Tag: MDMA

  • Trauma, addiction and MDMA therapy with Dr Ben Sessa

    Trauma, addiction and MDMA therapy with Dr Ben Sessa

    My unofficial Vital Study Zine #14 with observations from Vital Psychedelic Training and recent happenings in the space

        Jimmy Cauty, ‘Riot Shield’
    Jimmy Cauty, ‘Riot Shield’

    Dr Ben Sessa’s book The Psychedelic Renaissance acted as exactly that.

    The agenda for a new Albion is effectively a ‘hypersigil’ – the gnostic term for a creative work that somehow manifests its content. These effects even included the buzz phrase the proceeding new era of research was awarded.

    Debuting a decade ago, The Psychedelic Renaissance contained ideas Sessa first officially voiced in a presentation to the Royal College of Psychiatrists in 2006. LSD hadn’t been mentioned in its halls for over 30 years.

    Since The Psychedelic Renaissance took psychiatry by storm Dr Sessa has hardly been flouncing around in a kaftan. He’s living the experience, conducting frontline child trauma and addiction treatment… including acting as lead psychiatrist on the Bristol Imperial MDMA for Alcoholism (BIMA) project, where patients relapsing into heavy drinking were cut to a rate of 21% from the 73% who do so despite trying medications, 12-step and conventional therapy.

    BIMA research took place at leading clinic Awakn, co-founded by Sessa in Bristol, UK. It’s now listed on the NEO Toronto stock exchange and has hooked up with David Nutt’s Drug Science. The Mithoefers are on Awakn’s advisory board. Celia Morgan is head of ketamine assisted therapy, an area where Awakn just received 66% of new funding from the UK government and licensed its staggeringly successful ‘Project Kestrel’ design to US chain Revitalist.

    “I resent the assumption this is all about money. My job is getting the maximum amount of psychedelics to as many people as possible”

    Sessa is an avid member of the psychedelic ‘subculture’ too. In 2015 he co-founded and ran the Breaking Convention conference that showcases the space’s sharpest upcoming minds. His children are named Huxley, Jimi and Kitty.

    I’ve noticed during academic presentations that after their personal intro is over it’s de rigueur for presenters to, if they’d like, admit to any horrendous biases.

    Prostrate before you, I make clear: Dr Sessa is my age, lives and cheerleads for my home town, and confesses to an achingly middle class upbringing that includes winter sports and bedroom DJing… so there’s ‘similarity bias’ there. Moreover: only in the past few weeks I discovered he wrote a column for a hipster magazine I was founding editor of that’s having a bit of a moment now, and made a cameo in a Channel Four sketch show I wrote on. 

       Myself and Dr Ben Sessa (right) at Breaking Convention 2022
    Myself and Dr Ben Sessa (right) at Breaking Convention 2022

    So don’t ask me to justify statements like ‘Sessa is our generation’s admittedly unlikely Leary or McKenna’, and yes, I am calling that with this blog post. Instead ask Vital students, whose reactions to Dr Sessa ranged from “That was my favourite presentation so far” to “You’re the most interesting person to hear from in psychedelics right now” and “This has me so excited and hopeful for the future of this space!”

    Whilst actually being the closest thing we do have to Timothy Leary or Terrence McKenna – closest rival Robin Carhart-Harris has recently zhuzh’d up his look just to keep up – Sessa has succeeded in ushering in a revolution where the two counterculture icons failed.

    “This is the psychedelic era. Here. Now. We’re living in it,” he decrees to Vital’s class of ‘22.

    “Following medicalisation the psychedelic underground is richer and freer than ever”

    How has Sessa made this happen? By following his own advice in the closing pages of The Psychedelic Renaissance.

    ‘An unfortunate but necessary truth is that professionals working in this field must remain as boring and staid as possible,’ he solemnly advised in those very pages, ‘as well as inspirational and enthusiastic – to get the message across. I do not say all of these dull and conservative things because I lack imagination or fail to appreciate the fun, wonder and spirituality of the psychedelic experience. On the contrary, I welcome and embrace it.’ 

    This trademark approach of blowing minds by stealth doesn’t stop him racking up a ton of newspaper credits, where he lays down psychedelic law (and lore) in a fashion also quite dissimilar to his predecessors. 

    In fact, only this year at 2022’s Breaking Convention he decimated criticisms of corporadelia at his £6K per programme Awakn clinics with: “I resent the assumption this is all about money. My job is getting the maximum amount of psychedelics to as many people as possible, and researching that is very costly. There will still be raves, festivals, ceremonies. The psychedelic underground is richer and freer than ever post-medicalisation.”

    Dr Sessa is a boon to journalists. Here’s a few choice quotes from his week fourteen Vital lecture:

    “There’s nothing more dangerous than drinking a bottle of vodka a day” 

    “Then they go back on heroin, or other far, far more dangerous substances like alcohol” 

    “Three quarters of a million people in the UK take ecstasy every weekend and our hospital wards are not full of casualties” 

    “I’m not that spiritual a guy, but I’ll talk to patients about kundalini and chakras till the cows come home. They do also want to talk about things like how to get their children out of social services care”

    Here he is on NBC with MAPS’ The Mithoefers talking about their slot on Netflix’s How to change Your Mind, showing ITV viewers around Awakn, plus watch his TEDX Talk on psychedelics as antibiotics, explain childhood trauma and MDMA therapy and more on the New Psychonaut YouTube lecture archive.

    Here’s this issue’s contents arranged along Vital Psychedelic Training’s five learning themes:

    Next issue: Vegetalismo author Dr Luis Eduardo Luna of Wasiwaska Research Centre

  • Indistinguishable from magic

    Indistinguishable from magic

      Approach
    Approach

    Dr Ben Sessa’s greatest conversation stopper: psychedelics are a ‘psychic antibiotic’ capable of statistically curing mental diseases

       Novotak   , ‘Daydream Version Six’
    Novotak , ‘Daydream Version Six’

    “Psychiatry is a pretty desperate and miserable place to work.”

    Dr Ben Sessa’s been at the frontline of mental health services since 1997, and deserves a rant. “Where are we going wrong? We’ve had modern psychiatry around for 100 years. And we’re not getting the kind of clinical outcomes we want,” he opines, “younger people get given the SSRIs, can’t work the therapy, and kill themselves.”

    ‘Psychic antibiotic’ is another of Sessa’s bravura catchphrases. Mental health treatment’s in a miserable state of affairs comparable to general medicine in the late 1800s, says Sessa who first presented his vision that psychedelic medicine could be revived to the Royal College of Psychiatrists in 2006.

    “Doctors were losing the battle to the infectious diseases, leprosy, smallpox, tuberculosis, people dying post-operatively,” he continues, flexing his storytelling skills in a swaggering lecture, “Back then, were very good at our statistical analysis and epidemiology too. We knew that people were dying, but it wasn’t clear what was going on.”

    Things changed when a joint German-Japanese team discovered a cure for… syphilis in 1908, and Nobel prizes ensued.

    “Where is our treatment that gets to the heart of disorders?”

    ‘Antibiotics’ as they were called, ‘cos they killed bacteria, include any micro-biological treatment for bacterial infection, not just other bacteria bred to fight against their microscopic kin.

    Penicillin, invented by Sir Alexander Fleming in 1928, is derived from a fungus secretion… just saying. Specifically a mould, which are traditionally used for their anti-infection properties.

    “Where is our antibiotic?” bellows Sessa in the general direction of the gods, “Where is our treatment that gets to the heart of disorders, and actually cures them? We write these voluminous tomes,” he continues, hitting his stride, “The ‘DSM’ and ‘ICD’. We track who gets depression, and anxiety, and eating disorders, and personality disorders, and addictions, and affective disorders,” here it comes, “…but we’re not very good at treating them.”

    Dr Sessa’s allowed to ham it up like this because he is legit as any clinician, researcher or spokesperson.

    “The idea that healing patients would be a bad business model is sick”

    It’s almost like the anthropology reports from the Amazon… where researchers are struck by the animist doctrine that you’re only allowed to talk shit about stuff you’ve actually done…

    Tell us why our ailments continue to vex us so, oh unlikely shaman returned from the darkest depths of the forest with knowledge?

    “Because we treat them symptomatically,” answers Dr Sessa, “We provide a whole plethora of daily maintenance drugs that mask the symptoms. Which the pharmaceutical industry queued up to provide us with.”

    Yet there is hope. Way back in 2012’s breakthrough Psychedelic Renaissance, Sessa’s book which coined the phrase, he was already declaring psychedelic medicine the ‘psychic antibiotic’ that his profession and his patients crave.

    In his Vital presentation during the course’s second module covering psychedelic therapy styles, Sessa beams with pride after battering his return key to reveal a graph showing MDMA-AT thrashing a combination of the best anti-addiction treatments money can buy, plus 12-step and more, by a 73% to 21% recovery rate.

    “We’re not going to cure everyone and therefore put ourselves out of business”

    Sessa’s surging Awakn chain though, is a listed company. Like other private medical providers, doesn’t he have a duty to shareholders to drag treatment plans out too?

    “The idea that healing patients would be a bad business model is sick,” and he doesn’t mean in the same way he dryly describes my wannabe-hipster home town of Bristol as ‘extremely sick’ in his introduction, “sustaining poor treatments with poor outcomes in order to maintain a customer base is absurd.”

    Accident wards don’t keep your leg held up in traction forever. “There’s plenty of work out there for orthopaedic surgeons mending broken legs,” explains Sessa to an enquiring Vital student in the Q&A, “plus there are plenty of people out there who could do with their mental disorders being completely cured. We’re not going to cure everyone and therefore put ourselves out of business.” 

  • Behind the mask

    Behind the mask

      Therapy
    Therapy

    MDMA provides lasting respite for the traumatised

       Stefanie Schneider,      Boy with Silver Mask (Stay) Photograph
    Stefanie Schneider, Boy with Silver Mask (Stay) Photograph

    MDMA’s ideal for therapy because it can “rebrand your sense of self.”

    Shame and trauma dance a ghostly tango. An ostracised alcoholic is merely the grown-up version of the abused child we clutch our perals over. Or so says child psychiatrist and leading psychedelic researcher Dr Ben Sessa, presenting to Vital students.

    “Abused children generate tremendous sympathy,” says Sessa alluding to many high-profile court cases in the UK during lockdown and beyond, “but once the same abused child turns to addiction, they’re written off as a filthy smackhead, or an alcoholic.” Reported child abuse cases rose a staggering 1493% at one point during the C-19 lockdowns.

    Dr Sessa has worked as a child psychiatrist since 1997. But not just with under-16s. He’s taken his knowledge of childhood trauma and applied it across the all-too-adult issues it causes later.

    “Existing drugs are not treating the base disorder – trauma”

    Like alcohol use disorder (AUD) for example. 

    “I naturally take a very developmental approach to mental disorder,” he says, “I think that every adult psychiatrist should spend some time as a child and adolescent psychiatrist, because we really do grow up to become our parents. And those things that we learned in those early years – ‘Even my parents can’t love me, I’m useless, I’m a failure, I can’t achieve’ – become a blueprint for the rest of our lives.”

    Childhood trauma operates on a scale ranging from forced labour and sustained sexual abuse, to simply growing up in a rigid suburban household where neurotic parents act out their frustrations with a shaming communication style featuring ‘too many shoulds’. 

    “I deliberately lump together childhood trauma, post traumatic stress disorder, complex post traumatic stress disorder, and addictions,” explains Sessa, “it’s very difficult to treat these, and there’s no single approach.”

    The trajectory from trauma to addiction draws on John Bowlby’s attachment theory and research from the past decade or more connecting PTSD to substance abuse. Attachment theory suggests that maladaptive adult behaviour is more likely to be caused by issues between a baby and its mother and other environmental factors including poverty. This contradicts established psychoanalytic narrative, which says it’s all about… the oedipus complex, and other aspects of thanatos, the Freudian ‘drive’ to act according to one’s most selfish, basest urges.

    Despite being head of The Tavistock Clinic’s child psychology department from the mid-1940s, Bowlby’s ideas were still being rubbished by the establishment in the 1990s.

    “If you’ve had an insecure attachment to your parents, you develop these neuro-protective narratives: ‘I’m bad, I can’t achieve, I’m unlovable, the world is dangerous’,” explains sessa, “By the time you’ve been thinking like this for ten, twenty, thirty years you truly believe it. This is why mental disorders become chronic, lifelong unremitting problems. Faced with it, the safest and simplest way of dealing with it is to numb yourself, block out the world with sedating dangerous substances like heroin. And far more dangerous ones… like alcohol.”

    Like in the USA, there’s currently no pharmacological prescription for PTSD available in the UK. Nor alcohol use disorder; in the United States only 4% of AUD sufferers are given a medication.

    “We have what we call ‘polypharmacy’,” explains Sessa, “If the patient’s depressed, we’ll give them an antidepressant. If they can’t sleep, we’ll give them a hypnotic. If they’re constantly anxious, we’ll give them an anxiolytic. If their mood goes up and down, we’ll give them a mood stabiliser. If they are hyper-vigilant, one of the core features of PTSD, if this spills over into paranoia will give them an anti-psychotic. And of course, you have to keep taking these drugs day-in, day-out as maintenance medications for the rest of your life. None of these different classes of drugs are curing the patient. They’re not treating the base disorder – which is trauma.”

    Here in the UK psychiatrists (doctors prescribing drugs), clinical psychologists (NHS trained psychoanalysts who have lots to do) and psychotherapists (talk therapists of wildly varying quality, without medical training) have long existed seemingly independently of each other.

    Personal and financial resources are required to tackle one’s mental health with impact.

    “Pharmaceutical MDMA is 99.8% pure and very expensive”

    I’d recommend medication, psychoanalysis and psychotherapy. But as a customer myself I know it doesn’t come cheap. The experience can be arbitrary too.

    “After 30 years in psychiatry, my opinion is that psychotherapy boils down to a relationship between the patient and the therapist, and an ability for the patient to talk about their pain,” claims Sessa with authority, “that’s fine for around 50% of people with trauma based disorders.” 

    But not nearly for all.

    “A significant half, they cannot go there to talk about their pain… they will do anything but talk about that night when they were ten years old, and their grandfather came into their bedroom,” says Dr Sessa.

    Many therapists are understandably not fully prepared to deal with angry, impenetrable PTSD cases with substance use disorders and co-morbidities like ADHD.

    “Trauma victims drop out of therapy. We have high rates of self harm and suicide, and very high rates of addictions. There’s a 50% treatment resistance in PTSD. After detox, 70 to 90% of addicts are back on the substance again.”

    Combining psychiatry and psychotherapy sounds like common sense. But it’s practically unheard of. “The therapy alongside the MDMA makes the difference,” says Sessa pointing out that his clinic Awakn doesn’t offer its current ketamine programme without accompanying talk sessions.

    Awakn conducted its BIMA – Bristol Imperial MDMA for Alcoholism – project under research trial conditions, so while the process mirrored a regular treatment programme with genuine sufferers they didn’t pay and regulations were fiercely adhered to. Pharmaceutical MDMA was used, “it’s 99.8% pure and very expensive,” says Sessa. 

    MDMA’s cocktail of positive therapeutic effects include a melodic duet between the amygdala and frontal cortex, where the amygdala ‘fear response’ shrinks while activity in the advanced brain grows, providing an ‘optimal window of arousal’. MDMA’s empathy-increasing properties, generated by production of the hormone oxytocin, strengthen the bond between therapist and patent.

    “Elements of transpersonal psychotherapy were used during the drug sessions”

    The ‘peak experience’ though remains key for softening the calloused neural pathways that dictate repeated cycles of dysfunctional behaviour, like addiction in particular. 

    “You can’t just tell someone ‘stop thinking like that’. Chronic unremitting mental disorder is all about ‘stuckness’. It becomes your version of yourself.” Decades on from the original trauma, “Something otherwise relatively benign happens in the queue at the post office and you have a panic attack,” illustrates Sessa. 

    BIMA’s eight-week course Sessa describes with characteristic honesty as, “‘MDMA assisted psychotherapy for the treatment of alcohol use disorder’, which is perfectly accurate. It’s never been done before; we were making it up as we went along.”

    For MAPS-trained Sessa and his prodigal collaborator Dr Celia Morgan (named by Business Insider as one of the ‘Women Shaping the Future of Psychedelics’) this meant drawing on their wealth of experience carving out the Psychedelic Renaissance over the past 20 years, rather than riffing.

    “Of course it was more nuanced than that. We had elements of transpersonal psychotherapy we used during the drug sessions; we used a lot taken from the maps manual for PTSD.” 

    All the subjects were daily heavy drinkers who had been through detox. Talk therapy in the ‘non drug’ sessions, a total of 15 around three MDMA ‘trips’ drew from their experience at the forefront of addiction treatment: “We used elements of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy, Motivational Enhancement Therapy, and CBT [Cognitive Behavioural Therapy], which were typical for addiction studies. We are of course writing the manual for this, and will be using it as we move into Phase 2B.”

  • Where are you from and what are you on?

    Where are you from and what are you on?

      Space
    Space

    Therapists can meet anyone half way with a little universal love

        Weirdcore     ,      ‘Subconscious’
    Weirdcore , ‘Subconscious’

    “Is this is this what love feels like?”

    That’s what a trial subject in Dr Ben Sessa’s BIMA project using MDMA to treat alcohol use disorder said to him during a drug session.

    What was his answer? “I thought, ‘Well… no, of course this isn’t the noble, lofty form of love – it’s a transient artificial drug induced experience’.”

    The Bristol, UK-based psychiatrist remembered his MAPS training met his patient halfway though.

    “I thought to myself, ‘Hang on… she feels safe, warm and empathic. She feels held, contained. She’s in a trusting relationship with me.’ So I replied, ‘You know what? Yes. This is what love feels like,” he beams at Vital students in his triumphant lecture during our therapy-focussed module.

    The rapport held: “That’s amazing,” replied the recovering alcoholic from behind her Awakn-branded blindfold, “My whole life. I’ve never felt this, I’ve only ever felt scared, I’ve only ever felt frightened and threatened. But now I know what love feels like. And I have a platform on which to build.”

    ‘Loved up’ is raver slang for the narcotic-induced tenderness and sensitivity MDMA generates by increasing the flow of bonding hormone oxytocin.

    “Love will be the only religion, a religion of life for the children of the future”

    That rush contributes to the healing process by giving PTSD sufferers a glance of what may be. “The positively felt mood from MDMA is very important indeed,” says Sessa.

    Sigmund Freud wrote extensively about libido, ‘the energy, regarded as a quantitative magnitude… of those instincts which have to do with all that may be comprised under the word… love.’

    Opposite this positive, manifesting life energy that Freud dubbed eros though was thanatos – the ‘death drive’ towards addiction, aggression and rumination, derived from a desire to return to the simplicity of the womb. ‘The purpose of life is death’ wrote Freud in 1920. His flying monkey Jacques Lacan postulated that all other drives are ‘partial’ to the death drive. Freudians call it simply ‘the drive.’ 

    Freud’s star pupil Wilhelm Reich was pro-science and anti-mystic. He was nonetheless appalled by this one-sided development. “Love will be the only religion, a religion of life for the children of the future,” Reich wrote in his diaries during 1942, “it will transform man in such a way that the questions of passport and race will never arise.”

    Reich started well by coining the term ‘Sexual Revolution’ in 1948. But besmirched his reputation for rigour with the invention of implausible Orgone Generators, machines of various sizes and capacity to harness ‘orgasmic energy’ comparable to the eastern concept of chi.

    “Compassion has a natural partner in forgiveness”

    Beat generation authors JD Salinger, Allen Ginsberg, Jack Kerouac, William Burroughs, Saul Bellow, and Norman Mailer were all devotees. ‘Mailer kept a small collection of orgone accumulators in his barn in Connecticut; they were beautifully finished, and there was a big one that opened like an Easter egg’ writes Recih’s biographer Christopher Turner, ‘He climbed inside and closed the top.’

    This all ended rather horribly with Reich dying in prison and his books burned by the authorities. We certainly haven’t heard the last of Reich; for a start celebs like the Kardashians have been catalysing an Orgone Generator revival for years. No, it’s not a trickster prank. You can buy Reich tat on Etsy.

    The empathic compassion and awareness are part of this thing called love too. Reich’s predecessors in the field of bodywork are more careful to stress those elements in their own therapies. “Compassion has a natural partner in forgiveness,” says polyvagal theory icon Deb Dana, “awareness brings choice, the second element necessary for a regulated nervous system.”

    Polyvagal theory, endorsed by Dr Sessa, considers not only overactive fight or flight responses but ‘freeze’ too, the stultifying effect occurring when neither fight not freeze is not an option, seen for example in domestic abuse situations. Trauma victims have ‘the handbrake and the accelerator on at the same time’ in polyvagal terms. “With choice it’s possible to be still or move, approach or avoid, connect or protect,” writes Deb Dana.

    Forthcoming data reports from Awakn’ BIMA tests will examine compassion and empathy’s detailed role in the process. 

  • Ravers score rare victory over Mondays

    Ravers score rare victory over Mondays

      Medical
    Medical

    The Awakn formula to avoid notorious MDMA comedowns: peak early and don’t skimp on quality

        Scott Houston     , ‘Party Kids at Dawn’
    Scott Houston , ‘Party Kids at Dawn’

    In 40 years there’s been no single serious reaction to MDMA in clinical setting.

    Doses taken are 125mg and up, about half the size of a respectable ecstasy pill. But “It’s 99.8% pure, and very expensive,” says Dr Sessa of his MDMA stash.

    Alongside a 9:30am start time, measured hydration, and overnight stays in the chic surrounds of an Awakn clinic, the integrity of the substance is one of the many reasons why Dr Ben Sessa reckons MDMA comedowns don’t exist. Just like your mate, ‘Hardcore Mandy’.

    Sessa didn’t exactly say ‘Comedowns don’t exist’ in his December 2021 report Debunking the myth of ‘Blue Mondays: No evidence of affect drop after taking clinical MDMA.

    “Take it during the day”

    In fact, like he does say in the proceeding war of words on the letters pages of The International Journal of Psychiatry (which is a pretty cool thing to be having anyway) after the article appeared:

    ‘We were not stating that ‘Blue Mondays’ do not exist in recreational user populations. Quite the contrary, they do. In respect of power: across 26 clinical MDMA sessions, we did not elicit one single report of acute comedowns. All participants reported no negative disturbance to affect at the end of the day after taking MDMA as the drug wore off. No comedowns. This is a highly significant outcome over 26 separate sessions with clinical MDMA.’

    The notorious ecstasy ‘comedown’ where ravers feel considerably less clever on the morning commute than they did atop a riser earlier in the weekend, is likely due to sleep deprivation, over-exertion and dehydration.

    “People often ask, what about comedowns?”

    Plus combining recreational MDMA with whatever ravers can get their hands on at 7am, Dr Sessa told Vital students. 

    “Every weekend, three quarters of a million doses of ecstasy are taken in the UK, yet our wards and clinics and outpatient departments are not full of ecstasy casualties. That is a data driven,” he explains, “People often ask, ‘What about comedowns? Recreational ecstasy users describe all kinds of flowery terms to describe this: blue Monday, black Tuesday [usually the worst I find], suicide Wednesday. We saw no evidence of this effect drop after taking clinical MDMA.”

    “Not too quick on ‘Debunking the myth of ‘Blue Mondays’,” responded a team of Dutch psychologists in masterful pidgin english before going all n=17 on everyone and spreading a really heavy vibe over the whole session. 

    ‘For instance, were there multiple raters, and can the authors report inter-rater reliability?’ They wrote to the editor in the August 2022 issue of the IJP, ‘These questions also apply to the “list of representative questions and responses” included in Table 3. What does representative mean in this case, and how was representativeness assessed?’

    The urbane Sessa parried, ‘We feel our recent Blue Mondays article contributes positively to the field by providing a clear report of the relative lack of adverse effects seen with clinical MDMA administration in contrast with the widely reported negative anecdotes seen with recreational use… This is especially relevant given the fact that we were studying potentially vulnerable patients with significant mental and physical illness. We appreciate the criticisms about the article’s hard-hitting title, which has certainly resulted in considerable debate.’

    Dr Sessa’s valuable advice to recreational users?

    “Take it during the day,” he told readers of hoary hedonism journal Vice, “I realise that is a bit unrealistic.” The rave scene adapts nonetheless: next-gen London nightclub Printworks is built in a former newspaper printing press for total soundproofing within a central north London location. DJs play all afternoon and evening to three generations of ravers, mostly on the younger end. Closing time on the Tube hasn’t been the same since it opened in 2017. While Printworks will be demolished to make way for… commercial offices, a successor has been announced.

  • MDMA Assisted Therapy with Michael and Annie Mithoefer

    MDMA Assisted Therapy with Michael and Annie Mithoefer

    My unofficial Vital Study Zine #12 with observations from Vital Psychedelic Training and recent happenings in the space

        Jeremy Deller,      ‘The Problem with Humans’  available here
    Jeremy Deller, ‘The Problem with Humans’ available here

    Gotta love MAPS PBC, the Multi-Disciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies Public Benefit Corporation.

    An MDMA ban in 1984 inspired its founder Rick Doblin to somehow keep the flame alive. Decades later, in July 2022 a letter leaked to The Intercept’s Mattha Busby implied the Biden administration are stepping up for country-wide medicalisation of MDMA and psilocybin. MAPS expects legalisation in the USA by 2024.

    MAPS is technically a ‘non-profit’ entity with a public benefit corporation bolted on. In June 2022 the MAPS C-suite was joined by Boston Consulting Group managing director Dan Grossman, and former Sandoz CEO Jeff George a managing partner at VC fund Maytal Capital, boardroom heavy hitters both. The ‘extractive’ big pharma model is under challenge, it seems, from empowered non-profits like MAPS and in the UK, Amanda Fielding’s Beckley PsyTech. 

    “We facilitated out first Grof holotropic breathwork session where Vital is based near Vermont, with Vital’s patrons Lenny and Elizabeth Gibson”

    MAPS will be distributing its radical new treatment program, including its accompanying talk therapy, ‘MDMA-AT’, for free. MDMA-AT has obtained a ‘special protocol’ from the FDA so it does not need to be revised before MDMA itself is available legally. That’s an incredible achievement for the veteran healers who devised, wrote and guided it to American federal approval, Vital Week 12 lecturers Michael and Annie Mithoefer.

    The young Dr Michael Mithoefer was up to his scrubs in gore for ten years as medical director at the emergency departments of Charleston County and Georgetown County hospitals, North Carolina. He turned to psychiatry in 1991. The trauma specialist is trained in Internal Family Systems, EMDR and Grof Holotropic Breathwork. His wife and dyad partner Annie is a certified nurse and Hakomi therapist who’s also Groffed-up. The two have worked for MAPS since the early 2000s and are also on the advisory board of Bristol’s AWAKN; they’ve been to Ben Sessa’s house in Somerset. Check it out:

       Awakn’s Ben Sessa hosts the Mithoefers in Somerset, England
    Awakn’s Ben Sessa hosts the Mithoefers in Somerset, England

    “We facilitated out first Grof holotropic breathwork session where Vital is based near Vermont, with Lenny and Elizabeth Gibson who can’t be a hundred feet away from the offices right now, so there’s symmetry there,” said Dr Mithoefer to open the eight hours of workshops he and Annie graciously provided for Vital students.

    Here’s the Mithoefers on Psychedelics Today’s podcast, and on Aubrey Marcus for the bros. More on the New Psychonaut YouTube channel. And here’s this issue:

    Next issue: Ketamine therapy thought-leader Veronika Gold direct from her bustling Polaris Insights clinic in San Francisco

  • T-bombs away!

    T-bombs away!

      Approach
    Approach

    MAPS’ latest recruit is trauma pioneer Bessel Van der Kolk author of The Body Keeps the Score

       ‘Gifts for the Psychedelics’ by Wardell Milan, works from      David Nolan Gallery NY
    ‘Gifts for the Psychedelics’ by Wardell Milan, works from David Nolan Gallery NY

    Psychedelic Renaissance author Dr Ben Sessa says ‘trauma is at the root of most unnecessary human conflict and misery.’

    This summer, August 2022 topical spiritual teacher Thomas Hubl launched The Collective Trauma Summit; he talks about activating a “collective immune system.”

    Trauma, on the scale from ‘victim of war atrocity’ down to ‘feel nervous when you see a policeman’, is up there with depression as global burden. According to the US Department of Veteran affairs it touches 350 million people worldwide. That’s in comparison to depression’s head count of 249 million. Trauma is thought be behind many conditions for which there are no currently prescribed medications or therapies: including post-traumatic stress disorder and its domestic derivative complex ‘C’ PTSD, plus substance use and personality disorders.

    “The results in terms of experiences, and the secondary analyses, are spectacular”

    Dr Bessel Van der Kolk, trauma trailblazer and author of The Body Keeps the Score, is overseeing stage three trials for MAPS MDMA-Assisted Therapy for PTSD in Boston.

    Back in the mid-2000s he told MAPS founder Rick Doblin, and program director Dr Michael Mithhoefer, not to try psychedelics for PTSD.

    Since then, Dr Van der Kolk’s become an avid convert: “The results in terms of experiences, and the secondary analyses, are spectacular… transformations that I have not seen with any other treatment modality,” he reports.

    The Federal Drug Administration has designated MAPS’ own MDMA-Assisted Therapy for PTSD program officially a ‘breakthrough therapy’, that offers ‘substantial improvement over available therapy for a life-threatening condition.’

    “We have lost our minds. Here we have a chance to reclaim them”

    It wants to treat a million people every year and train 300,000 therapists by 2031. In keeping with its charitable vibe, MAPS is focussed on widespread availability, including for example BIPOC and low income sectors. The model will be available free of charge, and MDMA is out of patent. 

    “To my mind, psychiatry lost its soul in its marriage to the drug industry as psychiatrists largely became a bunch of drug pushers,” says Dr Van der Kolk, “we have lost our minds; here, we have a chance to reclaim them. But boy, am I worried about profits. That sort of stuff can really get in the way of creating optimal healing environments. I’m really worried that people will do this by themselves or with friends or in unprotected situations, because you really open up Pandora’s box with MDMA-AT.”

    Dr Van der Kolk says he “…mainly joined at that point to keep things very serious and very strict. Because I had seen how it blew up the last time,” alluding to scandals from 2015 dug up by New York Magazine’s The Cut podcast and intrepid news hounds at campaigning news source Psymposim.

    “The results are spectacular… transformations that I have not seen with any other treatment”

    Undergoing MDMA treatment himself convinced Van der Kolk of its potency. “I was just lying there going, ‘Oh shit, are you sure this is a party drug? Because I felt all the pain that had been dumped on me throughout the years. People asked me all the time: How do you deal with all this stuff? And I always said, ‘Oh, as long as you have a good support system and as long as you have a good marriage and you have good friends, you get to talk about your stuff, It doesn’t really become part of you.’ Well, I was wrong. On MDMA, I got to see that indeed this stuff had come inside of me, burrowed itself into the very core of my being. And it has affected me, my perception of things.”

    While MDMA shrinks amygdala activity subduing fear, healing takes place by fully experiencing repressed thoughts and feelings, like during LSD and psilocybin therapy. Yet, “It’s quite different from a psychedelic,” says Dr Mithoefer, “The term proposed is ‘entactogen’ meaning it brings one closer to others and oneself,” comments on the decision to use MDMA, “but it’s not a new idea, in the 70s and 80s a number of therapists used it.” In his later Vital lecture, UK thought leader and Awakn chief Dr Ben Sessa says he believes MDMA is the best drug for therapy.

    “Processing trauma in therapy can be very challenging and painful. It’s not a cakewalk”

    When patients take MDMA says Dr Mithoefer, “There’s often more insightfulness and less perceived loss of control. It doesn’t tend to cause hallucinations, and people are more in touch with their surroundings than with psychedelics. However, even with MDMA this is all relative. If you’re processing trauma in therapy, it can be very challenging and painful. So it’s not a cakewalk.”

    What shone out to Dr Van der Kolk was the self-compassion, evolving rapidly into acceptance, that MDMA treatment accessed inside its patients. “They stopped judging and beating up on themselves. They had a sense of internal generosity, a capacity for self-acceptance: and with that, the accepting of other people. They’d no longer defend against parts of themselves they couldn’t stand… and project on others.” What would normally be ‘triggering’ leading to self-defeating reactions is purged from the system… once felt in full.

    “Part of functioning well is knowing what you feels, know, and needs to be done”

    Pioneering child psychologist John Bowlby famously said, ‘What cannot be told to the mother cannot be told to the self.’ Resulting from this inner conflict is ‘alexithymia – ‘experiential avoidance of emotions as an emotion regulation strategy.’ Canonical 20th century psychoanalyst Joyce McDougall called it ‘disaffection’, “an inability to contain and reflect upon an excess of affective experience.”

    The disaffected respond by ‘pulverising all trace of feeling, so that an experience which has caused emotional flooding is not recognised as such and therefore cannot be contemplated,’ according to 1989’s Theatre of the Body. This sounds like most people I know, to be honest. (McDougall also identified ‘normopathy’, the fear of difference).

    Alexithymia was coined in 1973 by psychiatrist John C. Nemiah, a Yale and Harvard Medical school graduate and editor of the American Journal of Psychiatry. Some folks think it’s just a personality trait; ‘guys who can’t express their emotions’. Poor emotional intelligence is certainly a hallmark. Sufferers can certainly feel ‘happy’ and ‘sad’ but have little vocabulary to examine or discuss their state any further. In their relationships they are distant, over-rationalised and lack intimacy. They often lack assertiveness, and make decisions without taking their emotions into account leading to a dissatisfaction they cannot pin down. This develops into dysphoria, ‘a profound sense of unease.’

    One of the most difficult parts of my own ADHD diagnosis was the chapter in Gabor Maté’s Shattered Minds that told me I didn’t have an identity.

    “What you see in the MDMA-assisted therapy is that people have a self. They say, ‘This is who I am’.”

    Instead I was a series of behavioural diktats intended to please others, or get them off my back at least. 

    “The latest neuroscience stuff in the area of trauma is very much about the loss of sense of self that comes from it. And indeed the vast majority of our subjects in the MDMA-assisted therapy study had terrible Alexithymia scores,” said Dr Van der Kolk on Norway’s Psykologvirke podcast, “as long as you live with caregivers who don’t see you, that really impairs your capacity to know who you are and what you’re feeling. This is very much part of becoming a well functioning human being: to know what this creature that you inhabit feels, and knows, and needs to be done.”

    Beautifully, “What you see in the MDMA-assisted therapy is that people have a self,” observes Dr Van der Kolk, “They say, ‘this is who I am. This is what I feel, this is what’s important to me. That’s what’s unimportant to me. And I’m no longer dependent on what you feel to dictate what I feel. I have my own feelings’.”

    More MDMA therapy articles here on New Psychonaut:

  • Homestasis is where the heart is

    Homestasis is where the heart is

      Therapy
    Therapy

    Seeing your shrink will never be the same after MDMA-AT

      By    Jeppe Hein    on display at Albion Fields till 22 Sept 2020
    By Jeppe Hein on display at Albion Fields till 22 Sept 2020

    MDMA-AT consists of three ‘blindfold’ experiences each a month apart.

    These are punctuated by fifteen therapy sessions dedicated to assessment, preparation and integration. Each stage – indeed, each appointment – includes a detailed, mindful strategy.

    The ‘inner healer’ concept is described as a the mind mending itself in the same way the body might gradually heal a graze or cut. The method and therapy is described as the dressing that might be put on a wound, providing the correct environment for the miracle of human evolution to do its stuff.

    Homeostatic instinct is the term used by men and women of science for the inner healer. Freud (who isn’t dead, it’s just a headline. Well he is physically of course) said instinct is a ‘demand made on the mind by the body’. Back in the renaissance Spinoza wrote that ‘Joy is associated with a transition of the organism to greater perfection’ as noted by top scholar Antonio Damasio.

    Could denial of our human instincts – personal drive, logos, awen, true will, whatever you want to call it – land us in a chronic long-term disease ward? Not serving animal instincts certainly does.

    “It’s only when the process begins that they understand”

    During the MDMA time itself, patients are encouraged to spend time both talking to the therapists and by themselves processing beneath the blindfold, “although we are focussing on the inner experience” says Michael, and discussions during the experiences are intended to facilitate “a self directed experience. They don’t even have to wear the blindfold if they don’t want to, but often they end up doing so.”

    Patients are shepherded towards their own “personal alchemy” to quote Michael, a bespoke therapy style unique to them. This can be cultivated by honing one’s ‘self energy’, a calm, curious and compassionate state that provides an emotional container for patients to open up to themselves. 

    “Usually therapists have goals or ideas of where they should go, but the patient directs that,” notes Annie, “which can be difficult for some people – they want to be told how they can cure their PTSD! It’s only when the process begins that they understand.”

    The MAPS dyad and MDMA-AT designers quote psychology colossus, emeritus professor at Stanford and When Nietzsche Wept author Irvin David Yalom, who wrote, “The therapist must strive to create a new therapy for each patient, or strive to encourage the patient to create a new one for themselves.” 

    Surprisingly perhaps, patients’ individual inner work often has a similarity to popular methods. One that come up in particular is Internal Family Systems (IFS), where patients discuss talking to the ‘parts’ of themselves that play different roles in their ruminations. 

    “The therapist must strive to create a new therapy for each patient”

    “We see again the value of allowing space and time for something unexpected, terrifying or beautiful, to come through from the inner healing intelligence”

    A patient who allowed themselves to be filmed for educational purposes discussed acknowledging, listening to, and comforting his aggressive/defensive self – Jungian shadow work, essentially. I asked Dr Michael Mithoefer in the after-lecture Q&A if he had suggested the method: “if I even had, I wouldn’t have described it as ‘shadow work, which is part of the work of Sigmund Freud’s protege Carl Jung’. I would’ve put it in layman’s terms.” 

    ‘Imaginal exposure’ – fictional examinations of how thoughts and feelings may play out in reality – and ‘active imagination’ – using fantastical metaphors to better comprehend stark reality in classic ‘psychedelic insight’ style – are two methods patients turn to naturally. Call it a ‘Jungian archetype’ or a ‘spirit animal’, it’s imaginative right brain activity processing complex thoughts to achieve balance. “We see again the value of allowing space and time for something unexpected, terrifying or beautiful, to come through from the inner healing intelligence,” says Michael. 

    “We’re clear that the process isn’t designed to suppress their symptoms… but get to the root”

    Transference issues can be used to highlight areas of behaviour to work on. Freudian psychodynamics, the examination of unconscious motivations, is still relevant despite me declaring ‘Freud is dead’ last week.

    Other methods patients organically, roughly, incline towards range from the practical such as somatic experiencing (feeling trauma in the body) and corrective attachment (establishing a healthy behaviour model) to the totally way-out transpersonal. 

    “We’re keen to normalise transpersonal experiences, letting the patent know we won’t think they’re weird. Transpersonal experiences aren’t essential. Patients that don’t have them tend to do very well also.”

    What is impressed upon patients is that they will get the most benefit from leaning in to their inner turmoil, not suppressing uncomfortable feelings but letting them flow forth instead. Moreover, this is not entirely linear, themes can wax and wane in importance, and it might be unpleasant and uncomfortable in places: “They might get worse before they get better. We are clear that the process is not designed to suppress their symptoms, but get to the root.”

    The celebrated MAPS dyad call processing under the blindfold ‘going inside’.

    “They never have to, and we are aware when they are avoiding it and help with that. But we will say ‘maybe now is a good time to go inside’ when we think it’s a good point in conversation for them to process. If they come up with a connection themselves it’s more powerful – for example, ‘I notice every time I start talking about ‘x’ I ask to go to the bathroom.’

    We explore that first before prompting them to go inside: ‘Would you like to experiment with that for a little bit?’ We make it clear they don’t have to hang out with something they want to avoid. It’a matter of is it needed at all, timing, and offering the option so it doesn’t sound like we’re pressuring them.”

    The hardest part, say the pair, who’ve worked with MAPS for two decades, is not barging into the process. “IFS creator Dick Schwartz [who’ll be talking to Vital students later this year] uses the acronym ‘WAIT’,” says Michael, “why – am – I – talking?” 

    The therapist is not the ‘healer’ – that’s inside the patient. Defence mechanisms mean it can be a long struggle to help patients come to the conclusions that would benefit them: for instance, decorated commandos who refusing to believe that their PTSD could have anything to do with all the combat missions, or rape victims desperate to bury their experience. “One patient commented, ‘I now have a battle plan when before I was thrashing about in the undergrowth’,” says Michael.

  • Drugs are the Love

    Drugs are the Love

      Space
    Space

    MDMA for couples’ therapy: 4/4 octopuses can’t be wrong

      Ithell Colquhoun, ‘Song of Songs’    via Unit London
    Ithell Colquhoun, ‘Song of Songs’ via Unit London

    Can the inner healer mend a broken relationship?

    Next up for MAPS therapy program designers Dr Michael Meithofer and his wife Annie AKA ‘Annie and Michael’ in spacespeak, is MDMA for couples’ counselling.

    “We knew that MDMA was useful for communication… and some of the other anecdotal things about it,” Annie told none other than Professor David Nutt on the Drug Science podcast (where you can hear Dr Nutt, the David Attenborough of drugs, a UK national treasure say ‘Back to the show!’)

    Annie collaborated on the initial research for a new era in MDMA couples’ therapy with Toronto’s Dr Anne Wagner. The Remedy clinic director has come up during further investigations into juicy subjects two weeks in a row (sync). Last week it was in a call for further research into psychedelic treatment for borderline personality disorder (BPD).

    Yet Dr Wagner is not the only intrepid sailor of the soul cooking up excellent experiments using ecstasy. John Hopkins’ university neuroscience department, not to be outdone, gave E to octopuses. They’d noticed ‘that octopuses and humans had nearly identical genomic codes for the transporter that binds the neurotransmitter serotonin to the neuron’s membrane.’

    The California double-spot octopus is a solitary creature, barely interacting with others of its kind besides once a year, briefly, for mating. Even then the male uses a sex arm and it looks like mid-air refuelling. 

    Would you believe though, that when researchers put the octopuses ‘in a beaker containing a liquified version of the drug’ according to National Geographic, they exhibited significantly more social behaviour?

    ‘Particularly telling, said scientist Gul Dolen, was that after being returned to their tanks at Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute in Massachusetts, the octopuses went on to reproduce.’ 

    During the Q&A after Annie and Michael’s lecture the pair were asked about giving MDMA to animals. After all, dogs are given anti-depressants. When I got my own chance to talk to them, I celebrated group ceremonial use of the ecstasy sacrament in the form of our rave culture then made a bad taste joke about giving MDMA to our pets hadn’t gone nearly as well. Now we know to shove them in a beaker of it.

    ’At no point did the octopuses ink, which would be a sign of stress,’ Dr Dolan told Nat Geo in response to all of our ethical concerns. 

  • Inner space of safety

    Inner space of safety

      Medical
    Medical

    MDMA boasts striking therapeutic properties beyond increased connection

        Chemical X     , ‘Spectrum’
    Chemical X , ‘Spectrum’

    “I believe MDMA is the ideal drug for psychotherapy,” says non-nonsense Awakn founder and trauma expert Dr Ben Sessa.

    The exciting bits are MDMA triggers a ‘oxytocin-dependent reopening’ of a ‘social reward learning critical period’. It puts your brain in the state of early childhood and adolescence, when it establishes key neural pathways. The hypothesis is that dysfunctional thought patterns can be adjusted in this state.

    MDMA increases pre-frontal cortex activity like an ADHD stimulant, lowers activity in the amygdala ‘fear centre’ deep in the reptile brain, and is notable for its relationship to both dopamine and serotonin. It creates an ‘optimal level of arousal’ that is neither too little nor too much for the brain to process its thoughts and instincts. 

    Added neuroplasticity helps memories reconsolidate so patients feel safer in safe settings, for example. MDMA scored strongly on PTSD patients with dissociative symptoms who often prove the toughest to treat. Trial data was consistent across the five test sites spread globally. 

    Ecstasy was first named ‘Adam’ then ‘Empathy’

    Trial subjects previously suffered severe symptoms that had resisted regular therapeutic treatment for many years.

    ‘MDMA was invented for shellshocked soldiers’ is a trope I may be guilty of falling for. It wasn’t an appetite suppressant either when patented by Merck in 1914. Forensic research into the German pharmaceutical firm suggests a humbler origins for the love drug as merely a stepping-stone towards developing an alternative to hydrastinine, used to prevent internal bleeding particularly in the uterus.

    The military nonetheless had it knocking around for whatever reason in the 1950s around the first time scientists tested MDMA on humans and recorded the results. These soon reached the keen ears of Alexander Shulgin, who says he first synthesised it in 1965. It was originally named ‘Adam’, and also ‘Empathy’. 

    Patients during MDMA-AT are given 125mg of what the subculture renamed ‘ecstasy’ with up to 75mg of booster. Apocryphally, a friend who took part in an Imperial MDMA trial said it was hella strong.