{"id":214650,"date":"2017-03-09T10:44:39","date_gmt":"2017-03-09T15:44:39","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/uncategorized\/inside-the-psychedelic-underground-rollingstone-com.php"},"modified":"2017-03-09T10:44:39","modified_gmt":"2017-03-09T15:44:39","slug":"inside-the-psychedelic-underground-rollingstone-com","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/psychedelics\/inside-the-psychedelic-underground-rollingstone-com.php","title":{"rendered":"Inside the Psychedelic Underground &#8211; RollingStone.com"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><p>  How some doctors are risking everything to unleash the healing  power of MDMA, ayahuasca and other hallucinogens<\/p>\n<p>    How some doctors are risking everything to unleash the healing    power of MDMA, ayahuasca and other hallucinogens  <\/p>\n<p>    Dr. X is a dad. Appropriately  boringly  at 4:37 p.m. on a    national holiday, he is lighting a charcoal grill, about to    grab a pair of tongs with one hand and a beer with the other.    His kids are running around their suburban patio, which could    be anywhere; Dr. X, though impressively educated now, grew up    poor in a town that is basically nowhere. Like most Americans,    he is a Christian. Like a lot of health-conscious men, he    fights dad bod by working out once or twice a week, before    going into his medical practice.<\/p>\n<p>    Somewhat less conventionally, two hours ago, he was escorting a    woman around his yard, helping her walk off a large dose of    MDMA. He's the one who'd given it to her, earlier in the    morning, drugging her out of her mind.  <\/p>\n<p>    This would be psychedelic-assisted therapy, the not-new but    increasingly popular practice of administering psychotropic    substances to treat a wide range of physical, psychological and    psycho-spiritual concerns. \"Some people stagger out\" of the    room in Dr. X's home that he uses for these \"journeys,\" as    sessions are called in the semiofficial parlance. Some have to    stay for hours and hours beyond the standard five or so, crying    or waiting to emotionally rebalance, lying on a mattress,    probing the secrets, trauma, belief or grief buried in their    subconscious. Dr. X recalls a patient who was considering a    round-the-clock Klonopin prescription for anxiety; she    reluctantly decided to try a journey instead. On the    \"medicine,\" she spent seven hours unraveling ballistically,    picturing herself dumping sadness out of her chest into a jade    box that she put a golden heart-shaped lock on and tossed into    the sea. She'd been skeptical going in, but after it was over,    Dr. X says, \"She was so angry that it was illegal.\"  <\/p>\n<p>    Because Dr. X's hallmark treatment  an MDMA session or two,    then further journeys with psilocybin mushrooms if called for     is, absolutely, illegal. MDMA is a Schedule I controlled    substance. Psilocybin is as well. Exposure could get his    medical license suspended, if not revoked, along with his    parental rights, or freedom. \"This should be a part of health    care, and is a true part of health care,\" he says in his    defense. The oversimplified concept behind MDMA therapy, which    causes intense neurotransmitter activity including the release    of adrenaline and serotonin (believed to produce positive    mood), is that it tamps down fear, allowing people to interact    with  and deal with  parts of their psyche they otherwise    can't. Psychedelics in general are thought to bring an    observational part of the ego online to allow a new perspective    on one's self and one's memories, potentially leading to deep    understanding and healing.  <\/p>\n<p>    As an internal-medicine specialist, Dr. X doesn't have any    patients who come to him seeking psychotherapy. But the longer    he does the work, the more \"I'm seeing that consciousness    correlates to disease,\" he says. \"Every disease.\" Narcolepsy.    Cataplexy. Crohn's. Diabetes  one patient's psychedelic    therapy preceded a 30 percent reduction in fasting blood-sugar    levels. Sufferers of food allergies discover in their journeys    that they've been internally attacking themselves.    \"Consciousness is so vastly undervalued,\" Dr. X says. \"We use    it in every other facet in our life and esteem the intellectual    part of it, but deny the emotional or intuitive part of it.\"    Psychedelic therapy \"reinvigorated my passion and belief in    healing. I think it's the best tool to achieving well-being, so    I feel morally and ethically compelled to open up that space.\"  <\/p>\n<p>    Currently  legally  we're in the midst of a psychedelic    renaissance. New York University, the University of New Mexico,    the University of Zurich, Johns Hopkins University, the    University of Alabama and the University of California-Los    Angeles have all partnered with the psilocybin-focused Heffter    Research Institute, studying the compound for smoking    cessation, alcoholism, terminal-cancer anxiety and cocaine    dependence; the biotech-CEO-founded Usona Institute funds    research of \"consciousness-expanding medicines\" for depression    and anxiety at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Since 2000,    the Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies    (MAPS), a nonprofit based in Santa Cruz, California, has been    funding clinical trials of MDMA for subjects with PTSD, mostly    veterans, but also police, firefighters and civilians. In    November, the FDA approved large-scale Phase III clinical    trials  the last phase before potential medicalization  of    MDMA for PTSD treatment. MAPS, which has committed $25 million    to achieving that medicalization by 2021, also supports or runs    research with ayahuasca (a concoction of Amazonian plants),    LSD, medical marijuana and ibogaine, the pharmaceutical extract    of the psychoactive African shrub iboga. The organization is    additionally funding a study of MDMA for treating social    anxiety in autistic adults, currently underway at UCLA Medical    Center. Another study, using MDMA to treat anxiety in patients    with life-threatening illnesses, has concluded.  <\/p>\n<p>    \"If we didn't have some idea about the potential importance of    these medicines, we wouldn't be researching them,\" says Dr.    Jeffrey Guss, psychiatry professor at NYU Medical Center and    co-investigator of the NYU Psilocybin Cancer Project. \"Their    value has been written about and is well known from thousands    of years of recorded history, from their being used in    religious and healing settings. Their potential and their being    worthy of exploration and study speaks for itself.\"  <\/p>\n<p>    Optimistic insiders think that if all continues to go well,    within 10 to 15 years some psychedelics could be legally    administrable to the public, not just for specific conditions    but even for personal growth. In the meantime, says Rick    Doblin, MAPS' executive director, \"there are hundreds of    therapists willing to work with illegal Schedule I    psychedelics\" underground, like Dr. X. They're in Florida,    Minnesota, New York, California, Colorado, North Carolina,    Pennsylvania, New England, Lexington, Kentucky. \"Hundreds in    America,\" he says, though they're \"spread out all over the    world.\"  <\/p>\n<p>    As within any field, underground practitioners vary in quality,    expertise and method. Some are M.D.s, like Dr. X, or    therapists, and some are less conventionally trained. They    don't all use the same substances, and don't necessarily use    just one. Some work with MDMA or psilocybin or ayahuasca, which    has become trendy to drink in self-exploration ceremonies all    over the country; others administer 5-MeO-DMT, extracted from a    toad in the Sonoran Desert, or iboga or ibogaine, which,    according to the scant research that exists, may be one of the    most effective cures for opiate addiction on the planet  but    may also cause fatal heart complications.  <\/p>\n<p>    Underground psychedelic therapists are biased toward their    preferred medicines, and those they think work best for    particular indications. But they are united by true belief.    \"People that are involved are risking their careers, their    freedom, in order to help others achieve a certain emotional    freedom, and they disagree with prohibition,\" says Doblin. \"The    fact that people are willing to do these therapies at great    personal risk says something about what they think the    potential of these drugs actually is to enhance psychotherapy.\"  <\/p>\n<p>    There are limitations. Psychedelics aren't for everyone. Or at    all foolproof. Nary a researcher or provider, under- or    aboveground, fails to point out that some pre-existing    conditions make them inappropriate for use, and that though the    dangers don't rise nearly to the level of drug-war -mythology    (iboga\/ibogaine is the major exception), adverse outcomes do    happen. The toxicity of -ayahuasca is on par with codeine     though codeine causes many thousands more deaths per year.    Psilocybin's is even less. Some studies have found brain damage    in chronic Ecstasy users, but in 2010, researchers at Harvard    Medical School studied a large sample of Mormons who used    Ecstasy  which the LDS Church was late to ban  but no other    drugs or alcohol, and failed to find cognitive consequences;    safety studies of the dosages used in MDMA therapy have found    no evidence of neurotoxicity or permanent changes in serotonin    transporters. LSD does not stay in your body forever (its    half-life is a matter of hours). But behaviorally, people on    Ecstasy have died from heatstroke, or drinking too much or not    enough water at raves; there have been assaults and even a    murder at ayahuasca ceremonies for foreigners in Peru, which    has seen a massive tourism boom around the substance's    popularity. Probably the most common concern, the specter of    \"freaking out\" during or long after a bad trip, has yet to    happen in any of the clinical trials  though it's not unusual    for subjects to have tough experiences in their journeys. Dr.    Charles Grob, a professor of psychiatry and biobehavioral    science at UCLA, who has conducted studies with MDMA, ayahuasca    and psilocybin, says that's a function of screening,    preparation and expert support. \"This is serious medicine with    a capital M,\" he says, \"and if you don't watch yourself and you    don't pay attention to the essential basics, you could be in    for a very difficult time.\"  <\/p>\n<p>    Even under the best of circumstances, the process catalyzed by    psychedelic therapy is often far from painless. \"It's    definitely not that people just get blissed out and it gets    better,\" says Dr. Michael Mithoefer, the lead clinician on the    MDMA trials in Charleston, South Carolina (others are ongoing    in Boulder, Colorado; Canada; and Israel). \"It makes the    healing process possible, not easy.\" When you take 125    milligrams of pure MDMA, enough to nearly immobilize you, and    someone invites you to take a look at your deepest self, \"it    is a destabilizing agent,\" Dr. X cautions. But it's    purposefully so. \"It opens us,\" he says. \"Sometimes the    medicine can stabilize someone in a difficult situation.    Sometimes it stirs up madness, so they can process that. Some    people feel rejuvenated and ready to go back into their lives,    but other people feel frazzled, spent, fragmented. I've had a    few people say, 'That shattered who I thought I was.'\"  <\/p>\n<p>    Limitations and challenges aside, the evidence so far still    makes researchers cautiously optimistic that psychedelics hold    potential for great healing and change. If they're right,    medicalization could address the deficits in treatment options    for afflictions  trauma, depression, anxiety, addiction  that    collectively impact millions of Americans, and ultimately shape    our world. \"If we move forward and understand that these    substances should only be used under optimal conditions,\" says    Grob, \"it will have a positive impact on an individual, family,    collective and societal level.\" In aboveground clinical trials    like his, subjects routinely report that psychedelic therapy is    among the top five most important experiences of their lives,    akin to the birth of a child.  <\/p>\n<p>    We've been here before: From the 1950s to the early Seventies,    more than 40,000 cases of psychedelic treatment were studied in    1,000 different papers in the medical literature, covering    everything from addiction to PTSD to OCD to antisocial    disorders and autism. Despite encouraging results, says Grob,    the \"wild, uninhibited enthusiasm of the Sixties\" contributed    to some bad recreational outcomes that gave legislators    ammunition to ban psychedelics from research for decades. But    as the above-ground movement has again been picking up steam,    so is the underground. More positive studies get published;    more patients and doctors read them; more underground success    stories spread through word of mouth. \"The secret is out,\" says    Grob, and, perhaps combined with depression and opiate    overdoses at all-time highs, skyrocketing civilian and veteran    suicide rates, and trends toward personal optimization and    wellness, demand is increasing. Researchers at NYU, UCLA and    Johns Hopkins all stressed that they cannot and do not ever    work with people in the underground, but some of them admired    the willingness of certain health care professionals to act,    however illegally, on their belief that sometimes healing can't    wait and that psychedelics are imperative to it. \"I respect    that in them,\" NYU's Guss says. \"I really do. I've become a    member of the most established establishment. And so in a way,    we're isolated from all the wisdom and knowledge in the    underground community.\" That vast, uncollected experience    contains details about the medicines' potential and pitfalls,    challenges and inconsistencies  the variety of ways    psychedelics might wholly, drastically change a life. \"I'm very    interested to learn,\" Guss says, \"what underground psychedelic    psychotherapists have to teach us.\"  <\/p>\n<p>    My first introduction to underground psychedelic therapy    was when, years ago, a doctor told me my vagina was depressed.    I'd gone in for a pelvic exam because something felt wrong; at    the follow-up appointment, when my test results were all    negative and my answers to her hundred questions about the    post-traumatic stress disorder I was in treatment for were all    related to sexual threats and reporting on sexual violence, she    said my genitals were just fucking bummed out.  <\/p>\n<p>    This was San Francisco, and I did a lot of yoga; but even I    rolled my eyes at the idea that my privates had an emotional    disorder. I was very intrigued, however, when the doctor said    she knew a therapist who could heal years of trauma in one    five-hour swoop, so long as I had the secret password. The    doctor gave me the number for that therapist  who worked with    MDMA.  <\/p>\n<p>    I never called. I moved across the country. Years later, I was    on vacation on the coast when my husband went out for a run,    and I stayed behind and may or may not have contemplated    suicide.  <\/p>\n<p>    OK. I did. In the car, on the road, running an errand, I    thought about driving off the edge of a cliff into the    brilliant, crashing Pacific.  <\/p>\n<p>    Yes, I had a history: the PTSD, with concomitant major    depressive disorder, suicidal thoughts. On my official    paperwork, I was technically permanently disabled, but I had    been doing much better  working, going to karaoke, having a    life. I had backslides and big episodes, but if my \"issues\"    were not exactly handled, they were at least on a general    upswing thanks to years of constant treatment. But then, the    night before my drive, I had started yelling in a restaurant,    feeling that I was spiraling out of control but unable to stop    myself from making a scene. Now, having coaxed my car away from    the cliff edge and back to the hotel, I lay facedown and    screamed into the pillows. I called a local therapist and    begged for an emergency appointment. As I lay there in her    office, in the fetal position, I wondered aloud if I should try    MDMA therapy.  <\/p>\n<p>    Weirdly (or magically, as would later be obvious), she happened    to have the number of another therapist who worked with it.  <\/p>\n<p>    The therapist who gave me the second referral said she had a    client with whom she'd been working for years who had done a    journey. The difference in that patient's suffering, she said,    was like night and day. When I called the number, the woman who    answered said we needed to meet in person, and when we did, she    mentioned that my struggle was why the wait for MDMA to become    widely available was untenable. She said, in a stunning lack of    expectation management, that she could help me massively     more, in a few sessions, than all my years and dollars of hard    therapeutic work had combined.  <\/p>\n<p>    So after one more conversation, I showed up nervous, but    excited, but desperate on a Monday morning (as scheduled) with    an empty stomach (as directed) to a charming room with a couch    at one end and a bed at the other. After we did something like    a prayer, I took the see-through capsule of white powder and    retired to the bed with the journal I was encouraged to bring    while the therapist went out on the deck to give me space. I'd    been told that the journey with psychedelics truly starts    beforehand, the moment you decide to do it, and I had indeed    been struggling extra since then. Waiting for the medicine to    come on was no exception.  <\/p>\n<p>    The Journey. 9:35 a.m.  <\/p>\n<p>    I'm full of grief, and gratitude, and terror. I've been    extra wound up and tight, extra untouchable, since we put this    on the calendar. My body must be gripping and tensing in    preparation to let go....  <\/p>\n<p>    9:55 is when the doubt sets in. About the pointlessness, the    uselessness, the futility of this endeavor. A moment ago, I was    envisioning lots of purple tears. I'm like, let's just go read    a newspaper and drink some tea somewhere.  <\/p>\n<p>    This is when the therapist, who had come back inside, told me I    was higher than I realized, and to lie down and let it ride.  <\/p>\n<p>    I hadn't anticipated tripping, or time-travel. But there were    movies of my life, and visits with loved ones. The therapist    had turned on jangly guitar music, which struck me as lame at    first, but soon became the most beautiful, dynamic composition    I'd ever heard because: Ecstasy. I breathed deep with my eyes    closed and a hand on my chest. I cried, often, as I rewitnessed    my life. My therapist said very little. She had said before    that our collective job was to trust my intuition. I went back    to the scenes where my PTSD started. In one of them, I    revisited a remote, bleak room where a stranger cornered me. I    watched the scenario  which, in reality, I had escaped    physically unscathed  play out with an alternate ending. But I    didn't get overpowered and raped, which is what I'd always    assumed was so scary about it. Instead, the stranger stepped    forward and, in one swift move, landed his hands in a death    grip around my throat.  <\/p>\n<p>    Several times, the scene replayed. Repeatedly, I watched myself    get strangled.  <\/p>\n<p>    Ohhhhhhhhhhh, I could see, suddenly. This isn't just    a rape issue, as I'd been working through it in therapy for    years. This is also a murder issue.  <\/p>\n<p>    For weeks after the journey, every man I walked past triggered    an automatic but definitive  and elated!  voice inside me    that said: That guy's not gonna kill you! Down the sidewalk in    a city, that guy's not gonna kill you, and that guy's    not gonna kill you. If I had realized at the conscious level    that I thought they would, I would have stopped leaving the    house. No wonder I was always exhausted. After the journey, I    stepped down the street with wild new energy. Seeing, finally,    the ultimate fear of that moment, my feared choking death, was    sort of terrible, I guess, but not really, it wasn't, because:    Ecstasy. And as soon as I acknowledged it and saw it through,    the moment lost its quiet, powerful rule over my system.  <\/p>\n<p>    For some people, an MDMA journey ends after a few hours. They    sit up and start talking. They drink the water and eat the    snack given to them, and talk for a bit as the medicine wears    off. And then they leave.  <\/p>\n<p>    I had to be pulled out of mine. Whether because I have a    genetic variation that makes people more sensitive to MDMA or    because I am \"a very intense person,\" around 2 p.m. the    therapist had to shake me; it was time to get ready to go  my    husband was scheduled to pick me up, and the therapist had    another appointment coming. She had me sit up and eat and drink    and try to rejoin the present. When I left some half an hour    later, I was cheerful and articulate, but still tripping. My    husband, in utter bewilderment over how to handle me, took me    to a nearby hotel, as planned. Later, we tried to go eat in a    restaurant. I babbled, pleasantly at first, but then, about    eight hours after my journey began, everything turned twitchy    and dark. I called the therapist frantically and asked her if    most people, post-journey, felt like every single thing in    their entire lives needed to be burned down immediately, and    she said no, not really, but that my job in any case was to \"do    nothing, very slowly.\"  <\/p>\n<p>    In the clinical trials of MDMA for PTSD, the protocol is to    keep patients overnight. The sessions  typically there are    three, spaced a month apart  last at least eight hours,    because that's sometimes when the heaviest processing will only    begin to kick in, particularly for patients who have a history    of dissociation, or severe detachment from reality  which I    do. My MDMA therapist, who had been doing journeys for a long    time, had never happened to see a person quite like me, but for    people like me, researchers say, it's not unheard of for the    journey to get ugly at around the time I was in the middle of a    dinner date.  <\/p>\n<p>    But I didn't happen to know any of that.  <\/p>\n<p>    That night, I ran, fleeing from the hotel into the rural    darkness, alone. I had total conviction that every facet of my    existence was a mistake. I was engulfed in panic. I had no idea    what to do with myself, except for one specific thing, as the    clear message of it kept ringing over and over in my head, and    that message was: GET. DIVORCED.  <\/p>\n<p>    It's harder to integrate if you have a life: a company,    a house, a wife,\" Dr. Y explains to a patient during a phone    session one day. Dr. Y, who looks younger than his middle age,    paces and stretches while he talks to the man, many states    away, who recently started therapy after he lost his    relationship, lost his job and moved  three of the top five    stressful life events, psychologists say. Dr. Y is a    psychiatrist, which means he has the ability to prescribe    medications, but in this session, this patient's third, he    instead asks whether the patient is feeling open to taking    ayahuasca after having read all the literature Dr. Y assigned    last time. He wants to be sure the man is fully aware of the    \"integration\" process, which could be less charitably called    \"picking up the pieces of inner-personal land mines,\" that may    follow. Half of Dr. Y's patients enact a major life change    after ayahuasca. \"Probably a quarter,\" he says, strongly    consider a breakup or divorce.  <\/p>\n<p>    Dr. Y considers about 90 percent of his patients to be fit for    ayahuasca. The one out of 10 he believes it isn't right for    could include people with a history of psychosis, mania or    personality disorders, but more often it is those who don't    have the support necessary for integration, or aren't ready to    be led through symptom management while they're weaned off    antidepressants. That's required by most knowledgeable    practitioners: Like MDMA and psilocybin, ayahuasca increases    serotonin in the body, and there's a risk of serotonin    poisoning if it's taken with certain medications. Dr. Y's    patient today doesn't have any of these contraindications. And    Dr. Y believes the patient is strong enough to sort through his    psychological contents as long as the patient also    thinks he's ready, which he says he is after airing some    hesitations (\"You know,\" he says, \"once you pull back a layer,    there's no going back, and you can't unsee or unfeel what you    saw\"). Dr. Y will send him referrals to vetted, reputable    providers in his preferred city. \"Three nights [in a row] is    better than two, and two is definitely better than one,\" he    tells him. First night, drink ayahuasca, open up; next night,    dive deeper in. Layers of self-discovery. The soul as a    somewhat coy onion. Sometimes, the peeling of it with ayahuasca    involves experiencing your own death. Dr. Y gives the patient    instructions for the month leading up to his journey: no other    drugs, no alcohol, no sex. No reading news, no violent TV;    reduce stress, meditate, find quiet. And, in the final week, no    meat, no spice, no fermented foods. \"The cleaner you go in,\"    Dr. Y, who himself has experienced hundreds of ceremonies,    tells the man, \"the more impactful the ceremony.\" Whatever    happens, during or after, Dr. Y will be available.  <\/p>\n<p>    There are downsides to doing things underground. In addition to    the obvious threat of arrest, more risks are created at every    step of the psychedelic-therapy process by illegality,    providers say. There can be difficulty with something as basic    as finding and ensuring clean compounds: MAPS helped run an    MDMA testing program, and half of the pills sent in didn't    contain any MDMA at all; there have been reports of some    shamans spiking ayahuasca with a more toxic hallucinogenic    plant to intensify the trip. The best-cared-for patient is    still disadvantaged by the general lack of cultural wisdom and    support around the treatment. Even good providers aren't as    knowledgeable as they could be. Once a year, there is a secret    conference that brings together 50 to 100 underground    practitioners at a revolving location. \"Information gets    shared, and people learn new things,\" says one regular    attendee. Another participant recalls lectures on    practicalities like the best and most therapeutic doses, how to    screen for patients with borderline personality  whom many    believe are not compatible with psychedelics  and how    different music and sounds impact sessions. But not nearly all    the world's practitioners are there. And none of the minutes or    findings can be published.  <\/p>\n<p>    Plus, not every underground patient gets care as elaborate or    expert as Dr. Y's. Some don't receive the preparation or    follow-up they may need, because they can't afford it, or    because in an underground, patients don't have the luxury to be    picky about their providers; they may have to take anyone whose    number they can manage to get their hands on, and it can be    hard for laypeople to adequately vet providers anyway. An M.D.    who used to administer psychedelics (he prefers not to say    which) for depression and anxiety (and who, when I tell him    he'll have a secret identity  like Batman  asks if he can be    Dr. Batman) doesn't provide underground psychedelic treatment    anymore because it started to feel too threatening to his    legitimate practice, but in extreme cases he still refers    opiate addicts to underground providers who work with ibogaine.    \"I know quite a few people who do that,\" he says. \"But I only    trust two of them. Out of about 10. These are nurses, or    respiratory therapists  people that know how to resolve an    emergency.\" Outside of that, there's \"a whole subculture\" of    more amateur iboga and ibogaine therapists, Dr. Batman says.    \"It's a movement that's driven by addicts helping other    addicts. I don't think that's good, per se.\"  <\/p>\n<p>    It would be best, in Dr. Batman's opinion, for people to get    iboga-based addiction treatment in a reputable clinic outside    the country. According to one such center in Mexico, one in 10    patients needs some medical care, one in 100 needs serious    medical intervention, and, even in the hospital-like setting,    people do occasionally die. But not everyone has the money to    travel to the best treatment. \"It's very difficult for me to    make that referral\" to the underground for such a risky    compound, Dr. Batman says. But sometimes his concern that    someone will join the nearly 100 Americans who die of opioid    overdose every day overrides his hesitation.  <\/p>\n<p>    Even for comparatively safer MDMA and psilocybin, says Dr. X,    \"the fact that we have to do this and hide and send people back    to their lives, versus doing it at an inpatient facility,\"    where patients could stay for more integration, is less than    ideal.  <\/p>\n<p>    But all these are risks that people who feel they need    psychedelic therapy are willing to take. Nigel McCourry, a    35-year-old Iraq War veteran who participated in a MAPS MDMA    study, was so transformed by the PTSD treatment that he was    determined to get it for one of his fellow Marines. \"This is my    Marine battle buddy,\" he says. \"He needed help.\" It took a lot    of searching and ultimately traveling to another state to find    an underground therapist, whom neither Marine knew, and    McCourry was acutely aware of how difficult the process could    be: For up to a year after his own treatment began, he says,    \"It was really wild. I had all of these emotions coming up out    of nowhere. I would cry at random times. I had to give myself    so much space to be able to let that out. I would be crying and    I had no idea what I was crying about. It was just really    intense.\"  <\/p>\n<p>    As a subject in the clinical trial, McCourry underwent three    90-minute preparatory sessions prior to dosing, another long    integration session the morning after, a phone call every day    for a week, and additional 90-minute sessions every week    between the three journeys. His friend didn't have the money or    opportunity for nearly that kind of support. But he took the    journey anyway. In their infantry unit, 2\/2 Warlords, \"guys are    consistently committing suicide,\" McCourry says. \"I think [MDMA    therapy] is really our best shot at solving the veteran suicide    crisis.\"  <\/p>\n<p>    Elizabeth Bast, a 41-year-old artist and mother, also felt like    she was out of options when she and her husband, Joaquin Lamar    Hailey (better known as street artist Chor Boogie), flew to    Costa Rica to get iboga therapy at a healing center after    Hailey relapsed into an old heroin addiction that both of them    felt was going to kill him. When he felt he needed a booster    dose six months later, they turned to an underground provider    closer by, in the States. Iboga \"was crucial,\" Bast says. \"It    saved his life.\" The couple have started organizing and    facilitating treatment trips for addicts to other countries    (the drug is illegal in less than a dozen). But there are a lot    of others they can't help. Since Bast wrote a book about their    experience, \"I get inquiries every day: 'My brother's dying,    and I can't get out of the country.' We would love to support    that. But it's too risky.\"  <\/p>\n<p>    Psychedelic medicalization isn't without its own potential    problems. There is squabbling in the underground community    about whether it would provoke too much regulation over who can    administer medicines, and who can take them and how; or whether    it would lead to corporatization, or a boom in licensed but    low-quality providers of substances that are so intense. Even    now, in the aboveground in other countries, \"There are places    where it's done that are very unprofessional,\" says Ben De    Loenen, executive director of the International Center for    Ethnobotanical Education Research and Service (ICEERS), which    provides resources for users and potential users of ayahuasca    and iboga. UCLA's Grob has been called by patients who've    suffered severe, persistent anxiety for months after a    psychedelic-therapy experience, which he says tends to be the    result of bad preparedness, ethics, or practices of providers.    There are also questions about sustainability. As both    deforestation of the Amazon and popularity of ayahuasca    increase, shamans have had to trek deeper into the jungle to    find the plants that compose it. The increasing popularity of    5-MeO-DMT, called \"the Toad\" for its origins in the venom sacs    of an amphibian  which are milked, the liquid then dried and    basically free-based (smoking it is necessary; swallowing it    can be fatal)  has led to incidences of people stealing onto    Native American reservations to find the frog, leaving empty    beer bottles and trash in their wake. If the broader culture    ever accepted the species as the path to healing or    enlightenment, one can surmise how long it might survive.  <\/p>\n<p>    Guss, the NYU researcher, sees a future where psychedelic    therapy is the specialty of highly and appropriately trained    professionals and a robust field of scientific inquiry. For    now, there's the underground, some developing countries and the    Internet. ICEERS offers tips for vetting practitioners, as well    as free therapeutic support to people in crisis during or after    ceremonies. MAPS has published a manual for how to do    MDMA-assisted psychotherapy on its website, downloadable by    anyone.  <\/p>\n<p>    \"Putting out info about how we do the therapy is more likely to    contribute to safety than anything else,\" says Doblin. On the    dark Web, sellers of iboga and ibogaine thrive. There were a    thousand people on the wait list for MAPS' most recently    completed MDMA trial. \"People are desperate,\" Doblin says.    \"People are doing this.\"  <\/p>\n<p>    Personally, my integration after MDMA was brutal. Though    I eventually returned to my hotel room that first night, my    state didn't improve. I didn't sleep, lying next to my husband,    garnering every ounce of willpower to keep from saying that I    was leaving, immediately and forever; my husband didn't sleep    either, blanketed in my agitation. For weeks, we found    ourselves on the floor, or in bed, one or both of us crying as    he asked if I still wanted to be married and I didn't know; and    I didn't know, for that matter, what my personality was    (callous? Funny? Was I funny? If so, was I really, or just    performing?) or whether I was bisexual like I always thought or    strictly gay. My moods swung from extreme openness and optimism    to utter despair and stunned confusion. One day, I spent hours    indulging a rich and specific fantasy about filling a bathtub    with hot water, downing the years-old bottle of Ativan from    when I was first diagnosed, and slitting my forearms from wrist    to elbow. Later, in an entirely different temperament, I saw    the plan in my Journey Journal and recognized it as active    suicidal ideation; if someone had taken the notebook to the    police, they could have legally committed me to an institution    against my will.  <\/p>\n<p>    From the beginning, my MDMA therapist had recommended more than    one journey. Next time, she said in one of our multiple    follow-up integration sessions, I'd stay all night. I agreed    that another journey was in order, but I happened to talk to    someone who mentioned an underground therapist with a different    practice and whom I got a good feeling from when we talked, and    so, three months after the first journey, in a dark and silent    room with three other people after nightfall, concerns about my    family history of schizophrenia thoroughly discussed and    considered, I drank ayahuasca.  <\/p>\n<p>    On the first night of the two-night ceremony, sitting on the    \"nests\" we each built with yoga mats and sleeping bags on the    floor, I was nervous again. But less than last time. After    drinking about an ounce of the thick sludge, I lay down. There    were the initial sparkles and shooting stars behind my eyes,    and after a while, as the facilitators started singing     ancient songs they say come from the plant and help it work  a    vision of myself as a five-year-old appeared. There was a    suggestion at a history, something bad that happened that I    didn't remember; I did not like the direction it was going in;    I also thought it was bullshit. The visions stopped. Instead,    an abject, suffocating rage came over me, and I lay there in it    for five hours thinking about getting in my car and driving    away and wishing everyone else in the room would fucking die.  <\/p>\n<p>    The next night, after a long, raw and still-irate day in the    house, the first vision that showed up was five-year-old me    again  pissed. She wouldn't talk to me, however much I tried    to coax her. I knew I had to get her to engage, which over the    course of seven hours involved recognizing that I hated myself,    that my self-hatred was my best and most reliable friend, and    that my self-hatred would never die until I appreciated how it    had protected me; when I did, and it did, I gave it a Viking    funeral in the vision and in reality cried harder than I ever    had in my life. Then I just had to reckon with shame. I sensed    the five-year-old had brought it, actually, not me, but no    matter, I assured her: I was the goddamn adult here, and I was    going to take care of it. There was suffering and writhing and    grief and nausea. I threw up, twice, prodigious quantities of    black liquid, once so hard into a bucket that it splashed up    all over the bottom half of my face.  <\/p>\n<p>    A few inches away from me, a woman, who'd recently been in a    car accident that put her in the hospital and in a wheelchair    for a time, lay perfectly still and silent; a few inches from    her, a man gnashed his teeth at visions of his abusive parent.    At the other end of the room, another participant relived the    night of his father's suicide. In the vision, as in real life,    he was unable to stop him from slipping out into the garage to    do it. But this time, when the man discovered his father's body    and cut him down from the rope, he didn't falter under the    weight and drop him, as he did when he was a teenager. This    time, he had the strength of his adult self, and when he caught    him, he held him. Suspending his own sense of horror and    failure, and the calling of the police, and the screams of his    mother, he got to hold him for a very long time.  <\/p>\n<p>    In November, the results of two large studies showed    that the majority of cancer patients who received one dose of    psilocybin experienced lasting recovery from depression and    anxiety. In February, a paper in the Journal of    Psychopharmacology found that \"experience with psychedelic    drugs is associated with decreased risk of opioid abuse and    dependence.\" Medical-journal papers about ayahuasca suggest it    can treat addiction, anxiety and depression, and change brain    structure and personality. So far in the MDMA PTSD trials, zero    participants haven't improved at all, and more than 80 percent    have recovered to an extent that they don't qualify as having    PTSD anymore. Estimates for the effectiveness of other PTSD    treatments range as high as 70 percent but as low as 50    percent. The number is somewhat contentious, but even \"if you    think it's only 25 percent\" for whom conventional treatments    don't work, says Mithoefer, the lead clinician on the trials in    Charleston, \"that's still millions of people a year in the    United States alone.\" All the participants in the trials had    previously tried medication or therapy, usually both; as a    cohort, they'd had PTSD for an average of 19 years.  <\/p>\n<p>    But \"ultimately, the decision to reschedule [psychedelics from    Schedule I substances] is not a scientific one,\" points out    NYU's Guss. \"It's a governmental one. We may be able to prove    safety and efficacy. But there still may be governmental    legislative reasons that rescheduling doesn't move forward.\"  <\/p>\n<p>    Psychedelic use has been opposed and persecuted by authorities    for centuries, both in Europe and in the New World. Among those    reasons, believers believe, is the fear that widespread smart    psychedelic use could foment societal upheaval. That's not    unlike the belief in the Sixties  but we know more now about    what psychedelics do and how to optimize them. \"We didn't have    as much data then as we do now,\" says Dr. Dan Engle, a    board-certified psychiatrist who consults with plant-medicine    healing centers worldwide. \"And we didn't have as many of the    safeguards as we have now.\" He envisions \"the psychedelic    renaissance as a cornerstone in the redemption of modern    psychiatric care.\" Now, thanks to brain imaging, researchers    can see that far greater \"brain-network connections light up on    psilocybin compared to the normal brain. More cross-regional    firing. That's what the brain actually looks like on the    'drugs' that we've been using for hundreds if not thousands of    years.\"  <\/p>\n<p>    This has helped make psychedelics particularly popular in    Silicon Valley, where a drive toward self-actualization meets    the luxury of having the resources to pursue it. California,    where Berkeley-born chemist Alexander \"Sasha\" Shulgin    synthesized and distributed MDMA to therapists for decades    before it was prohibited, has long been at the front of the    movement; today, Doblin estimates, the state doesn't have quite    the majority, but probably 40 percent of underground    psychedelic therapists in the nation. Last year, California    Sunday Magazine reporter Chris Colin profiled Entrepreneurs    Awakening (EA), a company that arranges Peruvian ayahuasca    sojourns primarily for tech and startup CEOs. The customers,    says owner Michael Costuros, are \"supersuccessful type-A people    who use it to be better at what they do.\"  <\/p>\n<p>    \"These things are so powerful,\" says Eric Weinstein, managing    director at Thiel Capital, Peter Thiel's investment firm in San    Francisco, \"that they can get into layers of patterned behavior    to show folks things that they could change and could do    differently. And the brain has probably been playing with these    ideas in the subconscious. This entire family of agents is    extraordinary, as they appear to be very profound, unexpectedly    constructive and surprisingly safe. Most people who take these    agents seem to discover cognitive modes that they never knew    even existed.\" Weinstein has been considering trying to put    together a series of opposite-land \"This Is Your Brain on    Drugs\" public-service commercials, in which other Silicon    Valley luminaries and scientists like himself  a Ph.D.    mathematician and physicist  out themselves as having    \"directed their own intellectual evolution with the use of    psychedelics as self-hacking tools.\"  <\/p>\n<p>    But even for the super-high-functioning, psychedelic use isn't    just about optimizing. It also, Costuros says, makes them    better people: \"What I've seen consistently happen is CEOs    become a people-centric, people-focused person.\" After    well-administered and integrated psychedelics, \"we're not gonna    see the kind of Donald Trump entrepreneurs that are only about    extracting value.\" After an ayahuasca journey with EA, an arms    magnate left his multimillion-    dollar company to build an art and music residency program.    Chris Hunter, the 38-year-old inventor of caffeinated    malt-liquor beverage Four Loko, went into his trip with EA's    Costuros as a regular former Ohio State University fraternity    brother from Youngstown and came out a new man. \"Why are you    such a dick?\" he says he asked himself on ayahuasca. \"What if    you approached masculinity in a different way  instead of    being dominant and overseeing the women in your life, you came    from the other side, underneath, fully supporting and lifting    women up?\" Ayahuasca users whom UCLA's Grob has researched in    other countries \"have become better partners to their spouses,    better parents to their children, better children to    their parents, better employees, better employers, just    more responsible overall, bringing a higher level of ethical    integrity to everything they do,\" he says.  <\/p>\n<p>    It's possible that psychedelics could transform a wide array of    people. Clinical trials have included subjects across    demographic categories, including soldiers and conservatives    and the elderly and people who've never taken drugs at all    before. Some of Dr. X's patients most definitely do not vote    Democrat. But the people who have access to psychedelic    treatment underground (or overseas) do tend to have something    in common: They are usually well-off. \"If I could do it    legally, I would not turn away anyone for treatment, if I could    be aboveground and I could get them to supportive services    [afterward],\" Dr. X says. Because of the necessary secrecy and    lack of outside support now, he considers it irresponsible to    provide journeys to anyone without the time and resources to    also pay for integration sessions. (McCourry had to pay for the    first journey of his Marine friend, who didn't have any money;    they had to find a wealthy benefactor to cover the next two.)    Clients are also mostly white  as are providers. \"Sentencing    for middle-class white people is a hell of a lot friendlier    than for minorities and poor people,\" Dr. X says. \"It's a    tragedy that people with the most vulnerability, who need it    most, we can't do it with them.\"  <\/p>\n<p>    Doblin, for his part, speculates that the DEA hasn't cracked    down on underground psychedelic therapists because they have    more pressing priorities than those trying to heal a select few    of the rich, the traumatized and the addicted. It's also one    thing for psychedelics to be popular with millionaires  and    some Nobel laureates and business celebrities you'd never    believe, Costuros maintains  and the hip participants of the    estimated 120 ayahuasca ceremonies that take place in New York    City and the Bay Area every weekend. But who knows what might    unfold if psychedelic therapy were available to people for whom    the status quo doesn't work so well?  <\/p>\n<p>    It's unclear if the current presidential administration, which    includes some extremely drug-unfriendly members, will alter or    slow the course of possible medicalization. For the time being,    the researchers soldier on, and the underground grows. This    year, K., a therapist with a traditional practice in an    Appalachian state, administered her first MDMA journey with a    client (with two additional medical professionals on hand for    safety); the client, who'd still needed occasional suicide    watch stemming from symptoms of complex PTSD despite 16 years    of therapy, had brought her the MAPS manual, downloaded off the    Internet. \"I'm trained to provide the best care to my clients    in a way that's ethical,\" K. says, \"so if research is backing    up that things that are now illegal are really helpful with    little to no side effects, especially compared with psychiatric    medications, which have a ton of side effects, then it's    something I'm open to.\" When dosed, K.'s client, S., talked    through a childhood of severe abuse and torture  \"but none of    it was terrifying,\" S. says. \"I talked in detail about a lot of    horrific shit that happened. Then I said: The thing is, all    those things are over, and I know they're over, and my body    knows that everything is going to be OK.\"  <\/p>\n<p>    For Silicon Valley's Weinstein, the success stories show the    importance of advocating for broader access. \"If we don't    legalize, study and utilize these plants and other medicines,    people who could be saved will die,\" he says. \"Families will    break apart. Parents will continue to bury depressed children    who might have been saved by these miraculous agents. Can we    bring ourselves to ask if a single professionally administered    flood dose of legalized ibogaine could have saved Prince from    opioid addiction? Some of these agents are anti-drug    drugs...and we are still against them. I definitely would    like to attack the idea that any of this makes any sense.\"  <\/p>\n<p>    So I'd done an underground MDMA session, and a    weekend of illegal ayahuasca ceremonies.  <\/p>\n<p>    The integration, as the months went on, seemed to go a bit    smoother.  <\/p>\n<p>    After ayahuasca, I still had good and bad days. The process was    still intense but less earthshaking, either because I'd done    the first big, tough layer of processing post-MDMA, or because    the journey was different, or I was getting used to being    unsettled, or all of the above. Or maybe the smoother time was    a little reprieve, since something more shattering was about to    happen.  <\/p>\n<p>    After all the months, all the pieces that had been stirred up    were not quite connected. I felt I needed one more sitting with    the therapist and the psychedelic that at that point felt    right. So I settled into a nest on a little patch of floor,    again, in the same house as last time, but in a large,    high-ceilinged living room full of moonlight coming in through    the windows, and I whispered into a cup of ayahuasca a plea for    wholeness, and drank it.  <\/p>\n<p>    The vision is about me, as a five-year-old. Again.  <\/p>\n<p>    Psychedelics, they say, will not give you what you want. But    they will give you what you need.  <\/p>\n<p>    I'm shocked to encounter the child again, but ready to see what    she shows me this time. The child remembers; I remember, though    the realization is slow, and the acceptance is slower.  <\/p>\n<p>    When I thought I cried the hardest in my life the last time I    drank ayahuasca, I was wrong.  <\/p>\n<p>    I cannot (and would not) begin to encompass, in a brief space,    what happens in the next long hours, and the next day, and the    next night. The second night, the facilitators have to end the    ceremony without me. They bless and blow smoke and perfume on    the others because after so many hours, they're done, but I'm    still deep in it. They take turns staying with me and singing.    It goes on for so long, with so much shaking and sickness, that    to be kind to my nervous system, my facilitator, who in her day    job cares for homeless children, puts me in a bathtub of hot    water.  <\/p>\n<p>    I hyperventilate, for a long time, until I don't. I remember    the bathtub-suicide fantasy. The facilitator is sitting next to    me, on the floor, putting a soaked hot washcloth against my    face, my neck, on my head. I tell her about the fantasy, and    that I have come to know, in this bathtub, that I am not going    to kill myself.  <\/p>\n<p>    For a second she thinks I mean I won't kill myself in    her bathtub, rather than in general. Then when she gets    it, the two of us laugh about what a drag that would be for    her, if I killed myself here, on drugs in her house, both of us    joking about it: me, naked, her, trying to help me save my    life.  <\/p>\n<p>    We're laughing, but this moment is a big deal, and we know it.    I am not healed. But I am whole. I can go ahead and get    divorced if that turns out to be the right thing, but not    because I was violated too many times to bear intimacy. There    will be many more spectacularly challenging, professionally    supported months of working through the terror and pain    imprinted on my body when it was tiny, powerless under adult    darkness and weight, but one of the end results has already    arrived. The too-many years of my life where I sometimes    actively, and maybe always a little bit passively, thought    about killing myself are over.  <\/p>\n<p>    But what has changed, people keep asking me, since the    journeys. In my life, what difference did it make?  <\/p>\n<p>    Every single thing is different, I tell them. Because I was    splintered before, but now: I'm here.  <\/p>\n<p>  Sign up for our newsletter to receive breaking news directly in  your inbox.<\/p>\n<p><!-- Auto Generated --><\/p>\n<p>Read more from the original source: <\/p>\n<p><a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"nofollow\" href=\"http:\/\/www.rollingstone.com\/culture\/features\/how-doctors-treat-mental-illness-with-psychedelic-drugs-w470673\" title=\"Inside the Psychedelic Underground - RollingStone.com\">Inside the Psychedelic Underground - RollingStone.com<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p> How some doctors are risking everything to unleash the healing power of MDMA, ayahuasca and other hallucinogens How some doctors are risking everything to unleash the healing power of MDMA, ayahuasca and other hallucinogens Dr. X is a dad <a href=\"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/psychedelics\/inside-the-psychedelic-underground-rollingstone-com.php\">Continue reading <span class=\"meta-nav\">&rarr;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"limit_modified_date":"","last_modified_date":"","_lmt_disableupdate":"","_lmt_disable":"","footnotes":""},"categories":[431608],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-214650","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-psychedelics"],"modified_by":null,"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/214650"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=214650"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/214650\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=214650"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=214650"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=214650"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}