The Dr. Hyman Show - The Power Of Psilocybin To Heal Our Minds And Our Bodies with Paul Stamets
Episode Date: September 6, 2023This episode is brought to you by Rupa Health, Sensate, ButcherBox, and Thrive Market. We’re in the midst of a psychedelic renaissance. Compounds that have long been considered recreational drugs by... conventional standards are finally being recognized through science as powerful tools for overcoming hard-to-treat health issues like PTSD, depression, addiction, and more. Today on The Doctor’s Farmacy, I’m excited to talk to my good friend and one of the world’s most renowned mycologists, Paul Stamets, all about psilocybin and how this compound is helping us reimagine our way of treating one of the most important public health crises today—mental illness. Paul Stamets is a speaker, author, mycologist, medical researcher, and entrepreneur and is considered an intellectual and industry leader in fungi: habitat, medicinal use, and production. His breakthrough research has created a paradigm shift for helping ecosystems worldwide. He has received numerous awards, including Invention Ambassador for the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), the National Mycologist Award from the North American Mycological Association (NAMA), and the Gordon & Tina Wasson Award from the Mycological Society of America (MSA). In 2020, Paul was inducted into the Explorer’s Club. He has been awarded myriad patents in the field of mycology. Paul is the founder and sole owner of Fungi Perfecti, LLC, the maker, and marketer of the category-leading myco-supplement Host Defense line. This episode is brought to you by Rupa Health, Sensate, ButcherBox, and Thrive Market. Access more than 3,000 specialty lab tests with Rupa Health. You can check out a free, live demo with a Q&A or create an account at RupaHealth.com today. Head on over to getsensate.com/Farmacy and use code FARMACY to get 10% off your Sensate device today. For new members of ButcherBox, you can receive New York strip steaks for a year PLUS $20 off your first order. Go to ButcherBox.com/farmacy and use code FARMACY. Thrive Market is offering 30% off your first order and a free gift of up to $60 if you sign up now! Head over to thrivemarket.com/Hyman today. Here are more details from our interview (audio version / Apple Subscriber version): Why we should care about mushrooms (6:50 / 4:39) Why mushrooms are the zeitgeist of our time (12:35 / 10:00) Health benefits of mushrooms (13:54 / 12:07) How psilocybin works in human brains (29:34 / 25:48) Psilocybin as treatment for mental health and addiction (33:07 / 28:55) Specific psilocybin molecules that influence us neurologically (40:04 / 35:46) Research on psilocybin for mental health issues (51:58 / 48:06) The Stamets Stack microdosing method (1:02:41 / 58:57) The future of psilocybin use in our society (1:15:43 / 1:11:50) A day in the life of Paul Stamets (1:20:16 / 1:16:22) Learn more at paulstamets.com.
Transcript
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Coming up on this episode of The Doctor's Pharmacy.
This is why I think mushrooms have become the zeitgeist of our time.
It's like this worldwide revolution, awakening to the very fabric of nature that exists under every footstep that we take.
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And now let's get back to this episode of The Doctor's Pharmacy.
Welcome to The Doctor's Pharmacy. I'm Dr. Mark Hyman. That's Pharmacy with an F,
a place for conversations that matter. And if you've struggled with mental illness,
the meaning of life, end of life stress and trauma, or early childhood trauma, or pretty much anything that's got to do with what's
in between your ears, we're going to have an interesting podcast today because we're talking
to one of the world's experts on mushrooms. And not just one particular mushroom, but all
mushrooms. But today we're going to focus in on psilocybin and the research around psilocybin and
how that is changing everything we know about mental health, about our way of thinking about ourselves and the world,
and the problems it has for both healthy and for sick people.
And we have none other than the world's most renowned mycologist, Paul Stamets, a good friend.
We just were at a bunch of dead shows in the gorge in Washington, had a great time.
He's a speaker, he's an author, he's a mycologist. He's a medical researcher. He's an entrepreneur. He's basically the icon that everybody thinks
about when they think about mushrooms. He understands their habitat, their medicinal
use, their production. He's created a whole new paradigm shift in thinking about how we
care for our ecosystems and the importance of mushrooms and fungi in that he's had so many awards,
the invention ambassador for the American Association of the Advancement of Science,
the National Mycologist Award from the North American Mycological Association,
Gordon and Tina Watson Award from the Mycological Society of America, and on and on.
In 2020, excitingly enough, he was inducted into the Explorers Club.
That's the National Geographic Explorers club. That's a national geographic sports club,
which is a very rarefied place to belong.
And he's awarded a number of patents for his work in the field of
mycology.
And he's a founder and sole owner of fungi,
perfect.
I,
the maker and marketer of the category leading micro supplement host
defense line,
which I personally use all the time,
especially when I get sick.
So welcome Paul.
Thank you,
brother.
It's an honor to see you again.
It's great to see you.
Yeah, we were just together a couple of days ago.
I had no idea that you were a deadhead.
So it's so fun to be at our pod, interweaved together.
So much.
Yeah, so much.
My heart is actually breaking right now because this is the final tour of the Dead & Company,
which I kind of got on late because I kind of was a snob and I thought,
Oh,
the dead was the dead.
And then whatever's coming after that is not worth listening to.
So I sort of like blocked it out,
but then I kind of connected to it a couple of years ago and I'm like,
Oh man,
it's really good.
So
if I could sort of give my opinion is you may have experienced this as well
is the deadhead community is really founded on
some fundamental principles shared by all religions, actually. It's on goodness, on
kindness, on forgiveness, on helping people who are disadvantaged. And it's multi-generational.
It's four generations. And to see so many young people, I can't believe there was some young
people and they knew more lyrics than I did. And they were in their 20s. I know. I saw that. I can't believe it was some young people and they knew more lyrics than I did. And they were in their twenties. I saw that. I saw these young hippies that were like 20 some years old.
I'm like, where do these guys come from? Where do they live? Where are they hiding out? Cause I
haven't seen any of these walking around the street. So yeah, it's a, it's pretty, pretty
amazing community. And also by the way, you know, for people listening in the context of what we're
going to talk about today is the Grateful Dead was really key and instrumental in the psychedelic revolution in the 60s. They were the house band
for the Kool-Aid acid tests from Ken Kesey, Menlo Park in the mid 60s. And that was sort of the
beginning of the psychedelic revolution. And a lot of their music was basically created in the
psychedelic space. So it was kind of fun to be there with you and experience that. That was obviously LSD, but I'm sure they took a lot of mushrooms too. So I think most people don't think
much about mushrooms. They go, well, I mean, I have put some button mushrooms in my salad,
which is a bad idea, raw, because they contain a carcinogen, or I'm going to cook some mushrooms
or whatever part of my
dinner. But they don't really think about the role of mushrooms in the world, and particularly in
terms of its essential role in ecosystems, in the soil health, in creating so much of the
connections and communications underground that happen between plants. I mean, it's really a whole
interconnected network of
fungi that is basically running the world. So I wonder if you can just spend a couple minutes
explaining why that's so important to us and how they've been neglected and why we should be
really paying more attention. And then we're going to kind of dive a little bit into some of the
beneficial aspects of mushrooms in general that I think are therapeutic mushrooms.
And then I want to talk about psychedelics with you because I think this is a really interesting space.
So why don't you start out with, like, why should we care about mushrooms?
Well, this is a subject that catches people unawares, that it could be so profoundly important.
And yet the field of mycology, the study of fungi and science,
is underappreciated, under-recognized, underfunded. And yet it has such a profound influence on
why we're here today. So we go back in time 13.8 billion years ago, the Big Bang,
you know, 4.5 billion years ago, the Earth formed. 3.8 billion years ago, the first evidence so far of life, unicellular organisms.
And we then actually, the first evidence so far of a multicellular organism is fungi, mycelium,
refined webby cobweb substance found in lava beds in South Africa.
And that's about 2.5 billion years ago.
And then fungi were the first organisms that came to land.
Really, the prevailing theory, which I very much like,
is the influence of the moon on the oceans for creating tides.
And the washing of the ocean, and then the tide goes out and is exposed to air.
Well, that constant interface of going into aquatic and non-aquatic,
then the organisms in the ocean, and fungi being one of them,
paired up with plants, algae, and formed lichens.
And so lichens are actually a dimorphic organism, fungi and plants together form lichens.
And lichens then started munching rocks.
And then the mycelium would dissolve the rocks and give minerals.
And then the plants would give carbohydrates and sugars and mycorrhizal fungi. That's exactly what they do.
So it was that pairing.
Now, we diverged from fungi.
And that created soil, right?
That was how soil.
It created soil.
Munched rocks created soil.
So that happened for, I mean, for, you know, millions of years.
But fungi actually gave birth to animals.
650 million years ago, fungi created animals.
And the fungi went its underground path,
and animals went basically encirculating our nutrients
and digesting within the stomach,
whereas the fungi extracellularly digested its nutrients.
So we march forward, and, of course, we have animalium.
And so the supercadon is called a pyslaconta, digested its nutrients. So we march forward, and of course we have animalium.
And so the super kingdom is called a paislaconta.
650 million years ago, we were unified in the same, I like to say kingdom, rather than kingdom, by the way.
So fungi gave birth to animals, and this is from a medical point of view.
This is why we have really good antibiotics against bacteria,
but we have very poor antibiotics against fungi because of our close evolutionary relationship.
So these networks of mycelium permeated the ground and paired with plants and ecosystems that flourished.
And then animals needed plants, herbivores.
And then, of course, carnivores came about for consuming other animals.
So the whole path of our existence is traceable to mycelium.
We are the children of mycelium.
That's incredible.
And it's such an important part of our current well-being because without mycelium, you can't actually create healthy plants.
And they're in the soil that's been basically taken care of
properly when we talk about regenerative agriculture we're talking about soil that's
not been disrupted in the mycelial networks damaged and injured and i mean i think about
like you know when you kind of tell the soil you're basically like cutting through all the
fiber optic cables of communication from the plant kingdom that helps them extract nutrients
from the soil it helps them you know communicate other plants, tell them what to do.
It's really a whole information highway there.
And so we-
I've been in many interviews, but that's the first time I've heard that metaphor.
And that's a beautiful one.
I find the optics, you know, of the ground.
Yeah.
It's like a worldwide web, except it's underground.
And it's essential for our survival and we're killing it.
Yeah. No, that's it. My surname is essential for our survival, and we're killing it.
No, that's it.
Mycelium is earth's natural internet.
I've been saying that for a long time.
That's great.
Not all plants have mycorrhizal relationships. This means that they're in a mutually dependent dualistic relationship.
And then all plants are dependent upon soils.
So a few plants that don't have mycorrhizal relationships depend upon saprophytic fungi that break down organic material, you know, for benefiting the life cycles of many other organisms.
So you have a sort of mycorrhizal fungi.
They're in association with the roots of plants or inside of plants, endomycorrhizal versus ectomycorrhizal.
Endo means in, ecto means outside.
And then you have the saprophytic species.
And the saprophytic species break down wood, you know, as soon as a log is created or a tree falls in the forest.
So the dynamics between saprophytic and mycorrhizal fungi is still an unexplored area, but that they're very much interrelated.
You can think about, well, saprophytic fungi are growing the first foot of soil,
typically, with the exception of the oceans.
They've done cork bores down a mile deep into the oceans,
and they've found all sorts of fungi.
This is yet another unexplored area that's been stated
that the greatest mycelial mats in the world are submarine.
They are in the settings of the oceans, and we know virtually nothing about this.
That's incredible.
Yeah.
I mean, it's a well of knowledge that we're dipping into, but this is why I think mushrooms have become the zeitgeist of our time. It's like this worldwide revolution,
awakening to the very fabric of nature
that exists under every footstep that we take.
Literally every footstep that you and I take
in a healthy ecosystem
has about 300 miles of mycelium under each footstep.
I mean, that's how prevalent these are.
It's unbelievable.
To have something so prevalent and the presence of a mushroom is really a biological miracle.
I mean, just very few, we know about 150,000 species based on DNA analysis of mushroom-forming fungi,
but we've only identified around 14,000.
Again, 90% of the species we haven't identified because when they pop up above ground,
they have a morphology that taxonomists can use. Well, now with DNA tools, we know there's a whole
bunch of fungi that have never represented themselves in the form of a mushroom, but could,
but they're not yet described. So, I mean, it's truly an astonishingly rich treasure trove of
new discoveries for young scientists in particular.
Yeah, I mean, we could spend the entire podcast talking about what's going on underground,
but I want to talk about actually some other things that I think people are going to find
very interesting, which is a lot of what you build your business on, which is the benefits,
the health benefits of certain mushrooms that have been used potentially in traditional medicines
for thousands of years, certainly a lot
in Chinese medicine. And the things we might have heard about, things like reishi and shaga and
cordyceps and lion's mane and turkey tail and all these mushrooms that, you know, you can't really
buy in the grocery store that much. Some of them you can, you can buy shiitakes, you can buy maitake,
you can buy lion's mane and cook them. And I do, and they're delicious and we should eat them. But, but you've actually found that these are medicines and they actually
have biological properties that are helping our immune system, that prevent cancer, that may
actually help metal chelation, that help with also the sort of adaptogenic response that we need, sort of stress resilience.
So can you take us through some of these mushrooms and ones that are like the greatest hits of the mushroom community
that are part of your go-to toolkit for helping people support their health
and kind of take us through each one a little bit, what they do.
And then I want to sort of jump from that into the psilocybin conversation.
We'll get through that for the rest of the podcast.
Okay.
Well, let's start with, you know, mushrooms produce spores.
Spores are like little seeds.
They come together, they germinate, they form mycelium.
Now, when one spore germinates, it's called a hypha, H-Y-P-H-A, hyphae for plural.
When they come together, they form mycelium. The mycelium grows
and in response to four primary stimuli, most all of you listening to this know this, rain,
of course, water. With rain, you have evaporative cooling. So you have a drop in temperature.
Oftentimes, rain is associated with a drop in temperature as well have the mycelium comes up to the surface, exhales carbon dioxide,
inhales oxygen. So these are like externalized stomachs, externalized lungs, and then surprisingly
light. Most all mushroom species, with the exception of button mushrooms and portabellas
and a few others, most all of them are triggered by sunlight. Indirect sunlight usually is the best. So that dappled sunlight,
so a massive rain and the dappled sunlight after a storm passes, the mycelium is wicking up and
it's exhaling carbon dioxide, inhaling oxygen, stimulated by light, water temperature, drop in
temperature. Those are all the tools that cultivators use to initiate a flush. Now, a
mushroom comes from the mycelium, but when you dissect a mushroom
under a microscope, what is it made of? Mycelium. So mycelium makes mushrooms. Mushrooms are made
of mycelium. The difference is the single strands of mycelium, and you microbiologists out there
know this well, but in a single cubic inch of soil,
there can be tens of millions of microbes.
And there can be eight miles of that mycelium running through.
Well, it's only one cell wall thick, and it's got microbial pathogens that are trying to
eat it.
So it upregulates its immune system to create antibiotics that prevent peritonization and
exceeds alliances with
bacteria that are friendly, saying, hey, we'll help you if you help us.
And so it's a mutualistic relationship.
They create guilds of microorganisms that collectively cooperate to prevent other bacterial
predators, even bacteria, aligning with mushroom mycelium, produces antibacterial compounds
to keep the unfriendly bacteria away.
So these set the stage for ecological evolution.
And then under the right conditions,
mushrooms form from the mycelium,
and the mycelium laminates from individual strands
and laminates into this complex, dense structure.
So the structure of the mycelium becomes a mushroom,
as opposed to hyphae that are loose and in the ground. Now, the reason why this is important
is more than 25%, sometimes we have some examples of like 90% more genes are activated
in the state of mycelium. Doesn't that make sense. They have to grow for years sometimes before mushrooms form.
A mushroom is as perishable as fresh fish.
Many of you know this.
I'll give you oyster mushrooms.
You can eat them right away.
They're only good for two or three days.
I know.
It makes me mad because I want to eat partini mushrooms in America, but you can't get them.
You just can't get them.
So the mushrooms themselves don't have a good immune system because they're not meant to be.
They're meant to be eaten by mycobores, animals that then spread spores and carry the mushrooms away.
So it's really interesting that the mushrooms are nutritionally dense, but the bioactive immune agents are more present in the mycelial state.
Now, this is a big surprise to a lot of people trained in traditional Chinese medicine.
But not to be flippant here, but the typewriter had its usefulness.
And then we had the computer.
Technologies evolve.
So what was proven for thousands of years as a foundational stage of knowledge. And then with new technologies,
new scientists, thousands of people exploring the fungal kingdom, new discoveries. And so the
most interesting research is coming out on mycelium. I popular website that's for physicians
like yourself and for researchers, not branded. It's thousands of pages now of references,
mushroomreferences.com.
It's amazing. I've dug in there. It's quite amazing. If anybody wants to look at that,
mushroomreferences.com. It's unbelievable. So you can go there. I update it. We update it.
My team and I update it about once a month or so. So what I'm saying is that mushrooms
are nutritionally dense and they activate immune system through beta-glucans and other compounds.
But we have found that the beta-glucan, which are these polymers,
that can be from 10,000 Daltons to 10 million Daltons of molecular weight.
So what is the beta-glucan?
It's a massive polymer, and there's a whole bunch of them.
It's not a single molecule. But these polymers we
found are scaffolding for holding bioflavonoids and lipids. And some research has come out that
when you use lipases and you strip all of these fatty acids away from the scaffolding, the beta-glucans are immunologically inactivated.
So we found now that, yes, the scaffolding, that's what you could find in early science,
you can identify it very quickly, but it's the structure that houses all these other compounds.
So I see mushrooms as miniature pharmaceutical factories,
but I see mycelium as being like a factory on a planet.
And the mushrooms are like a factory and the mycelium is like the planet, right?
It's a massive treasure trove, a library of extraordinarily adaptive knowledge because of epigenesis.
The mycelium grows out and there can be more than six trillion end branches in a meteor swath of myigenesis. The mycelium grows out, and there can be more than 6 trillion end branches
in a meter swath of mycelium.
I actually said in the movie Fantastic Fungi, a trillion.
And then a mathematician says, no, you're wrong.
It's more than 6 trillion.
I said, okay, you win.
But the idea is the end tips of the mycelium are polynucleotide,
and they're encountering bacteria or a new food source, a toxic waste.
If those nuclei can upregulate a new enzyme sequence, proteins, to break down that new potential food, what happens?
The mycelium grows.
But then the mycelium back-channels that information into the mother mat.
And so it becomes immunologically educated.
And it has genomically in this reservoir, in this biological toolkit of protection,
already an experience to be able to reactivate these gene sequences should it needs.
So this is why mycelium is so exciting.
It is truly like Earth's natural internet.
It's sharing information and it's learning.
Mushrooms are at the end of the life cycle.
Hooray, you made it.
But they're perishable.
They're designed to rot.
They're designed because they smell and they attract insects and humans, et cetera.
And then insects and humans pick them and spores spread spores and and away we go so we're
actively in partnership with mushrooms whether we whether we enlisted or not so basically what
you're saying is they sample the environment and they kind of create an immune response for
themselves or create ways of fighting these things and then we can use for our own purposes so
basically like borrow their immune system in a sense,
and it helps us to fight cancer and to fight infections.
Absolutely, but more being an integrative doctor,
more specific to your field of expertise,
these are not a solitary soldier or entity
up against an army of competitors. They're very clever in realizing
that community is stronger than an individual. They set the stage for building communities
that then create the plants that then grow, creating the debris fields that then are
recycled. So they predictively condition ecosystems for the benefit of their community
to create resources for their own progeny.
Because obviously, if you did it, you would.
So they take a very long view of like, oh, I'm going to take a toxic waste
and I'm going to make it into an old growth forest.
That's going to take a thousand years.
We're all going to be eating my mushrooms.
Humans are going to consume my mushrooms, right?
When they stick us
in the ground. I'm sorry, I didn't follow
you on that one. I said
when we get buried, then eventually
we get consumed by mushrooms too, right?
Everything goes back to the earth and everything
is sort of decomposed
and digested by
the mycelial network and then
repurposed and recycled.
The more I'm very deep into the subject, obviously,
but it gives me great solace, surprising to some,
to know that I will be disambiguated, demodulated,
and returned into the essential atoms that built the molecules for my own
form right now. It's a continuum. I mean, think about everyone's concerned,
and there's apprehension and the life and depression, and we can talk about that.
But knowing that we didn't exist in our form before I was born and you were born,
we're not going to exist in the same form afterwards.
And this has been going on for billions of years.
There's a bigger picture here, folks.
It does not be biologically myopic and so self-centered
with our egocentricity that believe that we're all that important.
Maybe we're just in service of the mushrooms.
The fungi.
I think we're in service.
I love that.
I think we're in service of the universe.
Oh, yeah. I think that. I think we're in service of the universe. Oh, yeah, for sure.
Much larger.
Some people call up God.
I don't like using God as the phrase.
I'm like using entity.
But there is one giant consciousness that I think we all are participating in.
And religions are the inadequacy of our language to explain that great consciousness.
And then we elaborate all these strange rituals around religions that all have the same end
goal in common, but the way that they monetize and create businesses and propagate their
own myth.
And I'm not saying that in a pejorative term.
Myths are important.
Myths are legends.
You know, myths are based on oftentimes real experiences.
They're informative.
The myth that we choose is the religion, you know,
flavor of the week or the month or your lifetime.
So the bottom line is psilocybin mushrooms and mushrooms are a gateway
into this wonderful existence that we share that I think helps everyone feel better about their
temporary mortality. We have to go in mortality. We will be immortal with the atoms that are that have
created us we just flow back into the nutrient cycles you know and maybe one day one of our
people listening here one of their grandkids will be coming up on a plant that was made from
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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 know, 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
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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, 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. 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, try 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. And serotonin also docks with that same receptor. But psilocybin
substitutes temporarily for serotonin in the signaling pathways.
And this is why the floodgates of the senses are open.
So 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. 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.
So now we know that in psilocybin,
it just came out in an article that it binds to the same receptors that the
FDA approved antidepressants bind to, track B,
a thousand times greater than the FDA approved antidepressants.
So you have two articles. 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, psilocybin binds a thousand times more than those FDA-approved antidepressants.
Now, I mention this because I've been in a lot of skepticism about microdosing.
And I've been telling people for years, be a little bit more circumspect,
be careful about what you 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 that 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 macrophobic 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.
Meaning you have 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 doing 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 macro dose, you know, 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.
And that's what happens.
The problem with psilocybin, it's got a PR problem.
It sounds too good to be true.
And we're all trained at the sound of it.
Magic mushrooms.
It must be magic, right?
Well, as you know, the New England Journal of Medicine, JAMA, the Journal of American Medical Associates, 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, are attempted self-medicating to reduce inflammation and pain and trauma.
And you talk about this a lot, inflammation and pain and 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, that 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, you know, 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,
there's, this is a real phenomena that's habit and this works remarkably well, better than any other
therapies. MDMA also is effective. And, and, and that's pretty important to understand that,
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 medications. It's a long-term thing. It never really resolves,
and it's really debilitating. And yet, you know, 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
micro trauma, 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, you know, 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, you know, the instability of our economy and
social inequity. I mean, the list goes on. There's no lack of micro traumas. And so it's hard to cope
with these things. And we develop anxiety. We develop, you know, 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 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 re-imagining our approach. It's almost as big of a change as when Freud talked about the unconscious
and psychoanalysis. I mean, it's a massive paradigm shift in mental health. So 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 as they're listening to this and and maybe how
they can think about it in terms of their own lives okay i i you opened up a wide world i did
my brain is lying my receptors are dancing and cross-talking with each other
that is indeed what we're seeing now is that there's a lot of crosstalk of the receptors.
When you look at the single molecule, single receptor approach, you're stimulating one node and network of many crossings.
And that actually stimulates crosstalk and 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 in one molecule. Psilocybin mushrooms contain
psilocybin, psilocin, baocycin, norbaocycin, norcylocin, 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 many of these receptors.
Some of them are broken down by MAOs, monoamine 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 MAOIs do cross into the
bloodstream. I'm just saying all this because mushrooms are like miniature pharmaceutical
factories, and cell-thiobin 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,
which literally of the Mazatecs, 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,
90-95% is psilocybe covensis. Well, Maria Sabina never used psilocybe covensis.
She used psilocybe mexicana, serulescens, azotocorum.
These are species that grow in soil, in pastures, or in wood.
Psilocybe covensis grows on dung.
The common name in Mexico is sanisidro.
It's the saint of the fields.
It's associated with the conistadors who brought over cattle.
So, Selassie-Comenzas 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 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 psilocybe mushrooms
by tourists, 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, psilocy 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 psilocybe cuvensus.
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 Mastituk.
Now, this is to honor and to say that all traditions by indigenous people
around the world are sacred, should be respected, et cetera,
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-be-covensis 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 Sloth-Speak-A-Mensis would grow where the water lily would be located.
The cows go to the water lily, so you'd find Sloth-Speak-A-Mensis.
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 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 structured
religion. These are liberating experiences that bring us all together, where there's no gatekeeper
to God. There's no tithing. gatekeeper to god that's good it's really it's and so i can
see it all might be threatening to the to the industrial religious complex right
although it's interesting when you look at some of the history of the christian early christianity
and and the ancient greeks i mean a lot of the the sort of insights and mysticism that they had
you know 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 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 mean that's interesting 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 is some of their traditional
plant medicines that they use but i i'm wondering if if you're aware that because it seems like a
novel but very important idea let me tell you a story i was i was in um i was driving up to
washington state but i went through bakersfield i went through a mill valley so it's also lito
you know not east east bay and i ended up stopping i got gotta get a cup of coffee you know so i
stopped at a coffee shop and i'm there and this uh native american woman and this woman she kept
on looking at me.
And then she came over and said, are you Paul Stametson? I said, yes, I am.
I started talking to her. What do you know? She says, well, I'm a Navajo.
And I'm just accepted at the UC Berkeley. And I'm not sure what I'm going to do for my graduate thesis.
I go, oh, my God. You know, she's smart. She's, you know, she's not just indigenous.
She's grew up in the Navajo tradition and indigenous people are really emphatic about this.
You might have genetically had 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,
which 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 echoes through time or 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 psilocybin, and then, and then talk about, you
know, where it's being applied,
what the future looks like.
Because 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 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, U.S. 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 to 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 suicidality 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 would 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 if you're on the spectrum.
Well, most of us are in the spectrum of healthy normals,
and then there are people 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 our 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 can 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 nicer people. I think psilocybin makes smarter people.
Yeah. When you think about it, when you're, you know, sort of feel one with the universe,
it's hard to want to do anything bad to anybody else because you feel your connections to
everything and to the world and the earth. It's like, it changes your perspective. I mean,
I know you had profound change when you were a young man by taking psilocybin and I did too,
when I was 18, it totally changed my worldview of everything. And it's informed so much of how I think about
the world, the interconnections I see, how I think about functional medicine, how everything is
basically a big network and how we're not separate from it. I didn't really have it as an intellectual
idea. I had it as a visceral felt experience as a young man, and it really profoundly changed me. And I
think, you know, you went through the same thing. And you're right, Paul, you know, we're seeing
such an epidemic of mental illness. And, you know, you mentioned the cost. I mean, this was one study,
but it looked at the economic impact of chronic disease on our economy. And over the next 35
years, it's going to be $95 trillion. And the majority of it
is mental health issues and depression. So we're talking about tens and tens of trillions of
dollars that we're losing to our economy, to our society, because of something that we're all
experiencing, but don't have great solutions for. And that's why I'm really excited about the psychedelic revolution
as a way to sort of try to treat some of these really intractable problems.
And, you know, what's happening now, which is maybe a surprise to many people listening,
is that one of the major forces for the legalization of psilocybin is by conservatives,
is by Republicans, because they're dealing with so many of their constituents,
you know, Afghan and Iraq war veterans and law enforcement officers. And I was in Austin, Texas,
and met the founders of the Healing Warrior Church. It is a nonprofit. I looked it up.
And they have taken over 600 law enforcement and SEALs,
special forces officers, through high doses of psilocybin
at a weekend retreat owned by the SEALs,
a military guy who had a ranch converted into a psilocybin retreat center.
Let me just – it's a tough thing to say, but I won't say too much about this,
but law enforcement officers make mistakes.
Doctors make mistakes. Both of them literally have another person's life in their hands,
so to speak, and they can't be 100% right. So I asked the obvious, dangerous, and difficult
question about what some of these Iraq soldiers experienced that was so traumatizing.
I'm not going to get into it. But when I heard the answer, I went, oh, my God,
that would traumatize me for the rest of my life. So who can they talk to? These are good people.
They had a bad day, you know, and if they don't deal with that trauma, then it's alcoholism,
it's drug abuse, it's suicide, it's the guilt. And so they created the Healing Warrior Church, and they bring them in,
and they have massive doses of psilocybin with their other people sharing this experience.
And the most amazing story is that the city of Austin police chief, 56 police officers,
they had one bad apple, and And everyone very worried about this police
officer because he kept on going out of bounds and doing things that were not right. A very
difficult personality to deal with. But he knew he was traumatized. He went to the Healing Warrior
Church for a weekend session. He came back and no one recognized him. He said, he's got the same face and the same body,
but he's a different person.
What happened to this person?
So I was told personally then the chief of police of Austin
wanted all of his employee law enforcement officers
to go in this weekend ceremony.
So I asked the organizer, but these are law enforcement.
You're doing something illegal. He goes, that was a church. I go, I asked the organizer, but these are law enforcement. You're doing something illegal.
He goes, that was a church.
I go, what if you get somebody
who wants to bust you?
And he goes, we're seals, dude.
No one will.
Is it like Nixon said,
if the president does it,
it's not illegal.
So please do it.
It's not illegal.
I don't like that.
Don't mix Nixon.
So what's happening with ex ex-governor Perry, our Department of Energy?
I met with him. He's a strong advocate for using psychedelics and psilocybin for treating PTSD with soldiers.
He's had personal experiences and witnessing what's happened.
So you have conservatives coming in this, you know, Albert Marshall came up with two-eyed seeing,
and I think it's a brilliant concept.
But I would also extend that to conservatives, conservatives and liberals.
We need conservatives.
We need conservatives because conservatives don't dare take the risks that liberals do.
But the envelope of change is pushed forward by risk takers,
which tend to be more liberal. And the conservatives, my family comes, I'm a wheat
farm background. My family has massive, have large wheat farms. I'm a wheat farmer. I got 200 acres
from my family inheritance. But I'm talking to them. They don't want to change protocols
because it's too risky. So they're conservative. They're financially conservative. They're philosophically conservative because it's dangerous to take risks.
Now, those of us that are liberal, we push the envelope of change. We take risks and we fail
left and right. But the few times that we're successful expands our knowledge and technological
base that then it helps the commons.
So we need this balance of conservatives to conserve that which is proven,
and the more liberal thinkers and the minorities.
It's the fringe edge runners.
It's the LGBT community.
It's the people who are different.
And many of us know artistic individuals who are brilliant, you know,
in their own subject area of expertise. But these people are different than conventional people,
but they add this impetus, this push of the envelope on the edge of knowledge to explore,
to take dangerous risks. And some of those risks now we all benefit from today.
And that's why I think the Silicon Valley microdosing movement and the psychedelic
movement in Silicon Valley has been so inspirational in helping our technologies advance.
Well, let's talk about the next bit of what you just said, because you touched on microdosing. I
mean, I think the microdosing is being used across a spectrum from addiction to PTSD, to depression, to anxiety, to end of life. And we're seeing benefits, not 100% benefit
for everybody, but we're seeing more effectiveness than almost any other treatment that we have. So
it's sort of head and shoulders above everything else. In terms of microdosing, this is sort of an
interesting concept because it's not a dose at which you're going to have any psychedelic experience. It's sub-perceptual. You don't really
know you're doing it. But you pioneered something called the Stamets stack, which is a combination
of psilocybin, microdose, lion's mane, and niacin. And you've done a fair bit of research on this.
You have a sort of a community-based research platform that you've
created that helps sort of assess people's use and also the response to use and the cognitive
benefits. And you've basically created a whole company to do the research on this model where
you're actually using microdosing to treat neurodegenerative disorders like Parkinson's and Alzheimer's and seeing objective changes,
which is quite remarkable.
So could you talk a little bit about that work and you know,
the work around microdose.me, which is the website for the microdose study?
Sure. We publish two articles in nature, scientific communications.
So please check out the articles um and and
by the way nature for those of you listening is the premier medical scientific journal it's really
hard to get in it's and it's impressive if you get in there the first article had about 8 000
people report the second article i think is think, was around 11,000.
Now we're over 25,000 people reporting.
Now, being a doctor, this is called the N of 1.
A doctor meets a patient that should not be alive,
and they did something, and they have this unusual N of 1.
Well, this is not N of 1.
This is N of 4,000, right, in different cohorts.
The amazing thing about the data pool is that we had more non-microdosers than microdosers.
So the editors at Nature really liked how well-weighted the data sets were, you know,
equal numbers, about 4,500 non-microdosers and 4,200 microdosers. That always amazed me.
This was sort of announced as a microdosing survey, and yet we had more non-microdosers and 4,200 microdosers. That always amazed me. This was sort of
announced as a microdosing survey, and
yet we had more non-microdosers. I think
there were citizen scientists who wanted to create
baselines. That's what I
would do. I'd say, okay, if this works, I'd create a baseline,
and then I'll become a microdoser.
But nevertheless, we
found tremendous
signal-reducing depression,
anxiety, using standard DAS and PNAS scores.
This is using psychology.
But expectancy became a big part of the criticism.
Now, so expectancy is that you're expecting to get better.
You have a community of people that are doing the same.
You're sharing information.
And so the benefits you're seeing is all related to expectancy or, quote, unquote, a placebo, and it's not real.
Now, I would draw your attention to the latest article that was published in the New England Journal of Medicine for treatment-resistant depression. And in the abstract, and you can look it up at mushroomreferences.com,
it says expectancy was not a factor on predicting the outcome from psilocybin.
Now, that's on a macrodose.
So why would it be a factor on macrodosing?
Okay, we can argue about that later.
But one of the things that was outside of the arena of expectancy is we had a motor skill tap test, a psychomotor test.
How many times you can tap your fingers in 10 seconds.
This is used, validated tests for Alzheimer's, Parkinson's,
traumatic brain injury, TBI, dementia.
And the sad news is, with the exception of TBI,
you get slower and slower with age due to neuroinflammation,
due to Alzheimer's, et cetera, you don't get
better.
You're tapping frequency.
You can play a piano a lot better when you're 22 than when you're 82.
So it's also age-related.
We all start dying from the moment that we were born, right?
So we have this cosine curve of neurogenesis, and then we decline.
So we did the tap test. And we've also now had the microdose study.
We microdose the psilocybin by itself.
We're doing it with chocolate, peanut butter.
We're using a sandwich pack, which I popularized on some blogs.
And the stack is microdosing with psilocybin, niacin, and lion's mint.
So we've got a few hundred people in that category.
And then when we looked at 55-plus-year-olds, because, you know,
you're looking for a signal against a background population.
If you're looking at 22-year-olds, they're at the peak of their neurological health anyhow.
You're not unlikely to see a benefit.
But if 55-plus-year-olds, due to neurodegeneration, age-related,
we found an extraordinary signal that we published in Nature,
where the tapping test frequency went from 48 to 68 in 10 seconds after 30 days of microdosing with this damaged stock.
Now, that's not due to expectancy.
You can't say it's a placebo.
This is a psychomotor benefit, and I explored this.
In seven regions of the brain,
and your neuromuscular system are involved from ideation to execution of the taptoast.
So something is happening through your psychomotor network, and we believe it's related to neurogenesis.
So when we saw this signal, then we started looking at mapkinesis,
and this is where I've been talking about map kinases for almost seven years now. And the recent literature in the past two years has zeroed in on psychedelics and map kinases. So that includes the TRAC-B, the one that BDNF
binds to. So I'm saying all this because we see now a physiological demonstratable benefit.
The value of the P-value of significance is one chance in 250.
P-value of 0.004. That's very good for those who are not scientists.
Yeah, many medicines have been approved at 0.05, right,
which is one chance in 20 of this noise.
So the fact is that we have such a strong demonstratable benefit.
Now what is the cause? So this is where if you get mired in analyses and mechanism of action, don't lose
the forest for the trees. The patient is demonstrating a benefit. You can argue all
day long about your analytics, but the fact of the matter is the patient's benefiting. So let's prove that there's a benefit.
And let's, you know, aspirin, I think, I don't remember the date,
but I think 1974 they figured out how aspirin worked.
Well, aspirin worked way before 1974.
People were using it.
But just because you didn't know the mode of action doesn't mean that you shouldn't use it.
So I say all this to keep this in perspective,
because sometimes scientists go down wormholes and they have wormholes of
expertise and they have these little academic battles about which wormhole is
responsible for activity.
Forget all that.
I mean, all that's informative.
Ultimately you're painting a canvas with different brushes,
but the whole canvas is the result, which is beneficial.
So we created this new company, but we've been in stealth mode.
We're a public benefit company.
We don't do press releases.
You know, there's 500 companies that have come and gone.
Most of them have gone from the psychedelic, you know,
wave that came through two years ago.
So we're now in the middle of designing clinical studies. Parkinson's is one
of ours. There's two other studies that we're looking at right now. And I received my DEA
license, my company and myself. So I passed my background checks.
That's amazing.
Amazing that you passed.
Well, amazing for a very good reason.
I would not give my father psilocybin at the end of his life.
I wouldn't give Alexander Smith, the father of American mycology,
psilocybin at the end of his life.
Both of them asked me to, to journey with them, to trip with them.
And I told them both no, because I am not a therapist. I've
seen what's happened with psilocybin. You need to have a therapeutic support to maximize benefits.
For the 30% of the people who do not have a positive experience with therapy, you can make
that into a beneficial experience that they've been learning, learned from. So the temporary
negative experience could have long-lasting beneficial effects
with proper therapeutic support.
I just met somebody who did seven grams of slossy cuvences.
She cried the entire time.
She cried the entire time.
And then I asked her, was that experience beneficial?
She goes, oh, yeah.
It was a cathartic for her. She was able to resolve a lot of trauma.
And so if you call the experience positive, no, it was not. It was a negative experience,
but it was so cathartic for her. Subsequently, she felt that she'd come to a resolution.
This is what's needed. This is why high doses of psilocybin. We need clinical support therapeutically. But it's $4,000 to $5,000 in Oregon now to have a session.
That's out of the reach of most people. Microdosing
is within the reach of everyone. It can
be done very inexpensively. You don't need to have the
in-clinic support, the staff. You can do
things by an app, by a phone call by zoom you can build a
community of people did you know there's a community of people called mothers for microdosing
you know actually paul do you know in terms of the microdosing is it having the same effects
on not just the neurodegenerative diseases, but on depression, anxiety, trauma?
Are you seeing changes with those things that are more subtle?
Yes.
We see that.
Our first study in nature was demographics.
Why you microdose, you know, your income, your race, you know, your sexual preferences, et cetera. The second study was more looking at the consequences of microdosing
and the consequences we're seeing specifically in reduction
in the metrics for depression and anxiety, improvement of mood, et cetera.
So the exciting thing about the microdosing,
the tap test is think of you're a guitar player teaching a young student.
Think of you're a grateful dead guitar player.
Well, I do have a, I do have a guitar that I got for my birthday.
That's a Bob Weir signed guitar. So Matt might be soon.
It says, Hey now, Dr. Mark. I'm like, all right, I'll take it.
But if you have, you know, if you're a coder, right, and you need to get things done,
or you're typing your new book, your memoirs, we slow down in age. So having the psychomotor
benefit from the Stamets stack, if we can prove this clinically, which I think we have such a
strong signal, it's just hard to explain it away. I mean, there's one logical sequence of thinking here that is neurologically beneficial,
more so than psilocybin by itself.
Psilocybin by itself in the study had no effect on improvement of the psychomotor skills,
nor did the non-microducers who took nothing.
They were in the same level of no improvement, but the stamina stackers went like this.
And is this something you take every day, Paul?
Is this something that's designed to be taken in a –
We're in a new territory.
There's two protocols, the Jim Fadiman protocol where you microdose one day, two days off.
The protocol based on my cellular research, and this is basically running thousands of cultures over
many, many years, is three to four days on and then weekends off or two to three days off.
The idea is you want to wash your receptors, and Jim and I are on the same page with this.
You want to make it so your endogenous system recovers, becomes resensitized.
Psilocybin only has a half-life of 1.8 hours. It's phenomenal.
So it clears out of your system in less than 1,000, I think, in 28 hours. So it's very
quickly metabolized. Now, its latency or occupancy period is longer. So we want to get past the
occupancy so the receptor is then clear. So basically, you don't take it every day,
you take it intermittently. And we don't know if it's two days on three days on three days off
personal practice but those of you who consume vitamins your daily vitamins do you really take
them every day i know i forget sometimes are doing pulse vitamin therapy anyhow right
i didn't take my vitamins again and And you take them the next day.
So, you know, I think there's intermittent use.
But in the larger picture and scheme of things,
you are taking it several times a week, okay?
It's just that cadence may be interrupted
unless you have medical support
where people are actually giving you the pills.
So as we wrap up, I'd love you to sort of project out a couple of years, two, three,
five years.
Where do you see us all being with this?
Do you see it being legalized everywhere?
Do you see it being used as part of psychiatry, general medical practice?
How do we get from where we are now to where we will be in five years?
In five years, I think it'll be legalized.
I think microdosing will replace SSRIs.
I think we'll have the universality of use of a paradigm-shifting medicine
that will cost pennies, if not just a few dollars.
I think it's a game-changer for our society.
I think it could help us resolve many of the not only political strife that we face,
but I believe that this is a peace molecule.
I think if we reduce war, it would be more collaborative.
People will start working as networks of communities
that create guilds of cooperators that are trying to help each other.
I think we have the opportunity of interrupting the inflammation cycles.
And inflammation is the root of so many of these diseases that express themselves.
The other thing we haven't talked about is that psilocybin and the stack stimulates interleukin-10s and interleukin-1RAs.
These are anti-inflammatory cytokines while stimulating neurons to grow out.
So we have human neurons that are growing out,
and we can see the neurons enhanced in their growth with the stacking
versus psilocybin by itself or lion's mane by itself.
So I think there's a way of regeneration of your nervous system,
overcoming many neuropathies, and also overcoming inflammation.
I think the too-good-to-be-true adage, there are exceptions to rules.
Yeah, it might be.
And it's safe.
Now, how we articulate this, how we standardize it, how we deliver it,
I believe that self-sabotage should be available to anyone who needs it at no cost
or at an affordable cost.
The people who can't afford it should subsidize by paying commercial companies
sufficient money that they can be philanthropic to be able to give it away for free.
I don't think those two systems are incompatible.
That is, you know, the basis of Micromedica as a public benefit corporation.
We want everyone to heal the rising tide that lifts all boats.
There'll be more affluence, be better for everyone if these medicines get out,
provided we have the guardrails and we need government controls.
So what's happening now is so many politicians,
I hate to use the word bureaucrats because it's pejorative,
but I'm dealing with a lot of government employees who are risk adverse.
They don't want to make a decision that will ruin their career,
so it's easier to say no
than yes. But when you go to the ballot boxes and you have initiatives, like in Washington, D.C.,
70% of Washingtonians in Washington, D.C. voted for the decriminalization of psilocybin, 70%.
So I think the ballot measures are going to drive the government officials to then implement these medicines to be available because their jobs won't be on the line.
They're just following the new law.
And that's why we didn't get the politicians' neck out of the noose, so to speak.
So many of them are worried that their decision could be, you know, destroy their career should there be something wrong with that decision in
the future. That's a powerful vision. You know, doing what I do, I always, you know, sort of
have a deep understanding of the role of food in our health and particularly, you know, the problem
of obesity in our society where, you know, 75% are overweight and 93% are metabolic and healthy.
And a lot of it's because of the food we're eating. And a lot of it's very addictive. And so when you talk about psilocybin being a treatment for addiction or nicotine or alcohol,
I'm like, wow, maybe I wonder if it would help us deal with the obesity epidemic.
Well, I think so.
It's a crazy thought, but it's something that just had to sort of say, because I think,
you know, as I see people struggle with food, a lot of it is because of the hyper addictive and hyper palatable nature of the food they were eating.
And it's not their fault.
And one of the questions you had posed in the description here before we got online is what is the day in Paul Stamos look like?
Yeah.
What does it look like?
Let's end with that.
That's great.
It's funny that you say this. So, okay, I am a very active dreamer.
I love dreams.
My partner is amazed that I remember so many dreams.
I really love flying dreams, and flying dreams are my favorite.
I started as a kid in the storms of the windbreaker opening up in the wind.
I got very good,
very agile flying
in my dreams.
And so I fly a lot in my dreams.
And I wake up
and when I'm in bed,
I just sort of process
everything.
I like to wake up to first recognize
where I am.
Because I'm in this hotel.
Where am I?
So that's it. And then I
am a coffee drinker. I think
it's one of the best herbs
ever invented. I love coffee.
And then remarkably,
and this is true,
I do 100 push-ups a day.
I broke
the high school push-up record when I was 14.
I've been doing this all my life with my twin brother.
And I alert everyone to this.
And I do take two days off.
Sometimes I'm traveling.
But I'm very, very consistent on this.
And for young people, it's so important, the structure that you build when you're a younger person, you know, from the ages of, you know, from when you're born to 40 years of age, that structure carries through. And so
my core is really, really strong. But you can look this up. A Harvard Medical School survey
found that with men, 40 push-ups per day, you have over a 90 or 95% reduction in heart attack.
Yeah, heart attacks, yeah.
I mean, it's incredible.
It's the best medicine out there for treating heart attacks or cardiac arrest is push-ups, right?
And by the way, you don't have to do a full push-up all the way down your hyperextended elbows.
You want to do what I call a compression push-up. You want to tighten your belly, go down
two-thirds, three-quarters,
but you don't have to touch your nose
on the floor, which I had to do in high school.
But then I
write, and
I'm also a victim of Google
Scholar alerts, so I get so many new
articles every day that I have to
peruse through. And I write
and I do my work in Zooms, whatever the case,
about two or three in the afternoon, and then I go on an epic bike ride.
And I smoke some marijuana and I go on these epic bike rides
and I get free-form thinking.
I get adrenaline.
I'm just a little bit, you know, high.
And my best thoughts come from there.
I stop all the time, and I'll write down three or four words or a half a sentence in my notes on my iPhone to capture that because it's fleeting, right?
These good things, they're fleeting.
And then I untangle them, and the next morning I look at it going, well, that was a dumb idea or that was a really good idea so i could have assembled uh thought
streams both from dreaming from you know push-ups in the morning which gives me an adrenaline rush
and then i do my linear writing and then in the afternoon you know i go on this epic bike ride
and i usually listen to neil young the Grateful Dead on my iPod.
There you go.
But I really enjoy exercise and getting outside of your brain and let your body do the talking.
And often the body is informing the brain of things that it needs to know because you can finally shut yourself up, right?
Well, I think that's a great routine.
I think it's going to keep you going for a long time. And I think we have a lot more work to do, Paul. So
we got to get this all over the finish line and help millions of people, billions of people
potentially deal with the stresses and traumas of life and deal with the unbearable burden of
mental illness. And who knows what else we're going to find out about how they affect us.
You mentioned the immune system. You mentioned the way they affect brain diseases.
So I think we're just kind of beginning to understand the power of mushrooms and fungi
for human health.
So thanks for all the work you've done for decades and decades and decades.
Now you're in the spotlight, but I'm sure it was lonely for many, many years.
And thank God you stayed with it.
Well, I just want to close by saying, let's all be adults about this. These are serious medicines.
Please consult a qualified medical practitioner. Please obey the laws, you know, even though you
don't agree with them, you don't agree with them, go to a place where it is legal. So I am an
advocacy for abiding by the law. I'm also an advocate that what you do inside your head and inside your own home,
you know, I'm a libertarian in the sense the government has no right to interfere
with what your own consciousness or in your own home.
As long as you're not harming others, I think personal practices need to be protected.
And I will also say the use of soul-ocybin mushrooms is spiritual by many of us.
It's becoming a new religion, but not in the context of the conventional religions.
It's the freedom of consciousness religion, where you have the freedom of choice.
And I think the psilocybin mushrooms are sacraments.
They're medicines for the soul. They're medicines sacraments. They're medicines for the soul,
they're medicines for your body, they're medicines for your psyche. So I think they
have a huge potential. But everyone, please be very careful. If you see somebody going off the
guardrails, don't ostracize them. Reach your arm, you know, in companionship and friendship,
and try to bring them back. Because I think this unanimity of opinion of indigenous wisdom, modern technology,
conservatives and liberals coming together, we're all in this together.
And we all have skill sets that we need from each other.
And those skill sets are far more important than the purported differences that separate us. I think
there's a unanimity of being that we share one giant consciousness. Well, thank you, Paul. Thank
you for decades of tireless work. I can't thank you enough. And everybody listening, if you want
to learn more, go to Paul's website, paulstamets.com. You can watch his TED Talks. You can learn about
his research. You can connect into the huge database. You don't just listen to what we're saying.
Do the research yourself.
Go to mushroomreferences.com.
There's just so much available on his website.
So check it out.
And Paul, thank you.
And I'll see you again around the bend,
maybe the next TED show
when they resurrect again from the dead.
All right.
Thank you.
Thank you.
All right, buddy.
Okay.
And if you love this podcast, please share with your friends and family on social media, leave a comments,
have psilocybin or other mushrooms helped you in your life. We'd love to learn.
And we'll see you next week on the doctor's pharmacy.
Hey everybody, it's Dr. Hyman. Thanks for tuning into The Doctor's Pharmacy. I hope you're loving
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