We Can Do Hard Things with Glennon Doyle - 240. Are Psychedelics an Answer? with Dr. Hillary McBride
Episode Date: September 12, 2023Why is everyone talking about psychedelics?!?! Today, Dr. Hillary McBride joins us to answer all of our questions about therapeutic psychedelics, and: Her personal, step-by-step journey with th...erapeutic psychedelics; The science behind how psychedelics help break old patterns and create new ones; How she uncovered the root of her eating disorder; and How psychedelics can reveal your innate goodness. For our Embodiment conversation with Dr. McBride, check out: Ep 206: How to Follow the Wisdom of Your Body with Dr. Hillary McBride. About Dr. McBride: Dr. Hillary McBride is a Registered Psychologist, researcher, podcaster, author, and speaker, but she identifies most with being a mother. She has lived experience and clinical expertise in the areas of trauma, embodiment, eating disorders, and the intersection of spirituality and mental health. Her research has focused on women's relationships with their bodies across the lifespan, and her books include: Mothers, Daughters, and Body Image; Embodiment and Eating Disorders, and the bestseller The Wisdom of Your Body. Her next book – Practices for Embodied Living – will be released in 2024. Her podcast, Other People's Problems, was listed in the New York Times and Wall Street Journal as essential listening. TW: @hillarylmcbride IG: @hillaryliannamcbride To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
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You stopped asking directions, some places they've never been.
Pod Squad, welcome to We Can Do Hard Things.
Today is going to be a wild ride.
We are going to talk about psychedelics. Oh, wait.
And the new wave of how people are understanding psychedelics,
if you live in LA like Abby and I,
it's all anyone's talking about.
If you're in the world of therapy,
like I am, it's a lot of what people are talking about.
And I don't know anything about it yet.
So I am really delighted to ask Dr. Hillary McBride,
all of our questions about psychedelics.
This is gonna be like psychedelic 101.
You all know Dr. Hillary McBride for many reasons.
Episode 206, Dr. Hillary McBride joined us
to talk about the wisdom of your body. It's a beautiful
episode. Go back and check that one out. Dr. Hiller McBride is a registered psychologist,
researcher, podcaster, author, and speaker in the areas of trauma, embodiment, eating disorders,
and the intersection of spirituality and mental health. Her research is focused on women's
relationships with their bodies across the lifespan
and her books include Mother's Daughters and Body Image,
embodiment in eating disorders,
and the best seller, the wisdom of your body.
Her next book, Practices for Embodied Living,
will be released in 2024.
Yay, that's very exciting.
Her podcast, Other People's Problems. Ooh, Other People's very exciting. Her podcast, other people's problems.
Ooh, other people's problems.
That's a special interest of mine.
Was listed in the New York Times and Wall Street Journal
as essential listening.
Welcome back.
And I think you told me to call you Hillary last time,
so I'm supposed to call you.
I love that.
Okay.
Welcome back, Hillary.
Thank you for the welcome. I'm'm supposed to fight that. I love that. Welcome back, Hillary. Thank you for the welcome.
I'm so delighted to be here.
I miss this, as you know, one of my favorite things
to talk about.
So I just feel like the luckiest girl in town
to talk about embodiment with you and psychedelics.
And that dream.
We are too.
We didn't even really think about doing an episode
about psychedelics until we were talking after we recorded our
episode together.
And I think that you said that psychedelics were the approach that you found most transformational
in therapy.
Is that true?
Yeah, up there.
Okay. Is that true? Yeah, up there. That's true. If you were doing a psychedelics for dummies, because my entire understanding of psychedelics
is from like, Alan Ginsburg and Ramdoss and the electric cooling acid test and college
being on shrooms in a room where I thought I was at a campfire and actually I was sitting
by a laundry basket the next morning I found out. So that's not it. That's not what we're talking about, right?
These days, what is it now? What is it now? Well, would it be okay to just talk a little bit about
my personal experience? I would love for that. I think we get into the science because there's
something about psychedelics that are both there there's a strong biological, chemical component to them,
but there's also this phenomenal,
a logical narrative lived experience quality to them.
We can explain, and I hope to do this later.
What is happening in the neural action in the brain
when you're having a psychedelic,
but we know that that substrate,
the chemical qualities of the psychedelic really don't capture
the magic of what it's like or the terror of what it's like to have a profound experience with
the unknown, with the all or with your own trauma. So I'm, is it okay if we situate ourselves
that way? Please, I'm already riveted. Okay. Also when, you know, when you go into your experience,
like how was it first suggested to you,
that whole story I'm fascinated,
because you've been in the therapy world,
in this world for so long.
And I'm curious when it first intersected
with your awareness and experience and all of that.
So I have to start by saying that I grew up in a household
where I was actually told both
my parents are therapists and my dad had said that he had seen a patient who had used
cannabis once and had a psychotic break and was schizophrenic.
Oh gosh.
From me.
And so, my terror then of all substances was through the roof.
The fear mongering worked for me, right?
This is your brain on drugs, the eggs frying, the frying pan. I was like, that is going to be my brain.
Do you think that that was just a story that your mom and dad were like, here's what we
say. We say there was a psychotic brain. Do you think that that was like that?
I like that. And not certainly not about a clinical population. They probably just chose
that experience where like there was often conversation at the dinner table, like, I'm working with this
really interesting patient who is this presenting concern.
It gives what I'm learning.
And so we would talk about clinical hypotheses and, you know, things like that.
So I suspect that they self-selected that narrative for a particular reason, but I believe
that it actually happened.
Okay.
And the data shows that that can be the case, right?
The wrong substance in
the hands of a person who has a genetic vulnerability, we know can promote certain neurological changes
that, you know, perhaps would lead a person to experience a psychotic spectrum disorder.
So we want to be careful about that. That is a thing that hypothetically could happen.
Again, although very rarely it could happen., we go back in the story here,
you know, oh my goodness, if I have cannabis, if I use a substance, I'm going to lose my mind.
And then, in my eating disorder experience, I actually had a brief psychotic episode. So,
I experienced psychosis, along with briefly delusions and some hallucinations. And what that said to me was, I'm in the category
of people who, if I use a psychedelic, I legitimately will lose my mind. I will have schizophrenia
permanently. I won't be able to function in normal society or do the things that I love to do.
So for me, it felt really important to put a really long period of time between when I had that brief psychotic episode
and when I was even ever going to have the conversation or think about introducing a substance into my life.
So I had this experience of finishing my dissertation, completing, defending that, and finishing my PhD, and then thinking, okay, I've been hearing all of this research. I was really tracking carefully the empirical research,
the data that was coming out about neuroscientific change,
looking at the correlates of that structurally
on our neuroanatomy and seeing in the people around me
who had really challenging presenting clinical concerns
that this was really changing their lives.
And not always because something easy and magical happened, but mostly because it put them
in contact with something that they otherwise hadn't been able to be in contact with.
A memory, a feeling, a trauma, a knowing about themselves, but there was some sort of struggle
or negotiation where they learned something about themselves
that they could take into their life when psychedelic journey had ended.
So I finished school and I decided, okay, this is the time where I feel like I've had
enough distance from my brief psychotic episode.
And I have the right people and support around me.
I'm going to take this leap, knowing that there is some risk that I could take, but that
I'm surrounded by people who are saying, this is a good thing for you to do.
It's just a safe thing for you to do, and we're going to be here to help you through it
and after.
And what was fascinating about the experience is, I mean, so many things, right?
How do you describe lifetimes in a moment? But what it really brought me into awareness of was the process
that was underneath the eating disorder for me.
I could have told you everything about the Canada Food Guide.
I could have told you everything about what caloric intake
needed to be, and I could have told you everything
about what mechanical eating looked like
But I still didn't have a really good understanding of why an eating disorder
It didn't feel obvious to me about kind of the what was the function that it was serving for me?
Yes, I could tell you again theoretically generically. Oh, it was helping me manage my feelings
It was helping me not feel it was helping me get agency over my body and in a way that was socially desirable.
But what was going on for me phenomenologically?
What was it about Hillary's experience that was way too painful to be with?
That I had to find a way to get out of it.
And in the process of the psychedelic journey, not only did I feel like I understood what was
underneath the eating disorder for me, but I felt like I understood the way that the eating disorder
was adjacent to all of these other behaviors in my life that we're serving the same purpose,
workahalism, certain avoidant behaviors and relationships, certain strategies for getting control
even over my mind. Right? There were certain things that I didn't see as connected,
almost as if this stuff underneath was at the root,
and all of these other things, including the eating disorder,
were the flowers that were blooming out of this bulb at the root.
Mmm.
How, Hillary?
Like, what's happening?
Is someone coming to you and saying,
here is the root.
Here are the flowers.
Are you seeing a tree?
What was happening?
Before we go into that, can you explain
the actual process that how it begins,
how you find these people, where you are,
because I know that the setting is very important before
yes you get into the process of it. I think that our listeners would really love to know like the
step-by-step process before we get into the how. So I had connections because of my clinical work
and because of the people that I know who had psychedelic experiences with an experienced psychedelic guide.
So someone who was trained to sit with people and work with them therapeutically.
And again, this is really different than like taking mushrooms at a party and everybody's
doast and nobody knows if you're at the laundry pile or the campfire.
There was someone who was specifically there to help me move towards what was happening
inside of me and also to give me space to make choices about what I needed in that moment.
And generally what happens in clinical settings where you're using psychedelics for clinical
purposes, for therapeutic purposes is you have a series of prep sessions where you were
talking about what your intentions are, where you are deciding where it is that you want to head.
The kind of the big questions that you might want to ask
of the medicine, of the psychedelics,
of God, of yourself, whoever you're asking them of,
and establishing a good therapeutic rapport with the person.
Because we know that those are really important predictors
of outcomes, the ability to have an alliance
with the clinician, with
the therapist, with the guide, predicts how much you're able to go into those things.
And the work of neuroscientist Robin Carter has shown that if you are able to access
what's inside and able to have some sort of emotional release, catharsis, experience
connection to parts of you and potentially emotional expression connected to
those parts of your life, that that predicts really good therapeutic outcomes. So what you see is
like the kind of this series of things that work together, the setting, the set, the guide, the
trust, the ability to say yes to the process and kind of surrender into it allows you to begin investigating what's
going on inside of you. And then what you usually have is a dosing session, which depending
on which medicine you're using can last anywhere from two to three hours to eight to 12 hours
or in some cases like Ibogaine or Iboga 24 to 48 hours or can be longer medicines that you use depending
on what you're using. Yeah, really, really big long journeys. And then what happens is you have
integration and follow up, you have this container that you've been building along the way holding
you to support you to then make meaning of what happened. Because sometimes it's clear in the session
and other times you just kind of get this information
and then you're like, well, what do I do with this?
And you have a person who helps you
weave it into a narrative that then you can take
with you and hold on to in future moments,
in difficult situations to remind you of what you knew
or experienced in that session.
Super helpful. ["Piano Music"]
We've recorded with Priya Parker, which we'll air soon,
and she kept talking about the math and the poetry,
in that case, events, but I've been thinking about everything now as math and poetry. And this, I
hear the poetry about all of it. And there's also a math component. Can you talk
about, for those of us who are imagining like, but what is actually happening? I
have heard it said in the way that rings true for my brain is that I do the
same shit over and over of the same thought patterns. When something happens in my relationship,
I do the same shit over and over and over. My brain has all these possibilities and all
these answers, but I have one well-trot route. It is like cemented over of 157 times.
So something comes in and I go directly to that road
and that's the only road I use.
Is that what this is doing?
Like when you are hallucinating,
this rigid brain becomes more malleable
and I think neuroplasticity,
so that you can have the possibility
of going down a different route that you would
never go down because of your concrete it over route. And then you're accessing something
you never normally access so that then that road now exists. And then all the therapy after
is like, now we need to practice going down that road over and over so that you can access that different road.
So yes, exactly.
That is a different perspective to me.
Well, I'll fill in some of the details and give you a little bit more of the science
in the theory, but you basically have it exactly right.
So we'll get back to that narrative of kind of the concrete and the path and the root
that we take in just a second.
But I want to back up by saying this, the etymology of the word psychedelic comes from
Humphrey Osmond. It was created in the 50s and he he combined psyche and dillia, right? Psychedelic
and psyche is mind or if you're true to the Greek would mean soul. And dillia or doulon actually
would mean revealing or to make manifest. So what
that really means is mind manifesting or soul revealing. There's something about the process,
and this might be the poetry part of what you're talking about, the process of psychedelics
that they show us ourselves. They show us the roads we have taken and the roads we could
take. They show us what gets in the way of taking those new roads. So think about that. Hold that in your mind as I'm talking about the science of this and
thinking about what the experiences could be like. So like the origins of psychology,
when you think back to Freud and kind of the founding fathers of psychology, we think about
the importance of revealing the unconscious, the things that are outside of our conscious awareness.
And unconscious
might not be the right word, maybe like primary consciousness. I think there's a kind of wisdom
to what's going on underneath our defense strategies. But the true psychedelics, things like
psilocybin, LSD, DMT, and ayahuasca, they work on the serotonin to A receptors in the brain.
Kenamine, MDMA, a couple other drugs
work a little differently, although we sometimes
lump those into the category of psychedelic.
What we know is that based on analytics and data modeling,
that psychedelics, when they're active in your brain
and high doses, actually decrease activity
in something called the default mode network.
So the default mode network is the series of interconnected networks in our brain that
are responsible for introspection, self-directed thought, criticism, personal narrative, remembering,
and also how we think about the future.
So what we know from recent publications in peer-reviewed academic journals is that we
see changes in the brain in these neural networks connected to the default mode network
that kind of decrease connectivity.
So the tight rigid connection that you're talking about
starts to soften and dissolve,
which means that there's room for more spontaneous brain
activity.
And there's the release of something
that we call brain derivedderived neurotropic factor,
which is related to genes and proteins
that actually increase neural plasticity.
And what we see is that these effects
outlast the dosing session.
So you have a dosing session and you're experiencing
a lot of new kind of neural, in a way, connection
and disconnection, the things that were linked,
be kind of come unlinked and new spontaneous brain activity as possible. But that's ongoing.
And a recent study show that even up to three weeks after the dosing session, do you have BDNF
in your brain? And you have more potential for neural change. So the way that I describe this, and I'm not the first person to use this metaphor, is
it's kind of like our minds are this orchestra that's playing.
And we have a conductor at the front who is in a way the default mode network playing,
helping us play the specific music that we've always been playing.
And it's beautiful, and it's perfect, and it suits the mood until it doesn't.
And tell the same song that we've been playing for 30 years doesn't work
because we meet a new context or we have a new sheet music in front of us
or there's a new conductor or we want to we want to score to that beautiful
movie to sound a little different.
And the way to think about it is that psychedelics pull the conductor
and take away the sheet music.
So all of a sudden you can imagine a cacophony where you know the strings are like,
no, doing this thing and the drums are doing their own thing.
You've got the tubas playing and it's out of sync.
But yes, that could feel chaotic and new creative possibilities can emerge.
There could all of a sudden be the option for this synchronous sound to emerge between
the strings and the horns that you never heard before and a new possibility for a new
music that was never created or never lived by you could start to take place.
So the chaos and the disorganization is often what people are a little scared of when they
think of the psychedelics because what are we going to find? What if it's horrible?
And there's the possibility of that. In fact, there's often a challenging moment, if not many moments in psychedelic journeys, but then there's also something happening in the structures of your brain that say, let's try something different.
Let's do it new. Let's not play the same old song that we were playing before.
Damn.
If this is an actual therapy journey,
is then the follow-up like,
I heard that music,
and I want that music in my life.
So what are the ways that I can think and the strategies
and the therapy that I need to keep playing that way instead of the tired way that I can think and the strategies and the therapy that I need to
keep playing that way instead of the tired way that I've been for the past 30 years? Because you can't have the chaos all the time. So is it settling it into a new tune?
So I have the privilege of being in relationship with lots of musicians. So I hear how they're
working on songs. And what I hear is sometimes, you know, if you have a musician friend, they're like,
I've got this riff in my head, I've got this riff in my head.
And they sit in the piano and they tinker
and they work with it and they turn that riff
into this beautiful song.
And it's through nuance and repetition
and remembering or what we call
in the case of psychedelic work integration,
where you or the person who was guiding you
or supporting you help you figure out what was that riff,
what was that piece?
And let's pull it out. And let's sit at the piano next to each other and play the keys
and see what else we can turn this into.
And keep coming back and keep playing that song and that riff and that melody.
And the more that you play that new melody,
the more that it too becomes concretized in a way that that old melody that doesn't work for you anymore was concretized.
In the speculative imaging from the neurological function of
psychedelics, what we see is it's almost like you said, there's
this concrete terrain, or we could just say like a, you know,
landscape that has all of these deep holes in it. And it's really
easy if you're walking along that terrain to fall into one of those deep holes and get stuck.
And during a psychedelic experience, it's almost like the terrain becomes more level,
and everything becomes a possibility instead of this hole that you're trying to avoid,
or this mountain that you have to climb over.
And the effect of that decreases after the journey is complete,
but still some of it remains, that the holes
aren't as deep. The mountains aren't as high. The terrain is a lot more accessible for you.
And that seems to be this kind of metaphor for what's happening neurocognitively for us,
that we can do things a little differently, even after the journey is done. And really good
integration and support helps us continue to keep taking new paths and
choosing new possibilities and even coming up with new melodies even when the drug is out of your system.
Can you tie what you talked about in the beginning with in your particular case,
I'm assuming you went into the psychedelic journey asking questions about your eating disorder
because that's the information you got during the journey.
Can you explain to us how what you discovered was like the metaphor?
Was like an old song going away, an old conductor, and then a new song emerging?
What did that actually look like in your life?
Yeah.
There's another process that can happen, right?
There's the neural change that can level the terrain, which makes new possibilities an option.
And implicit in that is a softening of the defenses. If one of these deep holes or one of the peaks that we have to traverse mentally is don't go there, don't think about that, don't look at it, don't remember.
Then psychedelics in their softening of our process allow us to access things that maybe
we forgot, maybe we intentionally don't want to move towards.
So actually, we know what's fascinating about my journey is that I thought that I was
done with my eating disorder.
I wasn't ask any questions. Oh, okay. My questions were not about eating disorders.
My questions were about, why is it so hard for me to feel
these specific feelings?
The questions were about, you know, when this particular moment
happens in my life, why is it hard for me to let people in
to share that with me?
And where the medicine took me,
you can hear the language I'm using.
We often refer to it as having a kind of consciousness
itself.
It's kind of, it directs you.
This is part of the poetry in the math, right?
I can tell you about the serotonin two-ay receptors,
but there is something really mystical and sacred
about how especially plant medicine works in our body
in my ceilium.
It took me to these places,
and it showed me, if it's okay with you,
to share a little bit more of the story.
Please.
Please.
I saw a younger version of myself
who was walking through the world
encountering painful experiences.
And the intensity and the reverberation in my body
of those painful experiences was overwhelming
to me.
And what I saw in the second electronic journey was that as it was overwhelming in me,
I was looking out at the people around me and they were becoming overwhelmed by how
overwhelmed I was.
And so I developed this strategy, and here's where it starts to get a little bit kind of mythical, of holding
this giant balloon behind my back. And I saw that in my childhood, what I would do is
in a painful experience would impact me, it reverberate through my body, and I didn't know where to put
it, and so I would funnel it into this balloon behind my back. An experience after experience
started to happen, where I was filling the balloon up with all of these painful experiences and
Emotions and all the things that I felt and wanted to say but couldn't say and felt alone in and then the balloon became so big that it wasn't hidden behind my back anymore
It was bigger than me
And so I had to find some way to disappear. I had to find some way to make my entire
I had to find some way to disappear. I had to find some way to make my entire existence go away.
So that not only was the pain
that I was funneling into the balloon, invisible,
but me as a whole.
And that seemed to be where the origin
for me of the eating disorder emerged
is that it had this function of making everything go away.
But long before that, I was funneling things into this secret strategy to avoid feeling
it, to avoid showing it to anyone to try to stay in connection with people around me.
So what is able to do in this journey, which is often characteristic of psychedelic works
that you can go back and redo during the experience? You can go back to memories and do things
differently. What I imagined was that I could hold the hand of my partner and my best friend, and we walked into the
mouth of the balloon together, and I showed them everything that was inside of it. And they
held me, and they loved me, and they wept for me, and we looked at every single thing
that had ever gotten funneled in there and they
were still there. And they weren't overwhelmed. So what happened for me on the other side of
the journey was realizing, okay, this is my pattern. I almost don't feel anything, but I funnel it right into this thing
that I keep just adjacent to me,
so I don't really have to feel it.
And then other people around me don't have to feel it,
and I don't have to lose them.
So I need to be more in connection to what I'm feeling,
and I need to own that,
and I need to take the risk to let people close to me
while I'm feeling that,
knowing that it may overwhelm them,
but it also may not.
And if it doesn't overwhelm them,
then I don't have to be with it on my own.
Then I don't have to be carrying the enormity
of the pain and the challenges and the beauty of life
in my two hands alone.
I can let the people close to me help me hold it.
So the practice has been like, okay,
when I feel
something feel it in my body, but also I call that person up, right? Or I call my
husband, I'm like, I don't know what this is called, but I need you to sit right
here. Well, I learned to see what happens next as I feel it in my body. So are
you laying in a bed? I just want to know what exactly is happening while you're having this vision of yourself as a
child with the balloon on your back. Are you laying there? Are you talking to the person who's
facilitating? Are they talking back? And when you come back, what does that look like? And do you
already understand everything that's happened? Or were there lots of conversations that helped you
And do you already understand everything that's happened or were there lots of conversations
that helped you know what the hell that balloon was?
Yeah.
Typically, the way that it works in clinical trials,
in clinical settings is that you are in a comfortable space
that feels a little and looks a little bit like a bed,
so you get to totally recline.
There are often eye shades or headphones
where you can hear music,
but I think really good psychedelic work is tuned into the person who's in front of you, which means if a person doesn't want eye shades or headphones where you can hear music. But I think really good psychedelic work
is tuned into the person who's in front of you,
which means if a person doesn't want eye shades on,
they don't have them on.
If they don't want music, they don't have music on.
There can be something about music
that accentuates the emotion and kind of directs you
towards certain places inside of yourself
and certain feelings.
So that's happening.
There's often a
guide or two sitting next to you checking in, asking how you're doing. Sometimes people talk a lot,
sometimes people don't talk at all. And what's fascinating about the classic psychedelics is that
you remember everything that happened. There's nothing about what happened that you forget as
soon as it happens. You might need to make meaning of it.
Okay, why did that thing keep happening?
What was going on there?
But what's happening is sometimes the guy to sitting next to you writing things down,
taking notes, helping you remember important things.
There's something that often happens for me on psychedelics where I think I'm brilliant.
I'm like, write this down. This is great.
Everybody's got to know this.
Guess what?
It's all good.
Or whatever you know these guys
that think that people say when they're high,
I'm like, no, no, no.
Love is everything.
Write this down.
Write this down.
You need to know this too.
But it feels so profound, right?
Yeah.
I have been with the recipient
of friends, huge discoveries.
And I just really think that it's like that.
It's like, Glenin love is everything.
And I'm like, I just think you need the context of your personal story
because it's to really feel that.
But is it revolutionary because it's like, we all say that shit,
but we don't actually believe it.
And or know it.
Is it revolutionary?
Because you're like, holy shit, y'all.
This is the legit true.
Well, I think this is the difference about kind of cognitive work and embodied work that
happens back to our past conversation or bottom up processing versus top down processing.
I can tell you all of those things.
But in the psychedelic experiences,
it was the first time I felt it. It was the first time that I experienced what goodness was
like as my body, not just this abstraction or this idea of things that I say about these
truths that we are virtues or things that we know. It was like, I didn't know it anymore.
I experienced it.
And I think that that does something for us.
Yeah.
There's a clinical trial that was just on it and why you and the results haven't even
been published in a journal.
But what the study was was looking at religious leaders of various faith traditions, having
a significant psilocybin experience. And what they said was that they
knew God less, but they felt and loved God more. So there's something about taking these things
that we know, even let's just take my experience or the experience of perhaps the people listening
to the podcast.
What is it like to say I'm my body and what is it like to say my body is good because
it's nature because my body is alive.
And then what is it like to actually experience your body as having the same consciousness as the creator, as the
animals around you, as like mother earth. What is it like to experience that your cells
have goodness inside of them? It radically changes our relationship to ourselves. It radically
changes the way we want to care for ourselves.
So even the outcomes of this clinical trial
of healthy, what we call them, healthy normals,
the religious leaders who had been practicing
these religious traditions for years and years and years,
for them to go, oh, the body of Christ
isn't just this piece of bread that I eat, but
it's my hands.
It's my eyes.
It's me and you together in this cosmic dance,
to feel ourselves experiencing something will always impact us more deeply than the idea of it.
And I think that's what's happening for people when they're telling
you like, the, the, everything is love. What they're trying to say is like, oh, I felt it. Yes.
I want you and I want everyone to feel it too.
It feels to me that I haven't heard anybody tell me that it lessened their compassion, because if you are discovering and experiencing for the first time the divinity, the miracle
or whatever that is you, you are also knowing that for everybody else.
I assume it very much increases your reverence
for other human beings as well, including your family members.
I've heard so many people having experiences that allow them
to sense whatever forgiveness is.
It sense the humanity of the people who hurt them as
well and free themselves of anger.
Absolutely.
Yeah, there's something characteristic about, again, the dissolving of the default
mode network or what we might call ego-dath.
I don't love the term necessarily, but the way that our sense of individual selfness begins to dissolve that helps us feel in
an experiential way how we are the same or made of the same stuff as everyone around
us, our hero, our enemy, the person we have a grudge with, the tree.
Then that's not the experience that every person will have on psychedelics, but it is
a more common than not experience to have that felt sense of interconnectedness in a new way.
That makes it really hard,
at least during the trip and shortly after
to look at someone and go,
oh, why don't you put the dishes in the dishwasher
the way that I want you to?
We're like, oh, we're all just trying our best.
Isn't this a fun game that we're playing the dish?
I should go in the dishwasher,
and I'm going to be right about that.
We're like, that's whatever.
Like, you're alive and I'm alive too.
It injects into our experience a mysticism that I think
that we are lacking as a result of post-rational hypersoreb reality
our felt sense of being able to see what's happening here
in a way that detaches us from our defenses
and our irritations, it just kind of, again, it softens that terrain that helps us in a way
that helps us be more connected and empathic. It might be about time to give a shout out to our
sober community for whom this might feel things, ways it has for me in the past, it is my understanding that the man who wrote
the big book when he talks about the spiritual experience that he had that led him to these
12 steps and sobriety, that his encounter with the higher power was an experience of psychedelics. That AA was largely launched from a singular experience of psychedelics.
True, not true.
Yeah, true.
So Bill Wilson was part of the research in Canada that was happening in the 50s and 60s
using LSD to treat alcoholism.
So there was a long history of psychedelics and substance use disorder.
And what I've been learning about all of this is that Bill and Carl Jung wrote a series of
letters to each other in 61 talking about the significance of spiritual experience as transforming
relationship to substance and the process underneath that there needs to be a kind of spiritual
awakening. But what isn't common knowledge is that there was a letter that followed that in which Bill Wilson was saying to Carl Jung, LSD was responsible
for this spiritual experience that I had. And of course, he was using psychedelics legally as part
of clinical trials and under the supervision in a research hospital of clinicians who were trained,
but that was at the origin of him identifying a higher power as a significant
component or the foundation really of doing recovery work. So understandably, we need to think about
substances so carefully because there can be use and misuse of anything. I mean, eating
disorders are a great example of that. Like, food is meant to nourish us.
And yet, I have a history of abusing food.
Does it mean that food is bad?
You know, capital B bad?
No, but how I use it under what context, what's happening for me.
Medicine is the same thing.
We want to think about what is our relationship to it?
Are we engaging in it
thoughtfully? Is it a bad idea for us based on our genetic vulnerabilities or our past history? Do
we want to make sure that we're not keeping it in the house because we're concerned about our use
and therefore we're going to use it in a setting where we have good supervision around that?
I think it's important to ask all those questions. And I think to extend beyond that as well, I would argue that when we think about use and
misuse of substances, we also have to think about the history of indigenous peoples who've
been using plant medicine for a very, very, very long time whose relationships to these
medicine and sovereignty over how they're used as threatened as Westerners, as white folks come
in and in the true fashion of colonization and capitalism take medicines and misuse them in a way
that maybe isn't, you know, me becoming addicted to the substance, but I'm harming my relationship with
my kin. I'm creating ruptures in relationship with the earth if we're milking
toads for DMT and it's endangering the toad population. If people are using peyote or
sympedro in ways that are taking, colonizing, these medicines, we have to think about use
and misuse. I think more than just my individual self, but also what are the broader community
effects of what medicine
I'm using and how it feels to the people who have a tradition with that medicine.
Thank you for saying that. It's such an interesting parallel that I've never thought of in terms of how
now, you know, how many white entrepreneurs are getting rich off of the recreational cannabis
entrepreneurs are getting rich off of the recreational cannabis situation, while how many hundreds of thousands of black and brown people who had, you know, $10 worth of pot in their
pocket are still in jail. And the Supreme Court just restored the right of indigenous people
to use their ceremonial ritual medicines that they were outlawed forever.
And now it's like, oh, well, we've discovered it
and it's cool for everyone.
It's a something to be very aware of in this conversation.
Can we also just touch on like maybe the history of the law
and I think that maybe the fear mongering
happened throughout my life around drugs
and like just tripping LSD mushrooms itself,
like it's own scary category.
Yeah, same.
Same, I've never done anything like that
because I was always like,
oh, that's the bridge too far.
Everyone can smoke all the pot they want,
but that's stuff.
And is all the stuff you're talking about currently legal or is some of it
legal, some of it not, and do you need to like get a license the way some people in certain states
get cannabis licenses? These are important things to think about because I think many people will
come to this conversation holding either this unreflective enthusiasm about psychedelics
because it feels like they've had good experiences
or they've seen people have good experiences
in a way that maybe lacks critical thinking
about who this is good for and who it's not good for.
And then the other side of it is we might hold
an overgeneralization about these substances
in a way that has us believing
they're terrible and terrifying and dangerous
when at their core,
if they're used appropriately,
could actually be part of what transforms our lives
and engenders healing.
So again, I wanna hold the complexity of the dialogue
in here and know that that's a hard thing to do
when we wanna be polarized in these conversations.
And I think the polarization is really well captured
in the history of psychedelic use in North America where there was the emergence of clinical research in the 50s and were engaging in psychedelic use perhaps recklessly
with students and boundaries were crossed.
Timothy Lear is that who you're talking about right now?
Yeah, yeah, that it becomes, I mean, even making public campaigns like to drop out, to drop
out to do something.
Drop in, drop out.
I think about tuning and dropping for sure.
Something for sure.
Absolutely.
That was it.
That that there was this idea proliferated.
Everyone should have psychedelics all the time.
It should be accessible to everybody.
And we we just know that that's reckless and not good practice.
It doesn't treat these medicines or the people who are using them.
Sacredly, right.
It's not holding the complexity.
So I think that because of that, this emergence of this movement at the same time as people
are protesting the Vietnam War, particularly in the states, there becomes this conversation
about how this is dangerous to the psyche of the American youth, and how because of their
free thinking and their dropping out,
so to speak, what are they dropping out of?
Institutions, systems, the draft,
they're protesting these systems
that the government is promoting as ideal
or the right way to live,
and that creates a conflict for the government at that time.
I'm thinking particularly of the FBI, CIA,
and how at that point it became very important to schedule these drugs so
that people youth could be controlled, so the medicines could be controlled, and we could
argue for good purposes in some cases, and also really politically oppressive.
And by schedule, just so everyone on schedule means basically, put them in the realm of highly
regulated, government has the authority to say who does and does not get these drugs. The federal means basically put them in the realm of highly regulated.
Government has the authority to say who does and does not get these drugs.
Yeah.
And then we have along with that the proliferation of the St.
Notre-Drucks campaigns, which I think again, were really helpful for some populations.
I'm thinking of moms and parents and folks like within high control religious communities
who are really scared about thinking freely and consciousness extending between us and the
the dissolving of ego and identity and perhaps like reckless sexual behavior that might happen
if you are using a substance. And so the control around substances really think, became a way of controlling bodies, black bodies and brown bodies,
the bodies of youth, sexual bodies, the way to restrict anything that stood in opposition to this
very specific way of moving through the world that aligned with people who had the most power in
North America. And then the public campaigns that we all heard came out,
the one I mentioned at the beginning of seeing an egg fry
in a frying pan, I like so many people were like,
I don't want that to happen to my brain.
Of course, that's not actually what happens to your brain.
It's a straw man argument used to create fear and terror and control.
Obviously, there are changes that happen in the brain
when you're using substances as there are if you're eating a chocolate bar or if you're
having sex or if you see a sunset.
Changes in the brain are happening right now.
This is your brain on her season.
This is the trick.
I want to see that public campaign, right? This is your brain on a slip and slide at
summer camps.
This is your brain on a slip-and-slide at summer camps. This is your brain on capitalism. There you go. Yeah.
Exactly. This is your brain on diet culture. We could have the same conversations.
And what we're seeing is the emergence of, again, really good robust clinical data
that is suggesting in highly controlled clinical environments that not only can these psychedelics be safe
for specific purposes with certain populations, but that they can actually be the mechanism
that helps all of these intractable mental health issues heal. And is it okay if I just talk about
that for a minute? Please. Please. Something important here.
Whenever you're looking at the research on psychedelics and clinical implications, you
see things like, okay, huge potential there in depression, populations huge potential
with eating disorders, anorexia and bulimia, complex PTSD, single incident PTSD, fibromyalgia, headache disorder, chronic pain, tobacco use,
alcohol use, anxiety disorders. Okay, so I'm listing all of these things that we would typically,
in my field, put in very different categories. An eating disorder would probably sit on the other
end of the spectrum from tobacco use disorder or a complex PTSD.
We have these neat diagnostic categories,
which makes us ask a very interesting question.
How can the same thing be treating
all of these different conditions?
What is the root in that garden, Dr. Hillamy McBride?
Right.
Yeah. Well, there's this scholar who is now in that garden, Dr. Hillamay McBride?
Well, there's this scholar who's now in the state's name Robin Carrhart Harris who's written extensively about this. And what he's identifying is that there might be a unifying
process underneath most of our presenting
psychological concerns. And
what could that be?
It comes back to what you were saying, Amanda,
about rigidity or what we call canalization, right?
The idea that things could be rigid or intractable,
that underneath most of our presenting health concerns,
we have a kind of a distinct process
that our brain engages in that has very little flexibility.
We're in bed and we're depressed and we think the world is going to be horrible.
And I can tell you that with certainty because that's what I know to be true and that's
the same thing that I think every day.
Or that food is terrifying.
I can't eat that food.
It's bad.
It's bad.
It's bad.
Or someone's going to see that I'm worthless.
Right.
They're going to see that I'm worthless.
I can't go out. I can't go out.
The same potentially mechanism underneath most of our presenting concerns could be this
rigidity, right?
The kind of the stuckness of our mind working in a particular way.
And when you think about who psychedelics are not good for, it's people who don't have
that rigid stuckness. When you think about psych psychedelics are not good for, it's people who don't have that
rigid stuckness.
When you think about psychotic spectrum disorders, it's chaos in the brain a little bit.
It's like, oh, there's a lot of spontaneous brain activity.
I'm seeing things that I wouldn't normally see.
My version of reality is a little extended beyond what someone else's version is.
So when you think about what psychedelics are doing, those particular brains don't need the help of psychedelics to have more flexibility and neurogenesis and fluidity of reasoning.
It's the conditions that are most of what I would see or what we would see in clinical
settings, seeking treatment would be the rigidity, the stuckness that underlies most of what makes it hard for us to be in the world.
That is fascinating.
How often do people have to do these journeys? I've seen some documentaries and they say like one or two, like how often are you needing
to do something?
Or some people say like once a year they do them.
Is that dependant?
It depends on the substance and the presenting concern.
So what we see in clinical trials and this is like the way that we have to research things
to make them
empirically valid means that there is unfortunately a certain kind of rigidity to it.
But what we see often creates the best outcomes is a bunch of prep at least two dosing sessions,
sometimes even a third, and then really good follow up.
That being said, there are reports of people taking high doses of DMT in clinical
settings and saying, I never need to or want to do a psychedelic again because it was everything
that I needed to know and experience and learn and nothing compared to that. And so, are we treating
clinical issues that what might have a resurgence? Are people doing personal exploration and growth
and looking at kind of spirituality and well-being
and flourishing?
We know that there's use of psychedelics
around hyperformance athletes.
So what is the presenting concern?
And it's a kind of irritating answer,
I know, because it's saying, wow, it depends, right?
But I think that good medicine is person-specific.
Right. So we just have to wait for more clinical trials. But I would say, yeah, it depends, right? But I think that good medicine is person-specific. Right.
So we just have to wait for more clinical trials,
but I would say, yeah, it depends.
Do you believe we'll see this legalized
and become a part of treatment,
or is this our pharmaceutical company's never going
to allow this because there's no business model
for which to build, have one experience,
and then you're done.
I mean, I've been on antidepressants for 12 years
and I don't know that I'll ever get off.
So is there room in our system for something
that isn't hugely money-making?
Will Big Pharma allow that?
And also, if the crux of this experience is love
and freedom and peace, why would our culture allow that?
Do you know what I'm saying? Like we're not nobody's going into these experiences coming out and being like, oh my god, I've just realized I
have to work harder for the man. Right. Our system depends on you being pissed about the dishwasher.
Right. And not believing that there's freedom and love and that you're worthy no matter what.
Like hustle culture is not wanting us to know the truth.
So what's going to happen?
I firmly believe that the resilience of the human spirit is much more powerful than any
man-made system that oppresses us.
It is a foundational belief of mine that nature wants itself to flourish and grow.
And you can imagine if a meteorite hit the earth right at this moment,
how many weeks would it take before my house was overgrown with trees and the plants took on
a life of their own. There is something in nature that wants to dismantle the systems that work
against it. So it is my foundational belief that this, this is the direction that we're heading in,
and it may mean that we build new systems, and it may mean that the things that don't work for us need to go.
And I think that part of experiencing our interconnectedness means that we become connected to the will, and the courage, and the fortitude, and the courage and the fortitude and the love required to do the hard work and
the beautiful in some ways gentle easy work of dismantling what hurts us.
Damn.
Well, shit, Dr. McBride.
That being said,
Nope, don't know more things.
Oh, come on, that's it.
Goodbye.
That was so good.
No, go ahead.
So, my mushrooms are a plant.
Isn't it absurd that we have criminalized a plant?
Yeah, why do you have that?
You can't ask them permission.
I can pull carrots for my backyard.
I know.
So, what do you know?
In Canada, in certain provinces, certain psychedelics are legal or decriminalized.
In certain states, psychedelics are legal or decriminalized.
It can depend on which one and where and what setting.
I own and work in a practice that is connected to ketamine work.
Of course, ketamine has been legal for a very, very long time as an anesthetic that's used
in a hospital setting.
The team doctor that I work with was the
first to prescribe psilocybin clinically in Canada. Under health Canada regulation, there's
an exemption for a patient for end of life care. So I think that there is a movement in that
direction because I think at the heart of it, what we ultimately want and need, in spite of how hard it is to pull ourselves out
from underneath these structures,
I think that the human spirit knows the way,
and it is liberation for all, it's healing for all,
it's medicine for all, and knowing that not every medicine
is right for every person, not every context,
is the right context, even if that right medicine would be,
you know, right for that person in a different setting, it allows for people to have unique
diverse needs and for us to accommodate people to help them get what they need.
So there's like things are moving in that direction. Like I said,
ketamine is legal. I won't be long until MDMA is rescheduled in those dates. They're thinking
2024 based on the maps, multidisciplinary association
of psychedelic studies, clinical trials that are ongoing specifically for PTSD. And yes, yes,
big pharma might be angry about it. And yes, there might be people who are trying to monetize
mushrooms in some way. But the VA in particular is overwhelmed with a number of people who
have PTSD coming out of combat situations. The R medical system is not functioning. Anyone
who looks at it closely enough understands that we are failing people greatly. I don't think
that big pharma isn't any danger of losing at this moment, they're hold on the North American psyche
because the concerns and the need is so far greater
than what they're able to provide
that I think it will be a little bit of time
until we move away from mainstream,
big pharma being a part of everyday medical care,
but it's important to recognize
that right now people are being failed
and we need new and better treatments.
But we need to do better and I think this is part of it.
Pod Squad, we are going to pause this fascinating conversation right there and come back tomorrow
with a short bonus discussion that you will not want to miss on how psychedelic therapy
works for partnered couples or people trying to work on relational problems together or for strengthening connection and
experiencing closeness and intimacy without the walls that we put up that keep us apart. Don't miss it.
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I give you Tish Melton and Brandy Carlyle. I came out the other side
I chased desire, I made sure I got once money
And I continue to believe
That I'm the one for me And because I'm mine, I walk the line
Cause we're adventurous and heartbreak
So man, A final destination
That we stopped asking directions
Some places they've never been
And to be loved we need to be known
We'll finally find our way back home
And through the joy and pain
That our lives bring
We can do a heartache
I hit rock bottom it felt like a brand new star I'm not the problem sometimes things fall hard
And I continue to believe
The best people are free
And it took some time
But I'm finally fine
Cause we're adventurers and heartbreaks on land A final destination with that
They stopped asking directions
So places they've never been
Come to be loved, we need to be known
We'll finally find our way back home
And through the joy and pain
That our lives bring
We can do hard.
This birth, finish your rose and heartbreak some mat. We might get lost, but we're only in that room.
Stop asking directions, some places may've never been
And to be loved we need to be long
We'll finally find our way back home
And through the joy and pain
That our lives bring
We can do hard things
Yeah, we can do hard things
Yeah, we can do hard things Thank you.