TERRAFORMING TERRA
We discuss and comment on the role agriculture will play in the containment of the CO2 problem and address protocols for terraforming the planet Earth.
A model farm template is imagined as the central methodology. A broad range of timely science news and other topics of interest are commented on.
Friday, February 20, 2015
The Trip Treatment
We have recently noted that research has taken off on all forms of mind altering drugs. This is also releasing information of the spiritual experience as well with trained observers taking notes. We can touch on all this, but having thousands of individual reports, properly organized and compared is hugely more productive and useful. We are now going there.
We have lost two generation in time and that means two generations of suffering that likely could have been avoided. I think this will now quickly change.
These things are not cures but they liberate the mind. After all if you can experience the afterlife and then know that your fate will not be unwelcome at all, you will pass looking forward to this after life.
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The Trip Treatment
Research into psychedelics, shut down for decades, is now yielding exciting results.
Psilocybin may be useful in treating
anxiety, addiction, and depression, and in studying the neurobiology of
mystical experience.Credit Illustration by Stephen Doyle
On
an April Monday in 2010, Patrick Mettes, a fifty-four-year-old
television news director being treated for a cancer of the bile ducts,
read an article on the front page of the Times that would
change his death. His diagnosis had come three years earlier, shortly
after his wife, Lisa, noticed that the whites of his eyes had turned
yellow. By 2010, the cancer had spread to Patrick’s lungs and he was
buckling under the weight of a debilitating chemotherapy regimen and the
growing fear that he might not survive. The article, headlined “Hallucinogens Have Doctors Tuning in Again,”
mentioned clinical trials at several universities, including N.Y.U., in
which psilocybin—the active ingredient in so-called magic mushrooms—was
being administered to cancer patients in an effort to relieve their
anxiety and “existential distress.” One of the researchers was quoted as
saying that, under the influence of the hallucinogen, “individuals
transcend their primary identification with their bodies and experience
ego-free states . . . and return with a new perspective and profound
acceptance.” Patrick had never taken a psychedelic drug, but he
immediately wanted to volunteer. Lisa was against the idea. “I didn’t
want there to be an easy way out,” she recently told me. “I wanted him
to fight.”
Patrick made the call anyway and,
after filling out some forms and answering a long list of questions, was
accepted into the trial. Since hallucinogens can sometimes bring to the
surface latent psychological problems, researchers try to weed out
volunteers at high risk by asking questions about drug use and whether
there is a family history of schizophrenia or bipolar disorder. After
the screening, Mettes was assigned to a therapist named Anthony Bossis, a
bearded, bearish psychologist in his mid-fifties, with a specialty in
palliative care. Bossis is a co-principal investigator for the N.Y.U.
trial.
After
four meetings with Bossis, Mettes was scheduled for two dosings—one of
them an “active” placebo (in this case, a high dose of niacin, which can
produce a tingling sensation), and the other a pill containing the
psilocybin. Both sessions, Mettes was told, would take place in a room
decorated to look more like a living room than like a medical office,
with a comfortable couch, landscape paintings on the wall, and, on the
shelves, books of art and mythology, along with various aboriginal and
spiritual tchotchkes, including a Buddha and a glazed ceramic mushroom.
During each session, which would last the better part of a day, Mettes
would lie on the couch wearing an eye mask and listening through
headphones to a carefully curated playlist—Brian Eno, Philip Glass, Pat
Metheny, Ravi Shankar. Bossis and a second therapist would be there
throughout, saying little but being available to help should he run into
any trouble.
I met Bossis last year in the
N.Y.U. treatment room, along with his colleague Stephen Ross, an
associate professor of psychiatry at N.Y.U.’s medical school, who
directs the ongoing psilocybin trials. Ross, who is in his forties, was
dressed in a suit and could pass for a banker. He is also the director
of the substance-abuse division at Bellevue, and he told me that he had
known little about psychedelics—drugs that produce radical changes in
consciousness, including hallucinations—until a colleague happened to
mention that, in the nineteen-sixties, LSD had been used successfully to
treat alcoholics. Ross did some research and was astounded at what he
found.
“I felt a little like an archeologist
unearthing a completely buried body of knowledge,” he said. Beginning in
the nineteen-fifties, psychedelics had been used to treat a wide
variety of conditions, including alcoholism and end-of-life anxiety. The
American Psychiatric Association held meetings centered on LSD. “Some
of the best minds in psychiatry had seriously studied these compounds in
therapeutic models, with government funding,” Ross said.
Between
1953 and 1973, the federal government spent four million dollars to
fund a hundred and sixteen studies of LSD, involving more than seventeen
hundred subjects. (These figures don’t include classified research.)
Through the mid-nineteen-sixties, psilocybin and LSD were legal and
remarkably easy to obtain. Sandoz, the Swiss chemical company where, in
1938, Albert Hofmann first synthesized LSD, gave away large quantities
of Delysid—LSD—to any researcher who requested it, in the hope that
someone would discover a marketable application. Psychedelics were
tested on alcoholics, people struggling with obsessive-compulsive
disorder, depressives, autistic children, schizophrenics, terminal
cancer patients, and convicts, as well as on perfectly healthy artists
and scientists (to study creativity) and divinity students (to study
spirituality). The results reported were frequently positive. But many
of the studies were, by modern standards, poorly designed and seldom
well controlled, if at all. When there were controls, it was difficult
to blind the researchers—that is, hide from them which volunteers had
taken the actual drug. (This remains a problem.)
By
the mid-nineteen-sixties, LSD had escaped from the laboratory and swept
through the counterculture. In 1970, Richard Nixon signed the
Controlled Substances Act and put most psychedelics on Schedule 1,
prohibiting their use for any purpose. Research soon came to a halt, and
what had been learned was all but erased from the field of psychiatry.
“By the time I got to medical school, no one even talked about it,” Ross
said.
The clinical trials at N.Y.U.—a second
one, using psilocybin to treat alcohol addiction, is now getting under
way—are part of a renaissance of psychedelic research taking place at
several universities in the United States, including Johns Hopkins, the
Harbor-U.C.L.A. Medical Center, and the University of New Mexico, as
well as at Imperial College, in London, and the University of Zurich. As
the drug war subsides, scientists are eager to reconsider the
therapeutic potential of these drugs, beginning with psilocybin. (Last
month The Lancet, the United Kingdom’s most prominent medical
journal, published a guest editorial in support of such research.) The
effects of psilocybin resemble those of LSD, but, as one researcher
explained, “it carries none of the political and cultural baggage of
those three letters.” LSD is also stronger and longer-lasting in its
effects, and is considered more likely to produce adverse reactions.
Researchers are using or planning to use psilocybin not only to treat
anxiety, addiction (to smoking and alcohol), and depression but also to
study the neurobiology of mystical experience, which the drug, at high
doses, can reliably occasion. Forty years after the Nixon Administration
effectively shut down most psychedelic research, the government is
gingerly allowing a small number of scientists to resume working with
these powerful and still somewhat mysterious molecules.
As
I chatted with Tony Bossis and Stephen Ross in the treatment room at
N.Y.U., their excitement about the results was evident. According to
Ross, cancer patients receiving just a single dose of psilocybin
experienced immediate and dramatic reductions in anxiety and depression,
improvements that were sustained for at least six months. The data are
still being analyzed and have not yet been submitted to a journal for
peer review, but the researchers expect to publish later this year.
“I
thought the first ten or twenty people were plants—that they must be
faking it,” Ross told me. “They were saying things like ‘I understand
love is the most powerful force on the planet,’ or ‘I had an encounter
with my cancer, this black cloud of smoke.’ People who had been palpably
scared of death—they lost their fear. The fact that a drug given once
can have such an effect for so long is an unprecedented finding. We have
never had anything like it in the psychiatric field.”
I
was surprised to hear such unguarded enthusiasm from a scientist, and a
substance-abuse specialist, about a street drug that, since 1970, has
been classified by the government as having no accepted medical use and a
high potential for abuse. But the support for renewed research on
psychedelics is widespread among medical experts. “I’m personally biased
in favor of these type of studies,” Thomas R. Insel, the director of
the National Institute of Mental Health (N.I.M.H.) and a neuroscientist,
told me. “If it proves useful to people who are really suffering, we
should look at it. Just because it is a psychedelic doesn’t disqualify
it in our eyes.” Nora Volkow, the director of the National Institute on
Drug Abuse (nida), emphasized that “it is important to
remind people that experimenting with drugs of abuse outside a research
setting can produce serious harms.”Many
researchers I spoke with described their findings with excitement, some
using words like “mind-blowing.” Bossis said, “People don’t realize how
few tools we have in psychiatry to address existential distress. Xanax
isn’t the answer. So how can we not explore this, if it can recalibrate
how we die?”
Herbert D. Kleber, a psychiatrist
and the director of the substance-abuse division at the Columbia
University–N.Y. State Psychiatric Institute, who is one of the nation’s
leading experts on drug abuse, struck a cautionary note. “The whole area
of research is fascinating,” he said. “But it’s important to remember
that the sample sizes are small.” He also stressed the risk of adverse
effects and the importance of “having guides in the room, since you can
have a good experience or a frightful one.” But he added, referring to
the N.Y.U. and Johns Hopkins research, “These studies are being carried
out by very well trained and dedicated therapists who know what they’re
doing. The question is, is it ready for prime time?”
The
idea of giving a psychedelic drug to the dying was conceived by a
novelist: Aldous Huxley. In 1953, Humphry Osmond, an English
psychiatrist, introduced Huxley to mescaline, an experience he
chronicled in “The Doors of Perception,” in 1954. (Osmond coined the
word “psychedelic,” which means “mind-manifesting,” in a 1957 letter to
Huxley.) Huxley proposed a research project involving the
“administration of LSD to terminal cancer cases, in the hope that it
would make dying a more spiritual, less strictly physiological process.”
Huxley had his wife inject him with the drug on his deathbed; he died
at sixty-nine, of laryngeal cancer, on November 22, 1963.
Psilocybin mushrooms first came to the attention of Western medicine (and popular culture) in a fifteen-page 1957 Life
article by an amateur mycologist—and a vice-president of J. P. Morgan
in New York—named R. Gordon Wasson. In 1955, after years spent chasing
down reports of the clandestine use of magic mushrooms among indigenous
Mexicans, Wasson was introduced to them by María Sabina, a curandera—a
healer, or shaman—in southern Mexico. Wasson’s awed first-person
account of his psychedelic journey during a nocturnal mushroom ceremony
inspired several scientists, including Timothy Leary, a well-regarded
psychologist doing personality research at Harvard, to take up the study
of psilocybin. After trying magic mushrooms in Cuernavaca, in 1960,
Leary conceived the Harvard Psilocybin Project, to study the therapeutic
potential of hallucinogens. His involvement with LSD came a few years
later.
In
the wake of Wasson’s research, Albert Hofmann experimented with magic
mushrooms in 1957. “Thirty minutes after my taking the mushrooms, the
exterior world began to undergo a strange transformation,” he wrote.
“Everything assumed a Mexican character.” Hofmann proceeded to identify,
isolate, and then synthesize the active ingredient, psilocybin, the
compound being used in the current research.
Perhaps
the most influential and rigorous of these early studies was the Good
Friday experiment, conducted in 1962 by Walter Pahnke, a psychiatrist
and minister working on a Ph.D. dissertation under Leary at Harvard. In a
double-blind experiment, twenty divinity students received a capsule of
white powder right before a Good Friday service at Marsh Chapel, on the
Boston University campus; ten contained psilocybin, ten an active
placebo (nicotinic acid). Eight of the ten students receiving psilocybin
reported a mystical experience, while only one in the control group
experienced a feeling of “sacredness” and a “sense of peace.” (Telling
the subjects apart was not difficult, rendering the double-blind a
somewhat hollow conceit: those on the placebo sat sedately in their pews
while the others lay down or wandered around the chapel, muttering
things like “God is everywhere” and “Oh, the glory!”) Pahnke concluded
that the experiences of eight who received the psilocybin were
“indistinguishable from, if not identical with,” the classic mystical
experiences reported in the literature by William James, Walter Stace,
and others.
In 1991, Rick Doblin, the director of the Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies (MAPS),
published a follow-up study, in which he tracked down all but one of
the divinity students who received psilocybin at Marsh Chapel and
interviewed seven of them. They all reported that the experience had
shaped their lives and work in profound and enduring ways. But Doblin
found flaws in Pahnke’s published account: he had failed to mention that
several subjects struggled with acute anxiety during their experience.
One had to be restrained and given Thorazine, a powerful antipsychotic,
after he ran from the chapel and headed down Commonwealth Avenue,
convinced that he had been chosen to announce that the Messiah had
arrived.
The first wave of research into
psychedelics was doomed by an excessive exuberance about their
potential. For people working with these remarkable molecules, it was
difficult not to conclude that they were suddenly in possession of news
with the power to change the world—a psychedelic gospel. They found it
hard to justify confining these drugs to the laboratory or using them
only for the benefit of the sick. It didn’t take long for once
respectable scientists such as Leary to grow impatient with the
rigmarole of objective science. He came to see science as just another
societal “game,” a conventional box it was time to blow up—along with
all the others.
Was the suppression of
psychedelic research inevitable? Stanislav Grof, a Czech-born
psychiatrist who used LSD extensively in his practice in the
nineteen-sixties, believes that psychedelics “loosed the Dionysian
element” on America, posing a threat to the country’s Puritan values
that was bound to be repulsed. (He thinks the same thing could happen
again.) Roland Griffiths, a psychopharmacologist at Johns Hopkins
University School of Medicine, points out that ours is not the first
culture to feel threatened by psychedelics: the reason Gordon Wasson had
to rediscover magic mushrooms in Mexico was that the Spanish had
suppressed them so thoroughly, deeming them dangerous instruments of
paganism.
“There is such a sense of authority
that comes out of the primary mystical experience that it can be
threatening to existing hierarchical structures,” Griffiths told me when
we met in his office last spring. “We ended up demonizing these
compounds. Can you think of another area of science regarded as so
dangerous and taboo that all research gets shut down for decades? It’s
unprecedented in modern science.”
Early
in 2006, Tony Bossis, Stephen Ross, and Jeffrey Guss, a psychiatrist
and N.Y.U. colleague, began meeting after work on Friday afternoons to
read up on and discuss the scientific literature on psychedelics. They
called themselves the P.R.G., or Psychedelic Reading Group, but within a
few months the “R” in P.R.G. had come to stand for “Research.” They had
decided to try to start an experimental trial at N.Y.U., using
psilocybin alongside therapy to treat anxiety in cancer patients. The
obstacles to such a trial were formidable: Would the F.D.A. and the
D.E.A. grant permission to use the drug? Would N.Y.U.’s Institutional
Review Board, charged with protecting experimental subjects, allow them
to administer a psychedelic to cancer patients? Then, in July of 2006,
the journal Psychopharmacology published a landmark article by
Roland Griffiths, et al., titled “Psilocybin Can Occasion Mystical-Type
Experiences Having Substantial and Sustained Personal Meaning and
Spiritual Significance.”
“We’re upgrading our business to something worse.”
“We
all rushed in with Roland’s article,” Bossis recalls. “It solidified
our confidence that we could do this work. Johns Hopkins had shown it
could be done safely.” The article also gave Ross the ammunition he
needed to persuade a skeptical I.R.B. “The fact that psychedelic
research was being done at Hopkins—considered the premier medical center
in the country—made it easier to get it approved here. It was an
amazing study, with such an elegant design. And it opened up the field.”
(Even so, psychedelic research remains tightly regulated and closely
scrutinized. The N.Y.U. trial could not begin until Ross obtained
approvals first from the F.D.A., then from N.Y.U.’s Oncology Review
Board, and then from the I.R.B., the Bellevue Research Review Committee,
the Bluestone Center for Clinical Research, the Clinical and
Translational Science Institute, and, finally, the Drug Enforcement
Administration, which must grant the license to use a Schedule 1
substance.)Griffiths’s double-blind study
reprised the work done by Pahnke in the nineteen-sixties, but with
considerably more scientific rigor. Thirty-six volunteers, none of whom
had ever taken a hallucinogen, received a pill containing either
psilocybin or an active placebo (methylphenidate, or Ritalin); in a
subsequent session the pills were reversed. “When administered under
supportive conditions,” the paper concluded, “psilocybin occasioned
experiences similar to spontaneously occurring mystical experiences.”
Participants ranked these experiences as among the most meaningful in
their lives, comparable to the birth of a child or the death of a
parent. Two-thirds of the participants rated the psilocybin session
among the top five most spiritually significant experiences of their
lives; a third ranked it at the top. Fourteen months later, these
ratings had slipped only slightly.
Furthermore,
the “completeness” of the mystical experience closely tracked the
improvements reported in personal well-being, life satisfaction, and
“positive behavior change” measured two months and then fourteen months
after the session. (The researchers relied on both self-assessments and
the assessments of co-workers, friends, and family.) The authors
determined the completeness of a mystical experience using two
questionnaires, including the Pahnke-Richards Mystical Experience
Questionnaire, which is based in part on William James’s writing in “The
Varieties of Religious Experience.” The questionnaire measures feelings
of unity, sacredness, ineffability, peace and joy, as well as the
impression of having transcended space and time and the “noetic sense”
that the experience has disclosed some objective truth about reality. A
“complete” mystical experience is one that exhibits all six
characteristics. Griffiths believes that the long-term effectiveness of
the drug is due to its ability to occasion such a transformative
experience, but not by changing the brain’s long-term chemistry, as a
conventional psychiatric drug like Prozac does.
A
follow-up study by Katherine MacLean, a psychologist in Griffiths’s
lab, found that the psilocybin experience also had a positive and
lasting effect on the personality of most participants. This is a
striking result, since the conventional wisdom in psychology holds that
personality is usually fixed by age thirty and thereafter is unlikely to
substantially change. But more than a year after their psilocybin
sessions volunteers who had had the most complete mystical experiences
showed significant increases in their “openness,” one of the five
domains that psychologists look at in assessing personality traits. (The
others are conscientiousness, extroversion, agreeableness, and
neuroticism.) Openness, which encompasses aesthetic appreciation,
imagination, and tolerance of others’ viewpoints, is a good predictor of
creativity.
“I don’t want to use the word
‘mind-blowing,’ ” Griffiths told me, “but, as a scientific phenomenon,
if you can create conditions in which seventy per cent of people will
say they have had one of the five most meaningful experiences of their
lives? To a scientist, that’s just incredible.”
The
revival of psychedelic research today owes much to the respectability
of its new advocates. At sixty-eight, Roland Griffiths, who was trained
as a behaviorist and holds senior appointments in psychiatry and
neuroscience at Hopkins, is one of the nation’s leading drug-addiction
researchers. More than six feet tall, he is rail-thin and stands bolt
upright; the only undisciplined thing about him is a thatch of white
hair so dense that it appears to have held his comb to a draw. His long,
productive relationship with nida has resulted in some
three hundred and fifty papers, with titles such as “Reduction of Heroin
Self-Administration in Baboons by Manipulation of Behavioral and
Pharmacological Conditions.” Tom Insel, the director of the N.I.M.H.,
described Griffiths as “a very careful, thoughtful scientist” with “a
reputation for meticulous data analysis. So it’s fascinating that he’s
now involved in an area that other people might view as pushing the
edge.”
Griffiths’s career took an unexpected turn
in the nineteen-nineties after two serendipitous introductions. The
first came when a friend introduced him to Siddha Yoga, in 1994. He told
me that meditation acquainted him with “something way, way beyond a
material world view that I can’t really talk to my colleagues about,
because it involves metaphors or assumptions that I’m really
uncomfortable with as a scientist.” He began entertaining “fanciful
thoughts” of quitting science and going to India.
In 1996, an old friend and colleague named Charles R. (Bob) Schuster, recently retired as the head of NIDA,
suggested that Griffiths talk to Robert Jesse, a young man he’d
recently met at Esalen, the retreat center in Big Sur, California. Jesse
was neither a medical professional nor a scientist; he was a computer
guy, a vice-president at Oracle, who had made it his mission to revive
the science of psychedelics, as a tool not so much of medicine as of
spirituality. He had organized a gathering of researchers and religious
figures to discuss the spiritual and therapeutic potential of
psychedelic drugs and how they might be rehabilitated.
When
the history of second-wave psychedelic research is written, Bob Jesse
will be remembered as one of two scientific outsiders who worked for
years, mostly behind the scenes, to get it off the ground. (The other is
Rick Doblin, the founder of MAPS.) While on leave from
Oracle, Jesse established a nonprofit called the Council on Spiritual
Practices, with the aim of “making direct experience of the sacred more
available to more people.” (He prefers the term “entheogen,” or
“God-facilitating,” to “psychedelic.”) In 1996, the C.S.P. organized the
historic gathering at Esalen. Many of the fifteen in attendance were
“psychedelic elders,” researchers such as James Fadiman and Willis
Harman, both of whom had done early psychedelic research while at
Stanford, and religious figures like Huston Smith, the scholar of
comparative religion. But Jesse wisely decided to invite an outsider as
well: Bob Schuster, a drug-abuse expert who had served in two Republican
Administrations. By the end of the meeting, the Esalen group had
decided on a plan: “to get aboveboard, unassailable research done, at an
institution with investigators beyond reproach,” and, ideally, “do this
without any promise of clinical treatment.” Jesse was ultimately less
interested in people’s mental disorders than in their spiritual
well-being—in using entheogens for what he calls “the betterment of well
people.”
Shortly
after the Esalen meeting, Bob Schuster (who died in 2011) phoned Jesse
to tell him about his old friend Roland Griffiths, whom he described as
“the investigator beyond reproach” Jesse was looking for. Jesse flew to
Baltimore to meet Griffiths, inaugurating a series of conversations and
meetings about meditation and spirituality that eventually drew
Griffiths into psychedelic research and would culminate, a few years
later, in the 2006 paper in Psychopharmacology.
The
significance of the 2006 paper went far beyond its findings. The
journal invited several prominent drug researchers and neuroscientists
to comment on the study, and all of them treated it as a convincing case
for further research. Herbert Kleber, of Columbia, applauded the paper
and acknowledged that “major therapeutic possibilities” could result
from further psychedelic research studies, some of which “merit N.I.H.
support.” Solomon Snyder, the Hopkins neuroscientist who, in the
nineteen-seventies, discovered the brain’s opioid receptors, summarized
what Griffiths had achieved for the field: “The ability of these
researchers to conduct a double-blind, well-controlled study tells us
that clinical research with psychedelic drugs need not be so risky as to
be off-limits to most investigators.”
“I’ve been thinking. Maybe we just got off to a bad start.”Buy the print »
Roland
Griffiths and Bob Jesse had opened a door that had been tightly shut
for more than three decades. Charles Grob, at U.C.L.A., was the first to
step through it, winning F.D.A. approval for a Phase I pilot study to
assess the safety, dosing, and efficacy of psilocybin in the treatment
of anxiety in cancer patients. Next came the Phase II trials, just
concluded at both Hopkins and N.Y.U., involving higher doses and larger
groups (twenty-nine at N.Y.U.; fifty-six at Hopkins)—including Patrick
Mettes and about a dozen other cancer patients in New York and Baltimore
whom I recently interviewed.Since 2006,
Griffiths’s lab has conducted a pilot study on the potential of
psilocybin to treat smoking addiction, the results of which were
published last November in the Journal of Psychopharmacology.
The sample is tiny—fifteen smokers—but the success rate is striking.
Twelve subjects, all of whom had tried to quit multiple times, using
various methods, were verified as abstinent six months after treatment, a
success rate of eighty per cent. (Currently, the leading cessation
treatment is nicotine-replacement therapy; a recent review article in
the BMJ—formerly the British Medical Journal—reported
that the treatment helped smokers remain abstinent for six months in
less than seven per cent of cases.) In the Hopkins study, subjects
underwent two or three psilocybin sessions and a course of
cognitive-behavioral therapy to help them deal with cravings. The
psychedelic experience seems to allow many subjects to reframe, and then
break, a lifelong habit. “Smoking seemed irrelevant, so I stopped,” one
subject told me. The volunteers who reported a more complete mystical
experience had greater success in breaking the habit. A larger, Phase II
trial comparing psilocybin to nicotine replacement (both in conjunction
with cognitive behavioral therapy) is getting under way at Hopkins.
“We
desperately need a new treatment approach for addiction,” Herbert
Kleber told me. “Done in the right hands—and I stress that, because the
whole psychedelic area attracts people who often think that they know
the truth before doing the science—this could be a very useful one.”
Thus
far, criticism of psychedelic research has been limited. Last summer,
Florian Holsboer, the director of the Max Planck Institute of
Psychiatry, in Munich, told Science, “You can’t give patients
some substance just because it has an antidepressant effect on top of
many other effects. That’s too dangerous.” Nora Volkow, of NIDA, wrote me in an e-mail that “the main concern we have at NIDA
in relation to this work is that the public will walk away with the
message that psilocybin is a safe drug to use. In fact, its adverse
effects are well known, although not completely predictable.” She added,
“Progress has been made in decreasing use of hallucinogens,
particularly in young people. We would not want to see that trend
altered.”
The recreational use of psychedelics
is famously associated with instances of psychosis, flashback, and
suicide. But these adverse effects have not surfaced in the trials of
drugs at N.Y.U. and Johns Hopkins. After nearly five hundred
administrations of psilocybin, the researchers have reported no serious
negative effects. This is perhaps less surprising than it sounds, since
volunteers are self-selected, carefully screened and prepared for the
experience, and are then guided through it by therapists well trained to
manage the episodes of fear and anxiety that many volunteers do report.
Apart from the molecules involved, a psychedelic therapy session and a
recreational psychedelic experience have very little in common.
The
lab at Hopkins is currently conducting a study of particular interest
to Griffiths: examining the effect of psilocybin on long-term
meditators. The study plans to use fMRI—functional magnetic-resonance
imaging—to study the brains of forty meditators before, during, and
after they have taken psilocybin, to measure changes in brain activity
and connectivity and to see what these “trained contemplatives can tell
us about the experience.” Griffiths’s lab is also launching a study in
collaboration with N.Y.U. that will give the drug to religious
professionals in a number of faiths to see how the experience might
contribute to their work. “I feel like a kid in a candy shop,” Griffiths
told me. “There are so many directions to take this research. It’s a
Rip Van Winkle effect—after three decades of no research, we’re rubbing
the sleep from our eyes.”
“Ineffability”
is a hallmark of the mystical experience. Many struggle to describe the
bizarre events going on in their minds during a guided psychedelic
journey without sounding like either a New Age guru or a lunatic. The
available vocabulary isn’t always up to the task of recounting an
experience that seemingly can take someone out of body, across vast
stretches of time and space, and include face-to-face encounters with
divinities and demons and previews of their own death.
Volunteers
in the N.Y.U. psilocybin trial were required to write a narrative of
their experience soon after the treatment, and Patrick Mettes, having
worked in journalism, took the assignment seriously. His wife, Lisa,
said that, after his Friday session, he worked all weekend to make sense
of the experience and write it down.
When
Mettes arrived at the treatment room, at First Avenue and Twenty-fifth
Street, Tony Bossis and Krystallia Kalliontzi, his guides, greeted him,
reviewed the day’s plan, and, at 9 A.M., presented him
with a small chalice containing the pill. None of them knew whether it
contained psilocybin or the placebo. Asked to state his intention,
Mettes said that he wanted to learn to cope better with the anxiety and
the fear that he felt about his cancer. As the researchers had
suggested, he’d brought a few photographs along—of Lisa and him on their
wedding day, and of their dog, Arlo—and placed them around the room.
At
nine-thirty, Mettes lay down on the couch, put on the headphones and
eye mask, and fell silent. In his account, he likened the start of the
journey to the launch of a space shuttle, “a physically violent and
rather clunky liftoff which eventually gave way to the blissful serenity
of weightlessness.”
Several of the volunteers I
interviewed reported feeling intense fear and anxiety before giving
themselves up to the experience, as the guides encourage them to do. The
guides work from a set of “flight instructions” prepared by Bill
Richards, a Baltimore psychologist who worked with Stanislav Grof during
the nineteen-seventies and now trains a new generation of psychedelic
therapists. The document is a summary of the experience accumulated from
managing thousands of psychedelic sessions—and countless bad
trips—during the nineteen-sixties, whether these took place in
therapeutic settings or in the bad-trip tent at Woodstock.
The
“same force that takes you deep within will, of its own impetus, return
you safely to the everyday world,” the manual offers at one point.
Guides are instructed to remind subjects that they’ll never be left
alone and not to worry about their bodies while journeying, since the
guides will keep an eye on them. If you feel like you’re “dying,
melting, dissolving, exploding, going crazy etc.—go ahead,” embrace it:
“Climb staircases, open doors, explore paths, fly over landscapes.” And
if you confront anything frightening, “look the monster in the eye and
move towards it. . . . Dig in your heels; ask, ‘What are you doing in my
mind?’ Or, ‘What can I learn from you?’ Look for the darkest corner in
the basement, and shine your light there.” This training may help
explain why the darker experiences that sometimes accompany the
recreational use of psychedelics have not surfaced in the N.Y.U. and
Hopkins trials.
Early on, Mettes encountered his
brother’s wife, Ruth, who died of cancer more than twenty years
earlier, at forty-three. Ruth “acted as my tour guide,” he wrote, and
“didn’t seem surprised to see me. She ‘wore’ her translucent body so I
would know her.” Michelle Obama made an appearance. “The considerable
feminine energy all around me made clear the idea that a mother, any
mother, regardless of her shortcomings . . . could never NOT
love her offspring. This was very powerful. I know I was crying.” He
felt as if he were coming out of the womb, “being birthed again.”
“Your first perp walk, Your Honor?”
Bossis
noted that Mettes was crying and breathing heavily. Mettes said, “Birth
and death is a lot of work,” and appeared to be convulsing. Then he
reached out and clutched Kalliontzi’s hand while pulling his knees up
and pushing, as if he were delivering a baby.“Oh God,” he said, “it all makes sense now, so simple and beautiful.”
Around
noon, Mettes asked to take a break. “It was getting too intense,” he
wrote. They helped him to the bathroom. “Even the germs were beautiful,
as was everything in our world and universe.” Afterward, he was
reluctant to “go back in.” He wrote, “The work was considerable but I
loved the sense of adventure.” He put on his eye mask and headphones and
lay back down.
“From here on, love was the only
consideration. It was and is the only purpose. Love seemed to emanate
from a single point of light. And it vibrated.” He wrote that “no
sensation, no image of beauty, nothing during my time on earth has felt
as pure and joyful and glorious as the height of this journey.”
Then, at twelve-ten, he said something that Bossis jotted down: “O.K., we can all punch out now. I get it.”
He
went on to take a tour of his lungs, where he “saw two spots.” They
were “no big deal.” Mettes recalled, “I was being told (without words)
not to worry about the cancer . . . it’s minor in the scheme of
things . . . simply an imperfection of your humanity.”
Then he experienced what he called “a brief death.”
“I
approached what appeared to be a very sharp, pointed piece of stainless
steel. It had a razor blade quality to it. I continued up to the apex
of this shiny metal object and as I arrived, I had a choice, to look or
not look, over the edge and into the infinite abyss.” He stared into
“the vastness of the universe,” hesitant but not frightened. “I wanted
to go all in but felt that if I did, I would possibly leave my body
permanently,” he wrote. But he “knew there was much more for me here.”
Telling his guides about his choice, he explained that he was “not ready
to jump off and leave Lisa.”
Around 3 P.M.,
it was over. “The transition from a state where I had no sense of time
or space to the relative dullness of now, happened quickly. I had a
headache.”
When
Lisa arrived to take him home, Patrick “looked like he had run a race,”
she recalled. “The color in his face was not good, he looked tired and
sweaty, but he was fired up.” He told her he had touched the face of
God.
Bossis was deeply moved by the session.
“You’re in this room, but you’re in the presence of something large,” he
recalled. “It’s humbling to sit there. It’s the most rewarding day of
your career.”
Every guided
psychedelic journey is different, but a few themes seem to recur.
Several of the cancer patients I interviewed at N.Y.U. and Hopkins
described an experience of either giving birth or being born. Many also
described an encounter with their cancer that had the effect of
diminishing its power over them. Dinah Bazer, a shy woman in her sixties
who had been given a diagnosis of ovarian cancer in 2010, screamed at
the black mass of fear she encountered while peering into her rib cage:
“Fuck you, I won’t be eaten alive!” Since her session, she says, she has
stopped worrying about a recurrence—one of the objectives of the trial.
Great
secrets of the universe often become clear during the journey, such as
“We are all one” or “Love is all that matters.” The usual ratio of
wonder to banality in the adult mind is overturned, and such ideas
acquire the force of revealed truth. The result is a kind of conversion
experience, and the researchers believe that this is what is responsible
for the therapeutic effect.
Subjects revelled
in their sudden ability to travel seemingly at will through space and
time, using it to visit Elizabethan England, the banks of the Ganges, or
Wordsworthian scenes from their childhood. The impediment of a body is
gone, as is one’s identity, yet, paradoxically, a perceiving and
recording “I” still exists. Several volunteers used the metaphor of a
camera being pulled back on the scene of their lives, to a point where
matters that had once seemed daunting now appeared manageable—smoking,
cancer, even death. Their accounts are reminiscent of the “overview
effect” described by astronauts who have glimpsed the earth from a great
distance, an experience that some of them say permanently altered their
priorities. Roland Griffiths likens the therapeutic experience of
psilocybin to a kind of “inverse P.T.S.D.”—“a discrete event that
produces persisting positive changes in attitudes, moods, and behavior,
and presumably in the brain.”
Death looms large
in the journeys taken by the cancer patients. A woman I’ll call Deborah
Ames, a breast-cancer survivor in her sixties (she asked not to be
identified), described zipping through space as if in a video game until
she arrived at the wall of a crematorium and realized, with a fright,
“I’ve died and now I’m going to be cremated. The next thing I know, I’m
below the ground in this gorgeous forest, deep woods, loamy and brown.
There are roots all around me and I’m seeing the trees growing, and I’m
part of them. It didn’t feel sad or happy, just natural, contented,
peaceful. I wasn’t gone. I was part of the earth.” Several patients
described edging up to the precipice of death and looking over to the
other side. Tammy Burgess, given a diagnosis of ovarian cancer at
fifty-five, found herself gazing across “the great plain of
consciousness. It was very serene and beautiful. I felt alone but I
could reach out and touch anyone I’d ever known. When my time came,
that’s where my life would go once it left me and that was O.K.”
I
was struck by how the descriptions of psychedelic journeys differed
from the typical accounts of dreams. For one thing, most people’s recall
of their journey is not just vivid but comprehensive, the narratives
they reconstruct seamless and fully accessible, even years later. They
don’t regard these narratives as “just a dream,” the evanescent products
of fantasy or wish fulfillment, but, rather, as genuine and sturdy
experiences. This is the “noetic” quality that students of mysticism
often describe: the unmistakable sense that whatever has been learned or
witnessed has the authority and the durability of objective truth. “You
don’t get that on other drugs,” as Roland Griffiths points out; after
the fact, we’re fully aware of, and often embarrassed by, the
inauthenticity of the drug experience.
This
might help explain why so many cancer patients in the trials reported
that their fear of death had lifted or at least abated: they had stared
directly at death and come to know something about it, in a kind of
dress rehearsal. “A high-dose psychedelic experience is death practice,”
Katherine MacLean, the former Hopkins psychologist, said. “You’re
losing everything you know to be real, letting go of your ego and your
body, and that process can feel like dying.” And yet you don’t die; in
fact, some volunteers become convinced by the experience that
consciousness may somehow survive the death of their bodies.
In
follow-up discussions with Bossis, Patrick Mettes spoke of his body and
his cancer as a “type of illusion” and how there might be “something
beyond this physical body.” It also became clear that, psychologically,
at least, Mettes was doing remarkably well: he was meditating regularly,
felt he had become better able to live in the present, and described
loving his wife “even more.” In a session in March, two months after his
journey, Bossis noted that Mettes “reports feeling the happiest in his
life.”
How
are we to judge the veracity of the insights gleaned during a
psychedelic journey? It’s one thing to conclude that love is all that
matters, but quite another to come away from a therapy convinced that
“there is another reality” awaiting us after death, as one volunteer put
it, or that there is more to the universe—and to consciousness—than a
purely materialist world view would have us believe. Is psychedelic
therapy simply foisting a comforting delusion on the sick and dying?
“That’s
above my pay grade,” Bossis said, with a shrug, when I asked him. Bill
Richards cited William James, who suggested that we judge the mystical
experience not by its veracity, which is unknowable, but by its fruits:
does it turn someone’s life in a positive direction?
Many
researchers acknowledge that the power of suggestion may play a role
when a drug like psilocybin is administered by medical professionals
with legal and institutional sanction: under such conditions, the
expectations of the therapist are much more likely to be fulfilled by
the patient. (And bad trips are much less likely to occur.) But who
cares, some argue, as long as it helps? David Nichols, an emeritus
professor of pharmacology at Purdue University—and a founder, in 1993,
of the Heffter Research Institute, a key funder of psychedelic
research—put the pragmatic case most baldly in a recent interview with Science:
“If it gives them peace, if it helps people to die peacefully with
their friends and their family at their side, I don’t care if it’s real
or an illusion.”
Roland Griffiths is willing to
consider the challenge that the mystical experience poses to the
prevailing scientific paradigm. He conceded that “authenticity is a
scientific question not yet answered” and that all that scientists have
to go by is what people tell them about their experiences. But he
pointed out that the same is true for much more familiar mental
phenomena.
“What about the miracle that we are
conscious? Just think about that for a second, that we are aware we’re
aware!” Insofar as I was on board for one miracle well beyond the reach
of materialist science, Griffiths was suggesting, I should remain open
to the possibility of others.
“I’m willing to
hold that there’s a mystery here we don’t understand, that these
experiences may or may not be ‘true,’ ” he said. “What’s exciting is to
use the tools we have to explore and pick apart this mystery.”
Perhaps
the most ambitious attempt to pick apart the scientific mystery of the
psychedelic experience has been taking place in a lab based at Imperial
College, in London. There a thirty-four-year-old neuroscientist named
Robin Carhart-Harris has been injecting healthy volunteers with
psilocybin and LSD and then using a variety of scanning tools—including
fMRI and magnetoencephalography (MEG)—to observe what happens in their
brains.
Carhart-Harris
works in the laboratory of David Nutt, a prominent English
psychopharmacologist. Nutt served as the drug-policy adviser to the
Labour Government until 2011, when he was fired for arguing that
psychedelic drugs should be rescheduled on the ground that they are
safer than alcohol or tobacco and potentially invaluable to
neuroscience. Carhart-Harris’s own path to neuroscience was an eccentric
one. First, he took a graduate course in psychoanalysis—a field that
few neuroscientists take seriously, regarding it less as a science than
as a set of untestable beliefs. Carhart-Harris was fascinated by
psychoanalytic theory but frustrated by the paucity of its tools for
exploring what it deemed most important about the mind: the unconscious.
“If
the only way we can access the unconscious mind is via dreams and free
association, we aren’t going to get anywhere,” he said. “Surely there
must be something else.” One day, he asked his seminar leader if that
might be a drug. She was intrigued. He set off to search the library
catalogue for “LSD and the Unconscious” and found “Realms of the Human
Unconscious,” by Stanislav Grof. “I read the book cover to cover. That
set the course for the rest of my young life.”
Carhart-Harris,
who is slender and intense, with large pale-blue eyes that seldom
blink, decided that he would use psychedelic drugs and modern
brain-imaging techniques to put a foundation of hard science beneath
psychoanalysis. “Freud said dreams were the royal road to the
unconscious,” he said in our first interview. “LSD may turn out to be
the superhighway.” Nutt agreed to let him follow this hunch in his lab.
He ran bureaucratic interference and helped secure funding (from the
Beckley Foundation, which supports psychedelic research).
When,
in 2010, Carhart-Harris first began studying the brains of volunteers
on psychedelics, neuroscientists assumed that the drugs somehow excited
brain activity—hence the vivid hallucinations and powerful emotions that
people report. But when Carhart-Harris looked at the results of the
first set of fMRI scans—which pinpoint areas of brain activity by
mapping local blood flow and oxygen consumption—he discovered that the
drug appeared to substantially reduce brain activity in one particular
region: the “default-mode network.”
The
default-mode network was first described in 2001, in a landmark paper by
Marcus Raichle, a neurologist at Washington University, in St. Louis,
and it has since become the focus of much discussion in neuroscience.
The network comprises a critical and centrally situated hub of brain
activity that links parts of the cerebral cortex to deeper, older
structures in the brain, such as the limbic system and the hippocampus.
The
network, which consumes a significant portion of the brain’s energy,
appears to be most active when we are least engaged in attending to the
world or to a task. It lights up when we are daydreaming, removed from
sensory processing, and engaging in higher-level “meta-cognitive”
processes such as self-reflection, mental time travel, rumination, and
“theory of mind”—the ability to attribute mental states to others.
Carhart-Harris describes the default-mode network variously as the
brain’s “orchestra conductor” or “corporate executive” or “capital
city,” charged with managing and “holding the entire system together.”
It is thought to be the physical counterpart of the autobiographical
self, or ego.
“The brain is a hierarchical
system,” Carhart-Harris said. “The highest-level parts”—such as the
default-mode network—“have an inhibitory influence on the lower-level
parts, like emotion and memory.” He discovered that blood flow and
electrical activity in the default-mode network dropped off
precipitously under the influence of psychedelics, a finding that may
help to explain the loss of the sense of self that volunteers reported.
(The biggest dropoffs in default-mode-network activity correlated with
volunteers’ reports of ego dissolution.) Just before Carhart-Harris
published his results, in a 2012 paper in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences,
a researcher at Yale named Judson Brewer, who was using fMRI to study
the brains of experienced meditators, noticed that their default-mode
networks had also been quieted relative to those of novice meditators.
It appears that, with the ego temporarily out of commission, the
boundaries between self and world, subject and object, all dissolve.
These are hallmarks of the mystical experience.
If
the default-mode network functions as the conductor of the symphony of
brain activity, we might expect its temporary disappearance from the
stage to lead to an increase in dissonance and mental disorder—as
appears to happen during the psychedelic journey. Carhart-Harris has
found evidence in scans of brain waves that, when the default-mode
network shuts down, other brain regions “are let off the leash.” Mental
contents hidden from view (or suppressed) during normal waking
consciousness come to the fore: emotions, memories, wishes and fears.
Regions that don’t ordinarily communicate directly with one another
strike up conversations (neuroscientists sometimes call this
“crosstalk”), often with bizarre results. Carhart-Harris thinks that
hallucinations occur when the visual-processing centers of the brain,
left to their own devices, become more susceptible to the influence of
our beliefs and emotions.
“He didn’t want to end it, so I told him I wanted to get married.”July 24, 2000
Carhart-Harris
doesn’t romanticize psychedelics, and he has little patience for the
sort of “magical thinking” and “metaphysics” they promote. In his view,
the forms of consciousness that psychedelics unleash are regressions to a
more “primitive style of cognition.” Following Freud, he says that the
mystical experience—whatever its source—returns us to the psychological
condition of the infant, who has yet to develop a sense of himself as a
bounded individual. The pinnacle of human development is the achievement
of the ego, which imposes order on the anarchy of a primitive mind
buffeted by magical thinking. (The developmental psychologist Alison
Gopnik has speculated that the way young children perceive the world has
much in common with the psychedelic experience. As she puts it,
“They’re basically tripping all the time.”) The psychoanalytic value of
psychedelics, in his view, is that they allow us to bring the workings
of the unconscious mind “into an observable space.”In
“The Doors of Perception,” Aldous Huxley concluded from his psychedelic
experience that the conscious mind is less a window on reality than a
furious editor of it. The mind is a “reducing valve,” he wrote,
eliminating far more reality than it admits to our conscious awareness,
lest we be overwhelmed. “What comes out at the other end is a measly
trickle of the kind of consciousness which will help us to stay alive.”
Psychedelics open the valve wide, removing the filter that hides much of
reality, as well as dimensions of our own minds, from ordinary
consciousness. Carhart-Harris has cited Huxley’s metaphor in some of his
papers, likening the default-mode network to the reducing valve, but he
does not agree that everything that comes through the opened doors of
perception is necessarily real. The psychedelic experience, he suggests,
can yield a lot of “fool’s gold.”
Nevertheless,
Carhart-Harris believes that the psychedelic experience can help people
by relaxing the grip of an overbearing ego and the rigid, habitual
thinking it enforces. The human brain is perhaps the most complex system
there is, and the emergence of a conscious self is its highest
achievement. By adulthood, the mind has become very good at observing
and testing reality and developing confident predictions about it that
optimize our investments of energy (mental and otherwise) and therefore
our survival. Much of what we think of as perceptions of the world are
really educated guesses based on past experience (“That fractal pattern
of little green bits in my visual field must be a tree”), and this kind
of conventional thinking serves us well.
But
only up to a point. In Carhart-Harris’s view, a steep price is paid for
the achievement of order and ego in the adult mind. “We give up our
emotional lability,” he told me, “our ability to be open to surprises,
our ability to think flexibly, and our ability to value nature.” The
sovereign ego can become a despot. This is perhaps most evident in
depression, when the self turns on itself and uncontrollable
introspection gradually shades out reality. In “The Entropic Brain,” a
paper published last year in Frontiers in Human Neuroscience,
Carhart-Harris cites research indicating that this debilitating state,
sometimes called “heavy self-consciousness,” may be the result of a
“hyperactive” default-mode network. The lab recently received government
funding to conduct a clinical study using psychedelics to treat
depression.
Carhart-Harris believes that people
suffering from other mental disorders characterized by excessively rigid
patterns of thinking, such as addiction and obsessive-compulsive
disorder, could benefit from psychedelics, which “disrupt stereotyped
patterns of thought and behavior.” In his view, all these disorders are,
in a sense, ailments of the ego. He also thinks that this disruption
could promote more creative thinking. It may be that some brains could
benefit from a little less order.
Existential
distress at the end of life bears many of the psychological hallmarks
of a hyperactive default-mode network, including excessive
self-reflection and an inability to jump the deepening grooves of
negative thought. The ego, faced with the prospect of its own
dissolution, becomes hypervigilant, withdrawing its investment in the
world and other people. It is striking that a single psychedelic
experience—an intervention that Carhart-Harris calls “shaking the snow
globe”—should have the power to alter these patterns in a lasting way.
This
appears to be the case for many of the patients in the clinical trial
of psilocybin just concluded at Hopkins and N.Y.U. Patrick Mettes lived
for seventeen months after his psilocybin journey, and, according to
Lisa, he enjoyed many unexpected satisfactions in that time, along with a
dawning acceptance of death.
“We
still had our arguments,” Lisa recalled. “And we had a very trying
summer,” as they endured a calamitous apartment renovation. But Patrick
“had a sense of patience he had never had before, and with me he had
real joy about things,” she said. “It was as if he had been relieved of
the duty of caring about the details of life. Now it was about being
with people, enjoying his sandwich and the walk on the promenade. It was
as if we lived a lifetime in a year.”
After the
psilocybin session, Mettes spent his good days walking around the city.
“He would walk everywhere, try every restaurant for lunch, and tell me
about all these great places he’d discovered. But his good days got
fewer and fewer.” In March, 2012, he stopped chemo. “He didn’t want to
die,” she said. “But I think he just decided that this is not how he
wanted to live.”
In April, his lungs failing,
Mettes wound up back in the hospital. “He gathered everyone together and
said goodbye, and explained that this is how he wanted to die. He had a
very conscious death.”
Mettes’s equanimity
exerted a powerful influence on everyone around him, Lisa said, and his
room in the palliative-care unit at Mt. Sinai became a center of
gravity. “Everyone, the nurses and the doctors, wanted to hang out in
our room—they just didn’t want to leave. Patrick would talk and talk. He
put out so much love.” When Tony Bossis visited Mettes the week before
he died, he was struck by Mettes’s serenity. “He was consoling me. He
said his biggest sadness was leaving his wife. But he was not afraid.”
Lisa
took a picture of Patrick a few days before he died, and when it popped
open on my screen it momentarily took my breath away: a gaunt man in a
hospital gown, an oxygen clip in his nose, but with shining blue eyes
and a broad smile.
Lisa stayed with him in his
hospital room night after night, the two of them often talking into the
morning hours. “I feel like I have one foot in this world and one in the
next,” he told her at one point. Lisa told me, “One of the last nights
we were together, he said, ‘Honey, don’t push me. I’m finding my way.’ ”
Lisa
hadn’t had a shower in days, and her brother encouraged her to go home
for a few hours. Minutes before she returned, Patrick slipped away. “He
wasn’t going to die as long as I was there,” she said. “My brother had
told me, ‘You need to let him go.’ ”
Lisa said
she feels indebted to the people running the N.Y.U. trial and is
convinced that the psilocybin experience “allowed him to tap into his
own deep resources. That, I think, is what these mind-altering drugs
do.”
Despite the encouraging
results from the N.Y.U. and Hopkins trials, much stands in the way of
the routine use of psychedelic therapy. “We don’t die well in America,”
Bossis recently said over lunch at a restaurant near the N.Y.U. medical
center. “Ask people where they want to die, and they will tell you at
home, with their loved ones. But most of us die in an I.C.U. The biggest
taboo in American medicine is the conversation about death. To a
doctor, it’s a defeat to let a patient go.” Bossis and several of his
colleagues described the considerable difficulty they had recruiting
patients from N.Y.U. ’s cancer center for the psilocybin trials. “I’m
busy trying to keep my patients alive,” one oncologist told Gabrielle
Agin-Liebes, the trial’s project manager. Only when reports of positive
experiences began to filter back to the cancer center did nurses
there—not doctors—begin to tell patients about the trial.
Recruitment
is only one of the many challenges facing a Phase III trial of
psilocybin, which would involve hundreds of patients at multiple
locations and cost millions of dollars. The University of Wisconsin and
the University of California, Los Angeles, are making plans to
participate in such a trial, but F.D.A. approval is not guaranteed. If
the trial was successful, the government would be under pressure to
reschedule psilocybin under the Controlled Substances Act, having
recognized a medical use for the drug.
Also, it
seems unlikely that the government would ever fund such a study. “The
N.I.M.H. is not opposed to work with psychedelics, but I doubt we would
make a major investment,” Tom Insel, the institute’s director, told me.
He said that the N.I.M.H would need to see “a path to development” and
suspects that “it would be very difficult to get a pharmaceutical
company interested in developing this drug, since it cannot be
patented.” It’s also unlikely that Big Pharma would have any interest in
a drug that is administered only once or twice in the course of
treatment. “There’s not a lot of money here when you can be cured with
one session,” Bossis pointed out. Still, Bob Jesse and Rick Doblin are
confident that they will find private money for a Phase III clinical
trial, and several private funders I spoke to indicated that it would be
forthcoming.
Many
of the researchers and therapists I interviewed are confident that
psychedelic therapy will eventually become routine. Katherine MacLean
hopes someday to establish a “psychedelic hospice,” a retreat center
where the dying and their loved ones can use psychedelics to help them
all let go. “If we limit psychedelics just to the patient, we’re
sticking with the old medical model,” she said. “But psychedelics are so
much more radical than that. I get nervous when people say they should
only be prescribed by a doctor.”
In
MacLean’s thinking, one hears echoes of the excitement of the sixties
about the potential of psychedelics to help a wide range of people, and
the impatience with the cumbersome structures of medicine. It was
precisely this exuberance about psychedelics, and the frustration with
the slow pace of science, that helped fuel the backlash against them.
Still,
“the betterment of well people,” to borrow a phrase of Bob Jesse’s, is
very much on the minds of most of the researchers I interviewed, some of
whom were more reluctant to discuss it on the record than institutional
outsiders like Jesse and MacLean. For them, medical acceptance is a
first step to a broader cultural acceptance. Jesse would like to see the
drugs administered by skilled guides working in “longitudinal
multigenerational contexts”—which, as he describes them, sound a lot
like church communities. Others envisage a time when people seeking a
psychedelic experience—whether for reasons of mental health or spiritual
seeking or simple curiosity—could go to something like a “mental-health
club,” as Julie Holland, a psychiatrist formerly at Bellevue, described
it: “Sort of like a cross between a spa/retreat and a gym where people
can experience psychedelics in a safe, supportive environment.” All
spoke of the importance of well-trained guides (N.Y.U.
has had a training program in psychedelic therapy since 2008, directed
by Jeffrey Guss, a co-principal investigator for the psilocybin trials)*
and the need to help people afterward “integrate” the powerful
experiences they have had in order to render them truly useful. This is
not something that happens when these drugs are used recreationally.
Bossis paraphrases Huston Smith on this point: “A spiritual experience
does not by itself make a spiritual life.”
When I
asked Rick Doblin if he worries about another backlash, he suggested
that the culture has made much progress since the nineteen-sixties.
“That was a very different time,” he said. “People wouldn’t even talk
about cancer or death then. Women were tranquillized to give birth; men
weren’t allowed in the delivery room. Yoga and meditation were totally
weird. Now mindfulness is mainstream and everyone does yoga, and there
are birthing centers and hospices all over. We’ve integrated all these
things into our culture. And now I think we’re ready to integrate
psychedelics.” He also points out that many of the people in charge of
our institutions today have personal experience with psychedelics and so
feel less threatened by them.
Bossis would like
to believe in Doblin’s sunny forecast, and he hopes that “the legacy of
this work” will be the routine use of psychedelics in palliative care.
But he also thinks that the medical use of psychedelics could easily run
into resistance. “This culture has a fear of death, a fear of
transcendence, and a fear of the unknown, all of which are embodied in
this work.” Psychedelics may be too disruptive for our society and
institutions ever to embrace them.
The first time
I raised the idea of “the betterment of well people” with Roland
Griffiths, he shifted in his chair and chose his words carefully.
“Culturally, right now, that’s a dangerous idea to promote,” he said.
And yet, as we talked, it became clear that he, too, feels that many of
us stand to benefit from these molecules and, even more, from the
spiritual experiences they can make available.
“We are all terminal,” Griffiths said. “We’re all dealing with death. This will be far too valuable to limit to sick people.” ♦
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