TrueLife - Transformative Journeys: Insights with Alexandria Artzoglou
Episode Date: June 24, 2024One on One Video Call W/George https://tidycal.com/georgepmonty/60-minute-meetingSupport the show:https://www.paypal.me/Truelifepodcast?locale.x=en_US🚨🚨Curious about the future of psych...edelics? Imagine if Alan Watts started a secret society with Ram Dass and Hunter S. Thompson… now open the door. Use Promocode TRUELIFE for Get 25% off monthly or 30% off the annual plan For the first yearhttps://www.district216.com/🎙️🎙️🎙️ In a world that often settles for the mundane and the mediocre, Alexandra Artzoglou stands as a beacon for those who refuse to let their potential remain dormant. As Joseph Campbell once urged us to "bring forth what is within us," Alexandria's journey is a testament to this profound truth. With a background in Psychology, she soon realized that understanding the mind was not enough—it was the experience of truly living that captivated her. Since 2017, Alexandria has been on an unyielding quest to uncover and harness the tools that transform a good life into an extraordinary one. Her path has shown that self-actualization is not a final destination but a continuous, evolving journey of becoming more of who we are capable of being. This relentless pursuit has led her to integrate various teachings and approaches, from traditional psychology to the transformative potential of psychedelics.Alexandria now dedicates her life to guiding others who sense that there is more to their existence. She helps them feel at home in their own skin, trust in their journey, and rewrite the narratives that hinder their true potential. Whether through personalized coaching, therapeutic settings, or the mindful use of psychedelics, Alexandria’s mission is clear: to assist others in realizing and embodying their fullest selves.For those ready to step into their next level, Alexandria offers a unique blend of preparation, integration, and microdosing guidance, tailored to unlock deeper insights and lasting transformations. Her approach is rooted in the belief that greatness resides within each of us, and with the right support and willingness, we can all achieve extraordinary lives.Welcome to a conversation with Alexandria Artzoglou, where the journey of self-discovery meets the frontier of psychedelic-assisted therapy. Join us as we explore the infinite possibilities of human potential and the ever-becoming path of self-actualization.https://www.thealexexperience.com/https://www.instagram.com/thealexexperience?igsh=MW9uaDd5YjRib283bg== One on One Video call W/George https://tidycal.com/georgepmonty/60-minute-meetingSupport the show:https://www.paypal.me/Truelifepodcast?locale.x=en_USCheck out our YouTube:https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLPzfOaFtA1hF8UhnuvOQnTgKcIYPI9Ni9&si=Jgg9ATGwzhzdmjkg
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Darkness struck, a gut-punched theft, Sun ripped away, her health bereft.
I roar at the void.
This ain't just fate, a cosmic scam I spit my hate.
The games rigged tight, shadows deal, blood on their hands, I'll never kneel.
Yet in the rage, a crack ignites, occulted sparks cut through the nights.
The scars my key, hermetic and stark.
To see, to rise, I hunt in the dark.
fumbling, furious through ruins
maze, lights my war cry
born from the blaze.
The poem is Angels with Rifles.
The track, I Am Sorrow, I Am Lust by Codex Serafini,
check out the entire song at the end of the cast.
Ladies and gentlemen,
welcome back to the True Life podcast
Evening Edition.
I hope everybody's having a beautiful day.
the hope the sun is shining and the birds are singing, the wind is at your back.
I have with me today the incredible Alexandria are so glu.
And I just want to, I built a nice little foundation for us here.
Let me just go ahead and introduce her.
In a world that often settles for the mundane and the mediocre, Alexandria stands out as a beacon for those who refuse to let their potential remain dormant.
As Joseph Campbell once urged us to bring forth what is within us,
Alexandria's journey is a testament to profound truth.
With a background in psychology, she soon realized that understanding the mind was not enough.
It was the experience of truly living that captivated her.
Since 2017, Alexandria has been on an unyielding quest to uncover and harness the tools that transform a good life into an extraordinary one.
Her path has shown that self-actualization is not a final destination, but a continuous evolving journey of becoming more of who we are,
capable of being.
This relentless pursuit has led her to integrate various teachings and approaches from
traditional psychology to the transformative potential of psychedelics.
Alexandria now dedicates her life to guiding others who sense that there is more to their
existence.
She helps them feel at home in their own skin, trust in their journey, and rewrite the
narratives that hinder their true potential.
Whether through personalized coaching, therapeutic settings, or the mindful use of
psychedelics, Alexandria's mission is clear.
clear to assist others in realizing and embodying their fullest self.
For those ready to step into their next level,
Alexandria offers a unique blend of preparation,
integration, and microdosing guidance,
tailored to unlock deeper insights and lasting transformation.
Her approach is rooted in the belief that greatness resides within each of us
and with the right support and willingness we can all achieve extraordinary lives.
Alexandra, thank you for being here today.
How are you?
Good. Thank you so much.
So you can call me Alexandra or you can call me Alex.
But either way, thank you so so much.
That was a beautiful introduction.
I can't believe how quickly you put this together and it's taking me forever to write my about page.
I should have come to you earlier.
Good.
Yeah, thanks for that.
Yeah, absolutely.
I'm so sure here, I was, you know, when I visited your website, I was really impressed with,
you were really candid about searching for things in life.
and you're really candid about why you want to help people.
And I was kind of hoping we could start off by you sharing some of those reasons with my audience.
Yeah, absolutely.
Well, that was a great intro right there.
I've always felt that there's more to life than what we consider normal.
I was raised, like I guess most of us in the Western world,
around people who were not truly happy.
They were doing well enough.
but I felt like there must be more than this.
I felt like we're capable of more.
And that's why I'm really intrigued by the hero's journey by Joseph Campbell
to bring forth what is within us,
that there's this greatness, there's this thing that we need to go after
even when we don't know what it is,
even when we don't have a name for it.
I used to call it a thirst that I need to quench or an itch.
There was this thing I had to go after and I didn't know what it was.
And I studied psychology because you felt like the obvious thing to do, but psychology is a science.
It was more about statistics and normal distribution and research and less about healing the soul and holistic healing and understanding what's behind human motivation, behavior and all these things.
So by the final year of my psychology degree where I was very stressed to,
to complete it because of the research aspect of it,
I found meditation in a period of my life where I was really stressed.
And that was the first time that I realized I'm not my body.
I'm not just what I see in the mirror,
but I am consciousness residing inside it.
And this body is just a vehicle and it's taking me places
and it's really worth taking care of it.
But this is not all that there is.
And there's energy and we're all energy and everything is energy.
And for the first time, when I opened my eyes, I felt like everything is so perfect the way it is.
Everything is as it should be.
And that's when I decided I must go after this and learn more about meditation.
And on my way there, I accidentally got into yoga.
And that's a whole other journey.
But basically, then through yoga, I would tap into meditation.
and then I realized that if I was teaching yoga,
I would get more benefits of yoga
because I was very present with the practice.
And then one thing led to the other to finally psychedelics
where ever since I read about psychedelics,
I felt like, oh, I've always been looking for something
that will help me, I call it self-actualized.
It can be a bit of a grandiose word,
but I felt like there must be this thing that can help me
get more out of life and become more of myself and embody my potential more.
And when I read about psychedelics, I was instantly called to them.
And when I got to try them years later, I was like, yep, I knew it.
This is kind of what I thought it would be like.
I knew it can get better.
So it took years until I managed to piece all these together and realize if I do psychedelic
assisted therapy, then I can also both myself, but also help other.
others become more.
Because if I have this thirst, it must be more than me.
We tend to be very much the same.
So, yeah, I'll just pause here.
I feel like I'm going all over the place.
No, it's perfect.
A couple of people in the chat.
Mark Davis and Crystal Phoenix both say hello.
How are you?
We're doing well.
Thank you, Mark.
Thank you, Crystal.
Thanks for being here.
Let me know if you guys have any comments or questions in the chat.
Alexandra, it almost, when I,
look back on it when I would it almost seems like something was trying to get your attention like
something bigger than you is that something that's inside of you is it this language that is is it
the planet trying to speak to us is it a higher conscience what do you think it is like it just seems
like something calls to us what is that that's a really good question I feel like it might take me a
minute because I'm getting I'm getting different things I think there's definitely
I just finished watching.
I don't know if you managed to catch the source by Dr. Joe Dispenza.
They had a live streaming 21 to 23rd.
So in your time zone, you might still be able to catch it for free,
but then it will still be available just not for free.
And I follow Dr. Joe Dispenza a lot,
and I practice his meditations.
And I feel like his work is amazing for psychedelic integration,
but that's a whole other topic.
Yeah.
But in that documentary,
they also talk about the source, the light.
Some people call it God.
Some people call it the divine.
There's this light before the Big Bang,
before everything existed that we are all made of and it's there and it's everywhere and it's everything.
So it could be that there's definitely more than this.
And psychedelics do tend to help us to understand that,
oh, it's not just this dimension and there's more layers.
There's the energetical body,
many of which I don't even know because I tend to say,
I have a lot of work to do with what is already here and my past and my childhood.
So I've been kind of dealing with that until now, but maybe in the future.
And I know there's many beautiful people who do shamanic work, energetic work,
and they could possibly speak more to that.
But another thing that could be calling me, I've been trying to understand what happened to me
now that I'm being trained by Dr. Gabormate.
I'm in his training compassion inquiry
and it's absolutely life-changing
and I'm realizing that we all have childhood trauma
trauma is so normal that we don't see it
like fish don't understand they swim in water
so I've had a lot of work to do with
understanding how things work and how I work
and why do I react this way
and it's been a lot of like soul-seeking
and soul-searching and trying to understand
and one final thing I'll say on that
And someone who has been working with ayahuasca for years and years and years, he said people
when they're young, and by young, I mean, below 60, they try to understand life and themselves
and things.
And then after, maybe in their 70s onward, when they go to ayahuasca, they just want to feel.
And that is a really beautiful distinction.
Like, I feel like I'm still very much in the phase where I'm just trying to understand.
how things work and where things come from and what's the purpose.
And I've gotten many,
many clues on those enough to be like, okay,
I can pause for a bit and I can possibly help others on this quest.
But yeah, it's just like it's an evolution
and probably answers change as we age.
Yeah, it's well said.
Whenever I hear the word understand, like I picture myself underneath something
looking up and trying to figure out how it works.
Like you're like underneath it, like standing, like, how does this work?
And psychedelics really, and psychedelics and these different ways in which we enter alternate states
really do seem to give us insight on how things work, primarily ourselves, primarily our thought patterns.
And if we do take it back to childhood trauma, you know, I don't know that I've ever talked
to anybody in my podcast that didn't have a childhood trauma.
and it's interesting to hear the way they've integrated.
Some people have said, you know what?
Because this happened, I'll never love again.
And other people have said, because this has happened,
I'll love more than I've ever loved again.
You know, it's interesting to see the way in which we deal with those traumas.
Maybe you could share more about that.
Like, I don't know if you want to tell a personal story
or if you can just talk about how you've integrated,
maybe some of the traumas in your young life that brought you where you are.
Yeah.
Well, we're definitely meaning-making machines.
aren't we? So the same experience will create very different conclusions for people.
And there's there's healing work and there's coaching work and they're both important.
So the way I try to integrate everything is like therapy and other modalities help a lot with
healing the past and making sense of things and making different meaning.
But that work possibly never ends so we can be doing it forever.
if we get stuck there and constantly be looking at the past and what's wrong with me and how can
I fix it, then it can feel like a really long process and the results are really slow,
even though it's very, very beautiful work and I love therapy.
And I'm training to be more of a therapist all the time.
But at the same time, there's also coaching work, personal development work that capitalizes
on your strengths.
So instead of focusing so much on everything that's not working,
it's like can we focus on what is working and strengthen that and focus on that and create out of that.
So I find that it's really nice to do a balance of both because one gets in the way of the other.
And there's always an integrated model.
Like if I look at my healing, I used to battle with eating disorders for years.
And it wasn't therapy or psychedelic-assisted therapy that healed that.
It was having a really good relationship that gave me.
so much love that I learned to love myself through the eyes of someone else.
It was a very different and much healthier lifestyle of very different food, more low carb
and a lot more exercise, but also a lot of coaching work on body love and self-love.
And now looking back, and it was a lot of workshops I've done on my belief systems and
different things that it felt like gradually I would have less of.
of the disorder to the point that at some point
I would look back and be like,
I don't think I qualify anymore.
If I look at the signs that someone has anorexia,
I don't have that anymore, not even bulimia.
So then it was looking back that I realized,
I'm probably healed from this,
but it wasn't like a flick switching the flick on,
like now I have it, now I don't.
It was more like the effects are starting
to disappear gradually.
Yeah, it's it's interesting to get the flashes of insight.
You know what I mean by that?
Like you get the,
you get a download or you get this moment of clarity or you,
you find yourself finally alone sitting with your thoughts and it begins to make sense.
But then you got to go and do the work, right?
Then you got to go, okay, I know, it's this.
Some people can get hung up right there.
And I think you as an individual who's been studying under some amazing teachers
and put in their own work, like how does,
how would you help someone make that transition from that flash of insight into start walking the path?
Like that seems like how do you how do you make those first few steps?
Well, that is integration work.
And that is the hardest thing to convince people to do because people want to go to an immersive workshop.
They want to go to psychedelic ceremony and have all these downloads and expect to wake up next day and feel like I'm enlightened now and I got it.
no more daddy issues and whatever but it's actually walking the talk otherwise it just becomes a
memory it becomes a fun event a nice memory and it feels like the effects wear off over time
it just this is what doing the work is and it's often fun and inspiring to do it and often it's
soul-crushing and you feel like you're stuck at it and it's and you're losing people and because your values change
but integration work is living life.
It takes the rest of our lives.
And of course we can have another splash of another ceremony,
a sprinkle of a workshop here and there.
But it is what we're doing between that make up who we are
and creates a whole different life trajectory.
Like instead of going to the same path, we've always went to.
Then after integration work, we can go one degree in a different path
and end up in a different direction.
And that is very hard to convince people of.
Because, yeah, we just like quick fixes these days and magic pills and tell me something new
and what's the new method.
But really, there's nothing new.
It's all old methods like community, healthy lifestyle.
Meditate.
I keep saying to people, if you're going to do one, if all this healing is overwhelming,
just meditate.
If you're going to pick just one, meditate.
that's it and it's free.
Yeah.
It depends on you doing it.
Yeah.
It's, I'm curious for someone like yourself and maybe a lot of the people that you've been interacting with.
And I know a lot of people on my podcast that there can be radical shifts sometimes.
Like you said, it's nice to spend time at the top of the mountain.
Like there's this, you know, there's this sort of fearful ecstasy that you feel of like, oh my gosh, like the terror before the sacred and you're understanding things for the first time maybe.
There's some radical shifts that can come from there.
Have you yourself ever encountered or perhaps someone you're working with ever encountered this?
Okay, I'm going to make a radical shift in my life right now.
And they just turn on a dime and start trying to go down this whole new direction?
Well, every New Year's resolution, I see my clients trying to do that.
That's so true.
But it always comes back to integration.
So even if you have an ayahuasca ceremony and realize many things for the first time, like where we come from, I call them the hippie-like stuff, like why we call trees our ancestors, why we all come from the earth and descend back into.
it why what it means that we're all one and we're all the same yeah things that the hippies
used to always say and then I'm like oh I didn't know I had so much hip in me until I went to
a laska no I get it I want to be barefoot all the time why would be disconnected from the
earth um so those are it's a red pill blue pill kind of situation those things change you
and once you see you can't unsee yeah
But then again, like for me, it's all about long-lasting transformation.
If it's not going to change your life, if you're going to go back to the same life with the same people and the same job and the same habits, we can not always change our job or our environment, but we can change friends.
We can start hanging with people we admire, people we learn from, not people who gossip all the time or people, you know, who drag us down.
So we could change those things in order to integrate that experience.
We can be around people who have also had similar experiences and understand our language.
So it's all about what do you do after?
Big insights do occur and someone might want to have a massive transformation and it can happen.
But it really depends on the success of it depends on whether it's going to last or not.
And again, it doesn't have to be so black and white.
sometimes we do the work and sometimes we don't and sometimes we get it and sometimes we forget.
But it's like over time, there might be, if it was a graph, it could be going up and down and up and down.
And, you know, but over time, there would be an upward trend of progress.
It's interesting to think about the upward trend of progress and the relationships that tend to form around us.
when we're on that upward trend of progress.
It seems on some level, our relationships change because our relationship with ourselves.
Christo says here that she talks about having flashes of insight when she left her abuser.
Is that, have you, obviously none of us are giving medical advice here,
but have you had people come to you that were maybe in abusive relationship?
And is that a different method you would work with someone with versus someone who's trying to fix their job
or fix a relationship with their kid?
Do you take different avenues for different, like,
give different approaches for different styles?
Or how do you decide what to do this?
Yeah, if it's like big T trauma, if we say,
I would mainly go with compassion inquiry,
just hold space, allow space to be there.
I wouldn't coach as much.
I would just inquire of,
because we always want,
we want to validate the experience
when someone has had something traumatic
happened to them.
It wasn't their fault.
So we want to acknowledge
that and a whole space for that.
But also we want to give responsibility
to the client.
So, because I can't work with the abuser.
I can't work with the person
that inflicted the trauma.
But I don't want that person
to be a victim anymore
of that situation.
So I want to empower them
and help them see
their part in it
or how to not repeat the pattern
anymore.
Because as Gabur
that says the trauma happened before the trauma happened and we got disconnected from ourselves.
So that was the original trauma.
We were often I see it as if from the neck down, we have put a lid on and we are disconnected
from our bodies, our gut feelings, our intuition.
So we want to reconnect with those things.
And when we are, then it's less likely that similar situations will happen again in the
future because we're way more attuned to ourselves.
So that's more therapy work, and that's what I would do definitely with big T trauma.
That is most of what I do in general, but sometimes, you know, there's also different methods,
but that is the core of what I do.
Like compassion, inquiry, this approach has truly transformed my life and the way I see my childhood
and the way I hold space for clients, childhoods and traumas.
And yeah, that's the main thing of what I do.
it's so interesting to think about patterns that happen you know when i look back at some of things that
happened to me when i was younger and i can see patterns of you know maybe misalignment or abuse in
some levels you know it almost feels like like that trauma that happens to you when you were young
is i guess the proper word would be maybe impressed upon you like it almost creates a new pattern
you on some level.
Would you have any any thoughts on interrupting patterns with with different states of awareness
or is there any particular techniques that you use to interrupt patterns to help people
stop performing those things?
Well, again, again, there's the coaching stuff and there's the therapeutic stuff.
So, and I could speak to both.
But as Gabour Matte, again, everything I do in my life is backed up by quote by Gabon.
The myth of normal.
Exactly. As he would say and as he trains us to say is when the trauma happened, who did you speak to about it?
And most people will say nobody. So it creates a very different experience when someone is held.
When the child goes to their mother or father and expresses that difficult thing that happened and they are able to help them process that.
and to feel the sadness and and share that experience.
And it creates a very different life and a whole different set of belief systems and meaning-making
when the child is alone with their pain.
Then they start believing, I am alone with my pain.
Pain is intolerable.
I cannot share pain.
People are busy.
I'm not good enough.
I'm not important enough.
There's a whole list of beliefs that we create because of experiences like that.
So in therapy work, what we do is that,
when we go through this process of when did you speak to about it and if not then why not and there's a
list of questions we would ask and then the client would understand that that's when when the
reparenting happens when they understand of course they created those meanings and beliefs at that time
in that situation but it's not really that they're not good enough it's just that the conditions
were in such a way that one thing led to another,
and they were four years old.
So, of course, that's what they believe.
You know, children are very narcissistic, you know,
they're hungry, you feed them,
they pee on themselves, you change their diapers.
I mean, that's before four, but, you know,
so it takes time.
They can't really process that dad is busy
because he's trying to make money to pay for food,
and mom is busy because of this and this and that.
They can't rationalize in such a way.
So they're like, if they're busy, then it means I'm not good enough, for example.
So that would be the therapy work.
The coaching workers, Tony Robbins, the king of personal development, he talks about interrupting patterns a lot.
So he will put you in a state.
He talks about changing our physiological state a lot.
And that's why it's really important that we work out, that we have a healthy, fairly routine.
that if someone is watching TV and eats popcorn and drinking beer and thinking,
you know what, I'll change tomorrow.
And their system doesn't believe that.
They're like, he's lying again.
Of course he's not going to look at him.
He's just like doing the same thing he's doing every evening.
But if you're in a very different environment, that's why immersive workshops,
like going to a Tony Robbins workshop is a really beautiful experience
because you are disconnected from your normal.
environment and you he helps you being that state you get to clap with the clap and like
high five people and jump around all the time so you change your physiological state and in that
state you make a different decision and that decision it's as if if your brain and that pattern
was a CD like we still have CDs and then you scratch it and that's how you interrupt the pattern
so when you play the CD it doesn't the song doesn't go anymore so you need to change
your state and then make a very important decision and then take massive action after that.
So that's where the integration comes again.
It doesn't work if you just leave that experience, that workshop, that therapy session, whatever it is,
but you just do what you did yesterday.
You need to take massive action that aligns with that decision that you just made.
And then do that again the day after that and again the day after that.
So it's like walking the talk every day embodying that decision.
It's well said. The idea of perspective, like the idea of changing patterns and perspective change seem to go hand in hand.
And one way people seem to really get a different perspective is to write about their interactions.
I know for me, writing or journaling has definitely been helpful prior to a psychedelic session, even during a psychedelic session, and then after a psychedelic session.
and then after a psychedelic session.
If you could speak to those ideas about writing
and altered states of awareness.
Oh, that's my favorite topic, probably.
Awesome.
Actually, my coaching emerged out of creating journals for people,
for them to help to reflect on their experiences in their lives.
So I used to have a one-to-one consultation with someone.
They would tell me everything they're struggling with,
but everything they want, like their goals.
And then I would create 100 to 300 pages of customized journal prompts
to help them address all those things.
And then I realized, instead of giving them those journals,
I can just ask them the questions during a coaching session.
It's going to be faster.
And that's how I started coaching.
And then I realized that many people believe that they're ready to move forward,
but there's trauma from the past that is holding them back.
And that's when I decided to do my trauma training,
compassion inquiry and now I am actually creating psychedelic microdosing journals and also
for people who are not into psychedelics I'm also creating personal development journals to help
people reflect on priorities and a year and their goals and what are they doing that is aligned
with those goals because as a very beautiful quote says if I wasn't listening to your words but
only looking at your actions what would I think were your priorities because we often say I want to
focus on my career, but I spent two hours a day on Netflix instead of, you know, researching that
career idea and putting a business proposal together and all these things. So, um, huge, huge, huge,
huge supporter of journaling. I feel like nothing replaces writing, especially by hand. And it's really
worth doing that brain vomit, especially first thing in the morning, something like morning pages,
like from the artist's way. Um,
I often find when I personally sit to meditate,
there's all these thoughts that are coming in.
And I'm like, if I want to think,
I shouldn't be meditating, I should be journaling,
and then go off to meditate when I'm,
I've unloaded a bit, offloaded.
So yeah, I also very big supporter of journaling
during psychedelic experiences.
There's a big debate on that.
Some people will tell
you disconnects you with the experience you don't go as deep i think it really depends on the person
in my in the ayahuasca experience i had years ago i was writing during ayahuasca for like four
days unpopular tool of sitting in an ayahuasca but i felt like my journaling my writing was 50%
of my healing because it would also help me stay on the thread because often we get distracted and
And that was before I knew about intention setting as much and how to be self-regulated during a psychedelic ceremony.
I didn't really know those things.
So I felt like the writing really helped me to be like, oh, now I'm thinking of all these other things.
Wait, what was I writing?
Right.
This issue.
We are working on this issue today.
You know?
So yes.
Yes to that.
Yes to journaling at any point.
it's so it's such an epic attempt to really capture the imagination and like for me like on a on a big
journey there's been times where I'll try to first off I tried to journal during it and like it would
just be unlegible I'd be like what am I writing?
Like scribbles and I'm like I can't even read that I don't remember what I was thinking yeah
so then I was like okay I'm going to record myself because I know I can't really it's like I can't
barely see everything's moving so I just record my
myself. And like it's been, I think it's 50-50. Like some of it has been really inspiring and
cool when you go back and you listen to something you said at one of those experiences.
And the other part is just gibberish, you know, but it's really a way to try to capture
that ineffable, right? Because in some of these experiences, you have these flashes, like,
that's it. That's brilliant. And then five seconds later, you're like, wait, what was I thinking
again? It's so hard to hold on to. Yeah. Yeah, it's like a dream. Yes. It is like a dream.
It's fascinating to think about that you that particular insight.
It's like a dream.
Have you been able to take that insight and apply it to your daily life on some level?
It almost helps you realize the life you're living is like a dream.
Yeah, my parents have been telling me.
Because I don't live in Greece, but now I'm in Greece and I visit my parents.
And my parents, I'm starting to appreciate the elders.
as they say.
Yeah, right?
So the advice that they gave me and like my parents are, my mom is in her 60s,
my dad is in their 70s and they both say it feels as if we were 20 yesterday.
Like it really comes by as a dream.
And a beautiful thing my mom said that her father had told her was that one day you will
remember us as if it was all the dream when we will not be here anymore.
So those are very beautiful things to ponder on.
and really help us be grateful for what we have now.
Like that idea of impermanence,
I've had a life that it was such a dream
and it was exactly what I wanted to spend my 20s doing.
I've spent a lot of years traveling the earth
and meeting incredible people and doing different things
and going to spiritual gatherings
and having all these like clear crazy experiences
and beautiful experiences like unconventional
way of spending my 20s.
And then I realized that so many conversations I would have with my best friends in Colombia,
I was like, I can't believe I met this amazing people.
And this is going to end because we both have to do different things after this year.
And our visa is going to expire.
And I had bought a cheap GoPro, not a GoPro, a fake GoPro.
Right, right.
A lot cheaper because I was like 21 at the time.
And I wanted to record all this silly.
daily conversations we've had so to store them so to not lose them and then I realized you can't do that
Alex you can't hold on to life like that you just need to enjoy it as it happens and then let it go
so all these beautiful trips and all these beautiful experiences like going to Mexico and seeing all the
beautiful views and being 22 once and you know I was like this is going to end and that's fine
It's this is it.
It's a moment at a time.
And I just, the more I am present during and awake, the more I'm not thinking of different things, then that's the best I can do.
That's the most I take advantage of it.
Because I'm just here now and life is a collection of nows.
But the more we spend distracted and the more we spend, you know, regretting or just not being present, really.
even daydreaming is a way of missing out on it.
It might be a more positive way than regretting,
but we're still not present right now.
So then I just started to let go and realize it is a dream.
And I will be like 40 soon and then 60 and so on, hopefully.
Yeah.
And what else can we do?
It's this bittersweet realization of impermanence.
it is
I have a good question for that one
let's see
bear with me here
it's a really good one
I want to find it
you're looking for a book
I have like
I have like some notes that I wrote up here
and I was like I can ask this question
but as soon as you said that that reminded me
of one that I kind of wrote down
but I didn't really write it all the way down
take your time
imagine we're pausing
okay
fantastic
how do
how do you balance like the idea
how do you balance the idea of uncertainty
with living in the present moment?
It seems to me that uncertainty is the trigger in which you begin to dream
or you begin to make excuses or you begin to have this rapid ongoing question making in your mind.
What is your relationship with uncertainty?
It's like,
my life is constantly uncertain because I don't have a place in the world where I live.
I'm not based anywhere and I'm looking for that.
So yeah, very familiar with uncertainty.
Right?
Let's start there.
So like I don't even know how long I'll be in Greece for.
This is kind of my life the past seven years.
So time blocking is amazing, as silly as this sounds.
Like time blocking is everything because that's something I help others with,
but I also always try to help myself with first.
Like there's always all these different things to do.
Like we can spend some days, especially weekends with my partner.
We are offline and we talk things out.
It's like, what are we doing?
what is the next step and planning.
So that is our time for dealing with uncertainty.
But when it's Monday to Friday, 8 a.m. to 6, 7 p.m.,
we just crack on with what we have to do for the day.
So we are not constantly stuck on pondering on uncertainty and making plans for it.
But again, scheduling that in.
What gets scheduled gets done.
But there's always a level of uncertainty in life.
and I've been on and off reading things about it.
What was it that I read recently?
That to basically stop trying to avoid it
because it will always be there.
Because it feels like,
I don't know if it feels the same way to you
or to other people that it feels like
the level of uncertainty that I have in my life
is more than other people.
You know, but we all have it.
So, and possibly, potentially, it will always be there.
I don't know if things will ever get less uncertain.
So it's kind of like dancing with it.
But again, I don't have an absolute answer or formula about it.
I'm definitely still figuring this one out.
But all I can say is don't let it consume you, schedule time to deal with it.
And also time to not deal with it.
that's all I could say.
Yeah.
It's such an interesting question.
I do think that most people, I think it was Bob Marley who said,
every man thinks that his burden is the heaviest.
And that resonates with me and uncertainty because it's really easy to begin thinking
about all the things that could happen to you, all the negative things or reasons
why people did things, you know.
But yeah, I think this would be a good question for Cabramate or,
or the elders or anybody in your circle that has dealt with it on a level.
I think maybe your parents answered it when they said it was like a dream.
Because how much of those things that you really worry about or those things you're uncertain about really affect you?
It's usually something idle on a Tuesday that blindsides you that's the problem.
But uncertainty is a real clencher on some levels.
It definitely messes with my head from time to time.
But surrender might be the answer to that, right?
Trust.
Yeah.
There you go.
Yeah.
Trust.
might be the answer to many things.
Trust is peace, I was thought.
Trust is peace.
So trusting ourselves bring power and trusting what is and life brings happiness.
And trusting people brings love.
So trust tends to be a really good muscle to work on.
Alex, what?
You've traveled around quite a bit.
and you've had some really cool experiences
and you've had these different states of consciousness
in different parts of the world.
Do you feel like,
how do you feel when you go to a different part of the world
and have an experience?
Is it different in different parts of the world
because it's a different part of the world
or is it different because you're different
in that part of the world or both?
What do you think?
Yeah, possibly both.
It's definitely who we are.
It's a massive piece of it.
First time I left Europe, because I feel like the biggest transformation, the biggest
light bulb moment happens when we leave our continent, the continent we grew up in.
Because if you go from one state to the next, you know, there will be differences, but it's
going to be still the same.
It's similar in Europe.
Like, if you go from one country to another, there's different language and architecture and
history and stuff like that.
But it still doesn't feel like, oh, my gosh, it's such.
a cultural shock. I don't know how to cross the street. But when I went to India for the first time,
it was a lot of, I don't know how to cross the street because Tuk Tukes never stop and there's no traffic
lights and you just kind of have to walk through them and they will figure themselves out around you
while they're still speeding up. So that's when, but the thing is when I went to India for the first time,
I had just broken up with my long-term relationship I had at the time. So I was devastated and I was
crying every day. And then I was in this beautiful paradise like place in a yoga retreat,
but I was carrying this grief inside me and feeling like I'm wasting this experience. And that's
when I truly realize wherever you go, you take yourself with you. It doesn't matter that I'm in
this beautiful place. It's still me. Damn it. I wish it wasn't. And then another experience I've had
was, for example, living in Colombia was probably my favorite part of my life, my favorite
chapter, but it was also the time of my life and the people I got to meet and the experiences
I've had in that was in 2018. And then when I went back in Colombia in 2018, it was the same
city, but I was different and the people were different and the experiences were different
and it was so not the same.
So it definitely, I think mainly our life depends on who we are.
It's kind of like a reflection.
The outside is a reflection of what is inside.
But also, you know, people are where it's at.
Like you meet amazing people that see you and feel you and you learn from them and you admire them.
And you feel like, oh my gosh, I can't believe these guys are my friends.
Like I'm learning so much for them.
I'm becoming a better version of myself.
So that also helps to having a transformative experience anywhere.
It could be your hometown.
It could be a place really far away from home.
So everything is, I think, multi-dimensional.
Like healing.
It's well said.
I can't help but think about the language we use for traveling on like a journey from a state or cross-country.
And then the language we use when we talk about, like, tripping.
You know what I mean by that?
Like, maybe a microdose is sort of like going to another county
and like a macro dose to another continent, you know?
Never thought of it like that.
Yeah, microdosing is more like different planet.
It's so crazy to just see the different ways.
When we talk about microdosing, there's a lot of different methods.
You know, there's like the stamens method or the Fateman method or is there like the Alex, Alexandra method?
Like, what is the Alexander method?
The Fatiman method.
But many people, especially colleagues of mine who are also psychedelic coaches and they are very in tune with their bodies.
One I have in mind she's also a breathwork practitioner.
or they have some somatic practice in their training and in their life.
And they tend to microdose very intuitively.
But that's not something I recommend to clients who are disconnected from themselves
and they use microdosing to reconnect and to become who they are.
But I think there is a bit, I guess, more of an advanced level of microdozer
who just intuitively knows and is called to when and what to microdose.
because it's not just psilocybin and LSD, it's also Iboga, Wachuma, people might
do those different things.
Even ayahuasca, I don't fully recommend it, but if a shaman, like, you trust says it, then
I mean, there's a kind of a way to do it in many ways to not do it.
But, yeah, the whole thing of this parallel between journey and tripping with psychedelics,
it's something I've pondered on too, and it definitely is a journey.
Because it does have a beginning and middle and an end.
Yep.
And it does change you.
And you're tired by the end, especially if it's something like LSD.
You spend like 12 hours on this thing.
Yeah.
You're tired.
You're hungry.
You're sweating.
And it is really a trip.
And I also feel like I love psychedelics so much because they are, they help me understand life
better and myself better.
So when I, after a psychedelic trip done intentionally, then I understand how life is a trip.
And it's also to not take everything too seriously, to have fun.
Last, uh, psilocybin ceremony I was on a year ago.
And it was part of my training.
So all of us want to do this professionally and are very serious about intention setting and
preparation and integration and half of the room like 15 people or so were like you know what my
intention is to have fun because I haven't had that in a while and I just want to play and we keep
forgetting that life is also about having fun and seeing it as a game and playing yeah yeah that's half
the problem is everyone takes themselves so seriously like this is so important I have to get
this done or what you have to get that done or what
You know, it's crazy to think about it.
Even, you know, if you just take the idea of someone who gets high, well, what happens
when you get high?
Like, did you have a different perspective?
Like, if you're getting high, you're looking down on things or you're looking at a different
perspective.
And there's been plenty of times where, you know, in a psychedelic journey, I've lived a whole
of the lifetime where I was able to go back and reevaluate decisions I've made, make a different
decision and see how it played out in the third person.
And like, there's a really transformative things that are happening in there.
It's, and I don't think it's, I don't think that it is a coincidence that we use that same language to describe it.
Have you?
There is a zooming out for sure.
Yeah.
Even in microdosing.
And that's why it really helps with creativity, with productivity.
I found a faster way of pre-cooking cauliflower one morning because I was microdosing and I was like,
like, oh my gosh, this was here all along, and now I get to zoom out and be like, you could be
saving 20 minutes a day. But, and especially in macro journeys, as you said, yeah, you can
look back at your life and reconsider things and the decisions you've made and the way your personality
was formed and many things. But even in micro levels, this can happen, zooming out.
Yeah. I'm often curious about the
revealing that happens.
It seems to me like there's so much,
I don't know if revelation and revealing are the same things,
but it seems to me you can have these really unique insights,
whether it's figuring out how to cook cauliflower different
or whether it is tying your shoe different
or whether it is solving a problem at your work different.
But the process of the answer being revealed to you
is intriguing to me, right?
It's like, it was there the whole time,
but I just couldn't see it.
Now all of a sudden you could see it.
Right?
Isn't that amazing?
It's insane.
It's as if we really do find them when we're ready.
Yeah, I agree.
There was, so you know the comedian, Shane Moss?
I watched him in Colorado last year.
He's a psychedelic stand-up comedian,
and he's hilarious.
And he was just saying,
in psychedelic journeys, you often come up with these massive realizations that were not that
big of it.
Like, maybe you saw it in your grandma's embroidery somewhere, like, home is where the heart is
or something.
And then you have a big psychedelic journey, and you're like, home is where the heart is.
Like, you really get it.
But it's this thing.
And often it's been this quote that you've always heard, or this.
advice that so many people in your life have tried to give you and suddenly you're like, oh, I get it now.
Like, now I'm going to implement this thing. So the way I see it is to understand something is to embody it,
to make it from this cognitive information that was outside of you or in your head to go everywhere in your body.
You're like, oh, now I am one with this knowing. Now I fully get it. I fully understand it.
it's more like embodiment of like taking something that's outside to make it yours.
Because when someone gives you advice, it doesn't really come through until you are in a stage to experience it yourself or you.
Yeah, until you've had your own realization of that very same thing they're saying.
So it's like, oh, now I'm taking it inwards.
I don't know if I'm making sense.
Yeah, that's a great way.
That's a great way to explain embodiment.
I was like, yeah, I've never really thought about it like that.
But that is a great definition of embodiment is to take it to heart, to take it home, right?
And really know that, okay, I've got this lesson now.
Now I can move on to the next one.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's like it's mine now.
I get it.
Okay, we can move on now.
You don't have to repeat this anymore.
I've got it.
Yeah.
It's such an interesting time.
I'm in this particular cycle of psychedelics.
And while I'm happy to see the potential help for so many victims of, you know, PTSD or abusive
relationships, like, I'm hopeful and I'm trying to do everything I can to speed along, like,
the new 60s.
Like, I would like to see the explosion of, like, artwork everywhere, new methods of teaching, you know,
like the new movement come out of there.
Do you think that we're about to break out of this medicalized container?
Are we still going to be in a medical container for a while?
I don't know the way things are going now with the FDA trials for MDMA
as a legal treatment for PTSD.
We'll see.
But I loved Rick Dublin's vision of not too long from now.
He wanted to have LSD secondary.
therapeutic therapy rooms and SILSybin assisted therapy rooms and MDMA and ketamine and
Iboga and whatever you need and someone who needs treatment and hopefully not just for
treatment of mental health issues serious mental health issues but also for the betterment
of I guess fairly healthy people feeling happier because there's many of us who do not qualify
for treatment resistant depression or PTSD but we're not fully fulfilled. We're having
haven't reached our potential, but we know it's there.
We know it's within ridge and the clock is sticking and we can get to it.
But there's all these things in between, whether there are beliefs or self-destructive patterns
or our environment.
There could be many things in the way.
But we spend years and years and years not being who we want to be and not being who we can be.
And psychedelic therapy can help in those.
So hopefully there will be a future where you can go to a mental
health professional and they will recommend a protocol of it could be say therapy with MDMA assisted
therapy to start things off with feeling love it's always easy to start with MDMA because it's a loving
medicine it's not going to kick your butt probably like other ones will and then maybe integrate
that for a bit for a few months maybe with breath work with meditation with journaling with with
continuing to work with the coach or with a therapist and then having a psilocybin therapy
recession and so on. So I'm really hoping that such a future can exist and it's not a utopia.
Yeah.
I remember Rick Dublin mentioning that he is really, because he has been a visionary for ages.
So I really trust this man and I really like his ideas. So I want to believe that it will
exist that we can, especially in the United States, to go out and see so many psychedelic
assist therapy clinics, specializing in different medicines for different people with different
issues.
Hopefully, I don't know.
And I don't know how many years this would take, possibly not, I think even 20 sounds like
a lot at the moment, because things are moving quite fast.
Yeah.
But I have no idea because it's not, I'm not that much of a visionary.
I'm just more focusing on what can we do?
Now, can we coach people? Can we create a plan for them for the next six months and so on?
Yeah, I think you can.
And it would be interesting to see like psychedelic accelerators.
You know, if we could take people that were maybe they've done their healing or whatever,
but they are, you know, get some of the best and the brightest and put them in a room.
And let's figure out this problem right here.
Let's make a straw that you can drink ocean water with.
You know what I mean?
Like all these things can probably be done.
you just need a high enough dose to get the people together and figure things out.
That's all we've got to do.
That's pretty from boundaries a little bit.
I think we are doing that gradually.
I think we are changing the narrative.
We're changing the stigma.
And that's what's happening now with the psychedelic renaissance that we're on.
And there's so many integration coaches and psychiatrists and therapies getting into the field.
And we definitely need more of those.
but there's not only mental health professionals that we need,
because I speak all the time with people who are in different fields,
like marketing, advertising, tech, and they want to get in the psychedelic space,
and there's definitely room for that.
I wouldn't be able to speak about it because I don't know anything about those expertise,
specialties.
Yeah.
But, you know, we would definitely need people from all different fields.
to come in the psychedelic space.
So, yeah, hopefully we're not going to repeat what happened in the 60s.
We're not going to piss off some politicians.
I mean, we are trying to, we are constantly advocating harm reduction that should be government-friendly.
Like, we're not giving acid to everybody anymore and saying, you know, everybody take this and don't fight at the war.
now we're preaching, you're getting psychedelic somehow, you've always done it because you have
this thirst for expanded states of consciousness.
So let's use them safely.
We don't want you to go paranoid.
We don't want you to do it in a festival and realize you've been agoraphobic and now you, whatever.
Yeah.
So we're advocating harm reduction and hopefully, you know, we're doing things differently than it was
done in the sixes.
we're trying to integrate ancient wisdom and hopefully learn.
I would personally love to work with indigenous people
and have them help and hold space.
And then as therapists can also add the trauma,
the tools that we have to work around trauma
and the preparation, the integration, the community.
So, yeah, I'm really, really hoping.
and I'm also positive that this can happen.
But let's see.
I don't want to get political.
So I don't know how.
Because, you know, it was always a bit of a political issue.
Yeah.
So I don't know how it would land there.
But I don't know.
Not my field either.
It's the ultimate irony to think that the boomers who kind of win the last phase are now in positions of power.
And you could argue that that's kind of what happened with some of these, whether it was the Likos or the MDMA, it seems to me and who am I about a podcaster, but it seems to me that there's a thumb on the scale to be like, we don't want this right now.
You know what I mean?
Like there's on some level, it seems to me that there's people that are unhappy with cutting into the, cutting into the money that comes for addiction.
Addiction to me seems to be sort of this conveyor belt of money for certain people.
And there's a lot of people that don't want that conveyor belt shut off, you know, and it's too bad because I think that I think that whether it's MDMA or psilocybin, I think that they can do wonders.
And there's a proven track record of the wonders they're doing, you know, so many people out there that are helping them.
And yeah, it's an interesting thing to think about when someone's a what about what's your take on addiction?
Well, I'm also learning a lot on addiction this year from Gabormatic.
He's such an expert on that.
So he's very famous for a quote,
don't ask why the addiction,
but why the pain?
And even though I thought that working with people
with a lot of trauma and addiction in their lives,
it would be very difficult, heavy work.
But in reality,
when you believe in everybody's possibility for healing,
you see it's not heavy work.
It's actually a really nice thing to do.
It's not negative.
It's positive.
and Gabors sees everyone for their possibility.
So I'm also trained now to see the protective and adaptive reasons why someone became an addict
because of their childhood.
There would have been different reasons, different people, different, again, meaning making
that made one become an addict.
So it's like going back there and reparenting that and looking.
looking at that with compassion, only when compassion is present, people can heal and addiction can be healed.
And of course, psychedelics really help, especially like Iboga.
Like we've heard so many stories about alcohol issues, drug issues that can be healed.
But again, it does need a nice setting.
It's not just you go to Africa and take it and hope for the best.
I mean, it could possibly still help.
but now that there is such a field,
the psychedelic-assisted therapy,
we can maximize the benefits of psychedelics
because we don't want to be taking psychedelics often.
I used to think of psychedelics before I knew whether they're safe or not,
especially with something like LSD.
You don't know what you're getting if it's underground,
so you're hoping it's good and pure and you're not going to go crazy.
Like before I knew that psychedelics are actually good for the brain
and health neuroplasticity in the brain and all this thing.
I used to also be hesitant and be like,
I really want the experience and really hoping it's not going to mess me up.
So I used to think of psychedelic experiences as investing brain cells.
Like we're going to invest their brain cells now.
We might even like injure them a bit or harm them,
but we need to make this worth it.
We need to make it count.
So today I'm going to talk with my best friend about my issues.
with, I don't know, my mother or whatever.
So we're going to be intentional and make sure it's worth it
because we don't know about tomorrow.
You know, and now that we know that psychedelics are good,
especially if you get your test kits and test them
and make sure it's a safe substance,
then again, it's about investing that experience,
especially if it's something like Hippoka
that takes hours and hours.
It's not like ketamintas, like a 45-minute journey,
and then it ends.
But then you want to prepare your mind, prepare your body,
prepare your spirit, like journal things out,
have a certain diet,
make sure you cultivate a body that is capable of receiving the medicine,
that it's a fertile ground for the medicine to blossom upon.
So you want to do all those protocols
to make sure that I'm really going deep into this.
I'm having a trusted facilitator.
I'm minimizing risks,
and maximizing benefits because we don't know how good it can get and how deep it can get when we do all these things.
Like it can be good enough, like psychedelics have profound experiences anyway, but it can be even better when you have a really good facilitator that asks the right questions or creates a space that allows you to surrender and fully trust.
Because when we don't, we kind of stay at a surface level when we don't fully trust the environment.
So I can be talking forever.
No, it's perfect.
It's perfect.
Have you done I-Boga before?
I haven't.
I haven't.
I'm on the cautious side.
I'm like,
it hasn't called me yet,
and I haven't found the reason to.
But I've heard testimonial after testimonial,
and many friends of mine have,
and I see many recommendations of certain places
for those who need it.
So, yeah, I just know a few things about it,
but I haven't had the experience myself.
Yeah, it's interesting to think about
the things that.
that are out there that are helping people on some level.
I talked with Gareth Moxie from Canada the other day about Iboga.
And it's interesting,
we were talking about addiction.
And he had mentioned to me that,
you know,
maybe the idea of an addict is sort of like folk psychology.
Like maybe we don't,
maybe that's,
maybe that term and that label alone is doing more harm than good.
You know,
it presents this quandary for people to be stuck in something forever.
What,
do you have any,
any thoughts on that?
like the idea of us labeling people forever that's kind of crazy right yeah and marginalizing them
and then they take that on and they see the way society sees them so again what gabber would say
on that addiction is this thing that you know it's bad for you and you know you shouldn't do it
but there's an impulse to do it and there's a temporary whatever it is relief or
or excitement or euphoria, and then there's negative consequences.
And it's like a vicious cycle that repeats.
So instead of asking the addict, which is a really useless question that people have done for years,
it's like, why are you addicted? Like stop being addicted.
Gabor asks, what does it give you? What is this thing that this thing that you're addicted
to gives you the positive things? So when I was,
addicted to food when I when I had bulimia for years I would feel free during when I was eating
massive portions of food I would feel pleasure I would feel I like I'm present I'm really enjoying
the present moment so then Gabor would ask how can we why do you not have these things in your
life in the first place why is there no freedom no pleasure why do you have to escape the
present moment what is going on and then
then how can we find other sources of giving you these things from you know from that it wouldn't have to be an enormous amount of food that is eventually unhealthy so there's there's ways to work with addiction addiction is not the end people can heal from addiction when they work with professionals who do it compassionately and and because we can't heal someone when we tell them
what the self-destructing part of themselves tell them.
If we ask them, why are you addicted?
You shouldn't be doing this.
This is bad for you.
You're harming other people.
The people you love are sad and hurt because of what you're doing.
You can't help someone from that place.
Like they cannot help themselves when they constantly blame themselves
with these narratives and these stories.
So instead of focusing on these voices,
we can focus on what does it do?
give you, there must be a reason why you need to do this. Otherwise, you wouldn't survive.
Maybe you would have killed yourself. Instead, you're alive and addicted. So we need, that's
the place where we can help people. And that's the same angle where they can help themselves.
But in the beginning, it's easier with the help of a professional because they've had all these
other narratives for years and years and years. So, and again, yeah, psychedelic assisted therapy can
help in that because then you get a break, you know, the default mode, net,
work is finally silence and you don't have all these negative narratives all the time.
So you can finally take a break and see yourself with compassion.
And so on.
Again, I haven't taken Iboga.
I haven't had psychedelic-sic therapy on addiction, but I'm assuming this is kind of how it goes.
And yeah, addiction is difficult and we need to understand how difficult it is,
but to also find the reasons why someone chooses to do this.
be a really good reason that their system decides to do it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I was reading something a while back and was on the last wave of psychedelics in the late 50s.
And the way some researchers and doctors were using it, they were using it as like a psychomimetic.
I think I'm saying that word right, where they would take it.
And then they would begin in some terms to feel what it might be like to have a
psychotic break.
You know, and I, I've, it's interesting to think of from that point of view.
And I think anybody who's gone pretty deep has found themselves in like a, oh, shoot moment,
like, you know, and it can be, wow, incredibly frightening at the time, coming out of it,
I think it strengthens you on some level because you realize what you're capable of.
You have more empathy when you see people that are kind of losing a little bit.
Like, yeah, I know what that guy feels like.
I know, you know what he needs right now is I can just come over and talk to a little more.
But on some level, maybe you could talk to that idea of people using it as a way to have empathy or understand psychotic breaks in some ways.
I've never thought about it this way.
In general, even as a therapist, I'm learning, I need to find in myself an experience or a part of me that fully understands this client.
if I don't understand what if I see them as crazy as a bad person then I can't help them
but if I see myself in them and be like oh I've done that too or I've been treated this way
then that's when and they can feel safe and that's when I can help them but if someone also
feels judged because you can't be up here and they're down there we need to be equals so that's
that's when, as we say, healing is relational and it's the relationship that does the healing
and so on. But to use psychedelics to have a psychotic break to understand what that is, I haven't
had that experience. What I am pretty positive of is that we don't know what our limits are
and we don't know how powerful our minds are and our psyche. And when we fully truly,
rust and surrender to something, we don't know what can happen out of it.
And again, it's really wise to have a really supportive environment about doing that,
really good trusted facilitators.
There was an experience where I had three grams of mushrooms,
and then I was offered another gram in a retreat center.
And then I was already pretty deep with three.
Like for some people, that will be very small, but I tend to be on the very cautious.
And then when I was offered a fourth one, I was like, you know what?
I'll just take it because I know I'm so safe.
Like there's absolutely nothing that can happen to me that these facilitators cannot take.
Like I know I will be so taking care of.
They will be able to handle all of it.
And it was more than, it was around eight facilitators in the room.
It was a few of us.
but I just felt like I can just surrender so much
and be curious and go even deeper with the things that I'm working on
and I don't worry about what will happen.
So when we are to test the limits of our minds,
I think it's really advisable to do it
in a really, really, really safe place around people
that we really trust.
Definitely have some people around, I would say.
It depends on someone's self-regulation.
If someone is really good with themselves, possibly know how to meditate and know how to concentrate.
But again, that brings to another topic now that I will kind of digress.
I always find that there's a level of surrender.
There needs to be there in a psychedelic ceremony, but also a level of you need to have some practices,
whether that's breathing, to come back to the breath if it gets too much.
concentration, like the skill that we train through meditation, there needs to be something that
you can rely on yourself and come back to something. So again, I haven't had, okay, I felt like
the connection was gone for a second. Yeah. Nice. So maybe if you ask me the same question in 10
and 20 years, I will have a very different answer. If I will have way higher,
doses of psychedelics but at the moment I feel like there's there needs to be a dance between
surrender but also having a center to come back to like that self-regulation so yeah but when the
I don't know how to express this so when the dose is really high you still need both
but you mainly need to lead on the surrender side of things
because some people we don't want to be too controlling of the experience
with being like am I working on my intention
am I breathing right you know we don't want that
but we do want to have a level of that
but also we want to surrender the experience the medicine
the facilitators and the environment
I don't know if that made sense
yeah totally it had to be said
it had to be said it's something I'm pondering on
and something I find with clients often
because they often tell me,
are you telling me to be controlling?
I'm like, no.
I just want you to not go there randomly
without having an intention
and without having any regulation techniques.
So you need to have some of those,
but also be willing to drop them and surrender.
But also if it gets really dark
and you're really stuck and you're really scared,
then to come back to that breathing, to come back to that center.
Of course, we can forget all that during an ayahuasca experience.
But, you know, that's there.
It had to be said.
I just felt like it needs to be shared.
Yeah, I like the idea of it as a dance.
And, you know, we talk about relationships.
Maybe I'm curious to get your experience account on the ayahuasca ceremony.
that you've been to.
Is it common for the shaman or the person leading or the facilitators that are providing
the experience for them to take ayahuasca along with the people?
Yeah, for sure.
So I haven't done it in a Western setting, though.
I've only done the indigenous South American way.
So there's not much of a guidance, if at all.
but yeah I'm pretty sure that the shaman takes it
the facility whoever is assisting also maybe in less amounts
but I'm not I don't know how much they take or yeah I don't know how much it is
or if the shaman takes more than the assistance that's possible but I wouldn't be able
to speak to that much what about when you're helping people like do you do you
you take a small amount when they take an amount or are you strictly don't take it when they take
it or what is your procedure like well up until now i haven't facilitated i just do prep and integration
and microdosing guidance which is why i'm also very feeling very safe because everything i do is
legal in every country in the world so yeah i just i just prepare people and and then do the
integration and with micro dosing is also interesting because different people have different
medicines and that many people are called to mushrooms. I don't get it because I love LSD way more
than I love mushrooms, but I love also. But yeah, many people are called to mushrooms for example
and then they realize mushrooms make them really anxious and then that's where microdosing guidance
can come in to be like, well, we can change the substance, we can change the dose, we can
with food, we can take it without food, we can take it without coffee, you know, there's all
these different, or we can work on the anxiety.
Yeah, that's an opportunity too since it came up. It's probably here for a reason.
So yeah, that's all that I do. And however, we'll see how things evolve. I feel like with
the more training I get on how to hold trauma and how to hold addiction issues and also the more
training I get on how to be a better therapist, a better mental health professional.
We'll see how things will evolve.
But up until now, I feel like that's what I'm trained to do and that's what I'm going
to do.
You know, some people say that on mushrooms, there's an embodiment.
Like, there's an intelligence there.
And it's almost like you can ask and hear a voice.
Sometimes people do hear voices.
On LSD, it seems to be more less.
of an embodiment, less of an entity there.
That's just my opinion.
But have you felt something similar?
What is your opinion on that?
Yeah, there's definitely differences.
Mushrooms tend to be more grounding,
even in a microdosing capacity.
And they tend to be better for healing purposes,
for therapeutic purposes.
They are more DMT-like.
Like I've had a mushroom ceremony
that almost resemble ayahuasca sometimes.
and and there is of course they're a plant and they come from the earth so there's different
conscience there I find LSD simply put too much fun I find LSD to be amazing for creativity
for dreaming of vision if it's in a microdosing capacity for brainstorming for productivity
for writing better emails creating better content LSD is amazing
Mashions can do that too, but LSD is so good with all those cognitive things.
And LSD also tends to be more relational.
Like I found there was an instance that I personally, and I heard that before,
but when I tried, when I experienced it personally, I really understood it that I wanted
to therapeutically work on something with LSD, but I found myself alone.
but I found myself wanting to have other people around
and work on their relationships more
or have beautiful conversations with them.
So I find LSD to be more relational.
It's beautiful for relationship work as well,
not as much as MDMA.
Nothing will be MDMA in relationship work ever.
But yeah, it tends to be more extroverted
and mushrooms can be more of an introverted experience.
Like you go in words and it's more grounded, more, it's more earthly.
LSD is more you go in your brain and you're full of imagination and creativity.
Yeah, it's...
Both beautiful.
They are beautiful.
Yeah, yeah.
I've had some overwhelming experiences of love on LSD.
It's been like, whoa.
Actually, on some of the analogs, like ETHAD and some of the other,
have you tried any of the different analogs that they have?
I know if you read, um,
like Shulgin's books, you know, the, um, the acronyms.
Yes, thank you.
Thank you.
We should probably know what those are, but, yeah, it's a chemical love story.
But it's interesting to read some of his accounts on the different analogs.
And just to think about how many particular substances are out there that can help
expand consciousness on some level, right?
Mm-hmm, mm-hmm, exactly.
And it's not just psychedelics, right?
Right.
Breathwork is an expert.
Yes.
There's yoga.
Hypnosis.
I mean, I have a friend, exactly.
I have a friend who has this very nice analogy.
He sees, say, expanded states of consciousness on a spectrum.
If you have meditation being in the lower end and psychedelics on the higher end,
even though meditation can also take you really high.
But basically, before psychedelics,
psychedelics, it would be
breathwork
because it can be very psychedelic.
It can really, really so much
DMT that it feels as if
you're in a psychedelic ceremony.
Then hypnosis and so on.
And so some practices are more
than others, but
yeah, there's many
practices we could do. And
I see healing
as if it has many
angles. So we
ideally
could be doing more than one type of work,
not just psychedelic work.
We could do body work, we could do massage work,
you know, we could do yoga,
tai chi, chikong, all these modalities.
There could be breath work.
There could be therapy.
There could be coaching.
You know, there's all these different modalities.
And often it feels as if this is the one.
But this is just an angle.
And the more you do and approach your healing
from all these different angles,
then the more of a holistic healing,
get because you're like oh there were all these things stuck in my body i didn't know and then um
kaira practice really helped me for example or what was this uh i have a friend who does network
um it's a type of cairo and it it works like magic it's as if like they barely touch you so
nothing with a traditional right they got to correct you to the right direction and so on but they barely touch
you feels like a lot of energy work and people get they start trembling they're having like massive
insights they start crying they start laughing there's all these different types of release from
that type of cairo it's called it's called network for sure I can't believe I'm forgetting
things about it because they've been talking to me about it for ages in the past seven months
but that's definitely another modality that that can be really really really
useful and therapeutic for people.
And it's not psychedelic, but imagine
combining it with psychedelics.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I think it's amplified.
I think so too.
Do you see, sometimes in the future,
I think that
often you can see it now, like some sort of layering.
Like when I talk to Shannon Duncan, he talks
about layering, like using
MDMA with psilocybin.
And I'm curious to get your thoughts on that.
I think that there's probably
of time and a place for it, maybe particular sort of ailments may require some sort of layering.
We'll figure out in the future.
But what does your take on using the substances together to solve problems?
Yeah, I'm changing my mind on that because I used to say never mix.
But now I see the benefit of combining appropriately and having the right guidance, who knows?
Because I've heard also reviews of people who go to South America and have.
a different psychedelic every day and nothing amazing happened. It just felt like they tried different
things but it's like where like what changed you know maybe you could have had one ayahuasca ceremony
that was more profound and transformative that all those days of having buffo and cambo and
all these different things so you know when when that combination happens right
then I'm sure it can bring beautiful effects.
MDMA with psilocybin is becoming a thing,
and I hear so many people who come to me and they're like,
can you find me a facilitator that does both?
Because I don't want either one on its own.
And then I go to my network and I'm like another one,
who can recommend.
But the most important thing for me,
and that comes from personal experience.
experience. I enjoy it when it's more than one day of ceremony. So when it comes to ayahuasca,
for example, I had four and I would not recommend anything less than that, drinking every day.
Because every day, especially if you come with the same intention, which I recommend also,
every day you go deeper and then you go deeper and then you go deeper. So you build off of the previous day.
And then in the end, and I've also heard that ayahuasca knows, the medicine knows when you sign up for more than one day.
So it's not going to give you everything out at once, like a 5MEO DMT trip.
But it's going to be a more gradual, you know, experience of you getting to those realizations.
And I highly recommend that.
So when I hear people going to one psilocybin ceremony, I almost get disappointed.
Like, because especially suicide and that it's only four to six hours.
Often you just scratch the surface.
You can go really deep, but if only there was a protocol and it wouldn't have to be psychedelics every day.
There could be a sweat lodge, you know, Tamaskal, as they call it in South America.
There could be breath work activities.
There could be other things that allow you to integrate and go deeper and then have another medicine ceremony to continue going deeper.
and then you have a retreat, whether it's a few days or a week or so,
where you've really worked on that issue and all that preparation you've done paid off.
And you also have more clarity around what to integrate.
Because not everything is to be integrated.
Some things are just noise.
As we've said earlier, a lot of it is like a dream.
So not everything is useful material.
Some of it is kind of like, I call it like commercial break.
Like seeing the ads for a bit and you're like, okay, now we're working.
on this today, okay, back to that.
So, yeah, I think there's definitely benefit in signing up for more than a day of ceremony, ideally more than two.
It makes sense.
Anytime there's a big problem, it takes a few, it takes a while to crack it, right?
Yeah, yeah.
It's interesting.
I keep hearing the word angles.
And when I hear the word angles, I think of the geometric shapes that you see sometimes in these
deep trips. Like, sometimes I get the idea to language. You know, it always helps me understand,
like sometimes I feel like I'm just getting these geometric patterns shoved into my brain and it's
helping me learn things or maybe that's the way my brain's shaping up or, but sometimes, too,
it feels as if I get to study this image for a minute and it helps me see things in a different
way when I apply that geometric shape to a situation in my life. Like, maybe I'm not looking at it
the right way, you know. But what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what,
is your take on those images? Some of them are breathtaking and they're moving and they're
wonderful and sometimes they're unexplainable. But what do you, what's going on with those
geometric images do you think? Yeah, some psychedelics have those more than others. That used to be
my first, especially during LSD trips. It used to be the first question I had with my friends.
Like, why do we see mandala's? Like, why mandala's? Why is it not a different shape? Why is it
everywhere. And I'm sure there's many things
answering that question these days
on the internet. Some are credible than others.
But yeah, so the question
is why the shapes, why the angles? What's the question again?
Yeah, what do you think about? I'm like, do you have any speculations
on them or? I haven't thought of that
too much ever since then when I was questioning. Why do we see
mandales? So in the end of the day,
I always, again, I find this dance between you will know what the right thing to take from the psychedelic experience will be,
but also having a good facilitator can help you go deeper or point you to the right direction.
Like one question can help you see things from a different angle or move on to something else.
Because we tend to, our system is wired in a way to protect us from things that we want to avoid,
and we want to keep avoiding.
So often we're just going to, we're not going to go deep
and we're not going to open a different door
because we're just comfortable there.
And we just want to have fun there or whatever.
But then having someone to be like,
how about this one or what if you looked at that?
And then they can help you move through those angles in a nicer way.
So yeah, but again, not everyone has the luxury to have a facilitator.
it also tends to be quite pricey these days.
So it's like enjoy it, surrender to it and also trust that, you know, the big insights will happen.
If something is to be realized on that day, then you will remember it and other things will just be forgotten.
But it can still be a beautiful experience.
Definitely.
How long?
This is like a two-part question.
Like, how long have you had?
It looks like your site has been redone.
Is it a new site?
And how do you, like, if someone's watching this and they're like, I want to talk to
Alexander, like, how do they go about doing that?
Yeah, my site is changing all the time because it looks good.
My qualifications change.
Thank you.
I've done it all by myself.
Congratulations.
It looks really well.
Well, thank you.
So, yeah, it's, and I even have a note in the end, like,
everything I teach and coach and educate on changes based on my level of development.
Because I'm constantly immersed in different workshops and philosophies and getting more training.
And it used to be more for my own healing and my own personal development.
And now it's more about how to help others with all of this.
So now it's way more fine-tuned to psychedelic therapy and psychedelic coaching.
So things will definitely keep changing.
So Instagram, I am at The Alex Experience.
Instagram has been the tool and the social media I've been using for the majority of the time.
Then LinkedIn, often I'm there to Alexandra Zoglu, and then my site is the Alexexperience.com.
These are the main ways people can find me.
Sorry, are we back?
Yeah, we're back.
Can you hear you for just a second there?
Yeah.
I can hear you, but the pictures are still frozen.
Hello, hello.
I can hear you, but I just can't see the picture moving.
Hello.
Okay, can you hear me now?
I can.
Yes.
Okay, perfect.
So, yeah, sometimes I have to tweak things.
The main things that I want to add on my side at the moment is that,
that if you're interested in preparing or integrating psychedelic start here,
because I love to work with people for three months.
That's the ideal amount of time.
It's not too long.
It's not too little or 12 weeks.
But also, many people will reach out to me having a ceremony on Saturday.
That is the most common thing.
So even when that happens, I have some ways to work with that.
I also offer 30-day message support to help people integrate.
things after the long session that we have.
Then there's micro dosing support.
So I'm creating these beautiful books.
I told you I make journals.
He did.
So yeah, so this has taken ages to create.
And it's basically a whole course in one book with journal prompts.
So it allows people to track their experience and journal on it.
And there's truckers.
And there's also information on microdosing,
preparing, storing, benefits, risks,
contraindications, all this stuff on microdosing LSD and SILA.
Sibon.
And there's also a program I've been creating with a beautiful friend
for almost a year now, and we are about to launch now.
We are slowly launching, which is a microdosing course
following the hero's journey.
So we want to take people from the call to adventure
to the allies and mentors and inspirations on their path,
to the big ordeal they keep postponing and avoiding of dealing with to doing with our support to having that death and rebirth and then come out to share the gifts with the community to integrate and and that is a beautiful thing we have going on and also for people who are not interested in psychedelics because I'm so passionate about psychedelic therapy that I talk mostly about it but also for people who want to work through trauma through addictions through
things like that, then I also offer mainly compassionate inquiry there.
So these are the kind of that, I don't know if you made sense in my website of those.
I keep tweaking things for sure. I get easily bored.
No, the site looks awesome. I think that you did a great job of mixing together
functional ideas of what you're doing and inspirational ideas of how you do it.
And I would recommend people check it out for sure.
What is it?
Thank you.
Yeah, it's really well done.
And I know why I follow you on LinkedIn and I see the people with whom you're working.
And I know that it's something that's near and dear to your heart.
What does it look like when like let's say that somebody comes and they're like, okay, I want to work with you for this three months.
Like how does that work?
Is it like you start off with a consultation and you get to know them for a couple sessions or what does it look like when someone meet you for the first time and wants to get.
started with you well we go through an assessment together and we go through there's an intake form
they have to fill out so that I know that they are fit for psychedelic use in terms of especially from
a medical perspective then I we're going to dig into intentions and previous work that they've done
whether that's personal development or therapeutic work or what practices they have in place
and then it all depends on their intention and what they want to work on and how their life is
constructed and the space that they have to have more practices on a day to day and so on.
So it would be either weekly or biweekly calls, they get to decide what works for them.
And then we, so it all depends on their intentions and the substance that we're going to
use to decide to work with.
So there's a lot of calibration that goes on, you know, it might not work for them.
They might need to change.
they might need to increase or decrease the dose when it comes to microdosing.
So it depends on what we're doing, to be honest.
Preparation, integration and microdosing work are all very different.
Integration tends to be the least not scripted, but there's not a list really of things to do.
You translate the insights into practices and make sense of them and create change in your life and incorporate that change.
So it's more coaching work and like I would call people out on not behaving in the ways they said they would after the psychedelic experience.
Then there's trauma is always there.
So there's always some work with the body and with memories that come up, whether it's from childhood or from the psychedelic ceremony and what's making sense of them and so on.
So compassion inquiry is also a very body-based.
approach. I constantly ask, you know, how does this feel in your body? And after you've told me that
you've just got triggered by your wife, then how does that make you feel? So we work a lot with the
body. There's some grounding, some meditation there. So that's integration. Preparation is more
it's more clear cut. Like there's some ways to prepare the mind for the experience, some ways to
prepare the body, some ways to prepare the spirit or the soul or how you.
you want to call it.
Certain journal prompts and workbooks I give to people.
If they want to, they could have a hard copy of a personalized book as part of their program
because I just love creating those books in the journal prompts.
And microdosing is, it's different.
There's also a level of educating on the different substances and how to calibrate them
and how to track, how to see the long-term benefits.
If you don't and how to tweak things, things like that.
Have you noticed a pattern of people?
Like, is there a pattern in age groups?
Like, have you noticed, I've recently spoken to a lot of people that are in their late 50s and early 60s that are turning towards psychedelic therapy.
Have you noticed any patterns with the people you're working with as far as age groups?
groups? That's a good question. Thank you. I haven't. I'm sorry, I don't know what's happening
with my throat. So I haven't had a client that's around 50 turning 60 wanting to work with
psychedelics recently. So I wouldn't be able to speak to that. And many of my connections who are
already in the field, either as psychedelic professionals or enthusiasts, they seem to have
been there for a bit. But yeah, I don't have a sample size big enough to speak. I feel.
It's just an interesting time because I read a lot of different parts of some different blogs.
And it's talking about, I see Death Dula coming up. And I know that.
but there's a big demographic of people that are maybe getting close to the mortality experience, if you will.
And it's interesting to see that beginning to show itself.
I think it could be very helpful for that for end of life too, right?
Absolutely. Absolutely.
And that wouldn't be later than 60.
Hopefully.
But yeah, I'm a big, big, big supporter of that work.
It really changes things when someone dies peacefully and they're not afraid of it and they're not trying to fight it.
And I think it was Michael Poland who spoke about it at some point.
And he was saying it also changes the experience to those around the person dying.
It's a very different experience when someone makes peace with things and understands maybe I'm not just going to dissipate,
but I will become part of something else
and it's just going to be different
or whatever meaning making someone has about life after death,
it will definitely be a very beautiful work.
I'm not evolved in it yet,
but maybe at some point I will be.
We'll see.
It's definitely very beautiful work.
And I would, if I could,
I would recommend it to pretty much anyone I know,
you know, starting from my parents.
Yeah.
do that before you die.
It's not too late.
You know, now is always the most important time.
And yeah, it's definitely really beautiful.
And also for relationship work before people die,
to work on those relationships so that are not things spending after they're gone.
Because also the grieving process is very different.
To let go of someone or to let it be.
versus hold grudges or feel like things have been left and said or whatever so many things
could happen. So yeah, it must be really beautiful work.
I'm aware of different trials for different PTSD or different types of ailments.
But are you aware of any of the trials for end of life for like family members and stuff like that?
Have you heard about anything like that?
I'm not aware about trials for end of life.
There might be happening.
I'm just not so much keeping an eye on that.
Yeah, that would be a wonderful treatment for a setting with family members to change it.
There's so many possibilities out there.
And I'm so excited for the future.
And it's so amazing to get to talk to cool people that are out there doing their best to change themselves and change the world.
And I think you're one of those people.
I'm super stoked to get to talk to you today.
Thank you for hanging out.
with me for quite some time.
Well, thank you so much, George.
It's been a long time coming, right?
Like, I'm really happy we got to do this now.
My voice is really.
With our, our, um, our picture got shut off for a moment.
And while while it was shut off, I got the sense
that you were holding up the books, but I didn't get to see them.
Do you have the book here?
Yes.
Yes.
Yes.
So this is the microdozing guide.
Okay.
Okay.
I'm like, I don't know what I'm showing you.
This is a glossy cover.
I might also do mud covers.
So I've designed everything, all the graphics, all everything in it.
So I'm really proud.
This is like my baby.
It's awesome.
So it's supposed to be, I don't know how to show you, but anyway, you can go in my website
and see much of our versions of this.
But it's supposed to be not a book with like literature and research and stuff.
This was inspired after I've had a session with a client on microdosing.
She was to take psychedelics for the first time in her life.
And she wanted to do it in a microdosing way because that's the safest way and most predictable way.
And then I felt like if she was zoning out for like half of this session, which is very natural,
then I want her to have a place where she can find all this information.
but also a place where she, when we stop working together,
she can go back in a year and do it again.
And then I almost couldn't stop.
So I added over 100 journal prompts.
I added two different microdosing tracking sheets because microdosing,
it's this thing that you don't really know if it's working unless you're overdoing it.
It's supposed to be subperceptual.
But then long term, when you look back, you realize it actually has had some benefits in your life.
You've shifted some things.
Many people that used to trigger you, you don't react to them anymore.
You feel the anger, but don't yell at them.
And that's when you know that, oh, maybe something's working, even though no one can tell.
Or often we forget that we've taken a microdose because it's so subperceptual.
So there's tracking sheets in here for people to track how the microdose,
affecting them on different days, whether they slept eight hours or less, whether they've
drunk coffee or less, just to understand, because when you understand how things work,
then you can find you then, then you can optimize, you can do more.
So, and it's supposed to be a guide.
It's not really a book.
It's like ABCD.
Like, this is how you prepare.
This is how you're the benefits.
It's not.
James Fatiman was called the government.
you know it's not literature
fadiman is mentioned
but yeah his brother coach mentioned
but yeah i hope i hope this can help people especially those who are hesitant of hiring
and microdozing coach because um people don't really know what that is and if they should
spend their precious money on that and that's absolutely fine so hopefully this is a book that
can help not only those who work with a coach uh not only those who have not only those who have not
microdose before but also people who have have or have not microdose before and
they can learn something that they didn't know and a few people have reviewed it
and they've said it's a really good work in you know being professionals in
the psychedelic space and it will also improve like the rest of me and my
services with evolution so yeah I hope I hope this can help people live the same
day in a better way, in a more
amplified way, being less
bored, procrastinating less, being
more creative, more focused, having
a better mood, having less
anxiety, less negative self-talk.
These are little shifts
that microdosing can help with.
Because often we are looking for
big transformations, massive
insights, and we sign up for like the
five grams of mushroom ceremony.
But in the end of the day, it's also those
little shifts that create a very different
life. So that's, that
That has been my aim with this microdozing guide of you can have the same life and take a tiny amount of psychedelic.
So little you don't even realize you've taken anything.
But you're less reactive, more attuned to yourself, more present, more grateful, connecting people with those important to you.
So yeah, I hope it will resonate for some people.
Yeah, guaranteed.
One of the things that sounds so beautiful to me is that you're helping you're helping.
people help themselves.
You know, if you give someone a guidebook and you can help them out for a few months,
it seems it's like driving a car.
Like you can show them how to do it.
And then you're comfortable with them driving the car and playing in the environment
and understand, hey, maybe they want to go a little faster.
They want to take it down to the track or something like that.
But there's something beautiful about helping people and giving them the guidance they need
to help themselves along the way.
And it sounds like that's what the guidebook does as well as your work.
Yeah.
And that's something that most of.
my work does.
And that's what therapy,
I mean,
therapy is a good thing to do in our lives for self-awareness,
especially,
but there could be periods that we don't need it and so on.
But when it comes to psychedelic preparation,
combining therapy with psychedelic preparation or integration,
I don't need anyone to need me for a long time.
It could be from two sessions to 12 sessions,
but it doesn't really need to be more than that.
Unless some people really need it,
they feel like they're getting so much out of it,
they just don't want to stop and so on.
But my intention is not to have the same clients
for years and years and years and years.
My intention is to help those clients
who have access to psychedelics,
have the first to embody their potential more,
to optimize their day, their life, their attention more,
and they just don't know how.
They don't have the right.
someone to ask them the right questions to help them see things differently.
They don't know how to combine mushrooms with the right morning ritual.
To have a different experience of being alive.
So that's most of what I want to do is like how people have the same life but better.
It could be good enough.
It could be better because we're capable.
We can do it.
We're so capable.
and we want to do it.
So those who really want to do it.
Because there's many people who say, you know, I've tried everything.
Nothing works.
Nothing will ever work.
It's like, okay, if that's your belief, have fun with that.
But those who are like, I'm mainly geared towards those who say, I know there's more.
I've tried things I haven't worked.
Maybe it wasn't the right thing.
Because psychedelic therapy is not for everybody, like most modalities.
So it's about finding those people.
who can benefit from this because it can be a really beautiful work but it also needs active
participation from the individual like psychedelics are not going to sort us out forever they're
not magic bills we still need to walk the talk we still need to implement some some healthy
habits in our lives and continuing to journal and reflect and revisit the experience if you've been
recording your ceremonies then listen back to those and transcribe them that's a very great
integration tool like re-invide the ceremony into your life and make it a part of your life and that's when
you feel like I'm actually integrating and I'm actually making the most out of that experience.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's beautiful.
It's beautiful to be able to look back and see the progress.
I think that that can be motivation for the continued changes.
Look, I've came this far already.
You know, it's wonderful to think about.
well Alex I love a conversation this is awesome you're an amazing person but before I even let you go
where can people find you what do you have coming up and what are you most excited about
so again Instagram at the Alex Experience my website the Alexexperience.com
LinkedIn my complicated name so Alexandra dash I think it is as of
um these are the channels so the most
exciting thing I have coming up right now is the microdozing course eight-week program co-created
with a beautiful, beautiful friend and colleague. We've done our psychedelic coaching training
together. Her name is Salara Star. She's mainly a manifestation coach. So it's very beautiful
to combine my trauma expertise with her manifestation expertise to deliver this journey.
and we're following the stages of the heroes journey.
So we're doing beautiful.
It's going to be such a beautiful and exciting journey
because I've facilitated groups before
and I see that the transformation happens mainly from within the group
when you hear yourself, your story in another person's story
and things that you don't dare to voice up someone else does
and then you get the coaching help that they got
because we all do it as a container and we do it safely and we have our ongoing accountability
and people can also make friendships for life like that so that's the most exciting thing
because that has been brewing forever and now we can finally announce it and say it's out in the world
and yeah my microdozing guide is also available that's for people who want to do it at their own pace
people can find that in my experience
in my website
the Alexexperience.com
and also one-to-one work
I also do a lot of one-to-one work
so
some of it is
compassion inquiry like focusing
on the past
what is this thing that is sabotaging your life
and you're not able to call out
we can work with that
and also preparation for psychedelics
integration of psychedelics
the most important and my favorite part
my work probably is integration work and microdozing guidance how can we tweak these safe and
tiny amounts of psychedelics to help you have not an average day but a really good day when is the
eight-week course start so we're starting 12th of august okay coming up and goes until 30th of september
if i remember correctly and then we also start pre-course material in the 22nd of july so we will
have we're already starting the group channels and yeah we're starting to send people exercises
and some bonus material from the 22nd but the official course date is on the 12th of August and
hopefully it will run more times in the year for people that can do it but this is our very first
we're so excited about it yeah you should be you should be it's magic the first the first time is
amazing and you know yeah congratulations
It's a great experience and it's an amazing thing to see manifest.
And you guys should be proud of yourself.
It's awesome.
Thank you so much.
Yeah.
Well, hang on briefly afterwards.
I want to talk to you briefly afterwards, but to everybody who got to hang out with us today.
I hope you have a beautiful day.
Crystal, John, Mark, everybody in the chat.
Thank you so much for participating.
All the links will put down on the show notes down there.
If you're listening to this and you're not watching it, go down to the show notes.
Reach out to Alex.
Do your best to become the best version of yourselves.
And that's all we got for today, ladies and gentlemen.
Have a beautiful day.
Aloha.
Bye, everyone.
