Divergent States

PODCAST · science

Divergent States

Divergent States cuts through psychedelic hype with grounded, curious conversations about what these substances actually do.Hosted by 3L1T3, founder of r/Psychonaut, the world’s largest psychedelic harm-reduction community, and co-hosted by Bryan, a USMC veteran and advocate for psychedelic healing, the show brings together lived experience, science, and culture without losing its sense of humor.This isn’t a spiritual podcast.This isn’t a marketing platform.No mysticism. No sales pitch. Just real conversations, harm reduction, and honest questions.We explore how psychedelics shape mental health, creativity, and society, from underground use and peer-support communities to clinical trials, therapy rooms, and shifting public attitudes. Some episodes get serious. Some get weird. All of them are grounded in respect for the people actually taking these substances and living with the outcomes.</p

  1. 33

    Psychedelics Don’t Fix Your Life… Here’s What They Actually Do | Talia Eisenberg

    Psychedelics don’t fix your life.They don’t make you a better person. They don’t replace responsibility. And they don’t solve the problems waiting for you when you come back.In this episode, we sit down with Talia Eisenberg from Beond to talk about what actually happens after a powerful psychedelic experience—especially with ibogaine. What changes, what doesn’t, and why the hardest part is often what comes after.We get into:why insight isn’t the same as changewhat people misunderstand about “healing”the unglamorous reality of recovery and integrationwhy some people aren’t ready for these experiencesand what it really takes to make those changes stickThis isn’t a conversation about breakthroughs or peak experiences.It’s about what holds up when the experience ends.🎧 Music:Hyperspace — Sndbagz🎙️ Divergent States is a podcast exploring psychedelics without the hype—focused on harm reduction, integration, and what actually works in the real world.Chapters:00:00 – Psychedelics Don’t Fix Your Life01:17 – Harm Reduction Matters (Zendo Project)03:08 – Meet Talia Eisenberg (Ibogaine &amp; Recovery)04:05 – What Psychedelics Don’t Fix06:32 – Agency, Accountability, and Hard Truths07:35 – Addiction, Ibogaine, and Starting Over10:04 – Life After the Trip: Real Change11:25 – Optimization vs Avoidance13:26 – Psychedelics Don’t Replace Responsibility14:39 – Spiritual Bypassing (Ketamine, MDMA, Psilocybin)17:11 – Why Ibogaine Forces Honesty20:07 – Escaping vs Doing the Work20:59 – Do Psychedelics Delay Change?22:33 – Who Struggles Most After Psychedelics24:08 – The “Reset” Myth26:19 – What Actually Changes After Ibogaine30:05 – What Doesn’t Change31:41 – The Comedown: Emotional Whiplash34:00 – Healthy Discomfort vs Avoidance36:58 – Struggle Isn’t Failure38:48 – Power, Clinics, and Psychedelic Ethics44:19 – Red Flags: Gurus, Clinics, and Safety47:36 – You Don’t Need Ibogaine48:58 – What We Cut (Patreon Preview)52:20 – Final Thoughts + Support the ShowSend us Fan Mail FiresideProject.orgDownload the app or text/call 62-FIRESIDEZendo ProjectOur listeners get 10% off the Zendo Project SIT Program with the code DIVERGENTS10Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.Support the showSpecial Thanks to our Macrodosers, Super D and Mike, and our Thumbprint Tier member, Angie on Patreon!  https://linktr.ee/3L1T3Mod

  2. 32

    Psilocybin Therapy Works… But Not Like You Think, with Compass Pathways

    If one or two psychedelic sessions can produce measurable improvements in treatment-resistant depression, why does modern psychiatry still rely on daily medication?In this episode of Divergent States, we sit down with Dr. Steve Levine, psychiatrist and Chief Patient Officer at Compass Pathways, to break down their newly released Phase 3 clinical trial results for COMP360 psilocybin therapy.But this isn’t a hype piece.This is a critical look at what the data actually shows—and what people might be getting wrong.We explore:– What Phase 3 trials really mean (and why they often fail)– Why a “3.8 point improvement” is more significant than it sounds– The difference between clinical psilocybin therapy and underground use– Why one or two sessions may work—but not for everyone– The role of neuroplasticity, subjective experience, and “set &amp; setting”– Why scaling psychedelic therapy is harder than it looks– The tension between commercialization and psychedelic culture– What FDA approval would—and wouldn’t—changeCompass Pathways has now run over 1,000 participants across Phase 2 and Phase 3 trials, showing statistically significant results in treatment-resistant depression. But translating that into real-world treatment is a completely different challenge.This conversation pulls back the curtain on what it actually takes to turn psychedelics into medicine—and where the limitations still are.Because this show isn’t about psychedelics being amazing.It’s about understanding what’s true… and what holds up under scrutiny.🎧 Subscribe to Divergent States for grounded, skeptical conversations in psychedelic science, culture, and harm reduction.💬 Join the community Discord via r/Psychonaut (link in subreddit)🎶 Music:Elemental by [Drip] ⚠️ This podcast is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Chapters: 00:00 If Psychedelics Work, Why Daily Medication? 01:15 Why This Isn’t a “Psychedelics Are Amazing” Episode 04:00 From Daily Pills to 1–2 Treatments 06:45 Why Ketamine Wasn’t the Breakthrough 09:25 What Phase 3 Trials Actually Prove (And Don’t) 12:50 What Regulators Are Really Looking For 14:25 What a “3.8 Score Improvement” Actually Means 15:55 Psychedelic Hype vs Reality 18:30 What Actually Stood Out in the Data 21:40 Why Psychedelics Work Faster 24:55 Is the Experience Part of the Treatment? 25:45 Why Set and Setting Still Matter 30:10 Will This Ever Be At-Home? 33:00 Why Therapists Don’t “Do Therapy” Here 34:40 The Real Problem: Scaling Access 39:00 Commercialization vs Psychedelic Culture 43:00 What Are the Actual Risks? 45:10 What Success Looks Like in 10 Years 47:10 Why Access Matters More Than Approval 49:50 Why This Fails in the Real World 52:10 Outro + Patreon Integration Session Send us Fan Mail FiresideProject.orgDownload the app or text/call 62-FIRESIDEZendo ProjectOur listeners get 10% off the Zendo Project SIT Program with the code DIVERGENTS10Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.Support the showSpecial Thanks to our Macrodosers, Super D and Mike, and our Thumbprint Tier member, Angie on Patreon!  https://linktr.ee/3L1T3Mod

  3. 31

    Manuela Picq: The People Behind the Coca Leaf - The Many Faces of Coca Part Three

    This is the human center of The Many Faces of Coca.By the time coca enters Western conversations, it’s already been abstracted—reduced to policy, drugs, or crime. But for millions of people, coca isn’t any of those things.It’s daily life.In this final episode of the series, we speak with political theorist and anthropologist Manuela Picq, who has lived and worked alongside communities in the Andes and Amazon. This conversation moves beyond theory and into lived reality—how coca functions as food, medicine, memory, and community.We explore:– Why coca is not cocaine—and why that distinction matters– How prohibition reshapes entire communities– The generational loss of cultural knowledge– The role of women as keepers of coca traditions– How global policy decisions impact real lives on the ground– Why the war on coca may actually be a war on peopleIf Parts 1 and 2 explored the science and history of coca, this episode asks a deeper question:What does it mean to live with this plant today?This is Part 3 of The Many Faces of CocaFeaturing conversations with Wade Davis, Dennis McKenna, and Manuela PicqChapters:00:00 Intro – Coca as Lived Reality (Not Policy)04:05 Who Defines Coca? (Culture vs Western Narratives)09:51 How Coca Became Criminalized13:22 Coca in Daily Life (Food, Medicine, Community)18:02 From Tradition to Cash Crop22:19 Who Pays the Price? (Violence &amp; Exploitation)25:45 Prohibition, Capitalism &amp; the Drug War28:35 Women, Knowledge &amp; Hidden Traditions33:37 Is Coca Control Really About Power?36:32 The UN, Policy &amp; Global Disconnect40:09 What the World Gets Wrong About Coca41:15 Closing Thoughts (End of Interview)43:07 Post-Conversation Reflection (Why This Series Matters)45:31 Where to Go Next (Series, Patreon, Discord)Send us Fan Mail FiresideProject.orgDownload the app or text/call 62-FIRESIDEZendo ProjectOur listeners get 10% off the Zendo Project SIT Program with the code DIVERGENTS10Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.Support the showSpecial Thanks to our Macrodosers, Super D and Mike, and our Thumbprint Tier member, Angie on Patreon!  https://linktr.ee/3L1T3Mod

  4. 30

    Dennis McKenna: The Chemistry Behind the Coca Leaf - The Many Faces of Coca Part Two

    The Many Faces of Coca – Part TwoIn Part Two of the Many Faces of Coca series, 3L1T3 and Bryan sit down with renowned ethnopharmacologist Dennis McKenna to explore the science behind the coca leaf.Part One focused on history and politics with Wade Davis, this conversation turns to the biology and chemistry of the plant itself.What actually happens when coca is chewed?What compounds exist in the leaf besides cocaine?Why did human cultures independently domesticate coca multiple times?Dennis breaks down the alkaloid chemistry, pharmacology, and plant symbiosis that shaped coca’s role in Andean societies for thousands of years.Along the way, the conversation explores:• The three coca species used by humans• Why coca and cocaine are chemically and culturally different• The entourage effect of whole plant medicines• How alkaline activation changes coca absorption• Why coca chewing may help treat cocaine addiction• The scientific questions prohibition has prevented researchers from askingThe result is a clearer picture of a plant that has been misunderstood for over a century.This episode is Part Two of a three-part series examining coca from history, chemistry, and lived experience.Part Three will explore how coca prohibition shapes real life in Andean communities with Manuela Picq.Key PointsCoca comes from three main domesticated species in the genus Erythroxylum.The coca leaf contains multiple alkaloids, not just cocaine.Cocaine is only one compound within a larger phytochemical matrix in the leaf.Traditional coca chewing uses alkaline substances to increase alkaloid absorption.Whole plant use produces a broader entourage effect compared to isolated cocaine.Indigenous cultures independently domesticated coca multiple times across South America.Coca may help high-altitude populations adapt through increased energy, nutrition, and appetite suppression.Cocaine acts primarily as a dopamine reuptake inhibitor in the brain.Some evidence suggests chewing coca may help people transition away from cocaine dependenceChapters:00:00 – What Is Coca? The Question That Starts Everything00:44 – Major Psilocybin News: Compass Pathways Phase 3 Results04:28 – The Many Faces of Coca Series (Part 2 Introduction)07:36 – Dennis McKenna Joins the Conversation08:09 – Coca vs Cocaine: The Botanical Reality15:06 – Why Humans Domesticated Coca18:23 – Why Humans Seek Altered States of Consciousness26:06 – What’s Actually Inside the Coca Leaf?31:31 – Why Coca Is Not the Same as Cocaine36:48 – Is Coca Addictive? The Science Explained42:23 – The Medical Potential of Coca48:41 – Why Drug Laws Block Scientific Research55:25 – What We Learned From the Chemistry of Coca59:33 – The War on Drugs and the Economics of Coca01:00:42 – Next Episode: The Human Cost of Prohibition Send us Fan Mail FiresideProject.orgDownload the app or text/call 62-FIRESIDEZendo ProjectOur listeners get 10% off the Zendo Project SIT Program with the code DIVERGENTS10Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.Support the showSpecial Thanks to our Macrodosers, Super D and Mike, and our Thumbprint Tier member, Angie on Patreon!  https://linktr.ee/3L1T3Mod

  5. 29

    Wade Davis: From Sacred Leaf to Global Scapegoat - The Many Faces of Coca Part One

    In Part One of The Many Faces of Coca, 3L1T3 and Bryan sit down with Wade Davis to unpack the long history of the coca leaf and how a plant used for over 8,000 years became globally criminalized.This conversation isn’t about cocaine. It’s about coca.Wade walks us through:How coca was independently domesticated multiple times in pre-Columbian South AmericaWhy early 20th-century elites blamed coca for poverty instead of confronting inequalityThe 1949 UN commission that arrived with its conclusions already writtenThe nutritional research that challenged decades of ideologyHow the modern international scheduling framework still treats coca as if it were fentanyl or heroinWhy the recent WHO review maintained the status quo — and what that meansWe also explore the deeper cultural reality: coca as ritual exchange, spiritual alignment, social glue, and daily sustenance in the Andes.This episode lays the foundation for the series.Next, we move into the ethnobiology with Dennis McKenna.Then we examine sovereignty and lived realities with Manuela Picq.If you’ve ever wondered why coca gets ignored while other plant medicines dominate Western discourse, this is where we start pulling that thread.This isn’t nostalgia.It’s about policy, ideology, and whether a plant can be separated from the story told about it.Key PointsCoca has been used for over 8,000 years in the Andes, distinct from cocaine.Cocaine is an extracted alkaloid; the leaf itself functions very differently.Coca was independently domesticated three times in pre-Columbian South America.The leaf contains significant nutritional value (calcium, vitamins, protein) and aids digestion at altitude.Early 20th-century elites blamed coca for poverty and social issues instead of structural inequality.The 1949 UN commission formed conclusions before conducting meaningful investigation.The 1961 UN drug scheduling framework still reflects that early ideological bias.Coca plays a central spiritual and social role in Andean cultures (ritual exchange, prayer, daily labor).Prohibition has fueled violence, displacement, and environmental harm in coca-growing regions.The core policy question is political, not pharmacological: can coca be separated from cocaine in law and narrative?Chapters 00:00 – 8,000 Years of Coca 04:19 – What Is Coca? 08:22 – Traditional Use &amp; Preparation 14:36 – The 1949 UN Commission 23:10 – Drug War Consequences 29:23 – Coca as Cultural Foundation 33:40 – Why There’s No Public Constituency 43:35 – Coca vs Cocaine Extraction 46:00 – DEA, Cartels &amp; Prohibition Incentives 50:47 – If You Remember One Thing 53:10 – Reflection &amp; Series Preview Send us Fan Mail FiresideProject.orgDownload the app or text/call 62-FIRESIDEZendo ProjectOur listeners get 10% off the Zendo Project SIT Program with the code DIVERGENTS10Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.Support the showSpecial Thanks to our Macrodosers, Super D and Mike, and our Thumbprint Tier member, Angie on Patreon!  https://linktr.ee/3L1T3Mod

  6. 28

    ETEREO: What No One Tells You About Iboga Work

    Iboga has a reputation.It’s intense. It’s long. It carries real risk. And for some people, it’s life-changing.But what actually happens inside a retreat container? And what does this work look like behind the scenes?In this episode of Divergent States, 3L1T3 and Bryan sit down with Paije West and Fletcher Burdick, founders of ETEREO, an iboga retreat center in Baja, Mexico. Their approach sits somewhere between medical oversight and traditional ceremony, which opens up some thoughtful questions about safety, responsibility, integration, and how we talk about powerful medicines without turning them into mythology.This isn’t a hype piece.It’s a grounded conversation about:• The difference between iboga and ibogaine • Cardiac risk and how they screen for it • Why they sometimes say “no” • What ceremony actually does (beyond aesthetics) • Whether luxury retreat settings help or distract • Why integration matters more than most people think • And whether the field might be moving a little too fastWe talk about neuroplasticity, structure vs freedom, tradition vs extraction, and what’s still unknown about iboga.If you’re curious about the medicine — or about how people try to hold it responsibly — this one’s worth your time.The extended, more personal segment continues on Patreon.Chapter Markers00:00 – Introducing Bryan &amp; Why This Conversation Matters 02:00 – Framing the Episode: No Miracle Claims 03:15 – What ETEREO Is (In Plain Language) 07:00 – What an Iboga Retreat Looks Like 11:20 – Iboga vs Ibogaine 14:30 – Ceremony: Structure, Not Symbolism 16:30 – Neuroplasticity &amp; Set and Setting 17:40 – Who Iboga Is Not For 21:30 – Safety &amp; Medical Screening 24:30 – Small Groups vs High-Volume Clinics 25:30 – “Conscious Luxury” — Does It Help? 29:00 – Stepping Away from the Real World 30:00 – Why Integration Is Everything 32:00 – Relational Healing 35:00 – Why They Don’t Track Outcomes Like Clinics 36:10 – Incentives &amp; Avoiding Extraction 39:10 – Is the Field Moving Too Fast? 40:00 – What We Still Don’t Know About Iboga 41:30 – Final Reflections 42:00 – Patreon Segment Tease 44:50 – Closing Thoughts 🎧 Extended version available on Patreon🎓 Zendo Project peer-support training: use code DIVERGENTS10Send us Fan Mail FiresideProject.orgDownload the app or text/call 62-FIRESIDEZendo ProjectOur listeners get 10% off the Zendo Project SIT Program with the code DIVERGENTS10Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.Support the showSpecial Thanks to our Macrodosers, Super D and Mike, and our Thumbprint Tier member, Angie on Patreon!  https://linktr.ee/3L1T3Mod

  7. 27

    Cesar Marin: Microdosing, Midlife, and Reinvention

    What happens when a 25-year career at CNN ends — and a new life begins?In this episode of Divergent States, we talk with Cesar Marin, former CNN producer and founder of Microdosing Over 50, about how psychedelics helped him navigate midlife, identity loss, and personal reinvention.Cesar shares his journey from broadcast media to becoming an advocate for intentional microdosing later in life. We explore the difference between microdosing for healing vs optimization, how intention shapes outcomes, and why people over 50 face unique integration challenges.We also discuss: • Microdosing psilocybin vs LSD • Career loss and psychedelic-driven reinvention • Presence, connection, and integration practices • How media shapes psychedelic narratives • Why midlife may be the most powerful time for change • Healing vs performance framing in psychedelic use • Stigma, legality, and education • Building a mission-driven life after burnoutThis conversation is about more than substances — it’s about agency, curiosity, and what happens when you stop outsourcing your meaning.🎧 Extended version available on Patreon🎓 Zendo Project peer-support training: use code DIVERGENTS10 🧠 For listeners interested in microdosing, midlife transitions, and psychedelic culturehttps://cultivatingwisdom.net/⏱️ Chapter Markers00:00 – Introduction &amp; Cesar’s background 01:45 – 25 years at CNN and getting laid off 04:30 – Discovering psychedelics at 55 06:40 – Cultivating Wisdom &amp; microdosing over 50 10:15 – Loss, grief, and mission-driven work 13:10 – What shifted personally 17:45 – Early doubts and first psychedelic experience 22:23 – Fun vs healing: why people stay 22:41 – How media shaped his psychedelic voice 26:13 – Bad headlines and stigma 28:26 – Why storytelling matters 29:18 – Midlife fear and reinvention 32:12 – “It’s not almost over — it’s just starting” 33:18 – Integration for older adults 37:55 – Meditation, presence, and connection 39:13 – Healing vs optimization 43:45 – Microdosing LSD vs psilocybin 46:36 – Psychedelic commercialization 47:47 – Public episode wrap-up 48:31 – Post-interview reflections 50:05 – Bryan’s takeaway 52:11 – Healing vs optimization framing 54:17 – Outro &amp; Patreon plugSend us Fan Mail FiresideProject.orgDownload the app or text/call 62-FIRESIDEZendo ProjectOur listeners get 10% off the Zendo Project SIT Program with the code DIVERGENTS10Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.Support the showSpecial Thanks to our Macrodosers, Super D and Mike, and our Thumbprint Tier member, Angie on Patreon!  https://linktr.ee/3L1T3Mod

  8. 26

    Shane Mauss: How Psychedelics Actually Change the Mind

    What really happens when psychedelics change someone, and why do some people come back grounded while others spiral into ego, conspiracy, or spiritual bypassing?In this long-form conversation, comedian and science-minded psychonaut Shane Mauss joins Divergent States for a deep dive into what psychedelics do to the human mind beneath the mystical language. Drawing on neuroscience, cognitive bias, evolutionary psychology, and lived psychedelic experience, Shane explains how substances like LSD, mushrooms, and DMT increase mental plasticity, loosen rigid categories, and open the brain to new ways of thinking — for better and for worse.Together, we explore why altered states can lead to creativity, healing, and insight, but also why they can just as easily fuel delusion, conspiracy thinking, and inflated ego. We talk about the placebo effect, Dunning-Kruger, belief formation, and how access to infinite information can make people feel like they know everything while understanding very little. Shane also shares candid stories from inside the psychedelic comedy world, including how Tales From the Trip was secretly launched at Comedy Central, why he’s uneasy about the current psychedelic “gold rush,” and how mainstream acceptance has changed the culture.This episode isn’t about chasing cosmic secrets or mystical narratives. It’s about how the mind actually works — and how psychedelics can either help us become more open, curious, and flexible, or lock us deeper into fantasy if we don’t know how to think critically about what we experience.If you care about psychedelics, consciousness, and staying grounded in reality while exploring extraordinary states, this conversation is for you.Shane&apos;s new special comes out 2/18 on ShaneMauss.com!Special thanks to Drip who did the music, check him out on Spotify and Soundcloud! 00:00 — Season 2 Opening 04:18 — From Stand-Up to Science 07:40 — Creating Psychedelic Theater 11:40 — Why Psychedelic Comedy Was Taboo 14:50 — Tales From the Trip Origin Story 19:20 — Why He Doesn’t Feel Like a Regular Comic 23:40 — Comedy as Tension and Truth 34:00 — George Carlin and Big-Idea Comedy 38:20 — Psychedelics Going Mainstream 41:00 — Skeptical Psychonauts 45:20 — Seeing the Dark Side of the Scene 47:45 — Psychedelics, Categorization, and the Brain 51:30 — The Crunchy-to-Conservative Pipeline 54:00 — Dunning-Kruger and Illusions of Knowledge 57:10 — Why Science Is Counterintuitive 01:02:40 — Why These Conversations Matter Send us Fan Mail FiresideProject.orgDownload the app or text/call 62-FIRESIDEZendo ProjectOur listeners get 10% off the Zendo Project SIT Program with the code DIVERGENTS10Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.Support the showSpecial Thanks to our Macrodosers, Super D and Mike, and our Thumbprint Tier member, Angie on Patreon!  https://linktr.ee/3L1T3Mod

  9. 25

    Inside Season Two: Integration, Not Escapism

    Season Two of Divergent States is about something simple and surprisingly rare: exploring altered states without losing touch with reality.In this preview episode, 3L1T3 and Bryan share two short moments from upcoming conversations that define the tone of the season ahead.In the first, Shane Mauss reflects on how psychedelics open people to awe—but also to certainty, conspiracies, and belief systems that can replace reality if no one pushes back. In the second, Cesar Marin explains why presence and human connection are the real work of integration, not endless chasing of peak experiences.Together, these moments capture what Divergent States has always tried to do: hold space for wonder without drifting into delusion, depth without losing grounding, and exploration rooted in real human connection.Patreon supporters get extended versions of these conversations, including sections that don’t survive algorithm-friendly edits. But this preview is here for everyone—because harm reduction, presence, and honest conversation shouldn’t be paywalled.Welcome to Season Two.Chapters00:00 – Welcome back &amp; season context Introducing Season Two and why this year matters.00:28 – What Divergent States actually isWhat the show is: harm reduction, not hype or spiritual theater.01:05 – Shane Mauss: Awe, science, and belief systems The “ghost crocodile” and microscope analogy.04:49 – Why psychedelics create both insight and delusionReflections on pattern-seeking and certainty in psychedelic spaces.05:20 – Cesar Marin: Presence as integration Connection, mushrooms, and staying grounded in real life.07:17 – The power of daily human connection Kids, texts, meditation, and showing up.08:55 – What Divergent States is really about Awe without delusion; depth without losing touch.09:15 – Patreon &amp; how to support the show Extended cuts, deeper conversations, and why it matters.10:10 – Harm reduction &amp; Zendo Project Why we partner with them and what the code supports.10:50 – Closing &amp; Season Two welcome Personal sign-off and transition into the new season.Send us Fan MailFiresideProject.orgDownload the app or text/call 62-FIRESIDEZendo ProjectOur listeners get 10% off the Zendo Project SIT Program with the code DIVERGENTS10Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.Support the showSpecial Thanks to our Macrodosers, Super D and Mike, and our Thumbprint Tier member, Angie on Patreon!  https://linktr.ee/3L1T3Mod

  10. 24

    Dennis McKenna: Nature, AI, and the Collapse of Separation

    Dennis McKenna joins 3L1T3 and Valerie Beltran to discuss the future of psychedelics, indigenous knowledge, and whether we are ready to bring these tools into mainstream culture without repeating the extractive patterns of the past. We explore the gap between good intentions and real reciprocity, what Western psychedelic enthusiasm is missing, and how community-based practice may matter more than clinical models alone.We also dive into the first biomedical study of ayahuasca with the UDV, how long-term members showed surprising changes in behavior and biology, and why the community structure may have played a larger role than the compound itself. Dennis talks about the work happening at the McKenna Academy, preserving Amazonian herbarium collections, digitizing ancestral plant knowledge, and the ESPD Symposia.This conversation calls out the cultural side of psychedelics, not just the science. If psychedelics are going to help, they must be integrated with wisdom, not just technology.Join our Patreon for the exclusive extended interview!Key PointsPsychedelics entered global awareness through indigenous stewardship, not Western inventionReciprocity requires more than money and acknowledgmentThe ESPD Symposia preserve ethnobotanical knowledge and make it publicEfforts to digitize herbarium collections in Peru before they are lostChapters00:00 Welcome to the season finale with Valerie01:10 Who Dennis McKenna is and why he still matters04:50 What still feels unresolved after 50 years06:15 Co-optation, capitalism, and indigenous knowledge09:00 The ESPD symposia and preserving ancestral knowledge12:40 Biognosis and digitizing Amazonian herbarium archives17:00 Why preserving knowledge matters more than artifacts18:35 The first biomedical study of ayahuasca with the UDV22:45 Behavioral change, alcoholism, and community support24:40 Serotonin transporter findings and biological mechanisms27:30 Neuroplasticity and long-term structural change31:00 Microdosing vs macro experiences33:20 Default mode network and stepping outside the self36:20 Separation from nature and cultural disconnection38:30 Technology, AI, and cultural fragmentation42:20 What real reciprocity might look like46:50 Avoiding cultural appropriation and extraction50:00 Psychedelics entering clinical models52:45 Mushrooms as ideal symbiotic partners56:00 Future of psychedelics in 10 years01:00:20 Ibogaine as global brain reset01:04:00 Evolution, partnership, and species symbiosis01:06:00 Closing thoughts Thanks to Dyl👽Alien for the music! Send us Fan Mail FiresideProject.orgDownload the app or text/call 62-FIRESIDEZendo ProjectOur listeners get 10% off the Zendo Project SIT Program with the code DIVERGENTS10Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.Support the showSpecial Thanks to our Macrodosers, Super D and Mike, and our Thumbprint Tier member, Angie on Patreon!  https://linktr.ee/3L1T3Mod

  11. 23

    Betty Aldworth: MAPS, MDMA, and the Battle Over Psychedelic Medicine

    In this episode of Divergent States, 3L1T3 sits down with Betty Aldworth, the new co-president of MAPS, as she steps into shared leadership with Ismail Ali following Rick Doblin’s four-decade run.Betty brings decades of experience in drug policy reform, from Colorado’s 2012 cannabis legalization campaign to leading Students for Sensible Drug Policy, and now helps guide MAPS through one of the movement’s most pivotal moments: the FDA’s rejection of Lycos Therapeutics’ MDMA-assisted therapy application.We unpack the tension between science and advocacy, urgency and rigor, and explore what real access means for people living with PTSD. Betty offers a candid, emotionally grounded look at the FDA’s critique, the role of stigma, and how MAPS plans to keep pushing forward through education, policy, and global research initiatives.Later, the conversation turns to the larger movement: political support from both sides of the aisle, state-level reform models, and MAPS’ upcoming 40th anniversary in 2026.Key PointsBetty’s path from SSDP to co-president of MAPSThe FDA’s rejection of MDMA-assisted therapy: what it really meansHow “positive adverse events” became a sticking point in the FDA reviewDurability of treatment effects and the debate over long-term dataBalancing activism, science, and education under MAPS’ new leadership modelThe growing divide between regulatory caution and patient urgencyGrassroots and state-level psychedelic reform gaining groundThe stigma that still shadows MDMA despite decades of dataHarm-reduction advice for those seeking underground healingWhat’s ahead for MAPS’ 40th anniversary and new research directions⏱ Chapter Markers00:00 – Intro — Bryan’s stage play, today’s guest: Betty Aldworth02:00 – MAPS’ new leadership and legacy after Rick Doblin05:00 – Betty on stepping into the role and the three MAPS pillars08:00 – From activism to leadership — lessons from SSDP11:45 – Balancing research, advocacy, and education14:00 – FDA rejection letter — what really happened16:00 – “Positive adverse events” and the question of abuse potential22:30 – Durability of treatment and COVID-era data gaps26:30 – Prior MDMA experience and bias — myth or factor?29:20 – Politics, science, and the credibility dilemma32:30 – RFK Jr., AOC, and politicization of psychedelics35:00 – Echoes of the 1980s scheduling fight36:20 – What comes next — Phase III, audits, and resilience38:30 – MAPS’ evolving research priorities &amp; global work41:00 – Normalization, decriminalization, and stigma43:45 – Science vs activism — carrying both forward48:00 – State-level reform and slow federal process50:30 – Cannabis rescheduling and broader reform52:00 – A message to people living with PTSD55:00 – MAPS’ 40th anniversary — what’s ahead57:00 – Closing reflections — stay weird, keep exploringThanks to Dyl👽Alien for the music!Send us Fan Mail FiresideProject.orgDownload the app or text/call 62-FIRESIDEZendo ProjectOur listeners get 10% off the Zendo Project SIT Program with the code DIVERGENTS10Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.Support the showSpecial Thanks to our Macrodosers, Super D and Mike, and our Thumbprint Tier member, Angie on Patreon!  https://linktr.ee/3L1T3Mod

  12. 22

    David Bronner on Corporate Psychedelics, Mysticism, and the All-One Future

    Dr. Bronner’s Cosmic Engagement Officer David Bronner joins Divergent States for a candid, nuts-and-bolts conversation about building an “All One” company culture, pushing for psychedelic policy reform, and rewiring global supply chains to be fair, transparent, and regenerative. We trace the lineage from Rainbow Gatherings to Burning Man, from hemp activism to MAPS, and from commodity brokers to farmer-first vertical integration. Co-host therapist Valerie Beltran helps press on the tradeoffs: regulated access versus decriminalization, mission versus financing, growth versus grassroots.Key pointsThe “All One God Faith” DNA, salary caps (5× lowest vested wage), and why profit is a means, not the mission.Why Dr. Bronner’s backed hemp early, fought DEA roadblocks, and supported MAPS, Oregon’s Measure 110, DC decrim, and church-based access models.Regulated access vs. decriminalization: complementary pathways; cost, community, and safety implications.Purpose-aligned financing: why many mission brands drift, and how the emerging Purpose Pledge aims to solve it.Sourcing as activism: Ghana palm grown in multi-strata agroforestry; olive oil partnerships across Palestinian and Israeli producers; farmer income and soil health as first principles.Regenerative Organic Certification: weaving soil health, animal welfare, and fair labor into one consumer standard.Cultural lineage: Zendo/sanctuary work, AA’s Bill Wilson and LSD, Sacred Plant Alliance, and lessons from the Brotherhood of Eternal Love.Pitfalls and PR landmines: navigating blame and lawsuits in a fast-shifting policy landscape.Longevity over hype: why real soap beats detergents, and the quirky “punk rock soap opera” moment that proved it.Practical integration: moving from unitive states to everyday choices—diet, sourcing, and local service.If this conversation resonated, follow the show on Spotify/Apple, leave a short review, and consider supporting the work on Patreon to keep community-driven media independent.Special thanks to Sandbgz for the music! Follow him on Spotify!00:00 – Intro &amp; Setup02:00 – From Burning Man to the Mic04:35 – Origins &amp; Rainbow Gathering Roots06:25 – The All One God Faith Legacy10:25 – Sourcing as Activism15:20 – Mission Financing &amp; the Purpose Pledge17:35 – Building Roots &amp; Staying Grounded22:30 – Why Risk Psychedelic Advocacy28:30 – Early Activism &amp; the Hemp Wars33:00 – Meeting Rick Doblin at Burning Man37:00 – Decrim, Churches &amp; Community Access39:15 – Pitfalls &amp; Lawsuits40:30 – Choosing Battles &amp; Lessons from Oregon 11042:45 – Integration &amp; Regenerative Organic Agriculture46:45 – From Vision to Action51:55 – Balancing Perfection &amp; Pragmatism55:45 – Longevity over Hype1:01:00 – Heaven on Earth &amp; Deep Time1:03:45 – Brotherhood of Eternal Love &amp; Rainbow Bridge1:08:30 – Closing Reflections1:12:00 – OutroSend us Fan Mail FiresideProject.orgDownload the app or text/call 62-FIRESIDEZendo ProjectOur listeners get 10% off the Zendo Project SIT Program with the code DIVERGENTS10Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.Support the showSpecial Thanks to our Macrodosers, Super D and Mike, and our Thumbprint Tier member, Angie on Patreon!  https://linktr.ee/3L1T3Mod

  13. 21

    Joe Moore on the Future of Psychedelics: From Underground to Mainstream

    Psychedelics are no longer the fringe—they’re reshaping medicine, culture, and consciousness itself.In this episode of Divergent States, 3L1T3 and Bryan sit down with Joe Moore, co-founder and CEO of Psychedelics Today, to explore the messy evolution of the movement: from the chaotic 1960s to today’s corporate clinics and grassroots revival.They trace Psychedelics Today’s origins, dive into the Vital training program, and discuss what it means to build trust in a scene that still distrusts institutions. Joe shares insight into the next decade of psychedelic science—AI-assisted molecule discovery, new drugs entering clinical trials, and the fading of old stigmas—and the risks of turning medicine into marketing.Along the way, they talk Leary and McKenna, ketamine cults, LSD alchemy, and the underground traditions worth preserving.The result is a grounded, forward-looking conversation about authenticity, ethics, and the future of altered states.Key Points Covered How Psychedelics Today started from the breathwork undergroundWhat the 1960s got wrong (and right) about psychedelics  The danger of idolizing substances and personalities — “don’t worship the drug” How overuse of ketamine mirrors past mistakes in psychedelic cultureThe future of psychedelic research and the AI-driven chemistry boomVital, the 12-month training program creating the next generation of psychedelic professionalsWhat it takes to run an ethical business in a scene that distrusts businessHarm reduction and why testing your substances matters more than ever The LSD Philosopher’s Stone — does the chemist’s energy shape the trip?  Why pleasure and integration must coexist in psychedelic healing 🎙️ Joe Moore joins r/Psychonaut for an AMA on October 9, 2025! 🎧 Support the show and hear the Patreon-only “Trip Stories &amp; Cosmic Jokes” bonus segment at patreon.com/divergentstatesSpecial thanks to SndBagz for the music!00:00 – Intro / Bryan returns / Reggie Watts recap / Season 2 preview04:16 – Meeting Joe Moore / Origins of Psychedelics Today07:30 – Building a new media voice beyond academic monoculture08:46 – Lessons from the 1960s and the cult of personality12:00 – “Don’t Worship the Substance” – The Danger of Psychedelic Deification13:30 – Unsung Heroes: Shulgins, Dr. Z, Grof &amp; Leonard Pickard15:00 – Repeating Old Mistakes: Ketamine Overuse and Media Myths17:40 – “Is Anyone Driving the Bus?” – Who Really Controls Psychedelics Today20:30 – Can Clinical Models Honor Mystical Experiences?23:00 – Psychedelic Journalism: Objectivity vs Calling Bullshit25:30 – Inside Vital – Redefining Psychedelic Training28:30 – Teaching Mysticism to Therapists31:00 – Building Trust in a Culture Skeptical of Business37:30 – The Next Decade – Five Psychedelics Likely to Be Legalized43:30 – Harm Reduction &amp; Testing Culture46:00 – The LSD Philosopher’s Stone – EnerSend us Fan Mail FiresideProject.orgDownload the app or text/call 62-FIRESIDEZendo ProjectOur listeners get 10% off the Zendo Project SIT Program with the code DIVERGENTS10Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.Support the showSpecial Thanks to our Macrodosers, Super D and Mike, and our Thumbprint Tier member, Angie on Patreon!  https://linktr.ee/3L1T3Mod

  14. 20

    What Psychedelics Actually Do to Creativity, with Reggie Watts

    Psychedelics are often framed as creativity boosters, but that’s not exactly what’s happening.In this conversation with Reggie Watts, we explore what psychedelics actually do to the creative process, from removing self-judgment to unlocking flow states and dissolving the internal filters that normally shape how we think and create.Reggie shares how different substances affect improvisation, why dissociatives offer a unique kind of creative space, and how altered states can shift the way we experience music, performance, and collaboration. Along the way, we get into ego, flow, and what it really means to “tap into” creativity—both with and without psychedelics.This isn’t about becoming more creative. It’s about understanding what’s already there—and what’s getting in the way.⏱️ Chapter Markers 00:00 Intro  02:39 Meeting Reggie Watts  03:39 Psychedelics &amp; Creative Process  04:54 Creating in Different States  06:01 Flow State &amp; Self-Judgment  07:33 Psychedelics &amp; Improvisation  09:07 Past vs Future Consciousness  10:12 Creativity Without Psychedelics  11:55 Music, Trance, and Flow  13:12 Dissociatives &amp; Creative Exploration  15:12 Mixing Substances &amp; States  17:24 Cannabis, Nitrous, and Experience  18:38 Memory, Consciousness, and Identity  20:21 Collaborative Creation  22:32 Control vs Openness in Creativity  24:15 Mindset &amp; Creative Outcomes  25:58 Processing Difficult Emotions  27:52 Movement, Music, and Healing  29:14 Letting Go &amp; Permission to Be  30:54 Psychedelics: Tools or Collaborators?  32:58 Outro / Patreon Segment🎵 Thanks to Sndbagz for the music!https://on.soundcloud.com/rbYppKLjmcdWUBSrqQSend us Fan Mail FiresideProject.orgDownload the app or text/call 62-FIRESIDEZendo ProjectOur listeners get 10% off the Zendo Project SIT Program with the code DIVERGENTS10Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.Support the showSpecial Thanks to our Macrodosers, Super D and Mike, and our Thumbprint Tier member, Angie on Patreon!  https://linktr.ee/3L1T3Mod

  15. 19

    How Politics Could Derail Psychedelic Medicine — Again

    History shows politics can make or break psychedelic medicine, will we repeat the 1960s backlash, or finally move forward? In this episode of Divergent States, we explore the uneasy intersection of psychedelics and politics. MDMA remains a Schedule I drug—classified as dangerous with no medical use—while at the same time advancing through FDA Phase III trials. This contradiction highlights the limbo psychedelics face today: criminalized on one side, medicalized on the other.We revisit the lessons of the 1960s, when political backlash ended promising psychedelic research for decades, and compare them to today’s fast-changing landscape. With figures like Robert F. Kennedy Jr. championing psychedelic medicine, the risk of partisan branding looms large. Can the psychedelic renaissance avoid being reduced to culture war ammunition?From Oregon and Colorado’s legalization models to global perspectives like Australia’s, we unpack the fragile future of access, safety, and legitimacy. And we emphasize why independent media, grassroots communities, and diverse voices are essential to keeping psychedelics rooted in healing rather than political agendas.🔑 Key PointsPsychedelics remain Schedule I but are simultaneously advancing toward FDA approval.The 1960s crackdown shows the danger of entanglement with politics and culture wars.Public opinion has shifted rapidly, with mainstream endorsements from figures like Oprah and Michael Pollan.Risks of polarizing association (e.g., RFK Jr.) could trigger backlash despite strong science.Oregon’s tightly regulated model vs. Colorado’s more open system—pros, cons, and accessibility challenges.Potential for a two-tiered system: expensive legal clinics vs. criminalized underground use.Independent media and grassroots communities play a key role in shaping the narrative.Psychedelics could follow three futures: medicalized/corporate, grassroots/underground, or partisan football.Safety concerns are emerging with unregulated “gas station mushrooms” and microdose products.Global models like Australia’s nationwide legalization offer lessons for the U.S. path ahead.Chapters00:00 – The Psychedelic Contradiction MDMA is Schedule I and in FDA Phase III trials — the legal/medical limbo.02:00 – Why Politics Are Dangerous Why Divergent States avoids partisan debates, and how culture wars derail progress.06:30 – Lessons from the 1960s How Timothy Leary, Nixon, and the War on Drugs shut down decades of psychedelic science.09:45 – The Risk of Polarization RFK Jr., vaccines, and how associating psychedelics with a single figure fuels backlash.15:00 – Fragile Legitimacy Medical, cultural, and political legitimacy — and how easily it can collapse.20:20 – Can Psychedelics Unite Us? Hope for bipartisan support, parallels with cannabis legalization.24:00 – Global Models &amp; Access Oregon vs. Colorado, AuSend us Fan Mail FiresideProject.orgDownload the app or text/call 62-FIRESIDEZendo ProjectOur listeners get 10% off the Zendo Project SIT Program with the code DIVERGENTS10Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.Support the showSpecial Thanks to our Macrodosers, Super D and Mike, and our Thumbprint Tier member, Angie on Patreon!  https://linktr.ee/3L1T3Mod

  16. 18

    Compass Pathways: Independent Media Talks Psychedelic Medicine

    In this episode of Divergent States, we sit down with Kabir Nath, CEO of Compass Pathways, and Dr. Steve Levine, Chief Patient Officer, to talk about the future of psychedelic medicine. From FDA approval and insurance coverage to patient access, cultural safety, and patents, we dig into whether Compass is truly disrupting the pharma model or just reinventing it.We also share a major community update: the official Divergent States Discord is now open to all of r/Psychonaut. Built by Brady and the mod team, the server is a space for harm reduction, trip reports, deep dives, and authentic connection across the psychedelic movement.As always, this conversation is about asking the real questions without corporate PR filters. What Compass shared — and what they left unsaid — reveals as much about the future of psilocybin therapy as the answers themselves.👉 Join the movement: connect on Discord, support independent media on Patreon, and be part of the conversation. https://discord.gg/swPwT6ZYunKey PointsFDA approval: path to affordability or illusion of access?COM360 psilocybin therapy: synthetic model, patient journey, and therapy debateAccess &amp; equity: insurance hurdles, pricing models, and patient foundationsCultural safety: trauma-informed design, marginalized populations, indigenous rootsPatents &amp; Pharma tension: innovation vs. corporate control in psychedelic medicineCommunity news: Divergent States Discord officially launches for r/PsychonautChapters 00:00 – Intro: Setting the frame for Compass Pathways 01:30 – Community Update: Divergent States Discord opens for r/Psychonaut 09:30 – Guest Intros: Kabir Nath &amp; Dr. Steve Levine of Compass Pathways 11:20 – Kabir on moving from pharma to psychedelics 12:30 – Steve on ketamine clinics &amp; new models of care 14:15 – What “success” looks like for patients 16:00 – COM360 psilocybin therapy: synthetic vs. natural &amp; the role of therapy 17:30 – How Compass plans to deliver psilocybin in different care settings 18:40 – Patient hopes, fears, and the path to access 20:00 – FDA approval, insurance, and affordability 21:00 – Cultural safety, trauma-informed design, and community input 21:45 – Indigenous engagement &amp; staying “in their lane” 24:15 – The next 5–10 years of psychedelic treatment 26:10 – What could derail psychedelic medicine’s promise 28:10 – Compass’ place in the broader psychedelic ecosystem 29:50 – Outro: Independent media reflections &amp; listener call to action New Music from Sndbagz - check out his new EP &quot;Chosen Path&quot; on Soundcloud and Spotifyhttps://open.spotify.com/artist/0T1LU2nJ9ibGIU3Bxin2X6https://soundcloud.com/user-918755844Send us Fan Mail FiresideProject.orgDownload the app or text/call 62-FIRESIDEZendo ProjectOur listeners get 10% off the Zendo Project SIT Program with the code DIVERGENTS10Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.Support the showSpecial Thanks to our Macrodosers, Super D and Mike, and our Thumbprint Tier member, Angie on Patreon!  https://linktr.ee/3L1T3Mod

  17. 17

    Paul F. Austin: Mastering Microdosing and Unlocking Human Potential

    In this episode of Divergent States, host 3L1T3 and co-host Bryan sit down with Paul F. Austin, founder of The Third Wave and the Psychedelic Coaching Institute.We dive deep into microdosing psychedelics, intentional use for peak performance, and the rise of psychedelic coaching as a professional path. Paul shares insights from his book Mastering Microdosing, his vision for conscious entrepreneurship, and how psychedelics are reshaping the way we think about healing, creativity, and human potential.If you’re curious about LSD or psilocybin microdosing, psychedelic integration, or building a career in the psychedelic space, this episode is packed with actionable takeaways and inspiring perspectives.🔑 Key Topics &amp; Takeaways:How Paul F. Austin became a pioneer in the psychedelic spaceThe science and practice of microdosing for focus and creativityWhy psychedelic coaching is the next frontier in mental health and personal growthEntrepreneurship and psychedelics: Lessons from building The Third WaveBest practices for safe, intentional psychedelic useWhere the psychedelic movement is headed in the next 5–10 years⏱️ Chapters:0:00 – Welcome to Divergent States with 3L1T3 &amp; Bryan2:15 – Introducing Paul F. Austin &amp; The Third Wave5:30 – How Paul discovered psychedelics and microdosing10:42 – The benefits of microdosing for focus, creativity &amp; emotional balance18:20 – Psychedelic coaching: What it is and why it’s growing27:55 – Lessons from building The Third Wave &amp; conscious entrepreneurship36:10 – Integration, safety, and intentional psychedelic use44:15 – The future of psychedelics, careers, and community52:30 – Closing thoughts &amp; how to connect with PaulSend us Fan Mail FiresideProject.orgDownload the app or text/call 62-FIRESIDEZendo ProjectOur listeners get 10% off the Zendo Project SIT Program with the code DIVERGENTS10Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.Support the showSpecial Thanks to our Macrodosers, Super D and Mike, and our Thumbprint Tier member, Angie on Patreon!  https://linktr.ee/3L1T3Mod

  18. 16

    Amber Capone: The Psychedelics Saving Veterans from PTSD

    Amber Capone, co-founder and CEO of Veterans Exploring Treatment Solutions (VETS), shares the powerful story of how psychedelic therapy - starting with Ibogaine - helped her husband, Navy SEAL Marcus Capone, recover from PTSD and TBI when traditional care failed.We dive into the science and controversy behind Ibogaine, the limits of VA mental health care, and how VETS is paving the way for safe access to psychedelics like MDMA, psilocybin, and ketamine for veterans in need.Key Points:Amber’s leap from military spouse to CEO of VETSIbogaine’s transformative potential for PTSD and TBIRisks and rewards of seeking psychedelic treatment abroadBipartisan momentum behind veteran psychedelic initiativesWhy careful vetting, integration, and support are critical🎧 Listen to hear how psychedelics are changing lives—and the future of trauma care.Chapter Markers:00:00 – Introduction &amp; why Amber’s story matters05:56 – What was happening behind the scenes at home07:57 – The struggle after service: Marcus’ decline10:59 – Turning point: discovering Ibogaine14:57 – What changed after treatment20:20 – Starting VETS to help other families25:06 – Not just Ibogaine: the expanded toolbox31:21 – Addressing TBI and polytrauma35:43 – The importance of screening, context, and preparation41:46 – VETS’ evolving role in advocacy and support45:16 – Bipartisan support and shifting cultural norms51:54 – What “success” really means for healing veterans57:57 – Where to learn more and get involvedSend us Fan Mail FiresideProject.orgDownload the app or text/call 62-FIRESIDEZendo ProjectOur listeners get 10% off the Zendo Project SIT Program with the code DIVERGENTS10Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.Support the showSpecial Thanks to our Macrodosers, Super D and Mike, and our Thumbprint Tier member, Angie on Patreon!  https://linktr.ee/3L1T3Mod

  19. 15

    William Leonard Pickard - The Acid King, the Rose, and the Return

    What happens when the most hunted man in psychedelic history walks free and joins us for a conversation?In this deeply reflective episode of Divergent States, I sit down with William Leonard Pickard: chemist, philosopher, author of The Rose of Paracelsus, and the man once called the “Acid King.” After decades behind bars, Pickard returns with revelations about time, memory, suffering, redemption, and the spiritual cost of psychedelic pursuit.We discuss the rise and fall of the most infamous LSD lab in history, Pickard&apos;s views on Ibogaine and modern psychedelic commercialization, and how prison reshaped his consciousness. He speaks of literature, inner stillness, shadow organizations, and the unfathomable lessons buried in the folds of silence.A mythic guest, a poetic mind, and perhaps the most important voice in the psychedelic space today.🔑 Key Takeaways:The &quot;Acid King&quot; Speaks: For the first time in-depth post-supervision, Leonard Pickard reflects on his time at the center of what authorities called the largest LSD operation in history, and what he believes was really happening behind the scenes.Prison as a Psychedelic Experience: Pickard describes incarceration not as a void, but as a radically altered state, where time dilates, silence becomes sacred, and the mind either breaks or transcends.Ibogaine, Compassion, and the Future: He voices strong views on the therapeutic use of Ibogaine, its dangers when misused, and its misunderstood spiritual potential.The Rose of Paracelsus as Code: More than a memoir, Pickard hints that The Rose is layered with veiled truths and archetypes meant for those “with ears to hear”, especially those seeking refuge from commercialized psychedelia.The Invisible Networks: He suggests there are forces: academic, clandestine, spiritual, that have shaped and continue to shape psychedelic culture in ways the mainstream never sees.Redemption Through Stillness: Pickard doesn&apos;t romanticize his past. Instead, he presents a philosophy of quiet redemption, where introspection, myth, and suffering converge into what he calls “the sacred cost.”Warnings to the Psychedelic Industry: He offers a cautionary tale to today’s entrepreneurs and enthusiasts: be wary of glamorizing chemical mysticism, and remember that true wisdom comes not from flash, but from depth.00:00 – Introduction: The Acid King Returns3:06 – From Secrecy to Spotlight06:00 – Psychedelic Culture: Then and Now10:53 – Ibogaine and Healing Work12:44 – On Commercialization and Ceremony16:46 – What About the Sacred?19:46 – Medicalization vs. Freedom24:53 – What They Never Ask26:22 – Second Life Reflections33:16 – What Prison Taught Me38:15 – Ergot Wine and LSD Myths43:01 – Machine Elves and Other Planes44:13 – Star Trek and the Pickard Rumor45:07 – OutSend us Fan Mail FiresideProject.orgDownload the app or text/call 62-FIRESIDEZendo ProjectOur listeners get 10% off the Zendo Project SIT Program with the code DIVERGENTS10Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.Support the showSpecial Thanks to our Macrodosers, Super D and Mike, and our Thumbprint Tier member, Angie on Patreon!  https://linktr.ee/3L1T3Mod

  20. 14

    Dr. Anne Wagner: Can MDMA Fix a Broken Marriage?

    In this episode, 3L1T3 sits down with Dr. Anne Wagner, clinical psychologist and founder of Remedy, whose research pushes MDMA therapy beyond the individual — into the space between two people. We explore what happens when couples facing PTSD enter treatment together, why trauma rarely belongs to just one partner, and whether psychedelic medicine can transform relational patterns where traditional therapy fails.We also examine the ethical and emotional risks of dyadic MDMA therapy: consent, power dynamics, memory, boundaries, and what happens when only one partner improves. Is this the future of trauma care — or a dangerous leap?This conversation challenges the standard medical model, questions the limits of psychedelic therapy, and asks whether healing sometimes requires more than one nervous system.✅ Key Points / TopicsWhy relationship trauma isn’t just “one person’s PTSD”How MDMA-assisted therapy is being adapted for couplesThe science behind “dyadic healing”What happens when both partners dose — togetherHow MDMA opens emotional flexibility + secure bondingCore risks: power imbalance, coercion, storytelling shiftsEthical challenges in couples psychedelic workIs relational MDMA therapy scalable?Why some couples shouldn’t take MDMA togetherWhat traditional therapy gets wrong about trauma“The Power of Two” — healing via the relationship itselfCase outcomes — surprising resultsWhere research goes from here🎧 Plus: updates from Psychedelic Science 2025, upcoming guests like Leonard Pickard and Reggie Watts, and why the future of therapy might come in pairs.⏱️ Chapters:00:00 – Intro &amp; Conference Check-In 04:22 – Meet Dr. Anne Wagner 04:38 – Misunderstandings About MDMA Therapy 07:13 – Empathy and Connection on MDMA 09:05 – Pilot Study Results from MDMA + CBCT 14:08 – Unexpected Dyadic Challenges 16:31 – Why Couples Therapy vs Solo MDMA Work 20:09 – Shifting Toward CPT + MDMA 24:18 – Preview of Anne’s Panels at PS25 28:57 – Defining Integration for Couples 32:35 – Will Dyadic Integration Become Its Own Field? 34:52 – Power Dynamics, Communication &amp; Conflict on MDMA 37:22 – MDMA, Neurodivergence, and CPTSD 40:38 – Future of MDMA in General Relationship Work 42:13 – Ethical Guardrails for Psychedelic Couples Therapy 44:50 – Risks of Untrained Psychedelic Facilitators 45:44 – Training Models for Dyadic Psychedelic Therapists 47:20 – Access, Regulation &amp; Stigma Barriers 49:20 – Anne’s Origin Story: Psychedelics, Trauma &amp; Relationships 51:23 – Most Unexpected Lesson from the Work 53:09 – How to Connect with Remedy Centre 54:02 – Final Thoughts &amp; Psychedelic Science Plans 59:09 – Outro: PTSD Breakthroughs &amp; Upcoming GuestsMusic by FlintwickSend us Fan Mail FiresideProject.orgDownload the app or text/call 62-FIRESIDEZendo ProjectOur listeners get 10% off the Zendo Project SIT Program with the code DIVERGENTS10Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.Support the showSpecial Thanks to our Macrodosers, Super D and Mike, and our Thumbprint Tier member, Angie on Patreon!  https://linktr.ee/3L1T3Mod

  21. 13

    Kyrsten Sinema: Inside the Psychedelic Fast-Track for Veterans

    A former U.S. Senator says the federal government is preparing to fast-track psychedelic medicines, especially for veterans with TBI, PTSD, addiction, and treatment-resistant depression.In this conversation, Kyrsten Sinema explains why the current administration is unusually aligned behind plant-based therapies, how Ibogaine and MDMA could move through the FDA faster than expected, and why small researchers, not Big Pharma, may end up shaping the field.We dig into:Ibogaine’s impact on Special Forces veteransWhy bipartisan support is real and why it’s strangeWhat “FDA fast-track” actually meansThe fight to secure Medicaid/Medicare + VA coverageHow cost + access could shift once CMS approves careThe threat of large companies burying breakthroughsWhy trauma + TBI may define the next decade of medicineSinema isn’t claiming everything is solved.She argues there’s a rare window — and it could close.Whether you’re hopeful or skeptical, you’ll walk away with a clearer view of the policy machinery behind psychedelic medicine.⏱️ Chapters:00:00 – Intro: Politics, Power, and Psychedelics 01:41 – Why Interview Sinema? Pushback &amp; Intentions 02:21 – First Sponsor Tease &amp; PS25 Plans 03:56 – Sinema Joins the Interview 04:18 – How Ibogaine Changed Her Perspective 06:49 – Senate Colleagues&apos; Reactions 07:44 – Policy Progress &amp; Bipartisan Allies 09:43 – Pharma Capture &amp; Psychedelic Industry Risks 12:02 – Can Psychedelics Avoid Biotech Monopoly? 13:40 – Cost, Access, and Equity Concerns 14:44 – Ensuring Access for the Most Vulnerable 15:56 – State vs. Federal Models 17:00 – Federal Role in Decriminalization &amp; Reform 17:20 – Regrets or Missed Legislative Opportunities? 18:43 – Sinema’s Continued Involvement 20:06 – Political Alignment vs. Policy Goals 20:17 – Restoring Trust in Institutions 21:55 – Five-Year Outlook for Psychedelic Medicine 23:10 – Final Reflections &amp; Outro 23:41 – Bonus: Sinema on Psychedelic Science 2025 Panels 25:17 – Collaboration with VETS Foundation 25:53 – Closing Thanks &amp; Conference Plans 28:49 – Outro Recap &amp; Reflections 31:19 – Sponsors, Shulgin Legacy, and Fireside Project 32:10 – Next Episode Tease: Dr. Anne WagnerSend us Fan Mail FiresideProject.orgDownload the app or text/call 62-FIRESIDEZendo ProjectOur listeners get 10% off the Zendo Project SIT Program with the code DIVERGENTS10Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.Support the showSpecial Thanks to our Macrodosers, Super D and Mike, and our Thumbprint Tier member, Angie on Patreon!  https://linktr.ee/3L1T3Mod

  22. 12

    Kevin Cranford – Behind the Curtain at MAPS: Culture, Communication & Controversy

    This week, we sit down with Kevin Cranford, Communications Officer at MAPS (Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies), to talk about the upcoming Psychedelic Science 2025 conference — what’s new, what’s different, and why it’s shaping up to be more than just another gathering. From navigating hype vs. science to MAPS’ comms strategy, Kevin shares how the org is threading the needle between community storytelling, rigorous research, and avoiding another &quot;Wellness Industrial Complex&quot; meltdown.We dig into questions around affordability, integration, cross-aisle politics, harm reduction, and even Oprah&apos;s looming presence. It&apos;s a candid, funny, and thoughtful look at where the movement is headed — and how not to lose the soul of psychedelics in the process.Also in this episode: Rainbow Gatherings, EDM afterparties, psychedelic pickup lines, and how to make ketamine uncool.Key TakeawaysMAPS is prioritizing integration over size for PS25, aiming for intentional connections rather than sheer numbers.The future of psychedelics lies in dialogue, not dogma — MAPS welcomes skeptics, clinicians, artists, and policy-makers under the same roof.Storytelling beats data alone — personal narratives help bring complex psychedelic science to wider audiences.MAPS consciously avoids hype by deferring to the science and resisting exaggerated claims.Access and affordability are still big questions — MAPS is actively seeking insurance and donation pathways to reduce sticker shock for marginalized communities.There’s tension in the movement between spiritual influencers and clinical research — and MAPS isn’t shying away from those debates.The goal is to make psychedelics boring. That’s how you mainstream a revolution. Chapter Markers00:00 Introduction and Conference Overview03:14 Psychedelic Science 2025: A Cultural Gathering06:05 Target Audience and Conference Experience09:01 Balancing Science and Experience11:56 Community Dynamics and Open Dialogue14:56 Storytelling in Psychedelic Advocacy18:04 Addressing Criticism and Ensuring Access20:55 Future of Psychedelic Research and Regulation27:25 Curating Online Communities for Quality Engagement29:03 Learning from Past Mistakes in Psychedelic Movements30:40 Bridging Political Divides in Psychedelic Advocacy31:52 The Importance of Personal Stories in Psychedelic Healing33:44 Exploring the Deep Space Experience at PS2535:07 Innovative Ideas for Future Psychedelic Conferences36:53 The Impact of Celebrity Endorsements on Psychedelic Culture39:52 Making Psychedelics Boring for Future Generations40:29 Reflections on the Psychedelic Community and Its GrowthSend us Fan Mail FiresideProject.orgDownload the app or text/call 62-FIRESIDEZendo ProjectOur listeners get 10% off the Zendo Project SIT Program with the code DIVERGENTS10Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.Support the showSpecial Thanks to our Macrodosers, Super D and Mike, and our Thumbprint Tier member, Angie on Patreon!  https://linktr.ee/3L1T3Mod

  23. 11

    Tom Feegel: Can Psychedelics Heal the Opioid Crisis?

    In this powerful new episode of Divergent States, your hosts 3L1T3 and Bryan sit down with Tom Feegel—CEO and Co-Founder of Beond, a pioneering Ibogaine clinic based in Mexico, to discuss the unfiltered realities of healing, addiction recovery, and the evolving landscape of psychedelic-assisted therapy.Tom brings two decades of sobriety, a past life in global brand marketing, and deep experience navigating both the light and shadow of the psychedelic resurgence. This isn’t a conversation full of buzzwords: it’s a grounded, honest exploration of what actually helps people come back from the brink.Together, we unpack what Ibogaine is, why it has a reputation for treating opioid addiction where other modalities fall short, and how the Beond model emphasizes safety, preparation, and integration over hype. Tom also shares stories from the frontlines: clients who arrive on death’s doorstep and walk away with not just sobriety, but a new story for themselves.This episode dives into some hard but necessary questions:    Why do traditional Western rehab models have such a low success rate?    What does it mean to center human dignity in a treatment model?    How can clinics scale without becoming exploitative?    What role do communities like Reddit and independent media play in this movement?Whether you&apos;re a harm reduction advocate, a skeptic, or just curious about where psychedelics are headed, this conversation challenges assumptions and offers a rare window into the operational and ethical complexities of real-world healing work.Big thanks to our guest Tom Feegel for showing up with honesty, experience, and insight—and for the vital work he’s doing at Beond Ibogaine Clinic.https://beondibogaine.com/Appreciation to all our listeners, supporters, and community members who keep Divergent States growing with every episode.Shoutout to our co-host Bryan for always bringing grounded, thoughtful perspective - and to you, for being part of this movement.🎶 Music CreditOriginal music by Dyl👽Alien - alien frequencies for earthbound minds.Check out more of Dyl👽Alien’s work wherever interdimensional audio is transmitted.Chapters00:00 Introduction and Overview of the Podcast03:10 Tom Fiegel&apos;s Personal Journey and the Founding of Beyond Ibogaine18:40 The Role of Community and Support in Healing22:29 Challenging the Stigma of Asking for Help24:04 The Importance of Self-Forgiveness and Growth28:31 Redefining Healing and the Role of Medicine28:58 Healing Through Vision: Moving Beyond the Past32:13 The Role of Ibogaine: A Natural Healing Tool36:05 The Journey to Treatment: What to Expect45:26 The Ibogaine Experience: A Transformative ProcessSend us Fan Mail FiresideProject.orgDownload the app or text/call 62-FIRESIDEZendo ProjectOur listeners get 10% off the Zendo Project SIT Program with the code DIVERGENTS10Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.Support the showSpecial Thanks to our Macrodosers, Super D and Mike, and our Thumbprint Tier member, Angie on Patreon!  https://linktr.ee/3L1T3Mod

  24. 10

    Seven Principles of the Psychonaut w/ Valerie Beltran

    What does it mean to be a responsible psychonaut?In this episode of Divergent States, we sit down again with Valerie Beltran, licensed therapist, harm reduction expert, and educator with the Zendo Project, to unpack 7 core principles for navigating psychedelic states with intention, safety, and compassion.We break down everything from testing your stash to dismantling your ego, and talk about how these powerful tools can help us grow: not just as individuals, but as a culture.🔑 Topics we cover include:Harm reduction, substance testing, and staying safeWhat makes a psychonaut different from a recreational userEgo dissolution vs. ego inflation in the psychedelic spaceThe beauty of Zendo-style peer supportPsychedelic diversity, inclusion, and ethical useThe soul quadrant: psychedelics as a call to community actionIntegration as an everyday spiritual practiceWhy set, setting, and intention still matter more than hypeValerie brings grounded wisdom and therapeutic insight, while 3L1T3 and Bryan keep it real with stories, skepticism, and a few laughs about LSD philosophy, festival weirdness, and Rainbow drum circles.🧠 This is a great starting point for new explorers and a reminder to seasoned trippers that we all need to check our egos at the door sometimes.🎧 Music by Flintwick 🪬 Support the show + get the bonus after-show with Valerie at patreon.com/divergentstates 🎤 Email: [email protected]#Psychedelics #Psychonaut #Integration #ZendoProject #DivergentStates #PsychedelicTherapy #SetAndSetting #HarmReduction #MAPS #EgoDeath00:00:00 - Introduction00:00:18 - Valerie Beltran’s Background00:01:37 - Updates from the Zendo Project00:02:24 - Psychedelic Legalization News00:03:35 - Psychedelic Science 25 Conference00:05:19 - The Seven Psychonaut Principles00:05:50 - Principle 1: Harm Reduction &amp; Personal Safety00:08:42 - Preparation (Set &amp; Setting)00:14:21 - Principle 2: Do No Harm to Others00:16:07 - Principle 3: Community &amp; Connection00:21:36 - Principle 4: Diversity &amp; Inclusion00:25:59 - Principle 5: Ego Awareness00:31:18 - Principle 6: Integration &amp; Reflection00:38:18 - Princliple 7: Advocacy &amp; Social Justice00:44:47 - Closing RemarksSend us Fan Mail FiresideProject.orgDownload the app or text/call 62-FIRESIDEZendo ProjectOur listeners get 10% off the Zendo Project SIT Program with the code DIVERGENTS10Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.Support the showSpecial Thanks to our Macrodosers, Super D and Mike, and our Thumbprint Tier member, Angie on Patreon!  https://linktr.ee/3L1T3Mod

  25. 9

    Alli Schaper: Microdosing, Mushrooms, and Policy Reform

    In this episode of Divergent States, we sit down with Alli Schaper, CEO of Supermush and co-founder of the Microdosing Collective, to explore the evolving world of functional and psychedelic mushrooms. Alli shares her journey into microdosing advocacy, the challenges of navigating the gray market for psychedelics, and the urgent push for policy reform to ensure safe, legal access.We dive into the science behind microdosing, its profound benefits for mental health, creativity, and even athletic performance, and discuss why current regulations often overlook this powerful tool. Alli opens up about how psychedelics helped her family process grief and why storytelling is key to destigmatizing these substances. The conversation also highlights the risks of unregulated products (like gas station &quot;shrooms&quot;), the importance of community-driven advocacy, and the potential for cultural momentum to shape smarter policies.With psychedelic mushrooms gaining mainstream attention, from wellness brands to underground markets, we ask: Are we &quot;legalizing the whole bottle of wine before the sip&quot;? Tune in for a thought-provoking discussion on the future of microdosing, the role of functional fungi in daily health, and how everyday individuals can help drive this movement forward.Music by DylAlien.TakeawaysMushrooms can have a profound impact on physical and mental health.Microdosing can help maintain mental health and prevent burnout.Psychedelics can be valuable tools for processing grief.There is a cultural gap in understanding and accepting death.Microdosing is often misunderstood and misrepresented in popular culture.Functional mushrooms offer various health benefits beyond nutrition.Community and intentional gatherings are essential for wellness.Advocacy for microdosing is crucial for policy changes.The definition of a microdose is often misinterpreted.The Microdosing Collective aims to represent and support microdosers. There is a need for a legal safe pathway for microdosing.Education and research are crucial for microdosing advocacy.Community involvement enhances the impact of policy reform.The psychedelic gray market poses risks and opportunities.https://www.microdosingcollective.org/https://supermush.comChapters00:00 Introduction to Psychedelic Science 2502:53 Ali Schaper&apos;s Journey into Microdosing06:08 Balancing Entrepreneurship and Advocacy09:00 Personal Experiences with Grief and Psychedelics12:01 The Intersection of Wellness and Mortality15:05 Microdosing Collective and Its Goals17:48 Functional Mushrooms vs. Psychedelic Microdosing21:01 Benefits of Functional Mushrooms23:57 Debunking Myths about Microdosing28:45 Legal Pathways for Microdosing30:12 Challenges in Microdosing Policy32:05 Education and Community Engagement34:52 The Role of Everyday Psychonauts36:54 Understanding the Psychedelic Gray Market39:47 PSend us Fan Mail FiresideProject.orgDownload the app or text/call 62-FIRESIDEZendo ProjectOur listeners get 10% off the Zendo Project SIT Program with the code DIVERGENTS10Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.Support the showSpecial Thanks to our Macrodosers, Super D and Mike, and our Thumbprint Tier member, Angie on Patreon!  https://linktr.ee/3L1T3Mod

  26. 8

    JR Sawyers – The First Film About Set, Setting, and Psychedelic Therapy? A Trip Elsewhere

    In this deeply personal and eye-opening episode, we sit down with filmmaker JR Sawyers, the mind behind the indie psychedelic drama A Trip Elsewhere. What begins as a conversation about a film turns into a powerful exploration of transformation, healing, and consciousness.JR opens up about the psychedelic retreat that changed his life, the emotional weight of isolation during the pandemic, and how he turned those experiences into cinematic storytelling. We dive into the emotional architecture of A Trip Elsewhere, the science and stigma of psychedelics, and how visuals can speak to the soul when words fall short.From ego death to sacred geometry, from heartbreak to healing—this episode is as introspective and surreal as the film itself. Whether you’re curious about psychedelics, passionate about indie film, or just looking for a conversation with real heart, this one is not to be missed.🎬 A Trip Elsewhere is streaming now on Amazon Prime, Tubi, Apple TV, and the Roku Channel.TakeawaysJ.R. Sawyers is an independent filmmaker inspired by introspective films.His film explores the therapeutic effects of psychedelics.Sawyers experienced a transformative retreat that influenced his filmmaking.The film&apos;s visuals aim to capture the essence of psychedelic experiences.Character development reflects different emotional struggles and transformations.The future of psychedelics in therapy looks promising with increasing acceptance.Sawyers drew inspiration from various books and films to shape his narrative. Actors appreciated the character journeys in the film.Filmmaking was a way to relive the retreat experience.Setting and guidance are crucial for psychedelic experiences.Sawyers is working on a horror film about a possessed psychiatrist.The film addresses the silent pandemic of mental health issues.Psychedelics can help build empathy in a disconnected world.Letting go is essential during psychedelic experiences.He has never had a bad trip, highlighting the need for guidance.Again, thank you to everyone who is supporting on Patreon, all of the music entries (DylAlien, Flintwich, and Future Boogz), everyone who has helped with scheduling and booking, and last but not least, r/psychonaut. 00:00 – Intro &amp; Guest Welcome  02:00 – Inspirations &amp; Origins  04:00 – First Psychedelic Retreat Experience  07:00 – Translating Psychedelics to Film 10:30 – The Visual &amp; Emotional Grammar of A Trip Elsewhere14:00 – Character Arcs &amp; Psychological Themes18:00 – Real-Life Moments That Made the Film21:00 – Therapeutic Psychedelics: Real Science, Real Stories25:00 – Set, Setting, and Integration30:00 – Viewer Reactions, Misconceptions &amp; Mother’s Transformation34:00 – The Future of Psychedelics in Film and Medicine37:00 – Behind the Scenes: Budget, Casting &amp; Visual Storytelling41:00 – New Projects &amp; Final Reflections44:00 – Advice for Psychedelic NewcomersSend us Fan Mail FiresideProject.orgDownload the app or text/call 62-FIRESIDEZendo ProjectOur listeners get 10% off the Zendo Project SIT Program with the code DIVERGENTS10Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.Support the showSpecial Thanks to our Macrodosers, Super D and Mike, and our Thumbprint Tier member, Angie on Patreon!  https://linktr.ee/3L1T3Mod

  27. 7

    The Zendo Project w/Valerie Beltran & Chelsea Rose – What Happens When a Trip Goes Sideways

    In this powerful episode of Divergent States, we’re joined by Valerie Beltran and Chelsea Rose-Pires of the Zendo Project- an organization redefining harm reduction and compassionate care at festivals, events, and beyond.We explore how the Zendo Project began as a MAPS initiative and evolved into its own nonprofit dedicated to supporting people through difficult psychedelic experiences and emotional crises, not with judgment or clinical detachment, but with radical empathy and peer support.From creating safe spaces at Burning Man to launching training programs for crisis responders, Valerie and Chelsea offer insight into how the Zendo Project is transforming both event culture and the broader conversation around mental health, community care, and psychedelics.Whether you’ve had a challenging trip, want to support others through non-ordinary states, or are just curious about what real-world harm reduction looks like, this is an episode you don’t want to miss.🧘‍♀️ Learn how just being present can change lives. 🧠 Discover why “sitting, not guiding” is a revolutionary principle. 💬 And find out how you can get involved, support their mission, or even join them in the field.✨ “You don’t have to be altered to walk into the Zendo. You just have to be human.” – Valerie Beltran🔗 Learn more or get involved: zendoproject.org 💚 Donate. Volunteer. Sit with someone. It matters.Forgot to mention on the episode, but big thanks to Future Boogz for letting us feature their track on this episode! Ach for the art, Brad for the help, and all of the Patreon Supporters! All content in Ask Me Anything sessions are for educational purposes only. Zendo Project does not provide any legal, medical or mental health advice. Consult with a lawyer, doctor, or mental health therapist before making any significant decisions for your own situation. Any references to third party websites or service providers are made without any warranties, express or implied. All participants should conduct their own due diligence on any third party websites or professionals before engaging in any conduct. Zendo Project does not encourage or facilitate any illegal conduct.Chapters00:00 Introduction to the Zendo Project and Festival Collaboration04:06 Understanding the Zendo Project&apos;s Mission and History10:27 The Role of Outreach and Community Support14:46 Experiencing a Zendo Session: What to Expect17:56 Collaboration with Medical Services and Event Producers21:11 Challenges in Harm Reduction Awareness23:57 Exciting New Partnerships and Initiatives27:39 Success Stories and Impact of the Zendo Project32:10 The Impact of Zendo Project34:06 Getting Involved: Training and Community36:13 Education and Outreach in Psychedelic Spaces39:06 Navigating Adverse Experiences42:45 Challenges in Providing Services44:01 Future Vision and Growth of Zendo Project48:10 Inclusivity and AccessibiliSend us Fan Mail FiresideProject.orgDownload the app or text/call 62-FIRESIDEZendo ProjectOur listeners get 10% off the Zendo Project SIT Program with the code DIVERGENTS10Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.Support the showSpecial Thanks to our Macrodosers, Super D and Mike, and our Thumbprint Tier member, Angie on Patreon!  https://linktr.ee/3L1T3Mod

  28. 6

    DylAlien on Psychedelic Music Culture: Trance Rituals, Cosmic Giggles & Prankster Wisdom

    In this episode of Divergent States, we talk with Dylalien: psychedelic DJ, producer, schoolteacher, and longtime organizer of Goa Gil’s legendary all-night, open-air ritual dance parties. You’ve heard his music on this podcast, but in this conversation, we go deep on what it means to create and participate in psychedelic music culture at its most raw, weird, and transformative.Together, we explore:The life and legacy of Goa Gil, trance music’s spiritual godfatherThe influence of Hindu mysticism and Shiva archetypes in psychedelic cultureThe cosmic giggle: what happens when you dance all night and see the joke behind the universeDJing while tripping, playing to the sunrise, and accessing “wizard vision”How sound, sync, and group dance create stacked synchronicitiesWhy trance is a tool, music is a medicine, and exhaustion is a drugThe evolution of the underground, from vinyl and anonymity to phones and algorithmsBeing a high school teacher with a secret psychedelic life (“Did you just say that out loud?”)Pranksters, dosed swimming pools, and the chaos magic of the California sceneHow a late-in-life awakening led him to start releasing music, after decades in the shadowsWe also talk about how psychedelic states can permanently shift your view of reality—how even sobriety feels different once you&apos;ve danced with the universe. Dylalien reflects on how psychedelics pushed him to go vegan, redefined his ideas about spirituality, and reminded him again and again: “I don’t know anything. And that’s OK.”This episode blends stories, insight, laughter, and nostalgia with the kind of wisdom that only comes from living decades in a counterculture groove. Whether you’re a musician, a tripper, a Deadhead, or just someone who’s felt the beat pull them into something bigger—you’ll feel at home here.🎧 Music by Dylalien 🔗 Learn more about Goa Gil’s legacy and psychedelic trance culture 🧠 Support the show: patreon.com/divergentstates 🎤 Want to be on the podcast? Hit us up on Reddit, Instagram, or TikTok.#Psytrance #GoaGil #PsychedelicMusic #CosmicGiggle #Psychedelics #Deadhead #DivergentStates #Pranksters #TerrenceMcKenna #DJCulture #TranceDance #PsychedelicExperienceBig thank you Bryan, Dylalien, Flintwick, Ach, and Brad of Integration Communications!Chapters00:00 Introduction to DylAlien and Goa Gil02:46 The Impact of Goa Gil on Electronic Music05:58 The Cosmic Giggle and Psychedelic Experiences08:58 The Evolution of Music and Technology11:58 The Role of Music in Trance and Connection15:45 The Changing Landscape of Music Festivals18:03 Teaching and Navigating Youth Culture21:05 The Joy of Musical Collaboration24:05 The Therapeutic Power of Music and Psychedelics27:59 Exploring the Power of Music and Drumming34:19 The Journey into Music and Creativity37:24 Psychedelics and Reality: A New Perspective49Send us Fan Mail FiresideProject.orgDownload the app or text/call 62-FIRESIDEZendo ProjectOur listeners get 10% off the Zendo Project SIT Program with the code DIVERGENTS10Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.Support the showSpecial Thanks to our Macrodosers, Super D and Mike, and our Thumbprint Tier member, Angie on Patreon!  https://linktr.ee/3L1T3Mod

  29. 5

    Wendy Tucker on the Shulgin Legacy & the Future of the Farm: Preserving Psychedelic History

    In this profound episode of Divergent States, we welcome Wendy Tucker, daughter of Ann Shulgin and stepdaughter of the legendary Sasha Shulgin, the &quot;Godfather of Ecstasy.&quot; Wendy shares intimate stories of growing up at the iconic Shulgin Farm, working alongside Sasha in his lab, and her mission to preserve their legacy through the Shulgin Foundation.Key Topics Covered:Sasha’s Lab &amp; Humble Genius: Wendy recounts behind-the-scenes moments with Sasha, his playful humor, and the creation of 200+ psychedelic compounds.The Farm’s Future: Why the Shulgin property is being preserved as a living community space—not a museum—with plans for workshops, events, and even weddings.MDMA’s Therapeutic Roots: How Leo Zeff and Ann Shulgin pioneered underground therapy, and why veterans are now leading the charge for healing.Transform Press: Updates on Sasha’s lecture series, The Nature of Drugs, and other rare archival projects.How to Get Involved: Supporting the foundation’s mission to protect psychedelic history and foster education.Perfect for: Psychonauts, historians, therapy advocates, and anyone curious about the intersection of science, culture, and cognitive liberty.Links &amp; Resources:Donate or learn more: shulginfoundation.orgFollow Divergent States for more deep dives: [Instagram/YouTube] @DivergentStates]Subscribe now to explore the minds and movements shaping psychedelics today!Thank you to all the Guests, Patreon supporters, music submissions, and all the wonderful people that come together to make this thing happen! We couldn&apos;t be doing this without YOU!Big thank you Bryan, Dylalien, Flintwick, Ach, and Brad of Integration Communications!Chapters00:00 Introduction to the Shulgin Legacy03:00 Wendy Tucker&apos;s Journey and the Shulgin Foundation06:04 The Importance of the Shulgin Farm08:55 Community Engagement and Events11:50 Women and Psychedelics: The Deva Collective15:00 Personal Reflections and Lessons from the Shulgins17:53 MDMA Therapy and Veterans&apos; Healing21:01 Education and Stigma in Psychedelic Use24:01 Supporting the Shulgin Foundation26:58 Future Initiatives and Community Building29:49 Transform Press and Preserving Knowledge33:03 Balancing Legacy and Modern Research35:46 Conclusion and Future OutlookSend us Fan Mail FiresideProject.orgDownload the app or text/call 62-FIRESIDEZendo ProjectOur listeners get 10% off the Zendo Project SIT Program with the code DIVERGENTS10Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.Support the showSpecial Thanks to our Macrodosers, Super D and Mike, and our Thumbprint Tier member, Angie on Patreon!  https://linktr.ee/3L1T3Mod

  30. 4

    Rick Doblin Unplugged: Psychedelics, Parenting, Trauma & the Future of MAPS

    In this episode of Divergent States, we sit down with Rick Doblin, founder of MAPS (Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies), for a raw, unscripted conversation on the future of psychedelic therapy, the dangers of hype, and the deeply personal reasons behind his decades-long mission.We go deep into:Why MDMA was criminalized and how Doblin outmaneuvered the DEAThe hard lessons from MAPS&apos; FDA rejection and what&apos;s nextParenting and psychedelics: how both Rick and 3L1T3 approach education with their kidsThe trauma epidemic—why it’s bigger than war, abuse, or addictionHow psychedelics could help shift collective consciousness in an age of collapseBurning Man, the Zendo Project, and building a new kind of communityDoblin shares stories of his first psychedelic trips, his rebellious roots, and his vision for a future where safe, supported altered states are a human right, not a privilege. This isn’t just policy talk, it’s soul talk.👉 If you’re neurodivergent, psychedelic-curious, or just fed up with the way things are—this one’s for you.🧠 Support the show: patreon.com/divergentstates 🎟️ Learn more about Psychedelic Science 2025: maps.org🔬 Psychedelic Science 25 at https://www.psychedelicscience.orgThank you to our Visionary Collaborators on Patreon!  Thank you to Flintwick for the music! Chapters00:00 Introduction to Divergent States and MAPS02:47 Rick Doblin&apos;s Journey and the Founding of MAPS10:03 The Messianic Idea and Psychedelics18:54 Psychedelics as Tools for Healing19:00 Educating the Next Generation about Psychedelics25:00 The Role of Psychedelics in Addressing Global Trauma30:09 Psychedelics and the Future of Humanity33:31 Revitalizing Spirituality and Cultural Contexts34:45 Psychedelics and Responsible Use36:11 Modern Rites of Passage through Music37:57 Harm Reduction and Support at Festivals39:19 Psychedelic Science 2025 Conference41:35 Community and Collaboration in Psychedelic Research43:42 Reflections on Policy and Progress45:42 Navigating Politics and Science49:35 Globalizing Access to Psychedelic Therapies52:42 The Importance of Divergent PerspectivesSend us Fan Mail FiresideProject.orgDownload the app or text/call 62-FIRESIDEZendo ProjectOur listeners get 10% off the Zendo Project SIT Program with the code DIVERGENTS10Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.Support the showSpecial Thanks to our Macrodosers, Super D and Mike, and our Thumbprint Tier member, Angie on Patreon!  https://linktr.ee/3L1T3Mod

  31. 3

    Joshua White – Holding the Line: Fireside, Crisis Support & Conscious Integration

    In this episode of Divergent States, we talk with Joshua White, founder and executive director of the Fireside Project, a nonprofit creating a revolutionary model of psychedelic support through free, real-time emotional care and integration coaching.What happens when someone takes too much LSD and needs someone to talk to—right now? What if someone is trying to process an ayahuasca ceremony months later, but feels disconnected or judged in traditional therapy settings? Fireside Project offers a lifeline—through voice, text, and now coaching—for people navigating the psychological highs, lows, and revelations that come with non-ordinary states.Topics we explore:Joshua’s journey from attorney to psychedelic peer support pioneerThe fusion of festival harm reduction (Zendo Project) and therapeutic modelsThe challenges and beauty of being vulnerable on psychedelicsWhy peer support is not about fixing the trip—but honoring itFireside’s efforts to center marginalized voices and create culturally attuned careThe importance of long-term integration, not just “bad trip” triageThe launch of Fireside’s certified coaching program: preparation, integration, and affordable access to trained supportTraining 600+ volunteers and building a new generation of psychedelic-informed supportersThe hard truth about fundraising and outreach in the psychedelic nonprofit spaceHow to get involved, support, or train with FiresideWe also discuss the deeper existential questions around psychedelics: Why do humans have the capacity for these experiences in the first place? What does it mean to embrace anxiety, rather than suppress it? And how do we build a post-prohibition world rooted in compassion, not commercialization?Whether you’re preparing for your first journey, working through a past one, or just curious about what a post-psychedelic-care model could look like, this conversation offers a grounded, humble, and hopeful roadmap.🔗 Learn more or volunteer: firesideproject.org 📱 Download the Fireside app (iOS &amp; Android): Just two buttons—Call or Text. 💬 Support the show: patreon.com/divergentstates 🎧 Music by Flintwick00:12 – Intro &amp; Fireside Project Overview02:33 – Joshua’s Journey: From Law to Psychedelics08:37 – The Four Problems in the Psychedelic Field12:12 – What a Fireside Support Call Is Like14:08 – Anxiety, Acceptance, and “The Obstacle Is the Path”17:32 – Who’s on the Other End of the Line?20:45 – Volunteer Training &amp; Community Structure22:46 – Fireside’s Harm Reduction Impact24:56 – Culturally Attuned Support &amp; Identity-Based Care26:56 – Fireside’s Biggest Challenge: Fundraising31:04 – The Fireside Coaching Program Explained32:45 – First-Time Users &amp; Psychedelic Prep35:17 – The Fireside App for Trippers38:01 – Final Thoughts, Get InvolvedSend us Fan Mail FiresideProject.orgDownload the app or text/call 62-FIRESIDEZendo ProjectOur listeners get 10% off the Zendo Project SIT Program with the code DIVERGENTS10Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.Support the showSpecial Thanks to our Macrodosers, Super D and Mike, and our Thumbprint Tier member, Angie on Patreon!  https://linktr.ee/3L1T3Mod

  32. 2

    Hamilton Morris: r/Psychonaut and the DEA

    Hamilton Morris joins Divergent States to unpack a bizarre twist in the drug war: the DEA is using Reddit posts and trip reports as courtroom “evidence.”What happens when harm-reduction advice and half-baked comments are weaponized to criminalize psychedelics? And how do communities like r/Psychonaut survive in that climate?In this wide-ranging conversation, we cut through hype and paranoia to tackle the future of psychedelic research, regulation, and responsibility.We dig into the ethical tightrope between transparency and safety, the flawed logic of prohibition, and why silence isn’t a sustainable strategy. Hamilton breaks down his firsthand experience attending the DOI scheduling hearing, his efforts to build a scientifically vetted user-report journal, and how communities like r/Psychonaut are caught in the crosshairs of policy and paranoia.Whether you’re a seasoned psychonaut or just exploring the space, this episode cuts through the hype and hysteria to ask the real questions: How do we speak honestly about altered states in a world that punishes honesty?Topics include: • The DEA’s use of Reddit as courtroom “evidence” • Why trip reports matter and how they’re being misused • The dangers of pharmacological elitism and spiritual gatekeeping • The real meaning of harm reduction in an outlaw culture • The future of psychedelic research, regulation, and responsibility🎶 Featuring music by Flintwick | Support us on Patreon for exclusive episodes &amp; bonus content. 💬 Reddit: r/Psychonaut | IG: @divergentstates | #SetSettingGuide Chapters 00:00 Introduction and Context of the Episode 02:50 The Importance of Transparency in Psychedelic Discussions 06:04 Balancing Honesty and Safety in Sharing Experiences 10:33 Community Responsibility and the Impact of Online Discourse 15:54 The Role of Advocacy and Legal Support in Drug Policy Reform 20:08 Navigating the Challenges of Scientific Research and Public Perception 24:08 The Importance of Evidence in Psychedelic Communities 29:20 Navigating the Wild West of Online Drug Discussions 31:06 Spirituality vs. Scientific Analysis in Psychedelics 34:00 The Dangers of Pharmacological Elitism 37:04 Addressing the Fentanyl Crisis: A Call for Rational Drug Policy 44:06 The Future of Psychedelic Therapy and Accessibility 48:28 Integrating Cannabis into Society 50:13 Destigmatization and Education on Psychedelics 52:39 The Hype and Risks of Psychedelics 56:43 Understanding Challenging Experiences with Psychedelics 01:01:45 Cumulative Impact of Substance Use 01:07:34 Bringing Psychedelics into the Open Send us Fan Mail FiresideProject.orgDownload the app or text/call 62-FIRESIDEZendo ProjectOur listeners get 10% off the Zendo Project SIT Program with the code DIVERGENTS10Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.Support the showSpecial Thanks to our Macrodosers, Super D and Mike, and our Thumbprint Tier member, Angie on Patreon!  https://linktr.ee/3L1T3Mod

  33. 1

    Dr Rick Strassman - My Altered States

    What happens when psychedelic research, spiritual inquiry, and neurodivergence converge? In this premiere episode of Divergent States, we sit down with Dr. Rick Strassman, the groundbreaking researcher behind DMT: The Spirit Molecule, to explore the boundaries of consciousness, therapy, and identity.Host 3L1T3, an autistic psychonaut and longtime community curator, shares his personal journey through psychedelics, the inner wiring of a neurodivergent mind, and why the search for meaning matters. Together with co-host Bryan, the conversation takes unexpected turns: from early DMT studies and pineal gland theories, to the dangers of spiritual bypassing, to the ways autism can shape (and sharpen) visionary experience.🧠 Topics Include:The hidden cost of spiritual highsWhy Strassman stepped away from psychedelicsAutistic pattern recognition and altered statesDMT beings: projection or perception?How mainstream psychology misunderstands the tripWhether you&apos;re deep into the psychedelic space or just starting to question consensus reality — this one&apos;s for the explorers. Get ready to think differently.We talk about upcoming guests, give some acknowledgements and shout-outs, and we talk a little about the interview. The music comes from Dyalien on reddit.Music by DylalienSend us Fan Mail FiresideProject.orgDownload the app or text/call 62-FIRESIDEZendo ProjectOur listeners get 10% off the Zendo Project SIT Program with the code DIVERGENTS10Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.Support the showSpecial Thanks to our Macrodosers, Super D and Mike, and our Thumbprint Tier member, Angie on Patreon!  https://linktr.ee/3L1T3Mod

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ABOUT THIS SHOW

Divergent States cuts through psychedelic hype with grounded, curious conversations about what these substances actually do.Hosted by 3L1T3, founder of r/Psychonaut, the world’s largest psychedelic harm-reduction community, and co-hosted by Bryan, a USMC veteran and advocate for psychedelic healing, the show brings together lived experience, science, and culture without losing its sense of humor.This isn’t a spiritual podcast.This isn’t a marketing platform.No mysticism. No sales pitch. Just real conversations, harm reduction, and honest questions.We explore how psychedelics shape mental health, creativity, and society, from underground use and peer-support communities to clinical trials, therapy rooms, and shifting public attitudes. Some episodes get serious. Some get weird. All of them are grounded in respect for the people actually taking these substances and living with the outcomes.</p

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Divergent States

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