The Dr. Hyman Show - Healing Trauma, Depression, and Your Brain with Psychedelics
Episode Date: May 13, 2024View Show Notes From This Episode Get Free Weekly Health Tips from Dr. Hyman Sign Up for Dr. Hyman’s Weekly Longevity Journal Our brain has the ability to adapt, change, and grow new neurons through... a concept known as neuroplasticity. Compounds in psychedelics are finally being recognized as powerful tools to change the wiring of the brain which means we’re not doomed to become a statistic and lose our minds as we get older or carry destructive trauma in our bodies for the rest of our lives. In this episode, Dr. Hyman speaks with Dr. Andrew Huberman, Dr. Sara Gottfried, and Paul Stamets about what exactly neuroplasticity is and how psychedelics like ketamine and psilocybin may be a helpful treatment for depression, trauma, addiction, and more. This episode is brought to you by Rupa Health, Cozy Earth, and Cymbiotika. Streamline your lab orders with Rupa Health. Access more than 3,000 specialty lab tests and register for a FREE live demo at RupaHealth.com. Right now, you can save 40% when you upgrade to Cozy Earth sheets. Just head over to CozyEarth.com and use code DRHYMAN. Upgrade your supplement routine with Cymbiotika. Get 20% off with free shipping on all orders. Head to Cymbiotika.com and use code HYMAN.
Transcript
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Coming up on this episode of The Doctor's Pharmacy.
Neuroplasticity is real.
The brain's ability to change itself
in response to experience for better or for worse.
From 25 on until the end of life,
the brain is still very plastic,
but the requirements for changing the brain shift radically.
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Now, for quite some time, we thought the brain was just what it was.
But now we know the brain can change thanks to neuroplasticity.
Now, neuroplasticity is the brain's ability to rewire itself in ways that lead to long-lasting shifts in our emotional, cognitive, and behavioral patterns.
Now, while there are many things that can assist with rewiring our brain, psychedelics have been shown to work at the cellular and neural circuit level to trigger significant changes to the brain.
In today's episode, we feature three clips from the doctor's pharmacy about supporting
neuroplasticity to improve our mental and overall health.
Dr. Andrew Huberman defines neuroplasticity and names all the things that we can do to
change the brain, while Sarah Godfrey talks about how ketamine reprograms the brain to help heal from trauma
and autoimmune disease.
And with Paul Stamets about treating depression with psilocybin and opening our worldview.
So let's jump right in.
What I learned in medical school was that you were born with a certain number of brain
cells and that's all you get.
And if you've used up too many in college by staying up all night or doing drugs or partying too hard, well, tough, you know,
that's all you got. But it turns out that's just not true. That we have tremendous ability to
restore brain function, to bring back, you know, all sorts of things at any age that we just didn't
think possible. I mean, I just had a patient who, you know, was 70-ish year old guy that had a stroke and was paralyzed on one side. And, you know, traditional
care is like, you know, just do rehab and take your blood thinners and cross your fingers and,
you know, hope for the best. And I'm like, hell no. We know a lot about how to optimize brain
function. So I put him on a ketogenic diet, which helps the brain
repair and heal. I had him do hyperbaric oxygen therapy. I had him do IV nutritional therapies
like NAD, which helps the tissues and cells in the brain repair. It helps the energy cycle.
I had him take a number of supplements and help with inflammation, mitochondria.
And I had him do exercise, a whole cocktail of things, because it's not any one thing that's going to make a difference.
Even had him do sort of derivatives of stem cells and things like exosomes.
And it's unbelievable to see how much he's been able to recover and repair
from what we would have thought in medical school
when I was going to medical school was a permanent disability.
And now he's not disabled.
He's walking, he's using his body, he's doing
things. He's come back. He's not a hundred percent yet, but it just compared to what we
imagined was possible. We're seeing things we never thought possible, like whether it's
reversing Alzheimer's or autism, strokes, trauma, brain trauma, even, even things like depression,
anxiety, you know, PTSD, we're seeing all sorts of doorways into repairing that.
The psychedelic therapies that are being used now or MDMA therapies for trauma and for PTSD are changing the way we think about accessing the brain.
It's like, how does that even make sense that you take one therapy of psilocybin and all of a sudden lifelong symptoms are gone of depression?
It's wild, right?
It's pretty wild.
It's wild. Because? It's pretty wild.
Because we don't, we just like, oh, you need 30 years of therapy and psychoanalysis five times a week.
And nope, just, you know, go on this seven-hour journey
with a therapist and a guided experience
and something shifts in your brain.
Yeah, the data coming out of Hopkins are really impressive.
I think we're going to look back at the work of Matthew Johnson and
some of the other groups in the UK and the MAPS groups. I know less about the MAPS groups,
and I think we're going to realize that they are true pioneers. It's a topic for another discussion
perhaps, but what they've had to go through in order to bring credibility to this area has been really, really incredible.
Yeah, so neuroplasticity is real.
The brain's ability to change itself in response to experience for better or for worse.
I think that most of the discussion about plasticity is going to be what I call adapt.
We don't have to get too much lingo, but adaptive plasticity is the stuff we want.
And plasticity after a head injury or from chronic illness is the kind of plasticity is the stuff we want. And plasticity after a head injury or
from chronic illness is the kind of plasticity we don't want. But if we say plasticity,
it's almost always neuroplasticity of the type we want. I think that the way to think about
neuroplasticity is that early in life, our brain is extremely plastic.
Our brain is basically designed to wire itself up
from about birth until age 25,
which is not to say we don't need guidance
from parents and peers, et cetera,
but that the brain is trying to create a map
of its experience so that it can move forward
from that point.
There are areas of the brain that are not very plastic and we should all
be grateful for that. Areas like the areas of the brain that control your heartbeat, your respiration
to make sure your gut continues to churn food along, like all the kind of basic stuff,
the housekeeping stuff. But the rest of it we're discovering is extremely plastic. And from age zero until age 25,
just mere passive experience, exposure to things, your brain will change, creates a map for better
or for worse. Now, if people have traumas in that time or conditioning, there are ways to undo that.
And that all starts usually around age 25, maybe earlier. But the skills you learn, how to walk, et cetera, all that's laid down early in life.
But from 25 on, I want to draw a distinction because from 25 on or so, 25 or so, until
the end of life, the brain is still very plastic, but the requirements for changing the brain
shift radically.
Yeah.
Talk about that.
Yeah.
So the way to think about this is that the brain, the adult brain has no reason to change
unless it has a shift internally that says what you're about to experience or what you
just experienced is meaningful enough that you got to do something,
you got to change. Now, the negative stuff is always provides the most salient examples of
like a car crash. You'll never forget that. Where I was when I first learned about 9-11,
when the shuttle exploded. One trial learning, immediate brain change is always going to happen
for negative events more readily than it is for
positive events. I'm sorry. That's just the way we're wired. There's an asymmetry there. It's
designed to keep us safe, keep us out of danger. And we should be grateful for that. So, but
adding new skills, changing our emotionality, even changing personality, it seems to some degree, can be accomplished if certain
chemicals are liberated into the brain and or body. And the chemicals that cue the nervous system,
aha, I need to change something, basically fall into two categories. And they are adrenaline,
epinephrine, and acetylcholine. So acetylcholine, we could start with that.
Acetylcholine is released from multiple sites within the brain. It's actually the neurotransmitter
that allows us to, it's responsible for nerve muscle communication, memory. There are two main
sites in the brain that release acetylcholine. One is in the back of the brain, in the brainstem,
and it triggers alertness. And it also acts as sort of a spotlight on certain areas of the brain saying, ah, whatever's
active right now, I'm going to mark that for change later.
I'm going to make those connections stronger.
You know, it's just the nature of the sort of like a sprinkler system.
It's more general.
But it's kind of in the vicinity of, you know, I want to learn, um, well, you mentioned that you
learn Chinese. So let's say, uh, I don't speak any second language really. Um, so let's say I
wanted to learn, um, Mandarin. So if I were to go in and try and learn Mandarin, it'd be very,
very challenging for me. So I need to focus. We know that early in life, you can assimilate new
knowledge without having to focus too much, which is amazing. But that's because the whole brain is basically bathing in acetylcholine.
It's, you know, youth is lost on the young.
Yeah, exactly.
Three or four-year-old kids speaking three languages.
I'm like, what the heck?
Exactly.
So younger people always ask me, what should I do if I'm not 25 or older?
Here's what you should do.
Don't even check with your parents.
Learn a second or third
language. You'll thank me later. Learn a musical instrument. You'll thank me later for many reasons.
I didn't do either of these two things, by the way. And develop good habits around health and
nutrition and learning. And you are basically, you're pretty much home free. So those are the
things that you're good. And you have this gift of plasticity, it's just, et cetera. So as an adult, you need acetylcholine released also from this area of the forebrain
called nucleus basalis. There's a collection of neurons in the basal forebrain that when those
become activated, essentially anything that you experience in the time window around that
can be rewired. And these are incredible experiments that were done by Mike Merzenich at UCSF and colleagues where they would stimulate nucleus basalis and then provide some
sensory experience and the brain would just remap within seconds. Now the problem is getting basalis
to release acetylcholine is challenging. How do we do that?
Yeah. So it comes from powers of focus. You have to be able to contract your visual window or your
auditory window, whatever your attentional window is. You have to be able to bring a lot of focus
to that learning event or life event. And now if you think about negative life events,
you can realize why we learn them so readily because they bring about our entire focus,
right? I'll never forget seeing those planes hit the towers in New York.
So I wasn't focused on
anything else. I can see it in my mind's eye now still. And I probably don't have all the details,
right? But that's the level of focus you need to bring to something that you want to learn as an
adult. Now there are things that can facilitate, as we call it, cholinergic transmission. First of
all, there needs to be a baseline level of
alertness. And that level of alertness is going to come from epinephrine, from adrenaline.
So there is no learning without a sense of agitation and focus. I think most people think,
I'm just going to calmly go into this and I'm going to learn Mandarin or whatever. No,
it actually requires us a little bit of that leaning forward in the chair. Now your agitation and your knee bumping mark makes sense because you are that guy and you're
rich with knowledge. So that's why it's so well medical school. That's epinephrine.
That's epinephrine. And so you set the stage for that by getting good sleep and by being excited
and motivated. The phenomenon of meeting someone and then you forget their name a second later, you were focused on something else. We all
do it. I'm terrible about that too. But when you meet somebody that you're very interested in,
let's be honest, you don't forget their name. It just locks in and you never forget. You never
forget the details. And so focus and agitation and alertness, they, they work together because
when acetylcholine and epinephrine are liberated in the brain and body together, it basically signals to the nervous system, okay, I need to
rewire things so that I don't have to deploy all these resources in the future.
So if we want to improve our brain function, improve our learning, our memory, alertness,
attention, that's what people care about. And we want to enhance the neuroplasticity. What are the
top things that we should be doing? Okay. So get the foundational stuff right.
Sleep, sleep, sleep. Sleep, get your nutrition right. And there are many things, and you speak
to this in much more detail and sophistication than I ever could. But I think the omega,
the what, what do you say? Follow the pegan diet. I jokingly call it. Pegan, not vegan.
Not pegan, not vegan.
Yeah.
So get sleep right.
Get your nutrition right.
Get your relationship to stress right.
We can talk about that maybe at the end. But basically you need cholinergic transmission and you need sufficient choline available.
And we know that choline is going to come from
meat sources,
nut sources.
Eggs.
Eggs,
certain fish.
Sardines.
Sardines.
So you need choline available.
Now you can't just ingest those things
and expect to get smarter.
People always say,
tell me what to eat to get smarter.
Sardines are going to get a long way.
You have to engage in those focused learning.
Not many friends, but you have bad breath, but otherwise.
You have to engage in those focused learning bouts. You have to decide what it is that you
want to learn, what you want to change and do that. Now, for some people, they'd say,
well, I don't want to learn another language. I just want to feel happier. But that's actually,
as we know, a process as well. That's going to be a process of leaning into some gratitude practice or some, maybe if what makes
you happy is a physical activity, it's going to be bringing the greatest amount of attention and
alertness to that practice as you possibly can. And there's a lot of literature now pointing the
fact that what we sometimes call flow or flow states or getting lost in the beauty of some experience often involves a bit of
challenge.
It involves a sense of focus and your focus will drift and continually bringing that back.
Now, from a supplementation side, the data on alpha-GPC are pretty impressive to my mind.
That's glycerophospholipid, which is a derivative of choline for people listening.
You know, people, I mean, again, I'm not a physician, so I can't prescribe anything.
But the data on anywhere from 300 to 900 milligrams of alpha GPC before a learning bout,
it's clear that cognitive function goes up.
It's clear that people remember up. It's clear that people
remember more. It's clear that people retain more of that information. So there's the encoding part,
which is the part in which you're packing in the new knowledge. And that requires
high levels of alertness and focus. And that's going to be supported by this nutritional,
perhaps supplementation background. And then there's a second step. And the second step is the one that in recent years we've learned the most about, which is
that just having this heightened level of focus and attention to what you're trying to learn or
change is just the first step. The second thing is to actually turn off focus and put the brain
into a state where it can rewire more rapidly. And there's a beautiful study that was published in Cell Reports. There's a fine journal last year showing that if people
go into a kind of a pseudo nap or they intentionally move away from any kind of focus for
20 minutes or so after an intense learning bout, that the brain rewires more quickly
and their heightened levels of retention, the brain just rewires more quickly and their heightened levels of
retention. The brain just rewires in these states of relaxation. So it's just sort of like physical
fitness. You don't actually get better during the effort. You get better during the recovery.
That must be why I did so good in neuroscience because I was reading that Kandel book and
I remember being in the library in medical school and I would look at a reader and I would like go,
put my hand on the book.
Exactly. And then wake up and keep reading.
Oh, okay.
That book is a beast.
No disrespect to Eric, because I think that's a beautiful book.
But there's now a shorter one called Principles of Neurobiology by somebody else that is a little bit, but it's still pretty intense.
Oh, I love that.
It's a lot of knowledge.
It's my favorite book in medical school.
Yeah, it's a beautiful book too.
It's a big, it can hold the door open.
It's so big. But so you need these bouts of relaxation afterwards. Those can come from naps.
And now for people that want to kind of accelerate the process, they they're like,
wait, I don't want to do the stimulus. And then the relaxation, I want to accelerate.
There is a way that you can learn more quickly. And that brings us back to hypnosis.
Hypnosis is a very odd state of mind because it's a state of mind where you both have heightened
states of focus and relaxation at the same time.
It's what I call an atypical state.
You know, normally we're either very alert or very calm, right?
A nap is very calm.
Focus learning is very alert.
Stress is very alert. Obviously, sleep is very calm. Focus learning is very alert. Stress is very alert. Obviously sleep is
very calm, but in hypnosis, the whole purpose is to bring the brain and, and body into a state of
deep relaxation while maintaining awareness. I think deep forms of meditation do this also.
Um, and if you can, you, you can leverage those states as a way to accelerate plasticity.
So meditation, meditation, the reverie app for hypnosis is great.
Some people, including myself, um, have trouble with meditation because the mind tends to
drift.
Sometimes hearing a script or something that can keep you oriented towards something, a
metronome or a hypnosis script can
be useful. So, and this all might sound like a ton of hard work, but actually the best learning
bouts are going to be anywhere from about 30 minutes to 90 minutes. You don't really want
to hammer on something five, six hours a day. Medical school, medical, I teach medical students,
medical school is like the worst form of learning.
Too late. Too late.
But it's interesting because I look at the way medical students who have phenomenal minds,
obviously, I have so much respect for physicians. The way that you guys learned was essentially to
come in there and say, I'm going to extract the critical knowledge. So it's like these
spotlights that come on when something's really important. It's not 90 minutes of content blitz. It's like you guys
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20% off plus free shipping. I, I, not intentionally, but I think I kind of biohacked my way through medical school
because I lived four miles away from the campus and I didn't have a car.
And so I would run to school every morning, it was four miles and any weather.
Where was this?
In Ottawa, which by the way,
I ran to my biochemistry exam my first year.
It was 37 degrees below zero
without the windchill vector.
I literally had my face racked up.
I got there, my eyelids were crusted shut.
So I was kind of alert when I got to school.
And then I would kind of stretch
and do a little yoga in the back.
And then I would run home.
And I would really hyper-focus all day in class. And I made sure I was sitting in the front.
I was fidgeting all the time. So I was probably stimulating my whatever. And I did not leave that
classroom until I understood everything. And then I would run four miles back home. I'd do an hour
of yoga, make myself a healthy dinner. And then I would sit in the chair for four hours until 11
and just go to bed.
And I would do that day after day.
So you just described the perfect neuroplasticity regimen.
I majored in Buddhism and I graduated like the top of my class.
And I just, you know, it was kind of a joke because I really wasn't into science at all
when I was in college.
Toggling back and forth between these highly alert states and these deeply relaxed
states is the secret sauce, if you will, of neuroplasticity as an adult.
But what you're talking about is, I would call it inner size, right?
Like we know how to exercise, but we don't know how to access these different techniques
that help our brain function better.
And it's sort of a shame because most of us
are not connecting what we eat to how we feel,
or sleep to how we feel,
or whether we're exercising or not how we feel.
And my daughter came to visit me
and she was really going crazy just studying
and for medical school, she was in pre-med
and she sort of was an older student
and COVID was very isolating with social contact and all she was sleeping and all she of was an older student, and COVID was very isolating with social contact,
and all she was sleeping, and all she did was study,
and she got into medical school.
That's great.
Oh, she's going to become a physician?
Yeah.
Oh, wonderful.
But she really neglected this self-care
and got super physiologically depressed.
Yeah.
And what was sort of amazing was sort of I identified
what was going on with her,
and she didn't even make the connection. And then within a few days of just changing her diet
exercising she literally transformed her her whole mood and well-being and the depression
just went away yeah we were we reward performance and productivity and there will always be people
that are willing to burn their themselves including their health on the altar of whatever it is they're trying to do. And it,
and it shifts, it shifts the culture. I mean, it's I, I don't follow tennis,
but we saw this recent thing, a woman who is top tennis player, forgive me for not remember her
name. Yeah. She stepped away from the tournament, you know, citing that she needed to take care of
herself. I think it's great. I think that, you know, self-care of course can be taken too far in the other direction too.
We have to appreciate and understand that any learning, any competition, anything like that
is going to involve some adrenaline release in our body. But I think if we could all become
better at surfing the seesaw, so to speak, then it becomes an issue of, okay, there's a 30 minute break
between classes. Are you talking about the exam with your friends or are you relaxing under a
tree and resetting your mind? That's a, that's a, that's a key question. Are you the person who is,
you know, at every talk feeling like you need to be at every talk and you're going out for
dinner and drinks and then expected to be in the front row the next morning and performing. then the whole game changes because it really becomes an issue of how good are any one of us,
each of us at regulating the seesaw. And if you are spending too much time at one end of the seesaw,
you're headed for trouble. That's just the way it is. Now, sleep, most of us probably don't get
enough sleep, but I think that can be overdone too. I think that many people feel exhausted because the systems for engagement of the mind and engagement of the body are also
a bit atrophied. Yeah. So how do people start to begin to learn those tools to enhance their
neuroplasticity, to do the things we talked a few of the practical suggestions about sleep, but
is there a way, because you know, one of the things that terrifies me is the effect of technology on the brain.
Yeah.
And I just came back from a week vacation in Mexico, and we were off-grid, like phone, cell phone, computer, nothing works.
And we were in nature.
Didn't even know what time it was.
Didn't watch.
And my sense of well-being my happiness my focus was so
different and you talk about this this phenomena of a digital concussion from phones computers
social media and i felt that like you literally your brain hurts add like we the incidence of
diagnosable adhd is going up in adults and in kids. I think, well, there's ideal and then
there's reasonable and practical, right? I mean, I do think vacations and resets are great. I think
just like going camping can reset your circadian clocks and melatonin and cortisol. I think from
a very practical, low or no cost perspective, one of the things that one can do is ask, okay, if attention and
focus are required for neuroplasticity throughout the lifespan, what can I do to increase my levels
of attention and focus? And there's some interesting data on this. First of all,
learn to read one chapter of a book without your phone in the room, just a physical book,
not an audio book necessarily. Learn to read one chapter of a book
per day. Can it be a Kindle book or an actual book? It could be a Kindle book, sure.
Written word and handwriting and reading are baked into our DNA. There's no question. I mean,
sure, we were drawing on cave walls a long time ago, but we were drawing on cave walls. And when we evolved language, there are areas of the brain responsible for speech
and language and for digesting speech and language and producing speech and language, of course.
So this is something I struggle with and as much as anybody, but if you're not a reader,
still do it. Learning to read one chapter of a book and your mind will drift. People will go,
this isn't engaging or my mind drifted or something. And that's revealing to you your
powers of attention, of deliberate attention. It's revealing your ability to engage nucleus
basalis. So if you want to take a test of how well or poorly you can pay attention, well,
read one chapter of a book per day. So that's a wonderful practice that will improve the circuits
for attention. So this is one of the cool things about neuroplasticity is it's not just about
learning the information. It's about learning and teaching the circuits for attention to get
better at attention. So you can get better at attention as an action step, and that will allow
you to learn more things. So it's a kind of- If you want to lift weights, you have to start a little bit and keep going. So you want to read
one chapter, then you can read a book. That's right. And pretty soon,
what's really interesting about the relationship between acetylcholine and epinephrine is pretty
soon it starts to recruit the dopamine system. It starts feeling good to move through that
agitation. You start realizing, okay, I'm doing this, I'm doing this. And then your mind will
flip off and you'll go back to reading and this sort of thing.
And it really works for me is when I have deadlines.
Deadlines.
So deadlines are great.
Like I can write a book in three weeks.
Right.
And the reason deadlines are so effective is because they deploy epinephrine.
When you, when they're, it's baked into your psyche that there are some social pressures
of being, you want to perform well, you want to know the material, you don't, you don't
want to make mistakes, et cetera. So adrenaline is released. And once adrenaline is
released, then acetylcholine naturally will follow you tighten your focus. So reading one chapter of
a book, whatever that happens to be per day is absolutely critical to maintaining one's ability
to focus and therefore one's ability to engage neuroplasticity.
You'll also learn-
Read a chapter.
Read a chapter.
We talked about all the foundational stuff of sleep and microbiome and all that earlier.
Yeah.
The other one is to really respect these 90-minute learning cycles.
Don't try and throw yourself into a deep immersion of four hours of learning of something.
Ratchet up to being able
to do 90 minutes of focused work. So an ideal goal would be two 90-minute blocks of learning
per day, but that's a lot. So if you're somebody who wants to keep your brain sharp, read a chapter
a day and then decide what it is that you want to learn. Curiosity. What's that old saying? I think it was Dorothy Parker.
You know that the anecdote for boredom is curiosity.
There's no anecdote for curiosity or something like that.
Right, right.
The best way to engage the mind is to actually be curious about something.
So simply saying, I want to keep my brain young.
That's a terrific mindset.
But then the question is, what is it that you really want to know? So if it's about fitness or if it's about health or it's about language or
something that can get me, if it's murder mysteries, even something that engages your
mind, I would hope that it wouldn't be something morbid or something like that, but something that
engages your mind, that's going to be important to do for 90 minutes and ideally two 90 minute
learning cycles per day. And you might say,
well, I don't have time for that. That's actually, people are wasting far more time than that.
Oh my God, yeah.
So those are some do's. And then of course, if you really want to move things into the
optimization realm, it is true. I don't want people just relying on pharmacology, but it is
true that if you take 300 milligrams
or 600 milligrams, which is a lot actually of the alpha GPC, you will be like a laser
for those 90 minutes.
You'll feel really focused.
Now, a lot of people nowadays are taking Adderall, modafinil, things like that.
I personally, I mean that you're the physician, but I personally find that relying on what
are essentially amphetamines in order to tighten
the focus of the mind is a very slippery slope because what it does is it tightens up that hinge
on that seesaw on the alertness side. And then there's a crash to the other side. And there are
clinical uses obviously, but I don't think those are the best way to go. In terms of nootropics,
drugs that make us smarter the only
thing that really speaks to improved brain function for learning that i've seen besides
the foundational stuff are alpha gpc and creatine creatine has a gives the brain a boost it seems
because it increases the the availability of lactate which the brain can use as fuel. Some people, of course, like the
ketone thing or ketogenic diet for focus. The other thing is that fasting and ketosis will
increase focus. If you're somebody who's falling asleep while trying to learn and you're sleeping
enough at night, chances are you're not releasing enough acetylcholine and epinephrine into your
system and fasted states promote that and ketogenic states promote that. Carbohydrates flip on the other switch, which is for serotonin
and for sleepiness. So if you're falling asleep, we were all taught that you have to eat a good
breakfast and you need food for energy. You actually, I realized you don't really need
food for energy. You need neurotransmitters for focus and energy. Right, right, right. And so eating to supplement, to support those.
There are other things that if it's a physical skill that you're trying to learn,
as opposed to just a mental skill, then there's a whole kingdom of things that are fun.
For instance, if it's a physical skill, you want to generate as many repetitions as you
safely can per unit time.
So if you say, I'm going to learn dance,
you want to- Use a ball machine if you're playing tennis.
Exactly. You literally want to generate repetitions. And in particular, you want to
generate failures. Every time you give a bad serve playing tennis, that activates the circuits for
focus and alertness for the next attempt. Yeah, it's true.
That's right. Especially when you're losing.
That's right. And a lot of people don't like failures, and so they back away from it.
So remember, the nervous system will only change if you give it a reason to do that.
And the other one that's kind of an interesting twist on this is the way the nervous system
is wired is it wants to pass off all of its work to circuits that are reflexive as much
as it can.
You don't think about walking anymore because you learned how to walk, but when you were learning, you were very focused on it.
For sure.
One of the things that can set the stage for more plasticity overall is when you disrupt
the vestibular or the balance system. It does appear that whenever we are physically off balance,
the brain is primed to pay attention and the chemical milieu is such that it can actually rewire itself faster.
And whereas I think the nineties and two thousands brought out a lot of important work on saying,
Hey, exercise of aerobic type, or maybe even weight training can create neuroplasticity.
It was, that was great, but it wasn't directed enough. It didn't say, well, what kind of exercise and what will get me even more plasticity? And so there are some basal things about heart
rate and blood flow, et cetera, but anything that involves balance or coordination, it's incredible
how fast the brain can learn. So things like dance, martial arts, a real sport, not just
exercising. And I'm not, no disrespect to the, I'm more of a, just an exerciser than a sport guy. Um, but if you're 40, 50, 60, 80,
whatever, learning a new physical skill, we know is tremendously powerful for opening up
neuroplasticity broadly. So some people will even leverage this where after they finish some physical skill
learning or something, they might take a 20 minute nap and then they might read or they might try
something. So when we see these people- I've been learning surfing. I'm like 60 years old.
Well, perfect. I'm like, yeah, exactly. Exactly.
I started learning tennis when I was 45 and it's really a challenge because it's not automatic and
I have to really focus
and be present.
Well, these, and these individual cases are not necessarily the place to hang our hat
completely.
But for instance, the great physicist, Richard Feynman, he was well known for learning bongo
drums in the sick when he was in, well, it was in the sixties, but in his sixties, then
he became a quite accomplished painter later in life.
And, you know, his whole thing was approach all of these things from a standpoint of play with intense
focus.
And I think the play element is key because the play element keeps the agitation in check
so that when you're stepping on your partner's feet, trying to learn how to dance or you're
failing miserably, frustration is a real thing.
And so I think that the element of playfulness, some people call it beginner's mind, but I think
that should be the anchor point to return to. And people that maintain curiosity,
or I should say that cultivate curiosity and that cultivate a sense of play and willingness
to take on new vestibular experiences of all things, they show very, they show remarkable plasticity
into their late life.
And I think that it all comes back to this thing
that the brain won't change unless something changes
in the weather of the brain.
The overall milieu has to say,
oh wait, everything that's about to happen is different.
Otherwise, why would it change?
So this whole conversation is so great because it really is pointing out the fact that we have
the ability to change our brains at any time at any age. Absolutely. And that there are pathways
and doorways and techniques and tools that help us do that. And if we do that, we're going to be
happier, healthier, enjoy life more, be able to do whatever we want, and actually be able to actually maybe even live longer. Ketamine is interesting because it's one of the things
that's approved for treatment-resistant depression. Yes. And you take one dose and it lasts for a long
time, which is really fascinating because if you have high blood pressure, you need to take the
drug every day. It's a completely different way of thinking about medications. And it doesn't make sense to us, right? It's like, how do you take a drug one time or two times and
have profound long lasting effects? What's going on with that? And how does it work? And it's sort
of interesting to me that these drugs aren't just working on your psychology, they're working on
your biology. That's right.
So can you talk about how we can think about using those to
address trauma, how people start to think about it, where can they kind of learn more, and what
are the kinds of things you're seeing? Maybe you can share a few stories from your practice about
what has happened both to you as a result, and then also what's happened to your patients as a
result of exploring these therapies, which very soon will be legal.
I promise you all that.
There's billions of dollars in the space of research.
There's many FDA applications for new drug applications for these things.
There's lots of people working on this in a massive scale.
So even though it sounds like, oh, my God, drugs and psychedelics and, oh, God, you take LSD and jump off a building in front of a train.
Well, that's not true.
Well, they're safer than alcohol.
They're safer than horse riding.
That's like a David Nutt quote.
Yeah.
Oh, damn.
I love horse riding.
Yeah, I just came back from cow herding in Argentina, which was a lifelong dream, you know, on beautiful horses, cow herding
cattle in the Argentinian ranches. But yeah, the safety is quite interesting. There's something
called the LD50 in medicine, which is what is half of the lethal dose, like what's the dose that
kills half the animals getting the drug. And they're like, basically is not. It's like,
they're just safe. Yes. Yeah. So with ketamine, you mentioned
these people who take ketamine maybe for depression or some other indication and
they've got these benefits. There's a lot of people who do ketamine for six weeks,
like a weekly treatment. But what's interesting about ketamine is that we think it increases neuroplasticity.
So it's not just a psychological effect.
It seems to take, you know, if you think of downhill skiing and the grooves that you create,
and maybe you just keep going down the same grooves on the mountain, we're getting to
fresh powder.
And that's super exciting.
So to be able to go down the mountain of your life on fresh powder, do you like to ski?
I like to snowboard.
And I love powder.
I love powder.
Yeah.
So what have I found?
I found that, I'll tell you about one patient in particular.
Wait, wait, start with you.
Start with me.
Okay, bring me back here.
What happened when you went through that
in terms of your own, not just psychology
and getting free of those old stories
and patterns and well-worn grooves, but what happened to your health and biology?
So I'm a total nerd, as you know,
and I like to track things pretty carefully.
And I can tell you that when I take ketamine,
when I do ketamine assisted treatment, my,
my physiology changes, my blood sugar is better. My heart rate variability is improved for the days afterwards, weeks afterwards.
There's a lightness of being that just feels lovely. With psilocybin, similar results. So
really stable blood sugar. I noticed that there's kind of this lift that lasts for a long time, and that's been shown in randomized trials with people who've got a fatal cancer diagnosis and are using psilocybin in trials that are done at NYU.
We know it's also helpful for depression.
There's a JAMA paper that was published last year on this. MDMA-assisted therapy, what is so striking to me is the way that it changes how trauma drives my behavior. I conversation with a friend is that it got me to realize, you know, I knew a lot about secure attachment, avoidant attachment, anxious attachment.
And I felt in my body after MDMA therapy, I want secure attachment.
It's enough already. I don't want to just have the book
learning and the cognitive understanding. I want to feel it throughout my body. I want the
regulation of that. I want to be in a relationship where we've got that co-regulation like a mother
does with a baby. You can have that in a relationship. Yeah, absolutely. So that was a huge paradigm shift for me to realize, okay, I want secure attachment.
And so that changed everything really.
And my vulnerability is this cortisol insulin issue that I mentioned.
I've got the positive anti-nuclear antibodies.
And what I've done is test myself, science myself all through this process of using psychedelic
assisted treatments. I now have negative anti-nuclear antibodies. My blood sugar,
mean glucose is less than 95. The variability is less. I don't spike like I used to.
I feel more embodied. I used to spend all my time upstairs and also a little functionally dissociated,
which frankly we select for in medicine. It's really helpful to be functionally dissociated.
If you kind of ignore your body, it's actually an asset because you have to drive it into the
ground to get through medical school. Right. So I'm not dissociated anymore. I am in my body.
I feel everything, which at times can be difficult because I'm really sensitive.
But the thing about sensitivity and being so present is that we're like orchids,
people with this kind of sensitivity. And when an orchid has the right environment,
has the right light, is facing north, gets the right amount of water,
gets kind of spritzed. They bloom and they bloom and they bloom and they bloom. And that's what I
feel in my body. And that's what I want for my patients or for people who are on this journey.
Yeah. A lot of the doctors who are in this space have had these challenges, right? And they're
like, well, gee, everything I learned in medical school isn't quite working. And I don't know what to do, but I'm going to find something else. And
sometimes it's a kind of wandering in the dark and the desert for decades, but we get there and
you got there and you were able to, I mean, reverse a lot of the things that were happening to you
and do something that isn't quote possible in medicine, which is reverse autoimmune antibodies.
That's true.
And I've seen that over and over. So tell us a patient story where you've seen this, whether it's just the combination,
because it's not just like, oh, you can still have heavy metals and eat tons of gluten if
you're sensitive and your gut can be a mess. But if you just do psychedelics, you're going to be
fine. You can't just do that. You got to do it. Yeah, it's a holistic approach, right?
And you talk about that in the book. I want to talk about how you break the vicious cycle of autoimmune disease and reset your system and reset your immune system and restore your health.
But I want you to sort of start with maybe a story of that. to Gabor Mate talking about trauma, to Paul Stamets talking about mushrooms, to Tony Bosses
and Rick Doblin, who's talked about MDMA therapy. So there's a lot of content on the Doctors
Podcast if you want to dive deeper into these topics. But we're doing this from a medical
perspective, which is a little bit different. And I think it's an important conversation because
it's not being had in the halls of academia. It's not really being had in doctor's offices around the country,
but it is one of the most crucial conversations we need to be having with our
patients about how do we deal with this as part of their therapy.
So, so talk about a patient story and what you,
what you found and what kind of kind of made you kind of wake up and go,
wow, this really is something.
One of the patients who inspired me the most is a woman named Christina.
She's in the book.
And she's someone that I met at a yoga studio in Northern California where I live.
She was in her early 40s and ran this yoga studio.
And she discovered that her husband was having an affair with her best friend.
So she had this profound betrayal, profound toxic stress and trauma as she went through this
discovery and confrontation and processing. And so she left the marriage and within about a year, she started to notice
elbow pain and kind of this crackling and discomfort in her elbows. She's a yoga teacher.
So this is a big ball. It's really dysfunctional. And so she went to her nurse practitioner.
It's hard to, you can't do much of anything. Yin yoga, maybe. So she went to her nurse practitioner who ran a few tests.
She had a really elevated C-reactive protein.
She had rheumatoid factor that was really high.
And so she, the nurse practitioner said, I'm going to send you to a rheumatologist, made the referral.
And this woman has private insurance, good insurance, but it was a six-month wait before she could see the rheumatologist, made the referral. And this woman has private insurance,
good insurance, but it was a six-month wait before she could see the rheumatologist.
Oh, wow.
And so in the meantime, she did a couple of things. She reached out to me to see if I could
help her. And then she also made an ultrasound appointment to take a look at her joints.
Wow.
So this is before the six-month appointment with the rheumatologist.
So we started a number of different things. We ran the blood testing, the genetic testing, the
stool testing, nutritional panels. We found that her cortisol was dysregulated. And she was in the
early stages of perimenopause. And that was something that
we addressed. But we changed the way that she was eating. She's a yoga teacher. So she had a
pretty healthy diet. But we started to reduce some of those things that are more immunogenic,
like certain proteins. She was having a pea protein shake every day. And it was a little
too much for her immune system. So we went through this process.
It took about three months in her case of helping her get to a place where she was feeling much better and she was able to teach yoga again.
She had the ultrasound.
And the ultrasound basically showed that she was relatively normal.
Wow.
A little bit of inflammation, but nothing like what she had when she first started to come see me. And then she went to the rheumatologist. She had the appointment. And the rheumatologist said, yeah, your ultrasound doesn't look too bad, but you've got rheumatoid arthritis. Here are your options in terms of drugs. Which one do you want to take?
Wow. And so she left his office. She never took the medication. Yeah. And she was never officially diagnosed with rheumatoid arthritis, although she had certainly the constellation of symptoms and signs.
And now she is relatively free of this elbow pain that she had.
And throughout this process, she was doing a number of psychedelic-assisted therapies.
Oh, interesting.
I wasn't delivering them to her.
Yeah.
But she did a few different things, Bufo and a few others that really helped her with processing.
Bufo is what they call the toad.
It's from the Sonoran Desert toad.
And it's basically called the God molecule.
Yes.
5-MeO-DMT.
Which is releasing your brain at birth and at death.
And it's quite a remarkable experience.
I don't know if you've tried it, Sarah.
I haven't tried it yet.
I did.
And it was the most profound experience.
It lasts just 20 minutes.
But I was wearing my aura ring and my heart rate went up five-fold.
Yes.
Five-fold.
Exactly. This is the-fold. Exactly.
This is the kind of physical change.
What is going on here?
This is how the pine system is changed by these medicines.
It's such an important point.
It's not just your psychology.
It's also the way that you regulate, such as your heart rate variability.
Which is a measure of your stress response and your resilience to stress.
And it's an important
biomarker for so many different outcomes in your health. And it's something you can measure with
various devices, even your iPhone. You can use your finger on the camera. There's different apps.
You can buy an Oura ring. There's a lot of ways to do it. But it's a very important biomarker.
It is. And I would say, as our listeners kind of start to build out a dashboard of the things they
want to pay attention to related to their pine network, I would say HRV is critical.
Yeah.
So she used psychedelic medicine to resolve the way that trauma was still living on in her body.
And she changed the course of this potential autoimmune disease.
Yeah. That's incredible.
That's incredible.
So it was a combination of functional medicine interventions and psychedelic assisted therapy
and treatments that helped her heal the trauma and rewire some of the brain.
And I've seen data around psychedelics increasing BDNF and other neurotrophic factors.
It increases neuroplasticity and neurogenesis and really restructures your brain.
So it changes the structure and the function of your brain.
That's right.
So it's not just that you have an insight
and you kind of feel better.
It literally changes the brain matter, essentially.
Yes.
And I'm sure it regulates immune cells
and lots of things we haven't even been able to measure.
And I think we're just beginning to start
to unpeel the onion here
around what these compounds do biologically.
And they've been used for thousands of years by humans across cultures and every place.
And I think they've used to heal.
They've been used to have spiritual awakenings or used as part of cultural rituals to decide on what to do and how to do it.
And it's just a very integral part of many, many cultures.
And I just visited shamans in Ecuador
and deep in the headwaters of the Amazon,
sort of vanishing tribes, the Oshawa tribe
and the Sapara tribes.
There's just a few of them left
and they're still practicing their traditional medicines
and their traditional ways.
And I mean, it was a profound experience
to sort of witness how connected they are to the earth
and how they listen
and how they experience things differently
and they see things differently
and they relate to things differently.
And I think, you know, they have their struggles for sure,
but these medicines have been around for a long, long time.
As you talk about the importance of sort of fungi in human evolution, it's sort of
not lost on me that they've been used throughout human history. And you and I recently came back
from a trip from Egypt where we took a trip down the Nile and we visited these ancient temples,
thousands of years, 5,000 years old, who knows, maybe more. And on the hieroglyphics on the sides of these temples
were clearly psilocybin mushrooms. And so the ancient Egyptians were taking these compounds
as part of their cosmology, as part of their religious activities, as part of their ways of
understanding the world. And this is not just that culture, but all across the world, this has been done for thousands of years. And what sort of strikes me really is how do these molecules,
particularly in psilocybin, because all the others obviously work on different pathways in our body,
but psilocybin in particular has this profound effect on our neurobiology, on our neurochemistry,
on our neuroplasticity, on neurogenesis in ways
that are stunning and that are sort of hard to explain for me as a doctor. Like, how does this
sort of molecule in nature bind to these places in our brain that makes us grow new brain cells,
that increases the connection between brain cells, that helps resolve deep-seated trauma,
that helps alleviate depression that's resistant to every other treatment that
helps improve people's sense of their place in the world and the meaning of life. I mean,
it's quite remarkable to me. So what's your view on this? And how do these psilocybin molecules
work at the cellular neural levels to actually trigger the responses that we're seeing
now in the research? And I'm talking about like in the Journal of the American Medical Association, not like some crazy left-wing hippie
journal. I'm talking about mainstream medical literature that now is just engaged in this
massive renaissance and rethinking mental illness and using these ancient compounds
in plants to help us reimagine our lives and reimagine our way of treating one of the most important public health crises today,
which is mental illness?
Well, I would like to take a step back to some of the audience understands.
The progression of science is to remove all the clutter, all the noise, trying to find a signal.
And that single molecular approach, what got us penicillin,
what got us antibiotics, what got us many of the drugs that we know today.
But the practices of integrative medicine and integrative science
is how much these systems interrelate and influence each other.
So with psilocybin, the narrative has been docking with a 5HG2A receptor.
This is a neuroreceptor that's throughout our body, and particularly in our brain.
Serotonin also docks with that same receptor, but psilocybin substitutes temporarily for serotonin in the signaling pathways.
This is why the floodgates of the senses are open.
The big narrative is a 5-HT2A receptor. This is how the psilocybin works. Well, two articles I'm going to bring to your attention,
we can put them up later on the website. The one published in Cell 2022, about 25 co-authors
published that the reason why the majority of antidepressants, SSRIs, work
is they bind also to a different receptor besides 5-HT2A.
They bind to what's called TRAKB.
These are map kinases.
And TRAKB is so interesting because on the surface of the cells when it binds, it stimulates
neurogenesis
it was and especially newborn neurons in the hippocampus which was thought that you couldn't
grow new neurons you know after the age of seven or eight or some people debate what age but you're
basically got all the neurons that you're going to get in your life no that's not true anymore
very not true um so now we know that in theseilocybin, it just came out in an article,
that it binds to the same receptors that the FDA-approved antidepressants bind to,
TRAC-B, a thousand times greater than the FDA-approved antidepressants.
So you have two articles.
The new mode of activity recognized by many scientists is antidepressants work by binding to these tract B receptors. Newest article telling people for years, be a little bit more circumspect.
Be careful about what we say about microdosing.
But this recent discovery, if it's a thousand times greater than an antidepressant medicine
approved by the FDA at a therapeutic dose of psilocybin, what happens when you take
a microdose one-tenth as much?
Well, it may not be a hundred times as much,
but it's going to be more, I guarantee you,
in all probability, than these antidepressant medicines.
So there's been an incredible sea change in the past three months
by many of these skeptics who said the microdosing wouldn't work
who are now going, hmm, wow, I'm going to have to rethink this now
because the TRACB activation, what
happens with TRACB is called BDNF, brain-derived neurotrophic factors.
And so it stimulates endogenous BDNF to better bind and to locate and have a greater affinity
of binding to those receptors.
That's like miracle grow for your brain, basically.
Brain-derived neurotrophic factors like miracle grow for your brain.
So it helps everything get better, heal, repair.
That's an interesting analogy because I do a lot of cell culture.
I grow hundreds and hundreds of species.
So is it best to give miracle grow all in one massive dose for this entire lifetime? Or is it better to titrate it as it grows?
Microdosing is titration of a nutrient over time that as the cells divide and reproduce,
you don't overwhelm those receptors with one massive dose.
You titrate it during cell division as your endogenous system is repairing and growing.
So I think what's happening now, I was just on a call with some physicians,
is what we call pulse therapy of a high dose of psilocybin.
With therapy, we think that's revelatory for PTSD, for trauma, no doubt about it.
It's helped me personally.
We know this is helpful.
But you can't take a macrodose every week.
So macrodosing followed by microdosing.
That's where we think that you can be re-fortifying the signal pathways
with this new way of thinking thinking and that's what happens the problem
with psilocybin it's got a pr it's got a pr problem it sounds too good to be true um and
we're all trained at the magic mushrooms it must be magic right well you know as you know the new
england journal of medicine uh jama the Journal of American Medical Association, numerous other journals, very convincing evidence for treating depression, very convincing evidence for reducing alcohol use disorder.
For tobacco cessation, two experiences, John Hopkins, 67% of the people quit smoking tobacco.
That's amazing.
I mean, and so this is too good to be true or is it just fundamentally
changing our neurobiology and all these behaviors are self our attempts at self-medicating
to reduce inflammation and pain and trauma and that you talk about this a lot inflammation and
pain and trauma are trauma and mental health are
all interrelated.
It's a vicious Mario ground.
How do we get off that Mario ground?
And so I think psilocybin gives us that exit.
And once we find that we can get off that Mario ground of self-abusive behavior and
all the calamitous societal effects that it has, then we find that there is a way out.
And psilocybin, I think, gives people a way out of their need to self-medicate.
Well, you know, when you look at the data on the PTSD stuff, it's interesting because I think
that's an extreme example of the kind of mental illness people sort of get from various traumas,
whether it's sexual trauma, war trauma. I mean,
this is a real phenomena, that's habit. And this works remarkably well, better than any other
therapies. MDMA also is effective. And that's pretty important to understand that it has that
role when nothing else works. Like in terms of our paradigm in Western medicine, there's like
really no treatment other than antidepressants, anti-anxiety medication. It's a long-term thing. It never
really resolves. And it's really debilitating. And yet, here's this compound that with one or two,
maybe three treatments can resolve this in ways that nothing else can. And most of us don't have
that level of severe trauma.
Maybe it's 10, 15% of us, although I think one in four have some type of sexual abuse in their life.
But we all have microtrauma, right? We all were raised by parents who maybe didn't love us right
or neglected us or maybe yelled at us too much. Or maybe we had just the trauma of living in the
modern world with the threat of climate change and nuclear war and incredible divisions in our society and the instability of our economy and social inequity.
I mean, the list goes on.
There's no lack of microtraumas.
And so it's hard to cope with these things.
And we develop anxiety.
We develop poor stress resilience.
We develop mental health issues.
We develop physical issues that are a consequence of stress. And because our thoughts actually manifest in biological reactions. We know, for example, from the data on adverse
childhood experiences, which are bad things that happen when you're a kid, that the more of those
you have, the more likely you are to have actually physical problems like cancer or autoimmune
disease or heart disease or obesity or diabetes. So here's a compound, psilocybin, that potentially can help us deal with the whole range of, you know, just the normal run-of-the-mill sort of stress of living to more severe mental illness, which we're seeing escalating at incredible rates.
It's kind of this moment in history where we're kind of reimagining our approach.
It's almost as big of a change as when Freud talked about, you know,analysis. It's a massive paradigm shift in mental health. Can you talk about
the research in this field, what you're seeing, what you see coming down the road,
what's working, what's not working, and what people should think about as they're listening
to this and maybe how they can think about it in terms of their own lives. Okay. You opened up a wide world.
I did.
My brain is going, my receptors are damping and cross-talking with each other.
That is indeed what we're seeing now is that there's a lot of cross-talk of the receptors.
When you look at the single molecule, similar receptor approach,
you're stimulating one node and network of many crossings. And that actually stimulates cross-talking, influences other receptors activation. So the thing about psilocybin
that's so exciting is that it's activating many receptors, most of which I would say we haven't yet fully discovered,
because this is a whole organism change in behavior biologically
and psychologically.
So it would be not likely due to one pathway
and probably not likely even to do to one molecule.
Psilocybin mushrooms contain psilocybin, psilocin, baocystin, norbaocystin,
norsilocin, noruginicin.
These are other tryptamines.
All of those are legal except for psilocybin and psilocin.
They get you high.
The other ones don't technically get you high, but they dock within these receptors.
Some of them are broken down by MAOs, monamine oxidases.
And if you take MAOI inhibitors, putatively, they may cross into the blood-brain barrier and also activate the receptors. But we do have evidence that even some of those without MAOs,
MAOIs, do cross into the bloodstream.
I'm just saying all this because mushrooms are like miniature
pharmaceutical factories, and cell-type mushrooms are uniquely
a compendium of these molecules that I think influence us neurologically.
But let's go back a little ways.
First, we need to give Maria Sabina and the Mazatecs, you know,
our deep bow and debt of gratitude for opening up the therapeutic use
ritually of the Mazatecs to R. Gordon and Tina Wasson, specimens of
which were sent to Albert Hofmann, a discoverer of LSD, who first synthesized psilocybin.
So if it wasn't for the generosity and graciousness of Maria Sabina, this movement would be decades
behind.
Not entirely eliminated, because psilocybe mushrooms have been used around the world.
There's 141 species identified so far.
And the species that most people are using, 95% is psilocybe covensis.
Well, Maria Sabina never used psilocybe covensis.
She used psilocybe mexicana, Seriolesans, Azotocorum.
These are a species that grow in soil, in pastures,
or in wood. Sloth to be convinced grows on dung.
The common name in Mexico is San Isidro.
It's the saint of the fields.
It's associated with the conquistadors who brought over cattle.
So Sloth to be convinced is being used
by the majority of people around the world
has no connection to Maria Sabina. Maria Sabina was using a different species that unfortunately
is wild harvested only, even today, not cultivated. It can be in the laboratory,
but the production is extremely small. So So I say this because there's an interesting
bridge happening, and I believe in building bridges, not divides. A friend of mine went down
to Oaxaca and visited Maria Sabina's relatives and the Mazatecs down there. And because of the
interest in salt-type mushrooms by tourists and by people suffering from mental illness, by medical doctors who want their patients
to experience this. There is a shortage of these
wild psilocybe mushrooms. So what are they using?
Psilocybe cubensis, which can be cultivated
using Western technology of in vitro propagation
to sustain a Mazatec tradition
that's been going on for thousands of years.
I mention this because there is a concept here in Canada,
and I'm struggling to remember the person's name, Albert.
He's an Indigenous elder from eastern Canada.
And he was challenged by one of his Indigenous mother of a student that he had,
why should I send my Indigenous children to a Western school?
And Albert Marshall is his name.
And Albert said, because we need to learn the Western ways to survive in this world.
We need two eyes seeing.
One eye rooted in indigenous traditional knowledge.
One eye rooted in Western technology and Western knowledge.
The two are compatible.
And so many indigenous people are mixed blood.
Look at Mexico, right?
The entire Latino community is entirely mixed blood, most of it.
So I'm saying this because this is an advantage of Western technology
helping indigenous people continue their traditions.
It's also, psilocybin-cubeps, not being, it came over with cattle, we believe,
and the ergot, which is a bird that picks bugs off the backs of cattle,
also spread the spores of Salos v. Covepsis.
So that ecotype was not present in the Americas for, you know, until the Spanish came.
So they brought with them fungi that then are being used by the Massatex. Now, this is
to honor and to say that all traditions
by indigenous people around the world are sacred, should be respected, etc.
should not be exploited. But it's careful people
should understand with 141 species, any
indigenous population in Europe and Africa
and Russia and Japan and China ultimately would encounter these fungi.
And Sloth-speak-a-vensis is very obvious because it gets to be this big.
It grows on cattle dung, and cattle go to ponds to drink water.
So the whole thing with our Egyptian experience with a blue lotus,
a water lily, is that the Salaspica vencens would grow
where the water lily would be located.
The cows go to the water lily, so you'd find Salaspica vencens.
So what I'm saying is that any people resident in the ecosystem that's aware,
basically on survival and knowledge,
will come to discover these mushrooms eventually.
It may take thousands of years.
It could take tens of thousands of years.
And this is what here is a problem.
And this is why this movement's been so slow.
Think of this.
In your view scape with plants and animals, you have a familiarity factor because there are months, years. You are constantly
in contact. Mushrooms come up and disappear in five days.
They may not come up the next year. They may take two or three years.
What's that? I mean, you have to, you know, your memory
of that, you know, is very difficult to recall
compared to something like you're encountering all the time,
like a plant. So this eclectic knowledge is ephemeral. And then you have war,
you have cultural domination, you have disease, you have religion, you have suppression. And
psilocybin liberates people from the shackles of conventional wisdom, from the shackles of oppression, from
the shackles of a structured religion.
These are liberating experiences that bring us all together, where there's no gatekeeper
to God.
There's no tithing.
No gatekeeper to God.
That's good.
It's really, and so I can see it all the way threatening to the industrial religious complex, right?
Although it's interesting, when you look at some of the history of early Christianity and the ancient Greeks,
I mean, a lot of the sort of insights and mysticism that they had can be traced back to the use of ergot-containing plants or drinks that they used to use.
And recently this was sort of discovered,
it was written about in the Immortality Key,
but it was really an ancient part of the beginning
of the sort of mystical aspect of these religions.
So it's not like a new thing.
No, it's not a new thing.
And that's what's surprising.
It's been suppressed.
And Indigenous peoples, especially in the Americas,
I mean,
they were so
abused. And that is
a tragedy we should never forget.
And we should do everything
we can to make sure
this never happens again. Indigenous voices
are important.
I wonder if there's anybody working
on the Native American trauma using psychedelics? I mean, I think they. I wonder if there's a, is there anybody working on the Native American trauma
using psychedelics?
I mean, I think they have,
you know, peyote
as some of their traditional
plant medicines that they use.
But I'm wondering
if you're aware of that
because it seems like a novel
but very important idea.
Let me tell you a story.
I was in,
I was driving up to Washington State
and went through Bakersfield.
I went through the Mill Valley.
It's also East Bay.
And I ended up stopping.
I've got to get a cup of coffee.
So I stopped at a coffee shop.
And I'm there.
And this Native American woman, she kept on looking at me.
And then she came over and said, are you Paul Stamson?
I said, yes, I am.
And I started talking to her.
What do you know?
She says, well, I'm a Navajo, and I'm just accepted at UC Berkeley,
and I'm not sure what I'm going to do for my graduate thesis.
I go, oh, my God.
She's smart.
She's not just Indigenous.
She grew up in the Navajo tradition,
and Indigenous people are really emphatic about this.
You might genetically have some Indigenous genes with you,
but were you schooled in the tradition of ancient knowledge?
And she was.
And I said, you know, you're in a really unique position to explore.
And it's called re-Indigenization, bringing back knowledge.
So indigenous people at their request, not pushing this on them,
and this is what she got so inspired about.
So now I just met her again at the conference in Denver, MAPS,
and she's completing her PhD from that encounter in the coffee shop
where she was really prescient to do.
And I'm like, oh, my gosh.
And so she's explored this subject
very deeply and
there is a resurgence of interest
by indigenous people to recapture
I don't know if you like the word
recapture I don't like the word
rediscover
but maybe reintegrate
reintegrate re-implement
these ancient traditions because so much of those threads have been broken.
But we have goes through time where we have some family trees that are still practicing this.
But bear in mind that Maria Sabina, when she would do her Mazatec ceremonies, she had the Holy Trinity from Catholicism as part of her ceremony.
My immediate response was, well, that was a survival mechanism to be able to practice the magic mushrooms within the Catholic domination.
But anyone who's gone to Mexico, I mean, it's a very, very Catholic-centric culture.
It's very, so Catholicism with indigenous people is really an overriding paradigm
we can we could debate all day long well i want to i want to kind of i want to take a minute to
kind of dive a little more with you into the research around mental health and and psilocybin
uh and then and then talk about you know where it's being applied what the future looks like
because you know a lot of clinical trials are going on now.
I see they're being published regularly every week.
What's promising?
What are we seeing?
What does that data and literature show?
What's strong?
What's coming up?
Right.
I would, first off, recommend that people go to clinicaltrials.gov.
It's the clinical trial government, US government website.
All clinical trials are supposed to be registered if you want to advance to an FDA-approved medicine or therapy.
There's 124 clinical trials using psilocybin, 124.
So that's like a roadmap. All the potential indications, alcohol use disorder, stroke victims, mental health issues, depression, PTSD, all those things.
The use of psilocybin for treating depression is extremely strong.
But let's make sure we're careful about this.
70% of the people on average have benefits from psilocybin.
30% of people do not.
Okay?
So in a most recent clinical study that was published with treatment-resistant depression,
and you're being a doctor, I think it's two or three medicines did not work,
and then you're in the treatment-resistant depression category,
for which there are no medicines that are available.
That's a very tough patient group.
So student fidelity became an issue because people who did not get benefit,
oh, my gosh, I'm at the end of my rope.
This is my last hope, and it didn't work for me.
So you naturally feel like defeated
because you're hoping that this medicine will help you.
So it's really important that we contextualize this.
But I would say most of us are on the spectrum of healthy normals.
I know that's used a lot, is you're on the spectrum. Well, most of us are in the spectrum of healthy normals. I know that's used a lot, is you're on the spectrum.
Well, most of us are in the spectrum of healthy normals,
and then there are people out on the outer edges of that who are not healthy.
I think psilocybin has enormous potential for the prevention of mental illness,
for the prevention of PTSD.
We're looking at treating after the trauma,
after the event, you know, as a consequence of many factors. And then how do we heal people?
Well, how do we prevent this trauma from occurring from the beginning? And this is where I think the signals that we're getting from meta-studies are particularly interesting. A reduction of
partner-to-partner violence, reduction of crime, reduction of larceny, theft.
You know, if we can prevent and reduce crime, criminal behavior,
and mental illness, the return on investment for society is massive.
I mean, just think about the literally billions,
if not trillions of dollars that could be saved if we had only 10% of the
PTSD, the mental illness that we have today, 50 years from now. We'd be a much wealthier society.
We'd have more ability to support social programs, to be able to help educate individuals, to give
basic housing and food. We could elevate our entire society just from the
savings of money. So everyone talks about treating diseases and illnesses. I'm really
fascinated by the fundamentally psilocybin makes nicer people. I think psilocybin makes smarter.
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