The Diary Of A CEO with Steven Bartlett - Michael Pollan: How To Change Your Mind
Episode Date: July 7, 2022Michael Pollan is an author who between his five bestsellers has sold millions of books. Through exploring our connection to the natural world, he reveals sides of ourselves that we never knew we had.... As an author and a journalist, it’s Michael’s job to question everything. But in his 50s he turned the tables on himself and began to question his own assumptions. What followed was a one-of-a-kind journey that took him to explore the nature of his own perception of the world which would take him into trying going caffeine-free and trying psychedelic drugs. Now, he shares what he’s learnt from that journey with us. Michael’s book, This is Your Mind on Plants, is out in paperback this summer, and his Netflix series How to Change Your Mind drops July 12th. Follow Michael: Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/michael.pollan/ Twitter - https://twitter.com/michaelpollan/ Michael’s book: https://www.amazon.co.uk/This-Your-Plants-Michael-Pollan/ Michael’s Netflix series: https://www.netflix.com/title/80229847 Follow me: https://beacons.ai/diaryofaceo
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Quick one. Just wanted to say a big thank you to three people very quickly. First people I want
to say thank you to is all of you that listen to the show. Never in my wildest dreams is all I can
say. Never in my wildest dreams did I think I'd start a podcast in my kitchen and that it would
expand all over the world as it has done. And we've now opened our first studio in America,
thanks to my very helpful team led by Jack on the production side of things. So thank you to Jack
and the team for building out the new American studio. And thirdly to to Amazon Music, who when they heard that we were expanding to the United
States, and I'd be recording a lot more over in the States, they put a massive billboard
in Times Square for the show. So thank you so much, Amazon Music. Thank you to our team. And
thank you to all of you that listened to this show. Let's continue. Depression, anxiety, addiction,
mental disorders that involve a rigidity of thought.
What psychedelics appear to do is break those habits of thought.
What is the cost of this, though?
It's a great question.
One of the 100 most influential people in the world.
Please welcome Michael Pollan.
You've written six New York Times bestsellers, and they're on such a diverse range of topics.
Two of the topics I've worked on
have turned into movements.
I was writing a piece on the meat industry
and how fucked up it is.
And it led to this movement to try to reform agriculture.
Then I got into psychedelics.
They're much better than the results for antidepressants
when they came on the scene.
And we're talking about potential cures,
not simply symptoms.
There are risks with this,
and we don't talk about them nearly enough,
and people are gonna get hurt.
One of the immersive journalistic pursuits
you embarked on was this topic of caffeine.
It allows us to function better.
It allows us to work harder, longer.
You're feeling the clearing of the mental fog.
I can tell you the cost of doing heroin every day,
but no one can seem to tell me the cost of having three cups of coffee a day.
If you really want to understand your relationship
to this drug, you have to go.
So without further ado, I'm Stephen Bartlett,
and this is the Diary of a CEO USA edition.
I hope nobody's listening,
but if you are, then please keep this to yourself.
Michael, I have to say it's a real, a huge honor to speak to you. When I departed from my company
and I started investigating what I was interested in, one of the things alongside DJing and this
podcast and many others was psychedelics. I was so compelled by this apparent, and I didn't have confirmation, this apparent increase in mental health disorders in my country.
In the UK, as I know you've talked about many times, suicide is the single biggest killer of men under the age of 45.
And I thought that the most sort of fulfilling thing I could do with the next chapter of my life was start a company in that space. That's how I came to the psychedelics industry. That's how I came to actually work in
the psychedelics industry. And when I arrived in that industry, people said your name over and over
and over again. And they told me, and I'm not blowing smoke up your ass, they told me that I
had to, it was like, I wasn't allowed in the industry until I'd read your book, right? How
to Change Your Mind. It was that much of a pivotal book
for my colleagues at the time. You've written six New York Times bestsellers, and they're on such a
diverse range of topics. To be so successful in such a diverse range of topics in writing,
my first question to you that I wanted to ask is, as you look back on your life and your career, why were you
successful? What was it about you that made you successful? I think finding the right topics. I
had a nose for topics that most people weren't paying attention to. I felt very lucky. I was
writing in these uncompetitive spaces. Nobody was writing about psychedelics, except, you know,
the small handful of people within the psychedelic community
who write these books for one another
that nobody else reads.
So I remember thinking the whole time
I was writing that book, I was like, where is everybody?
Am I making a mistake here, investing so much in this?
No one else is writing about it.
And the same was true with food.
When I started writing about food and agriculture,
very little being written.
So a willingness to go into places that other people, you know, weren't working in.
I don't like writing in competitive environments. I'm not fast enough. So that was one thing.
I think there's something about the way I structure stories. So I don't start on page one with all the
answers. And if you read the first page of anything I've written, I'm kind don't start on page one with all the answers. And if you read the first
page of anything I've written, I'm kind of an idiot on page one. I've got questions. I don't
have answers. And so my books are kind of detective stories or, you know, I just tell about the process
of my figuring things out and going to this person and learning this and having this experience and learning that. And I think that readers don't like to be lectured at. And, and I don't do that. I take them along
on the journey. When, when I think about starting a business, one of the pieces of advice that I
would, and I think a lot of entrepreneurs would give a young aspiring entrepreneur is to not
pursue something that you're not genuinely interested about because- Oh yeah, without question. I mean, I write about things that I'm passionate about.
Curiosity is the driver and cultivating.
Curiosity doesn't necessarily come naturally to everybody.
It's a muscle you have to cultivate
and you have to see the world in terms of questions
rather than answers.
Because questions are always more interesting than answers.
So I do cultivate that when I see something happening. I remember when I first read a little article in the New York Times saying they were giving psilocybin to cancer patients to
help them deal with their fear of death. I'm like, what's that about? Why would you do that? Why would
you ever want to take a trip when you got a terminal diagnosis? I don't think I would want
to do that. You know, I just had all these questions and the only way to answer them was to do reporting was
to go interview the patients and interview the doctors and satisfy my curiosity so without
question i i can't write about things i'm not interested in i mean i get you know you can as
you can imagine editors are always coming to me we like an article on this or a book on this.
And I'm like, I don't feel it.
So yeah, so you do have to care about it.
I mean, writing a book is such a long journey
with so many twists and turns.
And so if you don't have some deep-seated drive
to understand something, to tell a story,
good chance you're gonna sink along the way.
And you really do go all the way.
That's something that you're- Well, immersion is a big part of my work.
And I think that's been another key thing.
I've been thinking about this a lot recently,
but I can trace the moment where I was first exposed to the kind of journalism that I think of myself as doing.
And that was when I was 13.
My parents gave me a book called Paper Lion.
It's a book of sports writing.
It's about football by a writer named George Plimpton.
He was a literary person, but a sports writer too, and loved sports writing. And he was
kind of bored with how sports writing was done then, which is, you know, it's that cynical cigar
chomping guy on the sidelines with the hat who just been there, done that, seen it all, has no
sense of wonder or excitement anymore. And he thought there's a way to reinvent this form. And what he did was he
persuaded the Detroit Lions, American football team, to let him train with them over the summer,
summer training camp, and then start in a exhibition game at the beginning of the season
as quarterback. So this guy had never played professional sports at all, was not an athlete,
and there he was facing this line of giant guys coming at him. And he could write about football
in a way that no sports writer could, but neither any football player could because they had been
doing it since they were 10 or six, and they no longer saw it freshly.
It was a job. But he had this incredible sense of wonder and humor because he's a fish out of water.
And it opened up all these funny narrative possibilities. And I realized that book just
sat with me. I love that book. So when I started writing, i forget which book it was in um i really i think
it was my second book was a book about architecture and then i realized i couldn't write this book
unless i built something myself and so finding how to put my finding the way to put myself in the
story is uh been key for me and with uh agriculture you know i bought a cow and followed them through
the food system you bought a cow i did i i was writing a piece uh that became a chapter in the
omnivore's dilemma on the meat industry and how up it is and um and feed lots and the drugs
they give the animals and that was my assignment from the New York Times.
And I found this, and I was gonna do the piece
in terms of, I was gonna follow one animal
through the whole system from insemination to slaughter.
And this was a piece called Power Steer
that was published in the New York Times.
And it's on my website if you wanna check it out for free.
But along the way, one of the ranchers said,
if you really want to understand our business, you should buy one of these animals. And I thought
immediately, this is a great idea because it's going to do two things. It's going to give me
a character, even though it's an animal, which having an animal hero in a piece is always a
good thing. And it's going gonna give me a different kind of access
when I get to the feedlot and the slaughterhouse
because I own this animal.
I'm not just a journalist.
And so I picked out this animal, number 534,
and I followed him.
And I met him on the ranch where he was born.
And then I had a reunion with him in the feedlot
where he ended up several months know, several months later.
I'm super intrigued by what happened to this cow.
Oh, yeah, well.
Were you emotionally attached to it at all
when it got, you know, reached its end of its days?
I was a little.
I didn't, they wouldn't, something happened.
So I had to publish the piece before he was slaughtered.
Right.
He was, they wanted to publish the piece.
I handed it in in February. They wanted to publish it in March and he wasn't going to get slaughtered tilled. They wanted to publish the piece. I handed it in in February.
They wanted to publish it in March and he wasn't going to get slaughtered till June. I wanted to wait because I still had very good access because nobody knew I was writing an expose on the meat
industry. I was just some goofball following the life of this cow. But when the piece came out,
the slaughterhouse was like, we're not doing business with pollen anymore.
And so I was hoping to retrieve the steaks and eat them or try to eat them and see what I thought about it.
But they wouldn't play anymore.
And it's interesting, when this piece came out, there was a whole explosion in the American media of people who wanted to save the cow because they knew he hadn't been killed yet.
And I had people, I had someone write me, a movie producer in Beverly Hills wrote and said, I want to buy your 534.
And I said, what are you going to do with it?
I'm going to put it on my front lawn. And I was like, you know, saving one animal is not
going to fix the food system. And everybody thought that way. There was even a telethon
on a vegan radio station in New Jersey. They were raising money and they would pay me anything I
wanted for this animal. And I'm like, this is not, you know, this is not how you change the meat system
by having this poster boy steer.
And they actually likened it to the Underground Railroad,
that saving one slave was worth it.
I was like, that's interesting.
And so I did not sell it.
And it went through the process and somebody ate it,
but it wasn't me.
There's something sort of telling about that,
about the human condition,
where we believe that one sort of surface level act
of apparent, it's probably virtue signaling,
but apparent goodness is enough,
or we don't really care about the systemic resolution.
Systems are hard to deal with, right?
We evolved to deal with individuals and stories of individuals. And that's why this story was powerful because it was
about an individual cow. But what matters is the system. I chose it because it was representative
of the system. It was a very typical animal going through a typical start out on grass,
kind of idyllic situation in South Dakota, move on to this horrible feedlot
where they stand in their own manure all day and eat corn, which makes them sick and they have to
take drugs. And then they go through this slaughterhouse process, which I described,
even though I didn't get to witness. But I think we have trouble dealing with systems.
And so we always have the poster child.
I mean, look at all the nonprofits, how they advertise, right?
There's one animal or there's one child that you're going to save with your donation.
And I just think it's a limitation of our imagination.
That's what I was thinking of a very recent example of that,
which is the tragic death of George Floyd
and how that sparked people
around the world specifically on instagram posting a black tile as a black male i looked at that and
thought this is like the easy thing to do right but it doesn't solve the systemic issues of sort
of race and race relations and discrimination but like we can all do the like virtue signaling
socially hashtag whatever black tile but again that the complexity of the system below it,
that's kind of might be the cause of some of these things.
It's just, does anybody really care to deal with that?
You know, it's like...
I think it's just overwhelming to people.
And, you know, I don't, I mean, it is virtue signaling.
I mean, all over Berkeley where I live,
people still have Black Lives Matter signs in their windows,
you know, everywhere. Like,
when are they going to take them down? Are they ever going to take them down?
I understand the value of expressing that point of view, but there's so much more that needs to
be done. What does need to be done when we're thinking about sort of rewiring systems? Is it education? Is it political? Is it? I tend to think it's about law. I think you can't
legislate morality, but you can change laws and make certain kinds of activity discrimination
illegal. You know, we're approaching it in America at the level of everyone's soul.
We're trying to reform everyone's soul
with anti-racism campaigns and things like that.
We'll see if it works.
I tend to think it doesn't work.
And one of the things that I've been very discouraged by
is the collapse in support for Black Lives Matter,
which had majority support after that George Floyd summer,
and now it doesn't.
It's been politicized, right?
Yeah, and it's been politicized, right?
Yeah. And it's been fought against by Republicans. But I also think
shaming people is not the way to get them to change. Amen.
And there was a lot of that. And I see a lot of this on college campuses. I see a lot of this
throughout the culture. I understand the instinct. But I think you get, I think you invite a backlash. That's not the best way to
get people to change. And I think, in fact, it can have the opposite effect. I think, from what I've
observed, specifically around the issue of Black Lives Matter, that shame that I saw in the wake
of George Floyd's death only resulted in this kind of like apparent social compliance, not change,
like, okay, now I have to pretend to be this person.
And that like compliance again
is not what we're looking for.
I did a big tweet thread about how I felt
white people were being shamed into either speaking out,
saying something profound or other,
when really, for me, it was actually
the least natural reaction to the scenes that i saw
in that video of george floyd's death would be right doing a tweet or posting i even i spent
weeks like processing it and then i was being shamed steve why aren't you speaking up with
black people and i just thought you know like you know of that, again, it made me, it didn't bring me closer to waving the flags.
It just made me feel like, I don't know, kind of disillusioned by it all.
So you're right, shamed.
Yeah, there was a lot of pressure to immediately express your solidarity with Black Lives Matter.
And if you didn't, there was something wrong.
Yeah, yeah.
I definitely saw a lot of that um
i don't know i just think we need i think our politics has to be organized around um more
positive emotions i mean make people feel really good about social change about um and i think
you know really concrete i think the way we hire people needs to change i think the way we promote
people needs to change i think i think that there's certain still certain kinds of
discrimination that have to be outlawed um i mean the biggest thing going on at the same time of
black lives matter is taking away the ability of african-americans to vote you know voter suppression
that is so concrete and you need those votes in order to change things.
And so while we're working on our souls, we're losing the franchise, which the civil rights
movement has fought long and hard. We're going backwards. So I think we should consider whether
this politics is working or not.
And I would suggest it might not be. I would agree. We started talking about the topic of
like immersive journalism. One of the, one of the sort of immersive journalistic pursuits you
embarked on was this topic of caffeine, which I found really, really interesting, because
I believe there's a cost to everything
in life just generally and the cost is always harder to see and with caffeine in the culture
specifically in business and even i could see it sort of taking hold in my own life this topic of
caffeine i'm like people never talk about the cost of it as if it's the super drug we take it it just
sends us up there's no free lunch exactly right so i and i started thinking with anxiety on the rise is there
is there a risk that this sort of tampering with our um our emotional state is going to
ruin the system that regulates us naturally and make us go up okay fine when we take caffeine
but then they're down like every other drug like heroin and cocaine is going to be
equally um destructive yeah i mean i you know you're talking about the law of compensation i think is what ralph waldo emerson called it i love that and that that there is there's always some
compensating thing there is no free lunch and um and that was a real issue as people were trying
to understand how caffeine worked
because it seemed to be a free lunch.
Here was something with zero calories
that gave you more energy.
Caffeine works by blocking the action of a neurotransmitter
or neuromodulator technically called adenosine.
It's a chemical that we all have in our bodies
that over the course of the day,
the levels rise and it plugs into a certain receptor in the brain that's all over the brain.
I think it's other parts of the body too. And adenosine is your body's signal to slow down,
get ready for sleep. It builds sleep pressure. And what caffeine does is it fits exactly in the same receptor and hijacks it,
basically blocks the adenosine from getting to that receptor.
So the adenosine is still in your body,
but it's not acting on your brain because it can't get into those receptors.
When the caffeine leaves your system, which takes a while to do,
all that adenosine that's been building up, boom, comes in.
And so you're more tired than you were before.
So you have this kind of rebound exhaustion.
So you're really borrowing that energy from the future rather than creating new energy out of nothing.
It's still very useful under certain circumstances.
I'm not a critic of caffeine.
It might be my favorite drug.
And I've tried a whole bunch.
And it was immersive journalism in that, in this case,
I had to stop doing something rather than doing something.
So in How to Change Your Mind, I tried LSD and psilocybin and 5-MeO-DMT
and all these things that were really scary and hard for me but this was harder giving up caffeine for three months um really was a
stretch and but it was a really interesting experiment and it taught me that there's a
great value in giving things up temporarily just to understand your relationship to them understand
your dependence on them what was hardest about it it? Well, there was the withdrawal, which took a few days and was very
unpleasant. I felt like kind of muzzy headed. I felt like this veil had fallen between me and
reality. Things seem less fresh, less immediate. I didn't have the headaches that some people
report and I didn't have the flu-like symptoms,
but I didn't feel myself.
And I was sluggish.
I couldn't concentrate.
I couldn't write for the first week.
I just, I said in the book,
I felt like an unsharpened pencil.
I just didn't have it.
You know, it takes a certain amount of ego strength
to launch into a writing project or to launch into it every day.
And I just didn't have it.
And so I was like, I don't know.
I don't know if I can do this for three months.
After the first week or so, I found my way back that I could work, but I still didn't feel myself.
And it began to occur to me that how curious is that?
Because what does that say?
If I feel more normal on this drug than off this drug, because I'm through the withdrawal period.
But I came to see that my normal default consciousness was caffeinated consciousness,
as it is for a great many of us. I mean, 90% of people on earth have a daily relationship
with caffeine, whether it's in tea, a daily relationship with caffeine whether it's in
um tea coffee soda chocolate um it's in a lot of things you know you meet people who say i i can't
talk to you until i've had a cup of coffee i you know i i'm not civil i can only read the paper you
know people just don't enter into social relations until they have a cup of coffee the reason is
they're going through withdrawal and they're cranky and they know it the amount of people probably in this room now there's probably you know 12 people in this
building and of them i think probably 12 of them have had that drug today yeah with this society
as you've said people saying i can't function i can't have a conversation until i've had a
what is the cost of this though because i can tell you the cost of doing heroin every day
or pretty much yeah this is subtler even sugar i can tell you the cost of doing heroin every day or pretty much yeah this is subtler even sugar i can tell you the cost of doing having you know huge amounts of sugar every
day but no one can seem to tell me the cost of having three cups of coffee a day yeah well
the costs i mean if it depends on how it agrees with you i mean for some people on three cups a
day they get pretty jittery. And it passes over
from this very positive feeling to this nervous feeling. And that's a cost. I think the larger
cost is to our identity as animals. We were designed, I think, to have rhythms as animals do
that, you know, you wake up when the sun comes up and you start going to sleep when it gets dark. And that we were tied into these natural cycles dictated by light. And it broke
that connection. It broke that temporal connection. And so there may be some cost as species. And we
struggle with sleep. And sleep is a huge deal. And sleep a you know you need sleep to be healthy and sane
you need it for your mental health and coffee does damage your sleep now i put a little asterisk next
to that because if you can stop drinking it after that morning cup you're going to have very little
in your system when you go to sleep but But a cup of coffee you drink at noon,
a quarter of that caffeine will still be circulating
at midnight.
So it takes a while to get out of your system.
Most of the caffeine researchers I interviewed
do not drink coffee or tea.
Interesting.
I mean, these are people who understand sleep
and the importance of sleep.
And one of the benefits,
I didn't mention one of the benefits of being off coffee,
is I slept like a teenager.
It was fantastic.
I had some great sleeps.
My sort of logical mind, when it understands how other drugs impact us and the withdrawals
and how they impact our rhythms, our natural rhythms, even things like testosterone,
if you take too much of it, your body stops producing it.
If you have too many sleeping pills your body struggles to sleep
without them so i reflect on coffee and go surely i'm an idiot so don't take this as truth surely
um if i have coffee every day i'm gonna struggle to like self-regulate um my ups and downs and i
and if my if i'm forcing my body to go up then my body will come down even further than it would ordinarily.
Or you'll take something else to make it come down.
Yes, and then I'll have to take a sleeping pill or alcohol.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
So, no, people do get into these cycles of coffee and alcohol or tea and alcohol.
So, yeah, I think there's always a cost.
But I would say, historically, the benefits have outweighed the costs of,
I mean, compared to other drugs,
I think that we've gained a lot.
And there's the whole social aspect of coffee.
I mean, the coffee house scene in London
was just so vibrant.
And the insurance in Lloyd's of London
began in a coffee house.
And the London Stock Exchange began in a coffee house and the London stock exchange began
in a coffee house. And, you know, English literature was changed by the rhythms of
conversation in the coffee house. And it was this place where the classes could mix in a way they
couldn't in the tavern or anywhere else. And, you know, you can make a case, and I try to in the
book, that the Enlightenment and the Age of Reason owed a lot to caffeine so i think it had really positive effect in that it got people who were inebriated
on alcohol all the time to think clearly and that was a big deal because i don't think people
realize how much alcohol people drank prior to 1650. it was the safest thing you could drink
because the water was contaminated with disease
and people understood that.
That's how you got plague was, you know,
using the wrong water pump and things like that.
Alcohol, the fermentation process and the alcohol itself
disinfected water to some extent,
but not as effectively as boiling it.
And coffee and tea, the first time we boiled water to drink.
So the countries that embraced coffee and tea, suddenly their public health was much
improved.
They had much lower rates of disease.
So that was also a boon.
So there are a lot of positives.
You talk about the reason why coffee is addictive anyway, from a pollination perspective, which
I found really...
No one's ever said that before.
Yeah.
So that was one
of the interesting bits of research that i came across um so like a lot of drugs that plants
produce it begins its life as a pesticide um most of these alkaloids that we think are so great
whether it's cocaine or um caffeine or um oh god there's so many of them. They're not occurring to me right now.
Plants evolved these as chemicals that would kill insects or discourage insects from eating them.
And then we found that they had interesting effects on our brains if you got the dose right.
And so caffeine was designed, it kills insects at high doses. It also stops other plants from germinating nearby.
So you get more habitat if your leaves contain caffeine and they drop.
But the cleverness of plants is such that some of them figured out that a really low dose of caffeine in their nectar would attract bees.
And the citrus family does this reliably.
So they've repurposed this pesticide as an attractant because you don't put pesticide in your nectar. That's where you attract insects. And it turns out bees really like caffeine.
And they will go preferentially to flowers that offer them caffeine. We don't know if they get a buzz,
but they do prefer it. And it does for them what it does for us. It improves their memory.
They're more likely to go back to the flower that gave them caffeine than any other flower and remember where it was. They will also work harder, so they become better workers basically. So the plants are manipulating the bees to do their bidding.
We knew that, but in a much deeper way than we understood
by essentially, you know, drugging them.
And then humans came along and just-
And then humans, yeah, yeah.
But the curious thing is why should a pesticide
have these mental effects for us?
And the theory I advance in the book is that if you're a plant
and you're bothered by pests, the best strategy is not to kill the pest. Because if you do that,
if you just put out a lethal chemical, you're going to kill a bunch of the pests,
but the resistant members, and there are always some mutations
that give resistance, they're going to explode. Their population will explode and your tool will
be gone. It won't work anymore. But if you merely discombobulate your predator, your pest,
confuse it, which psychedelics and other drugs do, make it lose its appetite,
which most drugs do, you're much better off because it won't have this kind of selective
pressure. So I got this insight from my cat, Frank, who had a real issue with catnip. I had a catnip
plant in my garden and my garden was fenced.
And every night when I was going out to the garden to pick something for dinner,
Frank would follow me and look up at me. And he wanted to be shown where the catnip was.
And I would show him to the catnip and he would roll in it and get really stoned and um and then forget where he had seen the cat in it and he had
to be reminded every single day this is an intelligent cat like where was that plant the
plant had drugged him so that he would lose track of where it was oh wow so i thought that was a
pretty clever plant certainly more clever than frank was speaking of clever plants then transition yeah that wasn't bad was it um i on the topic of psychedelics which is i referenced
at the start when i first heard about the concept of psychedelics i like you because i've heard you
talk about your initial sort of perception of them was terrified by the thought of losing my
consciousness i also thought as you know you
talked about cancer anxiety in your writing and how patients with suffering with cancer i think
the last thing i'd want to do is trip if i had yeah cancer but also another point that you made
in in a talk you gave was i saw myself as a very logical scientific physical person and i thought
that i couldn't be that and spiritual or however you want to describe
it or really anything i couldn't think or feel tell me about your journey then from going from
that place to psychedelics i i know it's well documented in um the journey you've taken but i
but i really want to understand how your perception shifted and where it sits today
as a spiritual individual so i did see myself as a very materialist in my philosophy.
I thought that the laws of nature we knew
explained everything and anything else was supernatural.
And I'd talked to a lot of people who'd done psychedelics
and had this big spiritual experience.
And so I was curious about it,
because I did, I said somewhere
that I thought I was kind of spiritually retarded.
I just, it was a part of myself I hadn't developed.
But I did have this misconception
that to be spiritual is to believe in supernatural things.
Yeah. Okay.
And that's kind of a scientific view.
It's in a, you know, scientists assume this
about spiritual people.
I had a couple of big experiences on psilocybin as I was researching
the book, More Immersive Journalism. Nice excuse. I know, I, you know, I did feel,
I was curious to try these things, but I also felt compelled. I think my readers expect me to do
stuff, you know, that I'm writing about and not just be on the sidelines and so i did feel some real pressure to do it but i was i did these conversations with volunteers in these studies
and individuals who had you know amazing experiences that completely changed their
attitude toward death i mean people who who lost their fear of death after one four-hour experience
on psilocybin i mean how does that happen that happen? I mean, you have to be curious
about that. Psilocybin being the active ingredient in magic. In magic mushrooms, yeah. But in these
trials, they get it in a pill form. It's kind of purified, but it's the same drug exactly.
So I had a couple of really interesting experiences that reset my understanding of what spiritual meant.
And my experiences had to do with powerful connection to something bigger than me that I felt.
Specifically for me, it was the plants in my garden.
I mean, I'm a gardener.
I've been writing about plants one way or another for a long time.
And I've always admired plants and i think you know as we
were talking about the the the citrus plants with the caffeine i think they're really intelligent
um in a very different way than we are but it was that was kind of an intellectual conceit i didn't
feel them as um conscious beings and during this trip i. I was in my garden and all the plants were like
talking to me. I mean, not literally talking to me, but they were returning my gaze.
They were present. They had sentience. And they were very benign. They liked me.
I took care of them. I fertilized them. But it was a very powerful
connection to nature that I hadn't felt before. Most of us, when we walk through the natural
world, we sort of feel we're sort of part of nature, but we're sort of not part of nature.
We're all alienated from nature. That's our human thing. And it's our human arrogance, actually. But
it's also a failure of imagination to see ourselves as animals.
But that's what we are.
We're a little different.
And in their ways in which we have transcended nature
or think we have.
But anyway, I felt more one creature among many
than I had ever felt in my life.
I was just another creature in the garden.
And it was kind of liberating.
It was this wonderful feeling.
It was a great moment.
So I had that experience.
And then I had another experience of, you know,
what people call ego death of, you know,
total ego dissolution on a high dose psilocybin,
a guided psilocybin trip.
It's not something you want to try on your own.
And I saw myself kind of explode in a cloud of post-it notes, blue post-it
notes, and then they fell to the ground. And there I was, this pool of paint on the ground. And that
was me, but I was observing it from this new perspective that was completely untroubled by
what should have been a catastrophe. And it was fine. This is how things are. And then having no ego anymore,
I had no walls.
And I just merged into this piece of music
that the guide was playing,
this Bach unaccompanied cello suite
that was indescribably beautiful.
But there was no subject-object relationship.
I just became the music.
I just joined it.
It was the most profound
experience listening to music I'd ever had. So I came out of these experiences like rethinking
what does spiritual mean? And I came to understand it. It means having a profound
connection with something larger than you. It's a kind of love. It's, it could, you know, some people have it with the universe. I had it with
the plants in my garden and this piece of music. And that, that sense of profound connection,
that's what I think of as spiritual now. And there's nothing, there's nothing supernatural
about it. You could say, well, your plants weren't really conscious,
but they are sentient beings.
And we're the first culture in history that's forgotten that.
Our scientific worldview has given us this incredible blind spot
about the sentience all around us.
Going back to Descartes,
who thought that we were the only thinking
creature and no other creature felt pain or had consciousness. And most of us still sort of
believe that, I think, even though we're learning that sentience goes way down. And that I just
read a paper saying that insects may have consciousness. Wrap your head around that.
Christ.
Yeah.
Well, there are a lot of ethical implications.
So my point is, though, that the perception that you're surrounded by sentient beings
is not supernatural.
We are.
And what the psychedelics are removing is this filter that's allowed us to see
things in this very narrow materialist scientific worldview. Paper was published just this week
by the group at Johns Hopkins. Roland Griffith was the author. He's the guy I was just telling
you about who studies both caffeine and psilocybin and they they did a big uh observational study of people who've had a psychedelic experience to see
if their uh how their beliefs changed and they and the thing they looked at was really interesting
they looked at attribution of consciousness to other beings um and it went up dramatically
um so people who i think normally 13 of people think plants have some consciousness it went up dramatically. So people who, I think normally 13% of people
think plants have some consciousness,
it went up to like 58%.
And that was the most dramatic gain, but everything did.
I mean, people attributing consciousness to animals,
to cats and dogs, to insects, it all went up.
Now you might think, okay,
psychedelics increases your magical thinking,
but they also check, did you believe in the Loch Ness monster
and a bunch of other kind of magical nature things?
And they didn't.
There was no change there.
But this attribution of consciousness
went way up across the board.
And so what does that tell us?
Well, every traditional culture has believed
that there are many species that are conscious,
that are sentient, and that this is something we've unlearned and i think
one way to interpret is psychedelics um you know unlearns the unlearning basically and and allows
us to see something that all children see and most traditional people see which is the fact
that we're not the only thinking being um so that's a that's a spiritual question too i my
first real experience with a psychedelic was san pedro yeah i have really interesting experience
so i drunk this drink drink with my partner.
Where were you?
Peru.
Okay.
I don't think it grows that well in England.
No.
You can grow it out here.
Yeah, well, yeah, I've heard.
But it was a really interesting experience.
First two, three hours, the shaman takes us to a cave because it's raining and nothing.
I'm sat there for three hours, nothing.
I leave the cave and I go back out into the hills hills the beautiful sort of grassy hills with trees and everything and the minute i got outside i think
within two minutes i was convinced i've said it to my team before i was convinced that me and the
plants were the same thing and really that they were like they were like looking at me i was
looking at them and they were like looking at me and it's the first time i felt like i had as you describe it a almost human relationship even with the the grassy hills but it
was really these plants in front of me it was like they were an audience now were they cactus
no they were just they were just these these tall plants and it felt like they were like looking at
me and trying to tell me something and you're're right. The experience I had was I totally didn't matter
in the same way that I'd mattered three hours ago.
My all sort of sense of self-importance had gone
and I was just as important as this little plant.
And it was, and as you describe it,
it was, we were the same thing.
And I was in awe of that feeling.
Obviously you don't forget the feeling.
You don't forget the memory,
but you almost, you lose the feeling
a little bit. You do. I think you do. I think you go back to baseline to some extent, not completely.
I don't know. I find that I can return to some of those ways of thinking. So my involvement
with psychedelics led to a meditation practice. And I think psychedelics are very good for starting a meditation practice.
I could never do it.
You know, I was just a very frustrated meditator before that when I tried.
But I'd had certain kind of paths of consciousness laid down during the psychedelic experience that I could get on again.
Not so much the peak experience, you know, the fireworks. And that's what people end up talking
about or writing about. But a lot of the psychedelic experience is this long tail, this long
denouement. As you're coming down, you're regaining control over what you're thinking about. You can
direct your attention here or there, yet you're not distractible. You are really in a zone. And that state is a meditative state. And having laid
down those tracks, you can get back to them, I think, with work. And sometimes it's a matter of
thinking about an image I saw on a psychedelic trip that helps me get there.
So I think that's one way you keep it alive because psychedelics aren't a practice.
You just, you can't do it that often.
You don't wanna do it that often.
It takes a toll.
It's hard work.
And that's one of the reasons
I think they're not habit forming.
And they're not, is that after a big psychedelic trip,
you're not saying, when can I do it again?
You're saying, do I ever have to do it again?
Because it's hard work and it can be overwhelming.
But there is a residue that stays with you.
And some people I've really seen their lives turned around
and they have a big, you know, they take away a lot.
For me, it's been subtler things like that but i i can
use meditation to kind of nurture that flame well one of the you talk there about people's
lives turning around after a psychedelic experience obviously the the studies that
are being done on psilocybin and many other psychedelic compounds are pretty profound when you read about them. The impact
of one dose, one trip in the right set and setting on things like treatment-resistant depression are
really like almost hard to believe. Yeah. And I think we should take them with a grain of salt.
I mean, I think that one of the things to understand, they're very impressive results.
They're much better than the results for antidepressants
when they came on the scene.
They were approved with like marginal utility.
I think they scored like two percentage points better
than placebos, you know,
but it doesn't take a lot to get a drug approved.
Here you're seeing substantial sustained changes in people,
which is great, but it's important to understand the early studies on any drug tend to be more positive
than they are later.
Part of the reason is that the researchers are optimizing everything.
They have very well-trained guides.
They can exclude anyone who's too depressed or has some other problems.
So they're not giving it to thousands of people,
they're giving it to hundreds of people.
So I think we could expect as we get to phase three
and then introduction that the effects
won't be quite as good as they've been.
But so far they've been like two thirds of people
in most of these trials, whether it's MDMA for trauma
or psilocybin for depression or addiction,
have lost their diagnosis.
That's pretty extraordinary.
And we're talking about potential cures,
not simply symptoms, dealing with symptoms.
So it's very exciting research.
I think I'm a little concerned about the kind
of irrational exuberance that's surrounding the space.
There's all this investment money.
There's more capital than there are good ideas, I would say.
That's my reading of the situation.
And people are going to get hurt.
So I just see a bubble here that concerns me.
But there is something real here.
And I just hope we can be careful about how we,
that we don't build up people's expectations,
especially people with mental illness that they think they've got a cure it doesn't work for everybody
and and some people have really hard experiences on psychedelics that tends to be the case with
that sort of bubble that you described tends to be the case with all new industries the internet
cryptocurrencies psychedelics they have this euphoria bubble and then there's a flattening
where the the true value emerges over time especially on silicon valley which is some like
some fashion conscious money um and because i've seen this you know having worked in the food space
uh agriculture there was i remember this moment in 2008 or so uh where all the silicon valley
people were investing in ethanol. They thought this was this
green energy. This is turning corn into fuel. And it was clear to anybody close to the situation
that, in fact, it took more energy to make ethanol than you got out of it. It was just a way to get
rid of a surplus of corn on the part of the farmers and the government. But everybody jumped
in, Bill Gates, the Sand Hill Road crowd, and you could watch this.
And then they very quickly realized, oh, this isn't such a good business.
And then they got into food and they got into mock meats.
And that's where they are now.
They're in the food industry as well as psychedelics.
And they're going to be very disappointed at the returns in the food industry, which
like if you're lucky, you're two or three percent.
It doesn't scale like software.
Some of the evidence in these clinical trials does show the efficacy of the psychedelics psychedelic compounds and one of the questions i had and i know that you know you've done a huge
amount of research on this is if psychedelics are effective even in some cases what does that say
about the causes of these it's a great question The honest, complete answer is we don't know. But the best
theory that I've come across is that if you look at the different disorders that psychedelics
appears to be effective in treating, depression, anxiety, obsessive compulsive disorder,
addiction, all of these are mental disorders that involve a kind of rigidity of
thought people stuck in loops of rumination inflexible thinking they need this drug to get
through the day they have this narrative in their head that they're a bad person that nothing is
working in their life or they have anxiety and they replay loops about, you
know, what makes them anxious. What psychedelics appear to do, what psilocybin appears to do,
is break those habits of thought. It's kind of a solvent. And so that it shakes things up in a way
that makes the brain more plastic, more able to learn new patterns.
Because this is essentially people stuck in old patterns.
And so I think that this is probably its contribution.
The most beautiful metaphor of this that I heard from a neuroscientist, he said,
I think of your mind as a hill covered in snow.
And it would have been a mountain, except he was from Holland, and they don't have mountains.
And your thoughts are sleds going down the hill.
After a while, your thoughts are going to keep getting drawn like attractors into the same grooves.
And it's going to be very hard to get down the hill without falling into those grooves.
Think of the psychedelic experience as a fresh snowfall filling the grooves. And it's going to be very hard to get down the hill without falling into those grooves. Think of the psychedelic experience as a fresh snowfall, filling the grooves, allowing you to
take any path you want down the hill. So I think it has to do with habitual thinking, rigid brains,
stuck brains, brains that have too much order and need to be disordered a bit.
So, you know, this all remains to be proven.
There's actually a group at Mass General at Harvard that is looking at the whole question of rumination in psychedelics
and seeing if that is indeed the common denominator.
Because we think of all these diagnoses as actual real things, but they're really conventions of the psychiatry industry.
And if you read the DSM, the whole encyclopedia of diagnoses, every five years they throw out a bunch, they add a bunch.
They don't really know what they're doing.
So I remember asking a psychiatrist, I said, isn't it a little weird that the same drug works on these five different things, you know, addiction and obsession?
And he said, well, how do you know they're different things?
Maybe they're all different symptoms of the same brain, same kind of brain.
And so, you know, I mean, if you think about it, anxiety is worry about the future.
Depression is really being a victim of the past.
But it's a similar mental construct.
And psychedelics appears to weaken it i've read that that in that sort of analogy of the hill and i and it really stayed
with me if that hill with the snow this idea that our trauma or whatever it might be our past
experiences have created these grooves which we just you know slide down every single day and over
and over again and you talked about previously how um that's why there might be a case for doing psychedelics later in your life yeah yeah exactly
yeah i i do feel i mean as life goes on we become more creatures of habit i mean it's just a given
it's about learning we learn what works we learn the algorithms that get us through the day get us
through a fight with our spouse get us through negotiating with our children whatever it is we
have these
algorithms. They're handy. They work. They save us time. And we are efficient creatures. But habits
blind you to reality. You're one step removed from experience. You're saying, okay, that's this
situation. I'm going to play this tape. And you don't, you lose your
sense of wonder. And that's so important. And, and awe, you know, awe is one of the most important
emotions. And as we get older, you know, kids are, have this awe experience every day, every minute,
you know, it could be a cookie. It could be walk down the street. I mean, it's just incredible.
And the reason is that it's all new to them and
they haven't formed these habits. And as we get older, I think that's where the value of psychedelics
is really important because they are reliable awe inducers and that they make you see things freshly. And, you know, I talk in the book about this very common
psychedelic insight that love is the most important thing in the world. And we laugh,
and it sounds like a Hallmark card and such a cliche, but what is a cliche? It's just,
it's a truth that's been overused. And we protect ourselves with the sense of irony and banality,
but love is the most important thing in the world.
So there's truth to that.
And that the line between banality and profundity is very fine.
And so, you know, you're always hearing people who have psychedelic experiences
and they come to you with this revelation of the obvious.
But we need to be reminded of the obvious.
Do you think there's another way to remain
fresh in the mind other than needing to do a psychedelic trip because i i even relate i'm 29
but i relate to me getting stuck in the same patterns of thought which can divulge into like
a bitterness or like they can so you know some of the some of my patterns and habits result in
happiness and fulfillment and feelings and contentment and then others can result in like bitterness and resentment and other negative things so i'd love to be able to
do some a fresh fall of snow once again yes i know i know and without using psychedelics i mean
learning something new doing something new is incredibly um revitalizing Travel is. I mean, think of like how, when you travel somewhere,
you're in a new country, you've never been there,
all your algorithms fail.
Like, you know, the menu is full of unexpected things.
Walking down the street,
you don't see the same brand names you see everywhere.
So your senses are really working hard
because you're taking in lots of new information.
That's why it's so exhausting, but it's so wonderful too.
So I think travel is one thing.
I think learning a new skill.
I think that for me, that's really important.
It's what I love about journalism.
I get paid as an adult to learn whole new
fields you know i'm getting paid now to learn about neuroscience and consciousness it's so great
um but you know and and some jobs don't allow you to do that that is in the nature of journalism
it's in the nature of what you do you get to talk to anybody you want so before i get i asked the
question i was thinking i was thinking if i was to answer it myself, it's this. Because when I walk away from these conversations,
it's almost like sometimes a psychedelic trip
or just a real shaking of what I thought to be true.
And it, yeah.
Oh, I get that after I do an interview.
I came from an interview with this neuroscientist
and it was like so exciting to think about.
I hadn't thought about things that way.
And so I think putting in yourself in situations where there's a lot of new information and you're out of your comfort zone the comfort zone is the problem right and um if you can put
yourself in a situation and and and also you know we we tend to gravitate to what we do well. We get reward for that.
But, you know, try working on something you don't do well.
I was just thinking then about how when people get older,
they tend to go on holidays to the same places.
Yes, right.
When people are young, they go to somewhere new.
Yeah, they don't want to repeat themselves.
No, it's true.
So I found this, at this phase of life,
the psychedelic experience was really valuable for that reason,
that it did cause me to rethink things, have new perspectives,
and have this wonderful feeling of awe and be reminded of these things.
How much I love plants, how much I love love, relationships.
I mean, the sense of gratitude that I i i've i mean this is a very
common emotion for me and after in a psychedelic trip is gratitude for my parents and my son and
and my wife and and um uh you know i mean we're we don't we don't spend nearly enough time expressing
gratitude for what we have we take it for granted and undermining the taken
for granted i think is the most important thing that they do breath work something i've heard you
talk about as well yeah so breath work is a non-pharmacological mode of uh changing consciousness
it was developed by stan groff a czech psychiatrist who who worked in the states for many years
oh you did oh that's great well i spoke to his wife but he was stan was there yeah stan's wonderful
and i interviewed him for how to change your mind and um so when lsd was banned in 1970 uh
he wanted he was having such good luck with it and really believed that there were these new, you know, super highways to the unconscious
that he wanted to figure out another way
to induce this state.
And so he studied yogic breathing
and all these other traditional cultures
that had these trance, induced trance.
And it's a pattern of breathing that you do
accompanied by usually rhythmic drumming that for I think about two thirds of people will put you in a trance state that's very much like a psychedelic state.
It was really eerie how it works.
You basically find yourself losing control of your limbs.
I mean, it's very physical. Yes, you're on your back and you're dancing
and you're breathing this very unnatural pattern
of a strong exhalation,
stronger exhalation than inhalation, very fast.
I think you're hyperventilating.
I think that's what you're doing.
And I think that that probably, we don't know this yet,
but that probably is reducing blood flow to the brain
or oxygen to the brain.
And one of the curious things about psychedelics
is not that they're increasing brain function,
but they're decreasing it in certain important areas,
including something called the default mode network,
which is the center of the brain
that's very important control center of the brain
that is involved with your sense of self,
time travel into the past, into the future,
the narrative self, the story you tell yourself
about your life, how you fit everything
into the story of who you are.
If the ego had an address,
it would be the default mode network.
It may be that starving that of oxygen gets a
similar effect that psychedelics do um but psychedelics that's one of the mysteries is like
we think of all this extra consciousness we get from psychedelics or expanded consciousness but
it may be that it's closing down certain things which allow other things to happen i did breath
work with um with my
partner and my girlfriend in bali she's training as a breath work practitioner so how did it go
so again walked in super skeptical this guy starts telling me a bunch of reasons why it's gonna
you know the sort of physiological reasons why it works it was about a 30 minute 20 minute session
i mean 10 minutes i didn't even notice i only noticed on photos after
that i was laying on my back but my hands were in the air so and i didn't even i did not put my
hands yeah it's involuntary yeah and they were in the air for 15 minutes and it didn't help my
muscles and the other thing was i i went to this strange emotional place where i felt a huge amount
of gratitude for certain people in my life and I actually felt the need to like apologize for recent behavior that I'd carried out it just um it was a very
emotional experience um as it is for I know a lot of people but it just really compelled me the
thought that doing something with my breathing I know could have such a profound impact and then
it got me thinking about my day-to-day breathing which is part of the the education about how we
breathe so shallowly.
And especially when I'm anxious, if I'm ever anxious and I think about it, I'm, I'm, I'm
breathing 20% of what I usually breathe. So one of my ways now, if I do feel anxious of
counteracting that from that breathwork session is taking seven second inhalation, holding it,
and then seven second out. And honestly, doing that for 20 seconds or 30 seconds
completely seems to flush out any feelings of anxiousness.
There's a bunch of really interesting breathing exercises.
There's one that Andrew Weil does called 4-3-7, 4-3-8.
And it involves a certain amount of,
I'm not gonna remember it right now,
but a certain amount of inhal I'm not gonna remember it right now, but a certain amount of inhalation,
hold your breath and then exhale for longer than you inhaled.
And it's remarkable.
I've done it before going on stage and things like that.
It just lowers your stress level very quickly.
I'm guessing it lowers your blood pressure.
There's a lot we don't know about breath.
I mean, breath is amazing.
And I think you can do a lot to fiddle
with your consciousness using breath.
Genuinely, of all the things
that people have prescribed or told me,
the simplest thing that I've sort of implemented
in my own life when in situations where I'm feeling stressed
before going on stage as well,
before my tour I used to do it in the green room,
or when I'm feeling anxious or divulging
and sort of like overthinking, is just focusing on my breath my next question to you my last question
really is is about what's next for you as a as a tremendously successful author that's written
about such a diverse range of topics i mean i think the first question when you walked in the
door was what are you writing about next yeah it's got to be something of deep interest you're
going to immerse yourself you're going to buy a cow again i don't know what i'm going to do for this this topic so i'm
researching consciousness the science and philosophy and literature of consciousness
you know one of the things that psychedelics does is raise questions about consciousness you know i
talked to you at the beginning about questions are more interesting than answers. It's kind of amazing
that we're conscious. I mean, you know, we could do all this stuff automatically, but we're not.
We have this space in our heads where we see things. We assume other people have consciousness
too, but we can't be sure. And how does three pounds of tofu in your, you know, between your ears produce an experience of subjectivity, of quality?
It's one of the greatest mysteries left.
So I'm going to explore all of it and see where it takes me.
You know, again, I don't know where I'm going, but that's the exciting part of writing.
You know, you said at the start that your job is to answer questions.
What is the question that you're trying to answer in your next project?
Is it just what consciousness is?
What is consciousness?
There's a couple of questions under that, though.
Why do we have it?
What do we need it for?
What does it allow us to do?
Who else has it? What do we need it for? What does it allow us to do? Who else has it? Do the insects have consciousness? Do the plants have consciousness? There are people who believe
plants are conscious. Are they? How do you define consciousness? There's so many subsidiary
questions you have to answer to get to the bottom of it. And I think it has a lot of,
this question of who else has consciousness has a lot of
political or environmental implications. I think that one of the reasons we got into such trouble
with the environment is the scientific worldview for all its power has blinded us to the interests
of other creatures. And one of the, you know, you look at Native American culture and there's this sense
that everything is alive, everything has a spirit to it. That keeps you from doing something to
certain things to those others, right? I mean, that you're violating spirits. We don't have
that feeling. I mean, our worldview allows us to see nature as something for us to exploit,
rather as our relatives, as Native Americans would describe it.
So getting consciousness right means getting a lot of things right.
So wish me good luck.
No, I do. I'm sure you're going to do an unbelievable job on that
because you always have on your work and all the books you've written
take a different approach. And I think that,
yeah, you highlighted how that comes from a place, starts from a place of naivety and curiosity.
I'm definitely naive. I mean, because I have to learn neuroscience for this, a lot of it. And
that's a struggle for me. And some of these theories are really mathematical and that's
really a struggle for me. But, you's, that's the job is finding the good
explainers who can help me to explain it and make it. I get a lot of satisfaction from taking a
subject that people think might be very dry and difficult and, and helping people make sense of it.
You know that there's a tradition on this podcast where the previous guest writes a question for the
next guest, they don't know who they're writing it for the question is as you've juggled your life
work relationships friendships and self-time what things have been key to building your resilience
doing new things including taking psychedelics which has definitely uh affected me and and
contributed to my resilience but i i think it's seeking out new projects and um uh
doing things that break you out of habitual ways of thinking and responding to things habit is
wonderful it's very efficient but it's deadening too um so i'm often thinking and i i am a creature
of habit i have like a whole routine every day to get myself to the desk to write.
But breaking it is, I think breaking habits, I would say, would be an important one.
You've spoken to that throughout this conversation.
So that's a beautiful ending, this idea of leaving your comfort zones as well.
Thank you.
Thank you for all the work you're doing.
It's really inspiring to me that an author could be so powerful.
And I hope we can have another conversation again once your your book about consciousness is
out because i'm sure it'll be i'll look forward to that it's been a great pleasure talking to you
thank you michael thank you Thank you.