a therapist.
I know.
No, but it sounds like there was more going on in there.
He's pretty much a believer that there's life on other planets,
might be mycelium life.
I mean, yes.
I think the thing that we didn't really get to,
which I think rounds out a little bit more of the person who is Paul Stammats
is, you know, a tremendous amount of the work that he does
is in understanding mycelium, fungi, and mushrooms.
Silocybin is one part of that,
but he believes that there's basically a pharmaceutical cabinet
that nature has provided us that can help with arthritis,
with aging, with depression, with anxiety, even at low doses,
being even outside of the journey experience,
these mushrooms are nature's medicine.
And that's a huge component of the work that he does,
the company that he has as well.
We have a friend of the podcast who wants to come back on
and talk about new breaking research on the impact
and how inflammation is really at the core root of all the afflictions,
basically that anyone can have, whether it be depression, anxiety, irritable bowel syndrome,
arthritis, even links to dementia and Alzheimer's disease all related to an underlying
inflammation. And what he was talking about is using mycelium and natural approaches to
addressing that core underlying inflammation. Also, the emotional inflammation, this idea of
the virus, a societal virus that has.
has really been at the underpinning of how technology has been developed and how by better understanding
that we can remove ourselves. And what is the alternative, you know, feeling what it feels like
to go out and be in nature, not in a reactive state, how impactful that can be.
Oh, we've got some great content on Substack from this episode.
Check us out on Substack. MindB Alex Breakdown on Substack. Exclusive content there, a lot of practical
tools to improve your life. Come check us out.
For more breakdown to the one we hope you never have.
We'll see you next time.
I'm wearing my mushroom hat.
It's my MPOLX breakdown.
She's going to break it down for you.
She's got a neuroscience PhD or two.
One, fiction.
And now she's going to break.
