The Dylan Gemelli Podcast - Episode #136 Featuring Dr. Dave Rabin Part 2! Everyone's FAVORITE NEUROSCIENTIST! "A Simple Guide to Being Alive"

Episode Date: June 20, 2026

Episode #136 Featuring Dr. Dave Rabin Part 2!  Everyone's FAVORITE NEUROSCIENTIST!  "A Simple Guide to Being Alive"   It is well known my love and affinity for Dr. Dave Rabin.  He is a mentor to m...e and is the reason that I came to not just study neuroscience, but taught me about the scientific and HUMAN side of how imperative our nervous system and minds are to obtain total health alignment.  He has enabled me to progress to peak levels on my journey to teaching everyone about the mind, body and God connection.  So it goes without saying that this interview and having a chance to help him promote his life's work with his new book release "A Simple Guide to Being Alive" meant the world to me!  I always term Dave as "everyone's favorite neuroscientist" but he is a true gift from God to everyone for not just his work and contributions to humanity but his genuine care and personality that resonates in every room he steps into.  This interview meant the world to me and you will find that his words and wisdom will change your life for the better, as he does every time he speaks and teaches!     Our interview covers all the bases of Dr. Dave's new book which is a flat out masterpiece!  We waste no time going right into my favorite topic of the mind and body connection which carries us into a discussion of the role of trauma and emotional impact.  Dave provides a detailed master class on the yin and yang of emotional expression and balance.  My favorite part of this interview is what comes next:  the science of spirituality and gratitude.  The information Dave gives on this topic, which is so near and dear to my heart, brings an extreme level of positive energy which fills the studio but will resonate through the recording as you listen as well!  We spend a great deal of time discussing time, presence and the experience of life moving into the driving force behind creating the Apollo Neuro and the goal of changing lives Dave carries day in and day out!  We then shift to the most detailed discussion you will find on psychedelics.  If you want to learn about ALL aspects of psychedelic therapy, how to use them, the caution and proper use, the benefits, the reason Dave believes in them, the care in which needs to be taken and every other aspect of them, Dave is the most qualified person on the planet to do so!  Dave gives a college course type lecture, except on a higher level!  We conclude with a final discussion on the new book and the impact Dave hopes it provides!     You can easily see and hear throughout this interview why Dave is so widely respected and beloved, from his calm yet charismatic delivery, to his wise words and insight.  He is a one of a kind person and I am so thankful to call him a brother, which I consider him always!  DO NOT MISS THIS EPISODE!     Get Dave's New book, "A Simple Guide to Being Alive": https://apolloneuro.com/pages/a-simple-guide-to-being-alive?srsltid=AfmBOooUZ5YIN6PZTDoWHFW-yltLbOUOQ9quXomT8mTcO_S26YkA-nKr     Follow Dave on instagram:  https://www.instagram.com/drdavidrabin/?hl=en       Today's episode is sponsored by APOLL NEURO!    Get the Apollo Neuro for $99 OFF!! USE CODE GEMELLI to save https://apolloneuro.com/gemelli       _______________________________________________________________________________ The Dylan Gemelli NAD optimization protocol powered by JINFINITI:     Save 10% with code DYLAN   https://www.jinfiniti.com/dylan-gemelli-protocol/?_ef_transaction_id=&oid=4&affid=131           To PURCHASE MITOPURE visit Dylan's landing page and use code DYLAN to save 20% OFF!! https://shop.timeline.com/DYLAN           Qualia Life Supplements:  Save 50% off PLUS AND ADDITIONAL 15% off with my code DYLAN   www.qualialife.com/dylan           TRULY Increase Your NAD LEVELS with WONDERFEEL NMN: https://getwonderfeel.com/?utm_source=DylanGemelli&utm_medium=podcast           MESCREEN: The world's first and only at home mitochondrial efficiency test Save $100 with CODE   DYLAN   https://mescreen.com/cart/47561239626013:1?discount=&ref=DYLAN         HIRE DYLAN ON THE MINNECT APP HERE: expert.minnect.com/@DylanGemelli       Follow Dylan on Instagram, Facebook, Twitter and Tiktok @dylangemelli and PLEASE SUBSCRIBE and leave reviews!!     MAKE SURE TO GO TO DYLAN'S YOUTUBE CHANNEL for MORE video content!!    https://www.youtube.com/@DylanGemelliBiohacking   Email Dylan for booking, collaborations and/or to apply for the Dylan Gemelli Podcast DylanGemelli@gmail.com   Visit Dylan's Homepage https://dylangemelli.com

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Starting point is 00:00:16 Today's episode is sponsored by Apollo Neuro. Apollo is the leading doctor recommended wearable technology. Apollo's award-winning smart vibes AI works effortlessly behind the scenes, automatically integrating into your life to deliver gentle, personalized vibrations that activate your vagus nerve, helping you fall asleep faster, stay asleep longer, and wake up balanced, focused, and ready each day. Not only that, but the Apollo Neuro is the first and only wearable that improves your HRV. Apollo is effortless. Simply wear it throughout the day and night and let it do the work
Starting point is 00:00:52 for you. It's safe for anyone and everyone with no side effects and is the only wearable that can be worn anywhere on your body. Optimal health requires both the mind and body to be in line and Apollo is the key to establishing that connection. Check the description below to save $90 with my special discount. Take control over your health today with Apollo Neuro. All right, everybody, welcome back to the Dillinger Melly podcast. Most excited I've been on a show to date. And I'll tell you why. If you follow me, didn't you know, I talk about my guest device, the Apollo
Starting point is 00:01:26 Nero all the time. But it's more so about him himself, everything about him, everything since I met him, everything that we've talked about together that you've taught me personally, the time we've got to spend together. Not enough for me, but a good amount. More to come. Yeah, it's 100%. That's a damn right. It's everybody's favorite neuroscientist. He's the co-founder of the Apollo neuro, which is what you're well known for. But what I'm most excited to talk about you today is the new book that is going to be coming out soon. We're going to give you some insight on that and the topics that are covered. There's some stuff in there that it just excites me to no end. And it's called a simple guide to being alive. But I mean, it goes without saying the impact. The impact. that you have, the things that you do and the heart that you carry is why I love you and think of
Starting point is 00:02:20 you as family. And it's just, it's so good to be back with you. And this is part two with my guest, Dr. Dave Rabin. Thanks so much for having me, Dylan. It's a pleasure to be here with you, as always. What does it mean to you when you put this together a simple guide to being alive? Because to me, it sounds like a handbook of life. I think that as a doctor, we often get patients coming to us. us all the time confused about how to live a good life, how to live a long life, how to just struggling to figure out how to enjoy life and make enough money and do all the things that we feel like we're supposed to be doing. And when I went to medical school and I, you know, I've spent more time in school than most humans, right, I've been in school for like 12 years post college in training.
Starting point is 00:03:05 So it's a lot of time. And I realized myself, you know, coming through the end of my training, that there were still a lot of gaps. And I learned how to treat people with severe mental illness. I learned so much about how to help people heal and recover. But I also realized that for a lot of people, many of the techniques we were taught to use still weren't working.
Starting point is 00:03:29 Like they weren't making a dent and people were still symptomatic for life, on medications for life, having a lot of side effects for medications. And we were taught, I think one thing that was really astounding to me is that we were taught not to use the C word for mental illness, right? The word cure.
Starting point is 00:03:50 Like all other practices in medicine are able to use the word cure for different things. We're not taught to use that word. Really? Because our treatments don't cure people. Our treatments stabilize people. And they stabilize people for life, but people are still sick. And so in part, that's why we've seen when you look at the statistics for mental illness around the world, but especially in the U.S. and the Western world, mental illness rates
Starting point is 00:04:16 have skyrocketed over the last 10 years, addiction rates have skyrocketed over the last 10 years, and they're not getting better. They're getting much worse every year, which makes me think, and many of my colleagues think, well, maybe we need to be asking different questions about how we're approaching this, right? Maybe there are other ways to approach mental illness, not from, let's just stabilize somebody, but let's get to the root cause. So when I started to dive into the root cause, I realized that whether you look at Western medicine and what we were seeing in the clinic in our patients or when I started to look at where Western medicine had gaps, like in the Eastern and tribal medicine approaches around breathwork, meditation, yoga, mindfulness, plant
Starting point is 00:05:03 medicine, and psychedelic medicine, I realized that these are all different. disciplines that are approaching life from different angles, but through the different lenses, right? But we're looking at the same thing. When you, well, taking a step back, when you look at trying to solve these really complex problems of mental illness that are epidemic worldwide now, and you look at trying to solve those problems from just a Western lens or just an Eastern or tribal lens, it seems really complicated. People are confused. People don't get better. but when you actually look at the field taking like a 30,000 foot view and trying to figure out, well, what do these different disciplines have in common?
Starting point is 00:05:45 What is Western medicine in common with Eastern and tribal medicine? And how can they all come together? You start to actually be able to put the puzzle pieces together into the solution and solve the puzzle because you have all the pieces. So I started to look outside the box and study other traditions in the way they that were much older than West. medicine. And long story short, I just realized that when you look at the whole view of life and mental illness and ease and disease and you try to, and you look at it from the three
Starting point is 00:06:19 perspectives together, Eastern, Western and tribal medicine with all the pieces, the solutions are actually a lot more simple than we thought. And so seeing that we weren't getting taught this in medical school and none of my medical colleagues and practitioners that I worked with were getting taught this stuff. I just realized, you know, I need to write this book. Like, I need to put all these pieces together for people so that we can have a simple guide that actually pulls from all these different disciplines and gives people all the pieces they need to solve this puzzle on their own, helping kind of reframe this as actually as simple as it really is, which is really getting back to childhood wonder and joy, innocence, play, imagination, intuition, like spirituality, all the good
Starting point is 00:07:04 stuff that has been talked about for thousands of years by Eastern and tribal cultures, we're now finally proving in Western medicine and Western science are real. And not only are they real, they change our biology, they extend our longevity, they increase our heart rate variability, right? They do all the things that people are injecting stem cells and paying hundreds of thousands of dollars for therapies for. And if you could get the same benefits with reembracing childhood wonder and play for free, people should probably know that. So that's kind of, of the thesis of the book. I spent so much time only focusing on fitness, nutrition, and I never understood how important and how dominating the mind is over that, over everything.
Starting point is 00:07:49 And what I'm coming to find is the more deeper that I dig and the more intellectual people that I talk to, even the guys that, like, what I'm going to do now that I haven't really gotten into you with, he's a chiropractor, but he's doing like nervous system work and reset. and things that go in deep because without doing that, all these other things don't work. Like the nervous system has to be in a state that's receptive
Starting point is 00:08:13 to what we're offering it. So the alignment's off. And if the alignment's off, it seems to me, now you tell me, because I do believe in the mind-body connection and I don't want to say that one is more important than the other,
Starting point is 00:08:25 but I swear to you, the more I look at it, and I say this because now it's just progressed month after month after month, that the mind is the more dominant part of this, that it really is the key to getting full health alignment. I don't think that if you're not there, you're ever going to be fully aligned,
Starting point is 00:08:44 no matter what you do, and it's too dominant over the other aspects. You tell me what you think. I mean, it's, so, yes, it is, the mind is, is dominant, right? Because the mind is where our ego lives. And when we're trained into a state, of self-protection because we believe the world around us is unsafe for any reason, then the grip of the mind takes hold and puts our bodies into a state where we resist change
Starting point is 00:09:18 and learning. And so this is actually what I call in the book Dr. Dave's mindblowers, which are these very simple concepts that have been taught incorrectly in modern education. by modern education, I mean for the last couple hundred years, that we still teach these incorrectly. Like, for instance, we teach that the mind and the body are disconnected, but we know, and separate, but we know definitively that if you are mentally and emotionally ill for an extended period of time and you don't do anything about it, you do become physically ill. Oh, yeah. We know that stress increases your heart rate and your blood pressure and your breath rate. And we know that when you slow your breath rate intentionally by choice, your heart rate comes down and, and you're
Starting point is 00:10:02 your thoughts slow down and you start to feel better within 90 to 120 seconds. So there's very clearly a mind-body, an intimate, irrevocable connection, right? And if we deny that at the core, then we lose out on the opportunity to engage that relationship and take the wheel, right? We let the environment steer what, like, dictate what happens to us rather than us saying, oh, well, I actually have a say in the outcome because I can change my mind. Yeah. Right.
Starting point is 00:10:36 Like, I have the power to change my mind. That is incredible power. It's like potentially unlimited power when you realize that the way we choose words, for instance, actually dictates our reality because our words applied meaning to our existence, right? And so, so that's a, so that's like a core piece is that, you know, like going back to what you're saying, that the mind and the body are connected so that if we are taught, for instance, that the world around us is unsafe growing up because we're exposed to extreme
Starting point is 00:11:14 hardship, lack of support from our parents or our role models when we're growing up and facing challenges, people who tell us many times, like we've all experienced, like, what's wrong with you that you did that thing? And what's wrong with you let that happen to you? And when you hear that from a role model, it all of a sudden makes us think that we can't trust ourselves to keep ourselves safe. And that's the core of trauma. It's actually like adopting a victim mindset. Like that's a, it's like a broken bone. It's a fractured self-trust. If somebody I respect tells me that I did something wrong, that I couldn't keep myself safe and that I caused a certain problem and I'm at fault, then now, rather than overcoming the challenge I just had with support, I feel guilt
Starting point is 00:11:59 and shame around that situation, right? And then that fractures my trust in myself, my ability to keep myself safe. So when that happens psychologically, the biological reflection of that is my amygdala, this fear center in my brain that goes back to ancient, we call the reptilian brain, right? It goes back to ancient reptiles. That's there to protect us from threat and keep us alive, starts to fire off all the time because it thinks that we are always under threat. And when we're under threat, we can't let the body lead. We can't let our intuition lead because we don't trust our intuition anymore. And coming back to our bodies and coming back to our intuition, which generally knows what's right and what's true, where our minds are often doubting what's right and what's true
Starting point is 00:12:45 and questioning and judging, which is useful in many circumstances, but it often should not lead. The mind is meant to follow the body and intuition should lead. And that's something. that's also very, very much not taught well. When we learn to not trust our bodies, then the fear, control of the mind and the amygdala leads, and then that takes such a firm grip and hold on us that we end up effectively doubting every single experience we have and not being able to be present.
Starting point is 00:13:19 So to your point, yeah, in modern day, the grip of the mind has been trained to, in this ego-dominant state, to protect us. It's not trying to hurt us, though, right? That's the thing that I think a lot of people don't understand is like it's like our minds are not trying to hurt us. They're not trying to make our lives hard. They're just trying to protect us because they perceive that there is danger, even though there isn't actually danger. And so in the book, I really helped break this down from an evolutionary perspective where people can understand this part of the brain, the amygdala,
Starting point is 00:13:55 evolved not just in us, but in all animals. dating back to ancient reptiles to really protect us from four things. Lack of air and in order of what will kill us first, right? And fastest lack of air, lack of physical safety and shelter, lack of water and lack of food. Those are the four things that will kill us faster than anything else. Then the other two are lack of sleep and lack of social connection to our community. So when, but when those first four issues are checked off,
Starting point is 00:14:26 you can say, I have all these things, right? I have physical safety, I have air, I have water, I have food, then when we run that checklist, we can actually shut down the amygdala. We can say, these boxes are checked, I can take a deep breath right now and come back into my body knowing my body's safe.
Starting point is 00:14:44 And then you reset. And it's just that simple. But again, if we don't learn how to do that, those skills just become elusive to us. Right. We forget how to come back to the body. So a couple of thoughts that I had there where you were talking. So if you look at it from this point of view, if you get injured and you recover and you get over it, let's just say you get a decently bad injury six months, right?
Starting point is 00:15:11 But if you get verbally injured, that can last a lifetime. And I'm correlating this in the difference between mind and body and why I feel like the mind is more dominant. Then think about this. If I'm running a marathon or a race or something that's so just difficult, my mind. mind can do one of two things. You can't do this. Stop or you can do this, run, control everything that we're able to do. And that's part of the reason why I'm understanding, okay, yes, I'm not saying that, of course, we want to address the health side of the fitness and the nutrition, obviously. That goes without saying. But you're not going to be able to do it.
Starting point is 00:15:48 You're just not. If this isn't done first, now vice versa, if your mind's right, you can always go and do the other stuff. Yeah. You can. Doesn't mean you're going to, you can. Right. It's the other way you just can't. Right. It's impossible. Yeah. So it's just dawned on me right now. Hallelujah. Yeah. Yeah. It's all about alignment. Right. It's about harmony. It's about the mind and the body working together where they're both listening. There's a clear like as the as the Amazonian people talk about the indigenous people and and even Eastern traditions, they talk about clear energy flow back and forth. Right. So it's about it's about it's about clear lines of communication and alignment and harmony.
Starting point is 00:16:31 So not a battle, not a fight between this and this. It's clear communication flow between this and this, between mind and heart, mind and body. And when those channels are open, then when the body sends signals to the mind, the mind can understand them without judging them first. It can just listen. And when the mind listens to those signals without judgment, and it can actually understand what they are by feeling them rather than by shutting them down before feeling them.
Starting point is 00:17:01 If we don't feel feelings, which are just signals they're not good or bad, then those feelings get stuck in the body and then they can't get out and they just keep knocking at the mind being like, hey, I need you to feel me. I need you to feel me. And when you don't feel them, they're like children. They just knock louder. They scream louder like, I need you to feel me. I'm trying to send a message to you, like answer the damn phone.
Starting point is 00:17:25 right and it just keep calling yeah and we call that anxiety right so like that is what causes restness that's what causes chronic anxiety and chronic stress is not it's paying attention to things we can't that are outside of our control it's also dissonance between mind and body not harmony harmony harmony means signal of emotion comes in and we don't shut it down or resist it because we think we're not supposed to feel it because it's uncomfortable or because we were talking about cold we're not supposed to feel it. We just feel it for what it is. And guess what? It passes by in 90 to 120 seconds and then you can take the message that you was supposed to be sending to us, understand what that is, and learn from it. And feeling goes away and you move on to the next thing.
Starting point is 00:18:11 Right. But if we resist that and don't allow the feeling to happen, then we're creating dissonance between the mind and the body. And it's effectively like an orchestra playing out of tune and out of time. It sounds horrible and it feels horrible. And so, so that, so that is kind of the metaphor, best metaphor that I found for like how to think about what we're talking about, which is it's, it's alignment, it's balance, it's being in tune and in time together like an orchestra, not out of tune because out of tune sounds horrible. Let me ask you a question then. And this is like a personal question about myself. I'm going to correlate this with what you're saying. So in my heart like I have this amount of love that's like abounding.
Starting point is 00:18:58 Like just full of compassion and full of care and sometimes just maybe even too soft to a point for for others. But I go through these points in time where it's there, but I can't let it out. And I don't know why. It's not like I'm sitting here going, Dylan, don't let it out, you know, like, but something in my head is not allowing it. So my question is to correlate with what you're asking because I feel like it falls into line there. What would one, because I'm sure there's plenty of people to go through the same thing.
Starting point is 00:19:30 Yeah. And I like to victimize myself here to people and tell people how the problems I have. But what we share your vulnerability? Well, yeah, man shit. I've got a lot of it. So what causes that? Like, what is the underlying issue there? Is it different for everybody or is it something that happened?
Starting point is 00:19:47 I mean, think about it like yin and yang, right? Like yin is cool, feminine, receptive, sensitive. Yang is hot, masculine, active, doing. And in the yin yang, those are constantly in balance with each other. So when we're taught growing up as young men, and I'm sure you experienced this the way I experienced it, which is when we express sensitivity as young men, what was the first thing as a young man that you were told. Well, it's weak. Exactly. So you internalize that. I internalize that. Every single young man in the world that grows up in Western, or at least in Western culture, internalizes this
Starting point is 00:20:34 concept that being sensitive, which is really just having a balanced Yin Yang, because the Yin Yang is about balance. It's not about, it exists in all of us, right? There's masculine and feminine energy in all of us. Eastern tradition around them. It's not like, because we're born men, we're just Yang. No, we are physically male, but we have yin and yang in us, just like women have yin and yang in them. And so the energies balance each other. So if we're taught expressing sensitivity is weak or not okay, then we shut it down. So when we start to feel that sensitivity come up, and we start to feel those powerful emotions in our bodies and our hearts, at any time, even when it normally would be safe to express them.
Starting point is 00:21:19 There's a part of us that has been trained now for decades. It says, it's not okay to express that. You're a man, be a man. Right? Don't show that weakness, but it's not a weakness. Right. And so do you want to necessarily start shedding tears in the middle of a board meeting? No.
Starting point is 00:21:38 And there are certain situations where it's totally okay to say, you know, I'm feeling really sensitive right now, but this isn't the right time. time. But to come back to it later, right, to make time, to come back to it later and restore the balance because maybe in that board meeting, you need more yang. Maybe when you come back after the board meeting and you're chilling in your home with your family or by yourself, with your pets, or at the beach, you can bring that yin out again. Right. Right. And so it's all about just this dynamic, understanding this dynamic balance and then balancing it. Right. And if we don't acknowledge
Starting point is 00:22:11 that none of it is weak, it's actually weak to shut it down. Right. It's the reject, of the balance is weakness. And that's what creates weakness because when we reject the balance, if we say, like, my sensitive parts are weak, I won't allow them to come out ever, right? Then those sensitive parts start to try to take over the system because they're like, why are you ignoring me? I'm part of you, right? And then they start to become manipulative and overbearing and start to like try to control and, you know, take over the situation in different ways. because they're not allowed to express themselves. Right.
Starting point is 00:22:50 And all of our parts need to express themselves and feel safe within the hole. So that's actually a big part of why we developed Apollo, because when we talk about this stuff, it's really important to talk about, but we call that top-down learning. This is another thing that's really poorly taught that I talk about at the beginning of the book is that there are two ways we learn, right? There's people listening to this podcast and reading the book and reading the books we're learning in school and all that.
Starting point is 00:23:15 And that's top-down learning. cognitive brain to body. Understanding through the brain, we try to pass that down to the body through practice. Then there's the other kind of learning that is equally important, if not speaking of balance, right, which is body first learning, bottom up experiential learning, watching somebody do something and then trying to imitate it, feeling a feeling and then trying to recreate that feeling based on feeling, not based on understanding. Have you ever tried to ride a bike by reading an instruction manual?
Starting point is 00:23:46 Negative, right? How hard would that be? It would be it so hard. Or to play any sport by reading an instruction manual, like, we just don't do that. Not much of an instruction manual guy. Exactly. But you're still learning. Right. And you're mastering because your body's leading the learning in those cases. And so we learn everything by top down and bottom up together. I see. That's how we maximize learning. That's very poorly taught. But we're missing 50% when we only try to learn by understanding and not from the body. So Apollo is the bottom up tool that's like that teaches the body how to feel safe with Yin and Yang at the same time, how to feel safe being sensitive, how to feel safe, being
Starting point is 00:24:29 dominant, how to feel safe in all these different situations where it's appropriate, right? And then how to feel safe and not weak expressing ourselves and expressing and expressing and feeling our emotions. And then the book is the top down, which is the explanation of how it all works, but we need both. And so the body always needs its own instructions. And so it's really, when we think about learning in general, aside from like Apollo in the book, just learning in general, it's really about balance similar to what we're talking about with feeling. And so that's why because of what we're taught growing up as young men in this culture, that's effectively why we shut a lot of that stuff down and why it comes out in all these weird ways as we get older.
Starting point is 00:25:13 man i'll tell you what i don't know what part of yin or yang i'm in with this new vibe you put on but it feels pretty solid man right i feel pretty damn good yeah because i was a little tired when i got here but i don't feel like that anymore man i this nice yeah so we're both rocking the conference vibe right now which has a brand new vibe we just put out which is like energizing social focus flow and you know just like you know like i've been i've been like staying up like three nights a week all night you know because I have 16-month-olds at home. And so I can't write the book during the day, then finish because I don't have any quiet time,
Starting point is 00:25:47 and it requires all of my focus to do this kind of work. And then I'm running a company during the day and seeing patience and all that. And so I have to do the book stuff at night. And so I'm super sleep-deprived, flew here today to see you and do this podcast. And so, you know, we just got on the same vibe, and now we're rocking.
Starting point is 00:26:05 It feels good, man. I'm going to start doing this every day. I told you, like, I'm the most same regimented guy. So I do the same ones every single day, but I think this is going to be super helpful throughout the week. And that's what I love that you do is the innovation coming out with new ones. And we talk about ideas and everything. But there's so many different things that you can trigger within a system to get it going in a different direction.
Starting point is 00:26:27 Right. I would have never dreamed of thinking because in my mind, it was like, man, this is when I first got learning about it, it's amazing. But I never really thought about, well, you could go 20 different routes, now 30 different routes and just keep going and going and going. Right. How do you keep coming up with these ideas and how difficult is it to create a different feel for what you're trying to like push through into a body? Yeah, it's a good question. I mean, I think what if I told you that one molecule will help keep your body system cleansed, supported immune health and cellular protection all at once? I'm talking about glutafione, aka the body's master antioxidant. It exists inside nearly every cell, helping to protect DNA, proteins, and
Starting point is 00:27:08 cell membranes from oxidative stress, as well as playing a major role in liver cleansing, mitochondrial energy production, and immune balance. Unfortunately, pollution, toxins, and stress can rapidly deplete glutathione levels, and as we age, glutathione production decreases as well. And many traditional glutathione supplements do not absorb well, making it extremely difficult to raise intracellular levels where glutathione actually works. And that's why I use glutareil, the multi-patented topical glutathione developed by the amazing Dr. Niam Patel. Instead of relying on digestion, gluterill absorbs through the skin, helping provide a convenient and consistent way to support the body's most important antioxidant system. So use my link in the description and code Dillon to save 15% off today.
Starting point is 00:27:52 So there are infinite states and situations that knock us out off balance. Yeah. Right? So it's not, so there are infinite situations that we can create vibes for. The vibrations that come out of Apollo are songs for your body. They're literal music. It's sound waves that we discovered in the University of Pittsburgh. That is a sound wave algorithm that my team and I discovered.
Starting point is 00:28:17 And we talk about the story in the book for the first time, really in depth. And it was from studying music and the effects of music on the nervous system. And soothing touch effect on the nervous system. And MDMA's effects on the nervous system. And it turns out that at least back in 2014 when I started doing this work, all of these things, soothing touch. and soothing music and all these things had great effects for our patients with trauma and depression. They were self-medicating with these things, right? They were self-medicating with their service animals.
Starting point is 00:28:46 They were self-medicating with their favorite songs all the time, right? But you can't always listen to music when you're at work. You can't always have your animal with you at work. And so that's when they started to get knocked off balance. So we started to look at, you know, well, what's actually happening in the nervous system when you get a hug from somebody you like on a bad day or when you hear your favorite song come on by surprise on a bad day. And when I was at this time, I was studying MDMA assisted therapy because this was the best most effective treatment that had short and years-long-lasting benefits to trauma treatment better than anything we'd ever seen before. Like just three doses of medicine in 12 weeks of psychotherapy and like an antibiotic protocol effectively. And people
Starting point is 00:29:35 were better, better as in no longer meeting like diagnostic criteria for PTSD at one year out and some people the benefits were lasting five years with just three doses of medicine. This is the opposite data statistics we were seeing with our treatments where people are sick for life and you stop medicine, most of them relapse. Right. So this was like leaps and bounds better than what we were seeing. Right. It's paradigm shifting for the field. And so I thought, well, we need to figure out how this thing's working in the brain. Right.
Starting point is 00:30:05 Right? Like if MDMA is really doing this, which it was in the trials in double blind, randomized incredibly the most rigorous form of clinical trial, it was undeniable it was working. And these were the same patients I was seeing in the clinic that were struggling. And I'm like, we have to figure out what parts of the brain this medicine is activating and why it's working so that we can figure out how to activate these parts of the brain naturally. Yeah. Turns out, guess what parts of the brain it activates? The insulate cortex and the amygdala, the same parts are involved in soothing touch.
Starting point is 00:30:35 hearing your favorite song in a bad day. And so I was like, wow, I never had a good explanation for why that felt so good. Sure. Have you? No. Right? I mean, how would I know? It's a universal human experience that we just all accept is real.
Starting point is 00:30:49 Yeah. And we do it, but we have no idea why it works. And I was like, I need to figure out how this works. And then it was like a light bulb went off when I started studying MDMA and the neural pathways that it activates. I was like, oh, my God. This is the same neural pathway. is it getting a hug from a friend or hearing your favorite song activate.
Starting point is 00:31:09 So then we started to play around with these different vibration patterns and started rather than composing, knowing that music has been proven for thousands of years to induce different mood and emotional state for any situation. Of course. Right? Like, we just accept that it's true by fact because it's a universal human experience. Yeah. I was like, well, if music can do this, then what if we just compose music for a different
Starting point is 00:31:30 sensory organ system? Right. So what if the music is wearable on your body? rather than through your ears, and then you don't have to have headphones on to get the benefits, which you can't have headphones on all the time. You seem like really disrespectful to the people around you when you're wearing headphones on all the time. You and I know it.
Starting point is 00:31:47 We see Gen Z people do it all the time nowadays, like when they're supposed to be like in a customer service role and you're like, are you wearing headphones? Seriously. They're probably just really stressed out. It's like I feel for them, but like we can do better now in the 21st century, right? Like now that we know that the skin can receive music, that is what led to the creation of Apollo. And so we can create vibes for anything. So now we're in a pattern that since we, I have more time, a little more time to do this,
Starting point is 00:32:15 we're a pattern of releasing a vibe a month for people. And each vibe is basically whatever our people reach out to us and they say, this is what we need. We want to feel more confident when we're tired. We want to feel more energized. We want to feel like we can dive in and study. something that bores the crap out of us for extended periods of time. We want to be more calm and present with our loved ones after work. So we just, we just serve everybody.
Starting point is 00:32:41 We're like, tell us what vibes you want. And so we just started composing them. And so we've been composing them in the lab and releasing them. And you get to try one of the latest ones right now. I love it. Well, I mean, and it's cool because it does give you that different sort of feel for what you need and what you want. Because I, you know, like you said, no, I never really understood.
Starting point is 00:33:02 why until recently that when you understand that we were made and created to love. I mean, that's the whole point in creation. Anything in the Bible always reverts back to love. I read the whole New Testament. And I remember the first time I read it, I said, well, this essentially is just talking about love the whole time until you then you grasp what it's really saying. But it revolves around that. That's what we were created to do.
Starting point is 00:33:24 So it goes without saying we get that. We feel good instantly because that's what we were designed to feel. But again, the Bible is top down. learning. Right, right. Right. So that's why so many people have trouble. Yeah. Learning and actually manifesting that in being. Right. Because it's just taught down. Yeah. We're missing the felt love, right? And missing like, oh, what does that love feel like? Well, I forgot. So I'm just going to do what I think it feels like based on what I'm reading in the Bible. Well, you're missing 50%. Yeah. Like 50% at least of love is feeling. Yeah. At least. It takes implementation. You can read all you
Starting point is 00:34:01 want. I mean, I could read and become the smartest in the world, but it doesn't mean it's working. Right. And if you just read about what hugs feel like, but you never actually get one, are you actually going to know? No. Not even close. No, no, no, no, no, no, no. Those words can't explain that, right? Words are at best, at best, at best, even with the best words and the best authors, words are an imperfect description of reality. Right. Reality is mostly feeling. Yeah. Right. Yeah. So words are trying to describe human experience. Human experience is reality. Right. Words are one layer of separation. They may make you feel something for the time being, but it's not going to be a constant
Starting point is 00:34:43 or consistent at all. It's just it is what it is in the moment and that's it and it's gone. Right. This is nonstop. And you can do it day and night or however you want. I mean, I try to keep it on as much as I can. The days I don't, I never really thought about it. And, Until I thought about it. You know what I mean? Yeah, what's going on today? I said, such a hurry. It's like some days I just forget.
Starting point is 00:35:08 Yeah. You know, you just do. You know how it is. Some days you get up and it's like you just are immediately something's on your phone and you just like everything goes AWOL. Yeah. You know. There's a fire split out today. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:35:18 Oh, shit. Never stops. But yeah. So, okay. Let's dig into some other stuff in the book. Let's do it. And then I want to talk about some MDMA therapy too. I want to get into that.
Starting point is 00:35:29 But I want to get into something on the book. One of the thing. that I loved about you was when I saw the excitement when you were talking about we can prove that spirituality through science has this real effect. To me, that's like the greatest thing in the world to hear because I'll fight that all day. And I won't sit here and go, I got all the science to prove it. I don't feel like I need to, but I want to learn it from somebody that does. I speak more in the confident understanding of God's with me, but I want the science too. I want to hear it. And I want you because nobody is better ready to rattle that off. So tell me what you found.
Starting point is 00:36:01 please. Well, so again, this is not, this is not just what I've found. This is like a, a synthesis of hundreds of years of Western science research that from backbreaking labor of, of incredible scientists that came before me, that were in search of the same mission, right? Like, that arguably for even longer, even for thousands of years, we've been trying to prove the existence of God. And, you know, growing up, many of us, myself included, I think, really struggle. And, wrestle with belief in God because when you actually learn about, like I learned that God existed when I was a kid, a really little kid, but then I started to learn about like Holocaust history and like, like, started to see war on TV every day and like the news and like all the
Starting point is 00:36:50 tragedy. And it's like hard to believe that there could be a God when there is so much awful stuff that happens in the world every day. And I think a lot of us wrestle with that, but don't talk about it enough. And I think that there's this idea of faith that faith has to be blind faith. And I kind of reframe that in the book where there's actually a science of faith and that faith need not be blind, but it actually can be based on evidence of knowing and feeling and listening. And when we listen, when we literally learn. learn that are, and to remind our minds that our bodies are safe places to inhabit, then we start to listen to all of the signs around us that are evidence that God is real, right? And that,
Starting point is 00:37:46 or whatever you want to call it, right? You don't have to call it God. You can call it the source, or you can call it divinity, or you can call it whatever words work for you. But the point is that we start to realize that there is profound evidence in every moment that, that spirituality exists. And it's really just that we're distracted most of the time. We're not listening. It could be distracted by your phone.
Starting point is 00:38:07 It could be distracted by too many responsibilities. It could be distracted by thoughts that your body is an unsafe place to be because people told you that growing up, right? Or trauma now even we know from past generations that gets passed down. Any of those things, infinite things, distract us from listening.
Starting point is 00:38:25 Yeah. And so what we start to realize is that in Western science, and this is some of the coolest stuff for what I think as a scientist, a neuroscientist, I start to think about like, well, what happens when you believe in something to the body, right? What happens when you pray? What happens when you express gratitude for being alive as a simple first step, right?
Starting point is 00:38:53 And you start to realize that when you measure people's bodies and they're expressing gratitude or they're expressing, active belief, like real belief. Like I believe that something is going, that I believe in myself, or I believe in a higher power that is actually there and I'm actually a part of it,
Starting point is 00:39:09 or I pray as if I actually know that I'm praying to something real. And you actually look what happens those people's bodies, their bodies change. They recover from illness faster. They live longer. They are happier.
Starting point is 00:39:24 They, their heart rates come down during the act, right? And the studies of gratitude to me, because gratitude is so, can I swear on this show? Yeah, absolutely. Gratitude is so fucking fantastic. Because it is a positive feedback loop. Yeah. Right?
Starting point is 00:39:42 Like, even the science studies show this that when you, and I don't know why we don't teach this more, but this is again why I wrote this book, is like, when you practice gratitude, thousands of years of knowing that this thing is real, we forget in Western science because it wasn't originally proven in double blindness. randomized placebo controlled trials. Now it is. Ha ha. Yay. We're showing. That's real. Congratulations. But we've known for thousands of years, right?
Starting point is 00:40:08 That when you practice gratitude for anything, which is gratitude, we can define gratitude as the act of saying thank you for something good, for noticing something good that could be earned or unearned, right? Just something good, like just being alive right now, being able to take a brass, feeling the sun shining down on your face and feel the warmth and just anything anything you can find when you express thanks for that you feel more grateful absolutely and when you feel more grateful over time you start to embody graciousness right and when graciousness is like what people identify as patience compassion presence humiliation
Starting point is 00:40:59 all these very positive human characteristics that we kind of hold up as like very, very positive things. And that increases mood and that increases resilience and it decreases stress and anxiety. And we see this now in clinical trials. And when we spend time practicing this and we get to graciousness, then as graciousness over time becomes gracefulness, and gracefulness is the goal state, right?
Starting point is 00:41:33 To be graceful means to flow with nature. Like, as Bruce Lee said, it's like, be like water, right? Water doesn't, when water isn't a cup, it becomes the cup. When water isn't a stream, it becomes the stream. It doesn't enter a cup and be like, why am I in a cup? I don't want to be here, right? Water doesn't do that. Water just is what it is wherever it needs to be.
Starting point is 00:41:56 if we are in a stream with water and we push back against it, we get overrun, right? It's painful and you eventually will die resisting, right? And you'll suffer the whole way. And this is, again, going back to like ancient Eastern philosophy. And so gratitude is about like flowing with the rhythm of nature. And gracefulness is, gratitude is the recognition of, grace, right? It's the recognition of good things that are there regardless of whether we earn
Starting point is 00:42:33 them or not. And so it creates this feedback loop of the more we practice gratitude, the more gracious, the more grateful we feel, the more gracious we are, and then the closer to grace we become. Grace is godliness. And it's a lifelong journey. And the more we do it, the more it helps other people feel gratitude around us. It's like an energy that ripples out. And now studies have shown this. So it's like for me, this is so cool because it's neuroscience and spirituality coming face to face and being like, we're speaking the same language. Right. Like we actually can show how this works. That is so freaking cool. It is. It is so freaking cool. It's not all about fear and danger and protection and fighting and battles. It doesn't have to be, right? It's just what are you paying attention to?
Starting point is 00:43:24 are you paying attention to what's bad and what's dangerous all the time with your time because you only have limited time on this earth to pay attention to anything or are you paying attention to what's good yeah right and that is something that we have control over so like you were saying the mind can govern the outcome in a lot of ways as the stronger part we have the power to decide where our attention goes sometimes I do this now and it took me 44 years to figure this out yeah it took me a long time pay for the end with this shit out too by the way. And for you and me both, it takes a lot of suffering, a lot of mistakes, a lot of things to go through to figure this out. But sometimes if you sit there and you say something out loud
Starting point is 00:44:05 and think about it, it makes a hell of a lot more sense as opposed to just going through your day and that's where that comes into time. So I hold a high value on time, obviously, with I've lost our most valuable asset. It's it's it. You can't buy it. You can't recreate it. Once it's gone, it's gone, it's gone, right? So if you factor in the time that you spent being gracious, having gratitude, being humble, as opposed to the time you were stressed, fear, cocky, greedy, all of these negative- You're protecting yourself? Yes, non-accountable. And then you look at the time that you wasted doing that and what you got from it and who you hurt because of it. And then you take the other side, the joy, the grace, everything else. Think about how that
Starting point is 00:44:51 expand your time. Exactly. Because it makes it more valuable. Right. It makes you more present. So time actually literally slows down in gratitude. Yeah. You actually, that's the only way to increase your time is by the quality that you spend in it. Exactly. Right. And the time you spend arguing or stress and or whatever, it makes it go like this. Right. And it ages you faster. Yeah. Right. So if we could just teach people a little bit of that and I practice the prayer of virtue. So I don't pray for all this money and all this everything. I mean, do you know, those things, they're insignificant. If you can get what you're talking about, all of these virtues, the humility, the perseverance, the endurance, all of these things. That's how you add the time. That's the only way to buy the time,
Starting point is 00:45:37 right? Because it enhances it. Yeah. And that's actually, that's actually one of the, there's these little gems in the book that come out as you, as people, you know, will start to read, they'll see that one of the things they talk about is like time traveling, right? And like, time traveling is not about inventing a machine that allows us to go back a time or forward in time. Right. The past no longer exists. The future has not yet come to be.
Starting point is 00:46:02 So it also doesn't exist. The only time we have is right now. So the real question is if you want to time travel, then, or you want to consider that as a thing that could be, then if you want to grow your time or expand your time, the way to do that is to be more present in the moment, the only moment that exists, which is right now. Yes. Right.
Starting point is 00:46:29 Right now. The more of us that is here right now, meaning the less of our attention is on the past or on the future. The more of our attention, if you only have 100% of your attention, is a finite resource available to us at any time. The more of that that's right here, right now with us together, then the more we take in in the moment,
Starting point is 00:46:48 the more we take in in the moment, the more the moment expands and slows down. And I argue in the book that Einstein actually knew this, and that is kind of the root of what I would consider the theory of relativity, which is our motion and position, not necessarily just physical motion and position that dictates our perspective of time. It's our mental motion and position.
Starting point is 00:47:08 So if our mental motion and position is in the past or the future, time speeds up and contracts. Yeah. If our mental emotional position is, our mental motion and position is in the present moment, time dialies and slows down. And the reason why I know this to be true is actually, actually scientifically true is because one of the most common reports of people who take psychedelic medicines for therapy or for whatever purposes is that they experience dramatically increased gratitude, significantly increased meaning and love
Starting point is 00:47:42 as two of the most common reports, and the third is that time slows down. Yeah. Right. Those don't exist independent of each other. They exist at the same time. Gratitude increases, love increases, presence and meaning increase, and time slows down. That is not an effect that is limited to a molecular action of a psychedelic substance. It is something that we can create ourselves indogynously with our own attention. So you're like spot on there. Old vitamin G. I gave a speech on it the other day. I did. I talked to. about that's the one thing that is the key. Yeah. The key. If you want to get in full health alignment, I always say it's God first, but it comes down to gratitude. The gratitude will fix the mental, which will then fix the physical. I love vitamin G. It is. It's great. That's great. The one that you can't buy, you got to create it. You know what I mean? Yeah, that's the best. It's free. It's free. Yeah. The best stuff is free. Come on. Come on. It's true. It is. Okay. So what I want to do then, because I'm genuinely curious myself,
Starting point is 00:48:47 and you and I have never really gotten into this discussion other than on the podcast. We never talked about it. Yeah, so the MDMA treatments, like I've had multiple people bring it up when I talk about it, and I honestly kind of, I avoid the conversation
Starting point is 00:49:00 because I want to save it for talking to you first before I get into it, because I feel like, not that you're the end, I'll be all, but I feel like you're the most that I trust and the most well-versed that I want to learn from first before I go listen to anybody else's shit. That's kind of you.
Starting point is 00:49:14 It's my comfort zone, but I do want a little bit of insight on that because that is one of those topics that you're going to get a million different viewpoints on. And you're always good about never saying, oh, it's government, this or money. That's not your thing. And I love that about you because you just keep it real. Now the government's on board. Well, you see the East side. I know. It's amazing.
Starting point is 00:49:35 The same Republican government that shut it down in the 1970s just reversed it. So we'll see how that actually had worked in practice. But it's pretty incredible that we're finally getting there. My first question is, why was it something that was viewed a certain way? And then secondly, let's just talk a little bit about the benefits, how it works, what it does. Just some basics for people that are wondering, because you hear that and most people are like, oh, shit, I'm going to go trip or whatever. And they don't even understand what it is or they think it's some illicit street drug and everything. Please, break it down.
Starting point is 00:50:06 So first off, the psychedelic, the word psychedelic, is not about drugs at all. It's about a state of being. Psychedelic as a word was coined by Aldous Huxley and the author of Brave New World. Humphrey Osmond, famous physician in 1950s, 1950s, 93, I think. And they came up with this word to describe a specific state that is a natural state of being, but it's a state that can be induced by medicines like LSD or mescaline or other psychedelic molecules. Because we didn't have a word that was appropriate at that time. And language is a living thing.
Starting point is 00:50:43 They saw language is a living thing. And they said, we're going to figure out the right word to describe this experience, right? Knowing the limitations of language. And they developed this word psychedelic because psyche means mind in Latin. And Delos means to show or to reveal. So what psychedelic states are taking a step back from drugs, psychedelic states are states of being where our mind is revealed to us. Okay.
Starting point is 00:51:09 Okay. So that's where it starts. and it has nothing to do with crazy 70s dance parties. It has nothing to do with Richard Nixon. It has nothing to do with the Vietnam War. It has nothing to do with the counterculture revolution. It has to do with a state of being. And that state of being is innate to all human being.
Starting point is 00:51:25 Well, just everything I ever knew just got blown up, right? So let's forget about all the politics and the bullshit. Let's just throw that away. And let's come back to language, right? Language is very helpful in that way. So whenever I give lectures on this, I think it's really, funny because I start talking about psychedelics and I see people in the crowd being like, listening in, leaning into their friends and they're like, I've never tried that.
Starting point is 00:51:49 And then I'm like, guess what, by the way, you already have because you've had a dream. Dreams are the very first psychedelic experiences we all have. Because what happens when you dream? Your ego, protective mind that's protecting us and involved in all of our self-identity, decision-making stuff during the day feels safe enough to relax. and then all the material from our subconscious and unconscious becomes aware. It kind of enters awareness, right? That is our mind revealing itself to us because we're safe enough for what's underneath
Starting point is 00:52:24 awareness to come out. Yes. So our awareness, our minds are, our consciousness as a whole is like an iceberg, right? Only the tip of the iceberg is visible during our waking life. Only the tip. But 98% of our consciousness is still there. at the surface of the water. So when we dream or enter a psychedelic state, could be when we're sleeping, it could be with meditation, mindfulness, yoga, deep breathing exercises, exercise in runners high
Starting point is 00:52:53 flows, soothing touch, orgasm, climax, any kind of different awe-inspiring, beautiful sunset, you name it, that something that makes you feel holy and alive, that's a psychedelic state. That's when our ego feels safe enough to our self-protective part, feels safe enough to relax. take a nap in the backseat, right, of the road trip of our lives and let someone else drive. Let some part of our unconscious, subconscious, inner child drive for a little minute, right? And that is psychedelic. The most common experience with MDMA, for instance, which is what we were talking about earlier, that's currently the most studied medicine in clinical trials, psychedelic medicine in clinical trials.
Starting point is 00:53:35 The most common experience that people report from it that I think is fascinating is they call child's eyes. They call it looking at themselves as if they were looking at themselves to their eyes as a child again, right? Like, think about how that is so pure. Makes so much sense and so pure, right? It's not a hallucination. I hate that word, hallucination in this context, because it's not a hallucination. It's not, hallucination implies it's not real. We're not talking about something that's not real. We're talking about seeing what else is real, right? What else we might, That's real that might be more real in some ways than what we're missing during our day-to-day lives because we've forgotten what's real. And we all have our inner child inside of us.
Starting point is 00:54:20 It's in most cases begging to come out and play more often, but it doesn't feel safe. It's like knocking like, hey, is it safe yet? Right. Right. Is it safe to come out? Nope. You're weak. Stay down there.
Starting point is 00:54:32 Right. That's what we tell it. Sometimes we take out the belt. Seriously, right? No, it's true. It's true. I've been a board meeting. Shut the fuck up.
Starting point is 00:54:39 Right? Like, this is life. This is the lives that we have created for ourselves. You know, like we, we, we, um, are Devaney. I use, I, I referenced his quote in the book, you know, he says this really, his really great, great poignant statement of, you know, we, I might mess it up, but it's something to the effect of like, we are not prepared for the world that we created for ourselves, right?
Starting point is 00:55:03 Like, we were not built for this world. We accidentally created a world that's designed around goals of productivity, and accomplishment and status and money. And that is not actually what we want. It's not what our inner child wants. That's our inner child is who we actually are. And in fact, I would argue, and I argue this in the book,
Starting point is 00:55:24 that our inner child is more real than the adult selves that we created thinking that we were trying to figure out what's real. So these are the kinds of questions that we need to start asking is like, you know, the real questions of like, what does it really mean to be alive? Right.
Starting point is 00:55:40 Does it mean to accumulate the most stuff and the most status, or does it mean to live the most fully? Yes. And that's what psychedelics teach us. Well, the breakdown, amazing. That's what I wanted. Let me ask you this. Because, like you said, people get this wrong idea.
Starting point is 00:55:58 Shit, I do too. Like, you hear it. We all do. Yeah. All learned in the wrong. We're programmed to think danger. Street drug, going to hurt me, going to harm me. Can you talk about how it's used efficiently and if there is any sort of danger?
Starting point is 00:56:16 And look, if you abuse anything, let me just preface this for everybody. If you abuse anything, you can drink too much water. I mean, that's extreme, but you could. Yeah, you can say, you'll yourself drinking water. Yeah. So let's just look at this. I've seen it. Seriously, I have.
Starting point is 00:56:30 Oh, my gosh. The context of proper use. Yeah. Right? Just run me down some of the benefits. and potential risks for people or anything like that. And what type of people this would be good for? For sure.
Starting point is 00:56:44 Yeah, so psychedelic medicines, getting to the drug side of it, are not a panacea. They are not for everyone. Yeah. You know, they are profoundly altering to our consciousness. Famous, very famous psychiatrist, who was one of the first psychiatrists to receive LSD from Albert Hoffman in the 19, late 30s,
Starting point is 00:57:03 early 40s. His name is Dr. Stan Groff. Still alive, brilliant, brilliant man. and he was the first to coin this understanding of psychedelic drugs as non-specific amplifiers of awareness. So when you think about the iceberg metaphor, right, if our awareness in a normal day
Starting point is 00:57:20 is just what's sticking up the tip of the ice group we can see, there's 98% of the iceberg, 98% of our consciousness is beneath the surface that we are not aware of. That is not just good stuff down there. It's everything. It's good stuff.
Starting point is 00:57:34 It's stuff that makes us really uncomfortable and squirmy. It's injured, wounded parts of ourselves in the past. It's parts of ourselves. We forgot we're there. And it's also endless joy and wonder and imagination and all the good stuff of our inner child. Right. It's everything.
Starting point is 00:57:49 So what psychedelic medicines do, even, and again, when I say psychedelic medicines, I include anything that significantly alters our awareness and reveals our mind to us. So this includes THC from cannabis, ketamine, psilocybin, LSD, MD, MDMA, and anything in those families. So it's not, like, a lot of people try to break it down into like, it's this or it's that, no, it's all of it. It's anything that's altering your awareness of yourself is considered a psychedelic substance. And so it just makes it simpler when we think about it as that rule, right? And instead of like overreducing it. So the, or dividing it into too many different families, they're all altering how we see ourselves, all changing awareness.
Starting point is 00:58:34 but they change awareness non-specifically. So effectively, this comes back to your question, which is, well, how do these, these medicines can cause harm, like any medicine can cause harm when they're not used correctly. And that comes down to this really important skill we don't teach very well called intention, right? All humans have intention. Intention or intentionality is like, what is my intention behind what I'm doing, right? What is my why?
Starting point is 00:59:03 What is my North Star? If my North Star is to take a drug to escape reality, because reality feels too painful right now, then guess what? I am going to increase my risk of addiction and side effects and dependency because, sad say, well, not sad to say, it's just the reality is there is no escape from reality.
Starting point is 00:59:26 We're here. You can't escape from something that you're in. Like, if you just entertain the idea of escape as a fantasy, and then you go escape into your fantasy. Guess what? As soon as the fantasy wears off and the drug wears off, you're right back where you started, but it's way more uncomfortable
Starting point is 00:59:42 because now you're like still wanting to go back to the fantasy. Because you've convinced yourself the fantasy world is real. The fantasy world is a fantasy. So the most important thing about the way we use medicine, not just psychedelic medicines, but medicine in general, is intentionally.
Starting point is 00:59:59 Intentionally means that we are using it to engage reality, not to escape from reality. There is no escape from reality. There is only engagement. You know, more. And so if you teach the brain to stop feeling by numbing it, then when you come back, your brain has just spent a bunch of time
Starting point is 01:00:18 not learning how to feel or not, right? Shutting down feelings. So guess what? It gets flooded by more feeling and it's like, oh, I want to go back there now. Yeah, right? And that's what makes the drug, whether it's heroin or opiates or benzos or cocaine
Starting point is 01:00:32 or whatever it is. or psychedelics, which have the lowest addiction profile of all of it. They are the least addictive and probably safest of all of these drugs I just mentioned, lowest toxicity profile, but anything can be addictive if you use it to escape. I've seen people who do hundreds of ayahuasca ceremonies. And they're like, but I'm still not where I want to be. I'm like, did you ever think that maybe that's not the right? Right.
Starting point is 01:00:55 It's not working for you, bro. Like your intention might be off, you know, right? Yeah. And so it's like that intention is our human energy. our intention or actions must be aligned. So your intentions to escape, but you're doing the right action, right? Ayahuasca, as one example, can heal people, psychedelic therapy can heal people. But if your intentions do it to escape, then your action of doing the healing practice
Starting point is 01:01:19 with a misaligned intention of escape is not going to get you to manifest your goals of healing because they're not aligned. So we need to align the use of the action with the intention and the intention is to engage. engagement is what leads to healing. Engaging with ourselves, engaging with the world around us more effectively, breaking, like bridging the gap of what we perceive to be division. Division is disconnection.
Starting point is 01:01:45 Disconnection is, it causes distress, and distress causes disease. So we really want to get away from that and get to more connection. Yes, right. So here, because I don't know the answer to this, this is my assumption from what you're saying, and I could be completely off. But I would assume then, based upon what you just laid
Starting point is 01:02:03 out on a, like a MDMA type of therapy or whatever, this is something that you wouldn't require you to do a ton of it. Like you'd get that experience. It would start to bring that out of you. And it's like, I don't need to do this every day like a medication or anything like that. No, no. Yeah, not at all. Yeah. In the actual treatments, like whether you use psilocybin in the trials or MDMA or ketamine in our clinic and, you know, or in many of the psychotherapy clinics that do it well, it's one to 12 doses over a year. Okay. That's what, that's, that's, But make sense. Not daily.
Starting point is 01:02:35 Okay. And then you're done for a while. Yeah. One to 12 doses, not daily, right? It's a stark contrast to what we do in traditional, what we call like stabilization medicine, which has its place in Western medicine. Sure. Stabilizing people's important when they're really off.
Starting point is 01:02:50 You can't use psychedelic medicines when people are really off the rails. So we have to stabilize people first. But when we're actually trying to get to the root cause after we've achieved stability, psychedelic medicines are working these they create punctuation marks in your life right that's what they're doing and they create it's like if you think about it from a video game analogy i know you're here it's a save point yeah right they're creating a save point and then that's a save point you could always go back to yeah and it's not for everyone like people who have you know diagnosed schizophrenia bipolar disorder psychotic disorder severe personality disorder. These people are not good candidates for psychedelics. We do not recommend that you use them
Starting point is 01:03:34 even with a highly trained doctor. Very, very dangerous and you can worsen your symptoms dramatically by using them. Definitely, if you have one of those diagnoses, do not use them recreationally, stay far, far away. But for people who don't have those risks and who don't have a family history of those things, then like an immediate first-degree relative family history, when these medicines are administered properly with guidance. Guidance is really important because, again, the medicine amplifies what you bring in. It amplifies your mindset and it amplifies your setting. If your setting is filled with uncertainty and fear and anxiety, that's what gets amplified
Starting point is 01:04:13 by the medicine. If your environment and your setting and your mindset has been cultivated through working with a trained practitioner like myself or someone who understands how to do this work and guide you or like an indigenous lineage. trained shaman, for instance, that creates the safe space for you to have this vulnerable experience of reconnecting with yourself in the world, then the medicine amplifies safety. And when you amplify safety, you help people feel safe enough to remake meaning around past traumatic events, and then healing starts to unfold because the vulnerable, injured parts of
Starting point is 01:04:49 us feel safe enough to come out to the surface. So if you do one of the treatments, ayahuasca retreat, ketamine treatment, do they act similarly in how they work? Or is there a differentiation? Like, I mean, what's the difference between some of the ones you mentioned?
Starting point is 01:05:07 Let's just say ketamine and MDMA and. Yeah, I mean, so for a long time, we looked at these things as all separate and different. What I think we're starting to see from the recent trials that we've been doing is, and, you know, first off, like, just phenomenologically, like, when you look at, like, how is it medicine, how is ayahuasca being used to treat mental health crises in the jungle, in the traditional setting, in the Amazon, and then how is MDMA and how are MDMA and
Starting point is 01:05:39 ketamine being used in Western, modern Western approaches? They're all being used to treat trauma. So that was the first clue to me, which was that when I started to look at how all these different experiences are being used. All these different medicines are being used. Yeah, molecularly, they have some similarities, but they're different. And the protocols are different. It still is medicine amplifying safety in a clinical ceremony or in a tribal ceremony that helps people feel safe enough to remake meaning around past traumatic events.
Starting point is 01:06:11 So from the shamanic perspective, they look at it in a spiritual energy alignment. From the Western psychiatric perspective, my surgeon colleagues call it, psychosurgery. Right. So like, which it is, like I feel like I make sense. Like I'm tying a rope to myself and tying a rope to, to like a pillar of the, of the room over there. And I'm like diving into your consciousness with you and helping you feel safe enough to fix stuff down there and allow the traumatized hurt, injured parts to come out and reassemble into part of the hole. Right. So they're all getting to the root cause, which is unprocessed, unhealed trauma. Okay. That blocks our energy from flowing freely.
Starting point is 01:06:49 as the tribes people say. So like from that perspective, they're the same. Okay. From the, from the, but we, for many years, I've looked at them as different. And they do have chemical differences. What's different about them chemically is how long they last, right?
Starting point is 01:07:06 How intense the experience is. What kind of experiences? Is it more like interpersonal connecting, like, but your eyes open in interaction? Or is it more internal, closed eyes, deep introspective, like meditative? right okay and so they all have different kinds of experiences like that but they all get to the same root cause which is unprocessed unhealed injured parts of ourselves like helping repair broken emotional bones
Starting point is 01:07:32 effectively right like that's what they're doing it's just like healing a physical bone in the emergency room it's just an emotional broken bone and that emotional broken bone is self-trust yeah so is it feasible for someone to go in there and do it once and just come out changed and never need it again or is that ridiculous. No, it does happen. I mean, we say to people don't have expectations. Also, the tribes people say don't have expectations because expectations set you up for disappointment. Going blindly, right? Right. So we never tell people that's what's going to happen because we don't know that that's what's going to happen. But I can tell you, like, I just interviewed for my, the psychedelic report a few days ago, I interviewed a military veteran Benjamin Forrest who wrote a book called Trip,
Starting point is 01:08:17 of a Lifetime. That was about his first. experience with psilocybin mushrooms when he was struggling with severe depression that would just not get better. And he was one of those people who went in single dose of psilocybin in a group setting. It was really like a really safe container for him to just be himself and let all of his parts, his injured parts come out and grieve his sadness and loss from all the challenging experience he's had, like a loss of family members and that kind of thing. And within one experience, he wrote this book definitively changed, like definitively changed because he had allowed his, he was, he had allowed his emotions to be felt and processed in that experience in a way
Starting point is 01:09:00 he had never felt safe enough to do before. It was too sensitive. It was too, he had been taught. It was too weak to, to feel, right? Like, same things we were talking about at the beginning of this show. And so he within one dose was changed. Changed. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:09:15 And we see that in some of the psilocybin studies for depression. that one single dose done in the right way can actually result in long-lasting benefits and are still detect major benefits that are more intense, more like significant benefits than people get from SSRI antidepressants, six months, 12 months out, people are still feeling really great and feeling healed. But more often than not, I would say, I've also seen that with ketamine, we've seen that with MDMA. More often than not, it usually takes a few doses of medicine, like one to three doses at least, and a bunch of therapy, right? Yeah.
Starting point is 01:09:53 Like you can't ignore the talk therapy part because the talk therapy is the preparation for the experience, make sure you're ready and you're ready to feel safe enough to let go and allow the medicine to show you what you were meant to be experiencing during the experience. You allow yourself to feel safe enough to look underneath the surface of the water to the rest of the iceberg. Yeah. Whatever comes up is fair game, right? You allow.
Starting point is 01:10:17 safe enough to allow, then healing can happen. Vulnerability can be come to the service and be healed. And then the second part of the talk therapy that's really critical is what we call integration, which is what happens after, because psychedelic medicines have this way of disintegrating your ego protective parts. And so what has to happen afterwards is you have to reintegrate your ego and protective parts, honoring them for protecting you, not dismissing them, not throwing them away. They're not bad. They're just protecting you. They thought there was danger, right? They're like, it's like a really, you know,
Starting point is 01:10:52 it's like the most advanced alarm system in the world that's actually been triggered to go off at the wrong times, right? Like, that's what it is. And so we don't want to turn the alarm off forever. We don't want to tell the alarm that it's bad. It's not bad. It's just incorrectly calibrated, right? And so then the integration is taking that,
Starting point is 01:11:12 for those protective parts of ourselves, and then like understanding how those now fit, in knowing that you're safe, knowing that you don't have to be on guard all the time. And how does that now integrate and fit in with your sensitive parts? And then what does your life look like now on a moment to moment day to day basis when you actually feel safe in your own skin for the first time in maybe decades? I got it. But for the effects to be long lasting, that integration has to be there.
Starting point is 01:11:39 Otherwise, oftentimes people just get confused with what to do after. Right. That's what I was going to ask you next was about like what's the steps. because I just think Burning Man, dude. Like that's all I could think of was that, that experience and then whatever they tell you there and that's it. So for you, it's like this is a really like dramatic type of layout almost where we have to go through stages and there's a lot of talking and understanding. Because I figure that there are certain categories of people that would qualify for this. People with trauma, people with depression, anxiety, high stress levels.
Starting point is 01:12:11 Those are the type of people that would be coming to you, right? I mean, the people who come to me usually are people who have mental illness that they've been trying to treat for years. Everything under the sun and the traditional way and nothing else that makes a dent. So I see people who predominantly are what we call treatment. Western medicine is labeled them as treatment-resistant mental illness. I see lots of people, but that's just the majority of people that I see. And then a bunch of people in my practice are people who have had really bad psychedelic experiences with people who are untrained providers, or they accidentally overdosed themselves in the wrong environment
Starting point is 01:12:43 and then got set back. And so then they work with me to bring them back to their fully functioning state prior to taking medicine. I see. So I would say that's like 40 or 50% of the patients I see are actually people who have accidentally retramatized themselves with psychedelics. So that's why I'm so bullish and passionate around teaching people how to use these medicines properly and how not to use them incorrectly
Starting point is 01:13:08 because you can totally fuck yourself up if you don't do it right. I believe it. They're very powerful. They are easily amongst the most powerful medical tools we have ever had access to as human beings. Wow.
Starting point is 01:13:24 So we need to treat them with respect. Yeah. And in doing so, treat ourselves with respect. Oh, yeah, 100%. I went to this with years with people wanting to run testosterone on their own and explain, like, you just don't know what you're doing. And it's not wise.
Starting point is 01:13:37 Like all medicine has to be treated with respect that if you take too much Tylenol, you'll kill your liver and you'll die. Absolutely. You take too much ibuprofen. These are over-the-counter drugs. Take too much ibuprofen, you'll kill your kidneys and you die. Toxic vitamins. I mean, right. You know what?
Starting point is 01:13:51 Yeah. So it's like everything has to be to do with respect. But these medicines. Another level. Yeah, well, they're not. People get lulled into a sense of safety because it's almost impossible. Like, it's almost impossible to overdose on mushrooms in a way that you can't kill yourself with mushroom toxicity from psilocybin. Your body can take a huge amount of mushrooms and not physically die.
Starting point is 01:14:12 Yeah. But mentally? Mentally, your ego takes a major hit. Same with ketamine. You can take a huge amount of ketamine, a huge amount of LSD, and physically what we call the LD50, which is like the 50% of the dose required to result in, to result in somebody having like a biological episode that would be physically impairing to you or causing death. The LD50 is very high.
Starting point is 01:14:38 So like pharmacologically, they're very safe drugs. They're much safer than Tylenol and ibuprofen, much safer than alcohol. Man, but that's another story. But that's the, but I think that's where people get confused. And so they're like, oh, I can just take a bunch of like cannabis. Like you couldn't ingest enough THC to kill you. It would be so hard. You would have to eat pounds of weed for days, right?
Starting point is 01:14:59 So like, that's where people get confused. But they still will take a tremendous toll on your mental emotional body. And so we have to treat that with respect because they're so powerful as mental, emotional, healing tools. Anything like that. I spent 40 years smoking pot till I quit three years ago. And I'll tell you what, man. And I want to relate this to them.
Starting point is 01:15:22 Booking since you were four? Shit, I wish. 11. Wow. Yeah. And I stopped when I was 40 when I gave it up for Lent. I'll bet you, but you felt a lot more clear. I haven't smoked since.
Starting point is 01:15:32 Yeah. Three years ago. I haven't smoked since. And I feel like a million dollars better. And that's where I was kind of going with this as they got to the point where it was causing me harm. I used to say, but it helps me pay more attention and study more. I had panic attacks every night after a while. I couldn't stop.
Starting point is 01:15:48 And it was becoming, it did a roll reversal on me because I misused it. Exactly. Even after all that time. Yep. And that's where I was kind of going to go back to this. When you were talking about people that misuse it and you have to bring them back, I mean, that could really, really destroy your mind, couldn't it? I mean, just actually alter it to a state where you're just worse off.
Starting point is 01:16:06 far than you were before. For sure, yeah. Oh, absolutely. Yeah, because it distorts thinking. Yeah. Right. But I think in Shepibo and Amazonian cultures, they call it the Shatana, which is the dark energy of a plant that manifests inside of us when we abuse or misuse it or disrespect the plant.
Starting point is 01:16:26 We invite the dark energy of that plant into us. And they also have another word that it's escaping me for the light energy of the plant that comes out when we heal ourselves with it by using it respectfully. Right. The point is that's a different lens of looking at the exact same thing that we're talking about that is now clearly validated with science. Just because it comes from indigenous people doesn't mean that it's not true. Like those words, that word Shatana was not a word that was developed in a lab, but it's a word that describes the same phenomena that we experience when people abuse medicine in Western culture. And what you're, but the good news is that for anyone who's struggling with addiction,
Starting point is 01:17:06 or substance abuse or dependence, which is a specialty that I specifically work on, is the good news is that you can heal. Yeah. Like, all it takes is making the decision to say, no, I'm going to stop. I'm going to change my relationship to this substance or this plant because I respect myself enough to do it. I respect my autonomy, my agency, that I have control. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:17:32 And when you start showing that respect to yourself and thereby showing you. their respect to the plant or the substance, all of a sudden, your relationship with it completely changes. And then you might be abstinent for a while from it. But then over time, you can, with enough discipline and thoughtfulness, potentially start to have a relationship with it. Again, that's respectful in a healing way or a way that it facilitates pleasure, but not abuse. So they think like that's, there's a fine line where we get caught up because we start using it for escape, from discomfort rather than for engagement with pleasure. Engagement with pleasure means respectful use once in a while in moderation
Starting point is 01:18:13 does not mean every day all day, right? And we've all fallen into that pattern in different ways in our lives, like whether it was with work or sex or gambling or like video games, right? People get addicted to video games. Yeah, people get addicted to social media now. I coined the social media addiction in the book because people deny that social media is addictive. Guess what? It is. It's just as addictive as video games, gambling, or drugs. Yeah. Right? In some ways more so, because it's right there and it's socially acceptable and encouraged.
Starting point is 01:18:45 Yeah. No. You did it. When we're talking about forms of like MDMA, ketamine, and psilocybin. Is that all mushrooms or how was that ingested? Well, it just depends on, on the environment and the medicine. So it comes in different forms? Yeah, so psilocybin comes from mushrooms. Uh-huh. mushrooms grow in cow dung traditionally now they grow them in all different kinds of things yeah you with psilocyte mushrooms you eat them orally or you eat like an extract mdMA is oral you take it orally that's primarily how it's used ketamine is not is broken down almost entirely by the gut when you take it orally so we don't really use it orally we use it what's called sublingually so you use it by swishing it in your mouth or we do injections or IV other medicines like
Starting point is 01:19:34 LSD can go through the skin or be oral, orally ingested. LSD is hands down the most potent psychedelics that we've ever discovered. It was actually helped us discover the entire serotonin system because when Albert Hoffman discovered it, we didn't really have a good understanding of the serotonin system at that time, but it's a potent activator of the serotonin receptors. And when people take it, they experience an almost immediate shift in meaning from the world. And that's really interesting, which I also talk about in the book. So there's a lot of studies now that have been done that look at and explore how we make meaning from the world through the serotonin receptor system. So I don't want to digress too much.
Starting point is 01:20:14 But yeah, different medicines have different ways of taking them into your body, some of which are better than others. Is the LSD safe to use if it's used properly? Yeah. I mean, all psychedelic medicines are safe to be used physically if used properly. I would say the only one that we know of, I mean, again, this depends on that there are exceptions if you have bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, psychotic disorder, personality disorder. If you're taking certain drugs, if you have high blood pressure in certain cases, you're taking certain drugs that are not compatible with psychedelics, like antidepressants are not compatible with most psychedelics, then you're not a good candidate for these kinds of things. but assuming that none of that is in the picture, then psychedelic medicines like LSD and others
Starting point is 01:21:00 are extraordinarily physically safe for the body. And the only psychedelic medicine that is now gaining popularity in the news media because it helps treat opioid use disorder is ibogaine. And ibogaine is a fascinating molecule that comes from the Bogia plant that is traditionally used by the Buiti people in Gabon, in Africa. This medicine is one of the most intense, most powerful psychedelic experiences that people have.
Starting point is 01:21:32 It can last, I think it lasts 18 to 24 hours. It's too long. It's really long. Yeah. It is serious. It is no joke. If ayahuasca is the compassionate grandmother spirit, as the tribes people call it, Iboga is like the grandfather's spirits.
Starting point is 01:21:47 It's going to whip you into shape. Like, it is intense. and it is one of the only, if not the only major psychedelic molecules that we know of it comes from plants that can kill you. They can cause sudden cardiac death, and we don't know how to predict it. Wow. And it can cause sudden cardiac death and healthy people. So it's very rare. It's extremely rare.
Starting point is 01:22:09 So as long as people are cardiovascularly monitored during it, we can avoid that risk. But the point is that it requires some monitoring and some extra care. All the other psychedelic medicines, if you don't have any contrary. indications, you're not taking any medicines that can interfere. They're extremely safe. Well, I'd never ask you this now that you brought that up. So you said that could, that can last way through. Huh? That scares the shit. I don't mean. I'm thinking about what is a, what is a standard kind of time frame for just a general dose of something? How long does? Like it's an academy? Yeah, how long does it last? So ketamine lasts 60 minutes,
Starting point is 01:22:41 which is why it's one of the best, easiest, first line psychedelic medicines we use. It's also fully legal currently. And so when we administer ketamine in the clinic, like in my clinic, we'll do, it's a one hour active time of the medicine, but we work with people for three hours during that time. So we do some talk therapy before, and then we do, or two and a half hours, we do some talk therapy before, get people prepared, feeling comfortable, we administer the medicine. They're under the influence of the medicine for somewhere between 60 and 75 minutes, and then they have some fade out time when they come back into their bodies and feeling safe again and back into the, you know, they get to reintegrate a little bit with us there.
Starting point is 01:23:21 Then they go home and then we meet again the next day and do integration. So are they talking to you while they're on it? Sometimes with ketamine in particular, it's more of one of the more introspective medicines. So most people are guided by a music playlist. Okay. Very highly curated to them and to what they want to get out of the experience. It helps them dive deeper in. It helps quiet their minds.
Starting point is 01:23:42 The music with psychedelic experiences is extremely important. And everybody has Apollo on at the same time, helping calm and ease the body. And then they have a blindfold on. Oh, okay. And so they're going inward. And with ketamine, that's what I'm saying. The way the medicine is used is different for each one. Ketamine is not like a group experience with going to talking and hanging out.
Starting point is 01:24:01 Yeah. It's a deeply introspective, quiet mind, what we call observer mind, meditative experience. MDMA has those internal components when we use it in treatment, but it lasts about four hours on a single dose. So it's less than psilocybin, which is about six to eight hours, less than LSD, which is 10 to 12 hours. And MDMA has people go inside and do the introspective work, but then a lot of the experience is also eyes open, talking, communicating, empathy. So I think it just depends on the medicine, a lot of ways of how people interact when they're on it. But ketamine is fascinating because, I mean, I think it's so cool. You give somebody a medicine
Starting point is 01:24:42 after doing a whole bunch of trauma prep work, and then they go inside, they witness what they need to see themselves for themselves, and then they are doing the work, and you get to watch them do the work. Wow. Right? So, like, they're doing the work. It's clear evidence that the source of healing
Starting point is 01:25:00 is coming from within them. I'm just, I mean, just, it takes a lot of work what I'm doing, but I'm holding a safe space for them to allow the work to be done on their vulnerable parts and the healing to be done their vulnerable parts, but they are fully doing the work. They're fully doing the work.
Starting point is 01:25:17 I am the supportive guide, right? And so it's like just reaffirming these ancient principles of healing that came from Hippocrates and Maimonides and the founders and that ancient, nameless now people of tribal in Eastern medicine who all came to the same conclusion from completely different parts of the world with no internet that they all agreed that the source of healing comes from the person who's seeking to be healed, right? Not from a pill, not from a doctor or a therapist, and not from a system. It comes from the person seeking to be healed.
Starting point is 01:25:49 And when you do this work, it is so humbling and such an honor and a privilege to witness because you get to witness that healing actually happening where people are healing themselves in real time. It is so cool. So since I'm coming to California, like once or twice a month, I'm booking a session with you. Okay. Serious.
Starting point is 01:26:08 Because I'll just picture myself listening to Pink Floyd time. and going off and the yonder with you and just getting myself right, man. Like, it sounds so amazing to say the least. It's pretty incredible. I mean, especially from a spiritually connecting perspective. I tell this story about one of my patients. I tell this story about one of my patients who was one of my favorite patients over the years. So I had this, I had this one of my favorite patients to tell a story about is this woman who left a cult that she was raised in with her husband through her 30s.
Starting point is 01:26:38 And in her 30s, she realized that they were lying. to her about the outside world and that they were trying to control her access to God and spirituality. And they said, your access to, like the world outside is cruel and dark. We are the light. We are your only source of life. We are your only connection to God. It's not through you that you get to God. It's through us.
Starting point is 01:26:57 And she eventually said, you know what? I don't think this is true or right. Doesn't feel right to me. I trusted her intuition. She left. And her and her husband left. And about 20 years later, she was struggling with severe depression and PTSD, feeling completely disconnected, lonely.
Starting point is 01:27:14 COVID hit made it much worse. She reached out to us for therapy, and we did one ketamine session with her. And in one ketamine session, this wasn't even in person. This is over Zoom. Wow. So pharmacy delivers ketamine.
Starting point is 01:27:28 Ketamine is this incredibly safe drug. Pharmacy delivered the ketamine to her home. Her husband was in the home in case we needed him to come in. But we were on Zoom with her. She takes a very low dose of ketamine, but just enough to get her, to an altered state of consciousness. She,
Starting point is 01:27:45 the first thing she said was in the session that it was so funny. She, she like, she just like has like a light bulb, right? And she's like, this is how they did it. And we're like, this is how who did it?
Starting point is 01:27:58 She's like, this is how the Beatles wrote all that music. My gosh. I was like, you're a funny, like, then in the integration session afterwards, she just had that insight, right? In the integration afterwards,
Starting point is 01:28:09 were chatting. And I think it was within 24 hours. It was like the next day she said to us, I didn't know that I could access God on my own. I didn't know that I had an independent relationship with God. I thought my whole life that God came through this cult that I was raised in and that they taught me that I had, was disconnected from God and spirituality forever.
Starting point is 01:28:39 because of them, because of what they told me. And I never reconciled that. All of a sudden, I had this experience with ketamine where I felt God. I felt God. I felt my connection to divinity and spirituality for myself without anyone in between. And I realize that this is inside me. Yes. And now I can cultivate that for myself.
Starting point is 01:29:01 I can continue to have a relationship with God that I nourish without going through anybody else. That was more healing than anything else for. for her. That was more healing than anything that we did. We just created the safe space for that to happen. She allowed that experience to happen because she trusted us to hold that safe space for her. And then she repaired this injured part of herself that was preventing her from connecting to her own spirituality, her own source of divinity. And then she didn't need us anymore. I was like, best, best outcome ever, right? Like she's just, yeah, we did a couple more therapy sessions, but she didn't do any more medicine sessions after that. She was just able
Starting point is 01:29:39 to take the lead on a road. So beautiful. That makes my day to hear. He gave me chills that honestly, that is a good way to end because it's such a positive note. Man, I loved hearing that. Thank you for sharing that story.
Starting point is 01:29:54 Well, we already got part three in my head lined up for the next run. So, dude, I mean, I don't even know what to say other than every single time I do something like this with you or even talk to the 10-minute talks. I'm always, I always tell you,
Starting point is 01:30:08 I'm always in a good mood. mood every time. So it's just, it's just not a pleasure to do this. It's a pleasure to know you. It's a pleasure to call you a friend, a family member, all whole nine, but your work, aside from ours, just your work and what you do and everything. And I've told you this before in conversation. And I sat and got to talk to you one on one and really feel when I, I remember asking you in the car, why do you do like, why do you do this? Just fill me in and you told me and it's just like, man, I remember calling Queenie that night and saying, this is just one of the best fucking guys I've ever met in my life.
Starting point is 01:30:43 Oh, thank you. Yeah, it's true. And excuse me for saying that, but I'm saying it because that's how I feel. So thank you. I can't wait for your book to come out. I can't wait to show the world and tell everybody, can we pre-order yet?
Starting point is 01:30:56 What's the deal? How do we get it? When can we expect it? So the book's coming in June. Thank you, for having me, by the way. Oh, always a pleasure to be. Always with you. I love our conversations.
Starting point is 01:31:04 You take the always take us in. direction that is different than everyone else. So like I really appreciate that. So yeah, please come find me on socials, of course. I love to hear from everyone. I will, I love answering questions and teaching in case you can't tell. So please ask me your questions. And so yeah, just go to a simple guide to being alive.com and you can learn about the book. You can get first access to the super discounted pre-order. And we'll also have the opportunity to get live Q&A webinars with me where you can actually talk to me because I love to teach. So we're going to create opportunities,
Starting point is 01:31:40 even though I'm really busy and I have a 16 months old, I'm going to make time to connect with everyone and to share this knowledge firsthand because I had great teachers and mentors in my training. I have a chapter about this in the book too that I really believe that mentorship is something that we've lost in our society and that a lot of people who achieve a certain status forget that our responsibility is to teach and pass down knowledge.
Starting point is 01:32:04 and I wouldn't be here without my mentors. You know, without the people who took the patience and the time to teach me when I was stupid and young, I'm curious, I wouldn't be here. And so I'm so grateful to those people. And so in the same vein, I really want to make sure to give back to everyone and actually be accessible. And so if you go to a simple guide to being alive.com, you put your email address in there. We'll make sure let you know when the super discounted pre-order comes online, which will be in the next few weeks.
Starting point is 01:32:32 and then we'll also make sure to let you know when the webinar with me, Q&A webinar comes online so you can join and get access some of the fun teachings and get any of your questions answered. Check the link or the description for the links. I got a nice coupon as I do in all my posts here when I post the podcast. You get $99 off the Apollo, the link for the book, the link to follow Dave. And we'll have video content out to watch. And he's always not only answering questions, but he gives live.
Starting point is 01:33:02 speeches at some of the biggest and best conventions, I would definitely encourage you to go see them. We'll put lists out for all of that. You check my socials, everything else. So that being said, my man, thank you so much for the time, the conversation, education, and the care. Dylan Gemley, Dr. Dave Rabin, signing off.

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