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September 19, 2022 57 mins

Here's a bonus episode of Psychoactive. I was was recently a guest on the Dear Chelsea podcast, a weekly advice show hosted by comedian Chelsea Handler. I thought our listeners might enjoy hearing this fun, lively discussion, so we're dropping it in your feed as a bonus episode.

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hi, I'm Ethan Edelman and this is psychoactive, a production
of I heart radio and protozoa pictures. psychoactive is the
show where we talk about all things drugs, but any
views expressed here do not represent those of my heart media,
protozoa pictures or their executives and employees. Indeed, as an

(00:23):
inveterate contrarian, I can tell you they may not even
represent my own, and nothing contained in this show should
be used his medical advice or encouragement to use any
type of drugs. Hello, psychoactive listeners, so today we're bringing

(00:44):
you a bonus episode. A few weeks ago I was
on somebody else's podcast. It was the actress and Comedian
Chelsea Handler. Her podcast is called Dear Chelsea, and she
asked me all sorts of questions about drugs, and then
we took turns answering questions from her audience. I'm sure
you're really going to enjoy this. Hi everybody. While I'm

(01:06):
taking the month of September off of doing stand up,
I return on October one to complete my vaccinated and
Horny tour. October, November and December. I have new dates up.
I kick it off in Saratoga, California, and I'm coming
to all parts of California, Long Beach, Bakersfield. I'm going
to Niagara Falls, Tucson, Arizona, Colorado, Minneapolis, San Diego, reading,

(01:30):
Pennsylvania and Baltimore, Maryland, just to name a few. There's
also some Floridian dates in there, since this will be
my last year that I'm able to go inside the
state of Florida. SO CHECK OUT CHELSEA HANDLER DOT COM
for more stand up dates for my vaccinated in Horny tour.
These are my last dates. Hi, Catherine, how are you?
I'm so good. I'm here in L A and it's

(01:51):
going to be a hundred and four this weekend. I
left l a because I don't like that kind of
temperature and but I'm going to see you in my
orcas soon. Catherine and I are going on vacation together
with Brad. We're going to become a throuple. We're gonna
open up their relationship. That wouldn't be weird. You're welcome in.
We're really good at snuggling and after care. I was

(02:12):
just at a lunch. I'm in New York City this
week because I'm here to watch the US Open, because
I wanted to watch Serena play for the last time,
so I went to the first night where she fucking won,
and it was so special. I just love that energy.
I love watching people win. Yes, she came out in
like a glittery wrote like tape, like a queen. Yeah,
she had six layers to signify all of the I

(02:34):
guess six US opens. She had one and she played
this girl whose name, God, that's terrible, I can't remember.
But the girl was so good. It's so funny to
watch Serena play because, like her opponents are always just
running back and forth with such athleticism and Serena just
stands there. She's just like here, I'll return the ball
from over here, like I'm not running anywhere. It's pretty

(02:55):
amazing to watch her play. She's such a she's a beast.
It's always amazing to see somebody who's us at the
top of their game, whether it's sports, whether it's comedy,
whether it's whatever it is. It's so fascinating to watch
somebody WHO's at the top of their yeah, yeah, I
love it. I love the whole vibe of like tennis,
Grand Slams, like I've been to Wimbledon I think I've been.
I think that's probably it. Wimbledon and the U S

(03:15):
hope and I've been to but it's just such a vibe,
you know, like you can drink. You Watch sports like
it's up close. You can see everything, no matter where
you're sitting in the stadium. You're just watching the court,
you know. It's not like a concert. We have to
watch on one of these big screens. And the US
Open is the biggest one out of the Grand Slams.
It's it holds the most seats and so it's massive

(03:35):
and it's just it's yeah, my best friend, Bitchy, she's
my sports friends. She knows. She's always got in roads
to any sporting event, so we always get hooked up. So, yeah,
I'm having a great time and I'm and then I'm
going to see you in my Orca. Yeah, and you've
been saying all kinds of friends this week. I know
because we're making plans last week when, Oh my God,
I know. I'm looking at my calendar. I'm like, Fun,

(03:57):
what the Fund is this? We have a podcast recording
a two this interrupts my lunch and mushroom at day.
I was so sorry to interrupt last night, though, I
had the most romantic night by myself. I went to
first I got up and I worked out for two
hours because I shot this campaign and I had to
really get it together for well one week. That's how

(04:17):
I get it together, and then I just went off.
Since then, I've gained six pounds and I am just
cruising through Manhattan and I'm walking everywhere. Yesterday I met
my sister. I walked forty five minutes. I met her
for launch. Then my friend pitchy came, then I walked
all the way back and then I walked back downtown.
I got in seven twenty seven thousand steps yesterday and

(04:38):
my goal is just too I love New York City
for that reason. There's nowhere. I mean, I just wish
I lived in a city that was walkable, not in
Los Angeles. Los Angeles definitely is not. It's barely drivable. Yeah,
but where else have you been? You've been all over
the place. Oh my gosh, I just got back from
Greece and Vancouver Island. I went from gree to Vancouver Island.

(05:01):
Warmed very cold, it sounds like. Yeah, well, it wasn't
very cold on Vancouver Island. Greece was beautiful. I went
to an island called left cotta, which I've never been to,
with a bunch of friends. We just got on a
boat every day and went to a different beautiful restaurant
and drank white wine and ate Greek Salads and fish,
and I could not have been happier. I actually was

(05:21):
able to protect my face from the sun with this
new hat I got. So it was like a Dick,
but I like at least my skin is not burned.
And Yeah, I was on vacation with lots of different
new people and some children, so you know how that goes. Yes,
I saw your instant stories with one particular who I
think was your favorite. Oh Yeah, she's my favorite. The
ones who can't really form sentences are my favorites, you know,

(05:43):
like I like when they're beginning to talk but they
haven't really gotten the hamstered it. Yeah, that's when they
get a full personality. Is when I start to lose issuest. Yeah,
the like Gibber Jabber stage where they'll just like tell
you all about their day and total like jabbery English
is my favorite. I had this four year old girl,

(06:05):
Mia who was just she was so she was like
a seven year old. So it was so funny. I'd
be like, okay, let's play a game where we count
all the boats that are moving in the ocean. She's
like that sounds silly. I've got another game. I'm like,
Oh my God, she said, I don't think so. She
was just so funny, just like and this old British like.
She sounded like an old British man. She sounded like

(06:27):
this is doubt fire. I love that. Traveling with children
is another thing. You got us to have your own
timeline involved people. I just don't understand how people do it,
how they have so many children and then they have
to pack up their car and they have to put
in the baby viorn and their cookies and their whatever bottle,
all of it. And at every airport all you ever

(06:49):
see is parents taking their sippy cups and downing the
liquid in the sippy cups because the kids haven't finished it.
Like I was at Heathrow on a layover. Oh, I
was in London too. I was at Heathrow and he
throws like the strictest airport in terms of like liquids
and fluids. So basically everyone who came through just had
to sit there in front of the T S A
agent drinking their thermis because no one had, you know,

(07:12):
emptied out their thermis, and I'm like, how do people
not fucking know about emptying out their thermis at this point?
How do they not even doing this? For a minute now,
it's been since yes, oh my gosh. Yeah, I just
don't think I could have a kid and be the
sort of mom who like licks their kids pacifier to

(07:32):
clean it before giving it to them or like like parents. Man,
I have a lot of respect, but I can't do
all that gross stuff. No, no, it's all. Yeah, it's
too much. It's just never ending and some people make
it look easy and I respect that, because it's not easy.
Some people with many nannies. We have a very special
guest today. His name is Ethan Niedelman and he is

(07:54):
the former Princeton professor who built a political movement to
legalize marijuana, roll at the drug war and treat drugs
as a health issue, not a criminal one. He is
now the host of the podcast psychoactive about all things drugs,
now in a second season, and obviously I would like
to announce to all my customers this disclaimer that I

(08:16):
am not a doctor I play one on a podcast
that I would never ever encourage anybody to do drugs.
This isn't medical advice, this is my own personal therapy. Ethan. Hi,
it's so nice to have you. Well, it's a pleasure
to be on your show, Chelsea. I really appreciate it.
Oh well, thank you. Thanks for being here, and you
know you've spoken to Catherine before. Yeah, hi, okay, so

(08:39):
I know you are a huge proponent of the legalization
of marijuana and basically I mean all drug use, right,
or do you want to get specific about what drugs
you are for and what drugs you're against? Well, I mean,
let me be very specific. I mean most of my
life was about working to legalize marijuana and to end
the war on drugs. So that's where and I was
never called myself prom a want, although my personal life,

(09:01):
I'd say marijuana and I have had a great relationship
for a very long time. Amen to that. But when
it comes to the other drugs, you know I'm sort
of a Merril Wand and Psychedelic exceptionalist and that those
are the drugs that have been good in my life
and the other ones are not so crazy about. But
the principle that nobody should be punished for whatever drugs
they put in their body if they don't hear anybody else.
I think that's the core principle we have to remember,

(09:21):
so that even if you love, we love, psychedology don't
like all the other sorts of things, it doesn't mean
that other people should get punished simply for using those things. Right, absolutely.
And so what are your feeling about other sort of narcotics?
I mean, you're into psychedelics and so I assume that
encompasses all of all psychedelics. PSILOCYBIN. Well, you know, I
haven't tried all of them yet, right. I mean, you know,

(09:44):
mushrooms have been my kind of go to one for
a very long time. AYAHUASCA has been good. I've done
Mescaland once or twice I've tried a few others. I
did two CEB M Dama, not really a PSYCHEDELIC, but
that one was very nice in my life, although it
doesn't really work for me anymore. But when it comes
to the opioids, I mean no, I just think they're
useful for pain and that one needs to be very
careful when you're using them. But I do know people

(10:07):
who use psyche you know who use opioids and have
led very successful lives even when using them regularly. So
I'm just it's always just very important that we not
demonize other people, even for using drugs that are more
dangerous and even like cocaine. Like I've never really liked
cocaine that much. Mean for me like having cocaine. It's
like drinking too much coffee and having post nasal drip right.
So it's never been a thing for me. I have

(10:29):
friends who love cocaine. I've had friends who got in
trouble with cocaine. I've had friends who just play with it.
So I'm not a big Fan. I don't think it
brings out the best in people. You know, I wouldn't
want people I really care about getting into cocaine too much,
but it still means I don't like the law of
punishing anybody for using that stuff. M So, when you
said you used M D m a but it stopped
working for you, what do you mean by that, because

(10:51):
I've heard that before from people. Well, I'll tell you.
I mean. You know, Chelsea, when I first started using
early thirties, it was in the context of my divorce.
I think it helped us land up on a softer
landing and I've used it in romantic relationships since in
my thirties and forties and it was good with friends
and I've been to raise but around I'm now sixty five,

(11:12):
around the time I hit my early fifties, I found
that the upside started waning and the downside started increasing
and I started having the feeling like my body was
telling me, don't put this in you, and so I
really miss it. I mean it was it served a
valuable purpose for me in terms, especially in romantic relationships,
in terms of being able to deal with issues and

(11:32):
have communications and otherwise difficult to do. Yeah, that's true.
It is helpful in relationships if you can have conversations,
important conversations, right. Have you used it in that way? No,
I haven't. I've only used it, and I mean that's
a good idea, though. I've only used it to like
have a good time, you know, M D M a.
That is, but no, I haven't. I'd recommend it. I

(11:53):
mean it's just because it gives people the ability both
to listen it more deeply than they normally worried, dissolves
the defenses, and also to speak in a way that's
more and pathic in a way. And so I think
you know when it was first kind of when it's
uses were first kind of rediscovered, the seventies, it was
known as the couple's therapy drug and it was most
famous for that type of use. And now, when we

(12:15):
see it emerging for use with respect to PTSD and
things like that, it really has a very valuable role
to play. So I strongly encourage it. As long as
it worked well for you. I should also say that
I think when it comes to stopping, I know a
lot more guys who says it doesn't work for me anymore,
whereas women seem to get this is no no research
on this, just impressionistic. Women seem to get more value

(12:37):
of it for a longer time. Interesting. And what about
tell me a little bit about mescaline. I've never had
any experience with mescaline either. I don't think so. Well,
you know, you can get it in the refined version,
which is the way I did it. That other two
ways is it comes from the Peyote Cactus, which is
the one that's used in indigenous ceremonies, native American church.
And now people are mostly people are being discouraged from

(12:58):
using payote because there's a limited apply and you don't
want to deprive native American church members and indigenous peoples
of having access to it. But there's a plant called
San Pedro which is also a source of Mescalin. So
I would say I did it. The one time I
did it I found that a lot like a mushroom experience.
It can be maybe a little bit longer. It was

(13:19):
before the invention of LSD in the forties or just
you know, a creation of LSD in the forties. It
was the most popular of the psychedelics. Like I just
interviewed somebody on my podcasts, like go active Mike J
wrote a wonderful history of this whole thing. Michael Pollen,
who has written that wonderful book changed and how to
change your mind about psychedelics. He has a new book
where he talks about his mescaline news. So I would

(13:39):
say it's worth trying. Some people may prefer it to
LSD or two mushrooms. I don't think it's radically different though. Okay,
so it's in that same family. And what about your experience?
You said Iowaska. Have you done that multiple times? You know,
I did it for the first time about twenty years ago.
I had a great experience. Then I did it a

(14:00):
few years later in the context of a religious ceremony,
something the Brazilian church called Santo dime, although I did
it in a loft in New York, but in that modality.
And then since that time I haven't really done the
full blowing ones. I've been at gatherings with a sort
of guide where they have low dose Ayahuasca mixed in
with other things. I've never gone down all South America

(14:22):
to do it in the jungle. I saw you did
that for the TV show you did on Netflix. I
know a lot of people have done it that way.
So it's not been a drug I've gone back to
many times, although I would definitely do it again. I
would definitely do it again. You know, I'm one of
the few people, like most people, throw up when they
do it, you know, and you're supposed to throw up
because it helps to purge, but I didn't throw up.

(14:42):
I didn't throw up either. Oh No, I did throw up. Sorry,
I did. Yeah, I thought you were talking about the
other outlet, because they say you can sometimes, you know,
go to the back to with respect to that second time,
I did it. Nothing happened during the ceremony, but in
the following days that other outlet was quite active. Oh well,
that's good to know. Thank you for filling me in. Yeah, sure.
Do you find age at all to be a prohibitor

(15:04):
in any of these drugs we're talking about? You don't.
I'll tell you I think. First of as I say,
as I've got an older m DMA is not really
doing it for me. Marijuana continues to be my friend
after all these years. I think if you don't have
issues like, for example, I don't have any. I'm very
healthy for my age, so I don't worry about cardiovasculate issues.
If you feel vulnerable Cardiovastro Y, you have to be

(15:26):
careful with taking a drug that could really, you know,
get your heart going in a serious way. I've never
been on antidepressants, but if you are, you know you
can't be an antidepressants and be doing Ayahuasca because, as
I've got, a toxic combination like. One thing I've gotten
into in recent years is doing LSD, not at the
macro dose, with the heroic dose, the big dose, and
and not so much at the micro dose, the five

(15:48):
or ten micrograms, but doing what I would call a
mini dose of like twenty or thirty micrograms, which is
enough to make you feel you're under the influence of something,
but you're not really having any visions, you're not way
out there, and I will say that the following day
I just feel exhausted and I think that maybe aging,
but you know, there are people who just keep doing

(16:09):
it into their eighties and older. I mean my view
on the psychedelics has always been there kind of wasted
on the young, and I tend to think about them.
I let's give it. Gave a speech and I said,
you know, I think about doing psychedelics the way I
think about Ya'm keep poor. You know, I'm Jewish. I
grew up religious. Right now and not that religious, but
you know, once a year yon't keep poor fast, twenty

(16:29):
five hours, no food, no water, because I think it's
a good thing for getting more in touch with that
spiritual side. And I think the same thing with psychedelics
that a lot of times people, you know, in the forties, fifties, sixties,
seventy say, Oh, I did that when I was young.
But my view is this a good thing to keep
coming back to at least once a year. It's a
it's good for stirring up the emotional sediment, the psychological

(16:52):
sediment that builds up as we get older, and I
think the reason that people get scared of it when
they get older is because it does mean to ring
up that emotional sentiment. It does mean coming to grips
with things, compromises you made in life, things you've had
to settle for. But I actually think it's a healthy thing, spiritually,
emotionally and probably even physically, to keep doing it as

(17:13):
long as one feels physically able. Wow, well, that's great.
I love to hear that because I always feel like you,
at a certain point you have to stop the drugs,
and I think what you're saying is quite the opposite.
As long as you're continually evolving and exploring, there's no
reason to stop unless you know you have some health limitations.
Exactly exactly, and I seem to try to overcome those

(17:34):
fears that happen as we get over. So many of
my friends who used to do it with me back
in the day now they're worried about it. They're scared
about it, although the truth being that with all the
same able media about psychedelics. Now, with Michael Collin's book
and all the other sorts of things, more and more
people are expressing interest in doing it who either haven't
done it in many decades or never did it, and
I think that's an encouraging sign. You know, I mean

(17:56):
even with marijuana, if you think about it, I remember
when we started legal marijuana, first for medical and then
more broadly in the various states with all the ballot initiatives,
and people would say you just you watch, adolescent use
is gonna Skyrocket, and my response to them would be,
I don't think so, because teenagers already have easy availability
in marijuana and we're not legalizing it for them. So

(18:17):
why is it gonna go up so much? And I
said the real increase in use is gonna be among
people in their fifties, sixties, seventies, eighties and nineties. And
I'll tell you. You know, five, ten years since we
started legalizing marijuana or in states around the country, there's
been virtually no jump in adolescent marijuana use, which would
be something you'd worry about. But meanwhile among people like

(18:38):
you know, people in their sixties seventies, there like a
quadrupling of us because people are finding it valuable. They're
finding it, you know, that they find they prefer to alcohol,
they find it helps with sleep or aches and pains,
or or maybe it helps to spice up a sexual
relationship with the person you've been married to for decades, right.
I mean, it's got all these sorts of benefits, and
so I think the benefits of psychoactive us and especially

(19:00):
on it's like cannabis and Psychedelics, I think they're underestimated
in terms of being positively connected with healthy aging. Do
you think that the dosage is important, as you aged?
I mean because the micro docing is really what everybody's
on about now, and guided journeys with whatever drug of choice,
whether it's a micro dose of LSD or Psilocybin or ketamine.

(19:21):
Do you think that that has an impact? Well, it's
so hard to know. I mean with micro docing, some
people have claimed it's little more than a placebo and
other people have claimed released significant benefit from microdocing. Usually
means taking between a tenth to the Twentie of the
dose that would normally result in a psychedelic trip, and

(19:42):
so I would say the microdocing thing is worth trying.
It does not appear to be much risk associated with it,
although there's not long term studies on it, and that
can evolve. Doing it with LSD, with mushrooms, it can
even be done with Ayahuasco or even with I've even
heard about microdocing Iby game, which is a very powerful
psychedelic out of West Africa from the Aboga plant that,

(20:03):
you know, people have found great results in curing addiction.
But I'm a little scared to try with marijuana. Some
people find that as they get older that the brain
changes in a way and so that you need less
to get high. So I think it's a matter of
just being attentive to what works and and look hood
for people use it differently. I know people. I know people, Billionaires,

(20:25):
enormously successful people. Every night, you know, they'll take a
couple of puffs off a joint, watch late night TV
and go to sleep, and they've been doing that for decades.
I know brilliant academics and intellectuals who've been using marijuana,
including for creative purposes. In my case, I don't do
marijuana daily, you know. I smoke it periodically with friends

(20:47):
or my partner or something like that, and and then edible.
I'm getting into edibles more frequently. In fact, for me,
part of my healthy aging process is once a week
when I'm in New York, I take ten doll of
ams of edible thhc, usually in a nice chocolate bar,
grab my headphones and I go down and get a
multi hour massage and I'm just floating and Mari Wanta

(21:10):
helps me get into my body. So I think it's
actually when you're using any psychoactive drugs, the key thing
is to be using it consciously, not to be using
it unconsciously and not to just be using it habitually
and not to be using it just in his escapest
way is to use it consciously, to say this is
a moment or a thing I'm doing where I think

(21:30):
actually using this substance when hands what I'm intending to
do or wanting to do right now. The circling back
real quick to your m d m a experience with
your ex wife. You said that that helps with issues
in your marriage to have conversations while taking that. I
have heard that before, but not really the way that
you said it, because the dosage would have an impact

(21:52):
on your being able to actually have a conversation like
that in a serious nature, right, rather than just not
not really chose, because you know, with M D M
May is pretty standard that people will do between a
hundred and a hundred fifty milligrams. And so when you're
doing M D M A, you know nobody's hallucinating. It's
not a psychedelic experience they call the drug. Used to
be called it in pathoging because it helps to open

(22:14):
up your heart. In fact, at some point the nickname
was originally gonna be like something like empathy, but people realize,
you know, who wants to market a druggle empathy? There's
not a big market for empathy. Let's call it ecstasy,
and so ecstasy became the nickname for M D M a.
But I think the key thing is that when the
drug comes on and it's two people and you're in
a relationship, the ability to process stuff, to process things

(22:37):
that have been bugging one or the other, to talk
about them in a respectful way, an empathic way. It
basically causes defenses to melt in a way, and I
think that's it's great with with with my ex wife,
you know, we were in a very difficult spot, but
we did it together and we're able to talk and
we actually thought for a while, as did our marriage
counselor that Oh my God, our marriage is gonna be

(22:58):
saved here. And in the end, you know, it wasn't enough,
but I do think we landed up with a safer
landing and became wonderful co parents and friends thereafter and
subsequent relationships. You know, it was, it's always been valuable
in terms of dealing with the stuff that builds begins
to build up in a relationship, that that needs to
get processed, that needs to get talked about. So I

(23:20):
think just being there quiet place, have that conversation and,
while you're in the conversation, remembering that it's not the
kind of drug you can keep using over and over
and over and over over again. If the idea is
to as you're doing it and as you're having this heartfelt, honest,
understanding and pathet conversation, to be thinking about ways in

(23:41):
which you can get back to that spot the next
day and the next week and the next month without
having to use the drug repeatedly. Right, it's good to
come back and use it occasionally. I'm talking about using
it three or four or five times a year, not
using it weekly, and never mind daily or something like that,
and it kind of deplete you right of your Serotonin.

(24:03):
If you think about you know PROZAC, they both act
on the Serotonin level. That essentially PROZAC is a mattress
and M D M A is a trampoline. And so
oftentimes the next day people can feel a bit depleted,
although I'll tell you, the first time I did it,
I felt great the next day. Yeah, I always feel
it the next day in my system, in a good way,
not a bad way, in a good way. Yeah, so

(24:24):
that's that's great. That's great. I think. If I have
found this is just, once again, anecdotal, when I would
do with friends and the next day we all jump
on the plane's to go back home. I noticed that
a surprising number as we get a cold and we
get thick in the following days. So I think it's
it's good to understand that your system M to maybe
somewhat compromised the following day and just take it easy

(24:46):
and like oft time telling you that people don't do
it on a Sunday, do it on a Saturday. Make
sure you have a day to take off between the
day you take it and the day you're back and work,
because what I find is that it melts your defenses
and the defenses don't just jump right back up. So
to throw yourself right back into work the next day
when your defenses are still kind of down, you know,

(25:06):
and ships flying at you in the work environment, you're
not quite ready to deal with it. You need that
recovery time, that at least a day of recovery time
after you do it. Yeah, and also it's good to
take be twelve before doing it and after doing it
to help with that kind of they call it like
suicide Tuesday. It's not suicide. Right, suicide? I don't know.

(25:26):
It's usually two days after you take it that some
people can have like a depressive episode. Right. This doesn't
happen to everybody, but people can. It can happen. So
it's always good to take B twelve. Okay. Well, Ethan,
we're excited you're here today. We have a show where
we have people call in for advice. So you're going
to be our guest and Katherine's going to give us
the low down. But first we're going to take a break, right, Catherine? Yeah,

(25:48):
we're gonna take a quick break for an ad and
we'll be right back with some colors. Okay, and we're
back pastic. Well, we have really just all drug questions today.
So what a nice what a nice episode this is
going to be. It feels so warm and fuzzy. Yes,

(26:11):
I mean, I do have to I do have to
preface this with I am a baby drug user. I
have not really tried a whole lot of things. Haven't
tried mushrooms that sort of thing. Have minimally tried marijuana.
Just wait till you come to my Katherine. Don't worry,
just wait. You have so much to look forward and
with N D N A I'm oftentimes most envious. I

(26:32):
call them the N D M A virgins because if
you've never done it before, the first time is oftentimes
the best ever. So I'm kind of excited. I do
have to say I won the second place prize in
the dare essay writing competition in fifth grade, but second
place was better than first place because she got like
a tour of the police department and I got a
pizza party. So yeah, seriously, hello, prizes are in the

(26:56):
long order for that contest. Exactly, exactly. So our first
question comes from Jamie. She says Chelsea, you were talking
about cbd today when I was listening to Glennon's episode.
I've tried many CBD products and I don't ever feel
any effect. Can you recommend a specific amount or brand
so I can feel the effects? I try to pop

(27:16):
Brownie ones and it threw me into a terrible panic attack.
I don't want to feel bad again. I just want
to feel calm and sleep. Thanks, Jamie. Well, CBD. If
you're not feeling anything, I would say not to be
opposed to adding a little th HC ratio to it.
I mean if you're taking C I don't really feel
CBD when I take that by itself either. I'd usually

(27:37):
take that for when I'm skiing, for pain management for
my knee. But I would say to throw in a
little th HC, like you don't you know? It could
be like two point five milligrams of th HC against
a higher percentage or higher ratio of CB D for
a little bit more of a buzz to help you
so you can actually feel it without overdoing it. Ethan,

(27:57):
what are your thoughts on this matter? Yeah, I really no,
I mean I do do CBD. All this stuff about
the rub bombs and this and that and it drops.
There's not a lot of evidence out there about how
using it in that form is actually helpful and it's
usually not psychoactive. There are studies that show that CBD
has been helpful in some very serious medical conditions, but
a lot of it's been hype. It's hard to say.

(28:19):
Now there is a website out there called project CBD,
a guy named Martin Lee who I think it's one
of the most honorable you know. I don't think he's
taken money from anyone company to promote one or the other.
So I keep your eye on that project CBD website
and they may provide some guidance about what are the
more reliable or less reliable both brands and ways of
taking it or not taking it. The idea that Chelsea

(28:41):
said about combining it with T hd and small amounts.
I mean, you know, the plant produces the marijuana plant
produces both th HC and CBD, and so that's why
you see a lot of the edibles. Sometimes we'll have
a t HC CBD combination. I think it's generally a
good idea to use th HC with some CBD. Sometimes
people have issues the marijuana an anxiety may find that

(29:01):
if you're using thhd with no CBD in it, it
may exacerbate the anxiety because CBD is supposed to be
an anti anxiety drug. So I'd say no fantastic information
out there, but you can dig around and try to
use the drugs in combination. And what's the name of
that website again? I think it's called project CBD, or
just Google Martin Lee CBD, which is what I just did. Yeah,

(29:24):
you know, I like the idea of combining it. There
was a time when I was using a lot of CBD.
I also didn't really feel anything. But Brad, my husband,
and I went to the beach and I had been
using like a CBD vape pretty heavily that day and
we decided like okay, we're gonna like take a couple
of hits of this very strong joint that we got
as a as a wedding favor at my brother Ethan's wedding,

(29:46):
and we both took one hit and we're just I mean,
it was beyond it was way too much. It was super,
super strong and usually when I have too much marijuana
I get very like unhappy panicky. It activates all that
stuff for me, but since I'd had so much cbd,
I was very calm, even though I was like, I'm
way more stone than I want to meet, but it

(30:08):
really helps from that perspective of like just gave me
a chill time. Hm. That makes sense. You know, a
lot of times a lot of people have issues with
anxiety and marijuana. I think a lot of them I
find that the first time they did marijuana, they did
it in a social environment, oftentimes with people they were
not necessarily that comfortable with, and so I think the
best way to deal with that is when you're using marijuana,

(30:28):
either to overcome that fear of anxiety or using it
for the first time, try to do in a place
where you're either if either by yourself or with your
lover or close friends, where you're really comfortable, where there's
nobody you have to be on with, nobody you had
issues with, and, if possible, do it not in like
the same place, like the TV room or whatever, but
trying to find a nice place outside, you know, whether

(30:50):
it's the woods or a lake or something that's not
your normal, you know, sitting environment. Just alter it a bit. Well,
our next question comes from Michelle. Michelle says Dear Chelsea,
I'm going on a camping trip this month with my
husband and two other couples. We all plan on doing
mushrooms together. The other couples do this yearly and are
inviting us for the first time, I don't have much

(31:13):
experience with drugs. I smoked weed a bit in my
early twenties and I've done coke once. I'm a little
nervous of the possibility of a quote bad trip. I
feel extremely safe with my friends and I know they'll
guide me through the experience. I'm mostly nervous about my husband.
He's very experienced with drugs, although he has never done mushrooms.
But my main worry is his reaction if I do

(31:34):
have a bad trip. He would prefer me not to
partake and I'm scared that my fear of his reaction
could make me have a negative experience. What's your advice
to have an enjoyable experience for my first time? Michelle,
Hi Michelle, I think first off you have to stop
telling yourself you're not going to have a good experience,
because that's like a self fulfilling prophecy. You have to
go into drugs always like you're using the drug. The

(31:56):
drug is not using you. That's how I feel about
any time I take drug. Anytime I'm not in control
of the situation, is when I'm not in control of
the situation. So I would just say to do you know,
if you're worried about your experience, just do half of
what everybody's doing and you're gonna have a good time.
Mushrooms make you laugh, they make you relax. They you
will be probably laughing the hardest you've ever laughed in

(32:17):
your life. That's usually what happens to people the first
time they do mushrooms. Ethan, what has you've been your
experience with people who have bad trips on mushrooms? I mean,
so I think your advice to Michelle is right on.
The other thing I would tend to say is that
Michelle and her husband should have a conversation beforehand and
maybe with their friends there. Just say listen. I want

(32:38):
you to know, dear husband, that if I need some
help during this, I'm not expecting you to be there.
Please don't worry about me and have one of the friends,
saying we're in charge here, say to the husband you
can relax if you're having your own good trip, bad trip,
don't feel an obligation. You want to be together, be together,
but don't get into a mode of needing this for

(32:59):
one of the other and we, the friends, are here
to help in that and thereby take the pressure. So if,
for example, it does you're right, it's highly unlikely to
go in the wrong direction. But if it does that,
the husband's not gonna feel guilty for not being president's
having the friends there the host. They're saying, we got this,
you relax. When she's a little better, you guys can
be together, something along those lines. Yeah, and just for

(33:22):
the record, I know this is I mean, I don't
speak for the entire universe, even though I'd like to.
I would like to say that I've never been around
anybody who had a bad trip on mushrooms, and I
do them all the time. I've done them with dozens
of times. I did have two trips that I would
regard as that. We went into a very dark place
um where I just began to feel enormously depressed and

(33:45):
I used two different approaches to deal with it the
first time and it felt a little bit light cheating.
was that when into when it went into a very
dark place, I had some m d m a around,
you know ecstasy, and I just took a little m
D M A and just lifted it up into a
beautiful place again. It's one reason why sometimes people can
buy mushrooms in M D M A, because it both

(34:06):
enhances the possibility will go into a beautiful spot and
it minimizes the chance I'll go into a dark spot.
Now the other way to do it and the real
possibility that it goes into a dark place, and this
I remember. I was doing it with my partner, were
to beat and it went into a very dark place.
Everything felt black and dark and crumbling and dying and
all this sort of stuff. And you can't. The thing is,

(34:29):
you cannot run away from a bad trip. You can't
run away from it, and so what I did was
I almost envisioned that darkness of the bad trip is
like a huge wave and you know, when you swimming
in the ocean and then you see also a big
wave coming, you can't run from it because then you'll
get you know, crash on you, you'll tumbling, you might
hurt yourself. The only choice when a big wave is
coming is to dive into it, dive underneath it, dive

(34:52):
through it, and so I practically, like musically, almost dived
into the sand, but, like you know, I mean you
know literally in a way, or you know or metaphorically
what it was, into the way of the darkness and
I kind of came out of it. I came out
of it and all of the sun things just lifted
and it became this magnificent trip for the rest of it.

(35:12):
So I would say you're right to tell her don't
worry about the bad one. It's highly unlikely. You have
friends around who can take care of you. Don't worry
about your husband's reaction. If it does go in a
dark place, there are ways to deal with it and
whatever case, even if it is dark, you're going to
get better in a few hours and you'll be fine
the next day. And many times people say they find

(35:33):
that even going into a dark place on mushrooms are Ayahuasca,
they may go through a terrifying place, especially with Ayahuasca,
and then the next day they said, my God, that
was the most magnificent experience in my life because of
how much I've learned, how much I've benefited. Yeah, so
I would just say to lower the dosage compared to
what your friends are taking, you know, just for you
in the beginning. Just take half so that you're not

(35:55):
going to be, you know, out of control, and then,
if you like it, you can take more. Yes, Great. Well,
we have our first caller of the day today. This
is Annie. Annie says, Dear Chelsea, I was diagnosed with
complex PTSD about fifteen years ago, but I've struggled with

(36:16):
it for over twenty years. I've tried many different forms
of therapies, medications and THHC, which have helped some, but
never completely. My symptoms have become much worse during the
last few years, with running from fires in California, Covid
and just the general ship show that is our world.
I'm now struggling to leave the house and I've been
isolating myself to an extreme. I'm pretty sure I'm bordering

(36:38):
on Agoraphobia. Even my work zooms have become a source
of anxiety. I'm planning to email my doctor to talk
to him about some Beta blockers to help with the
short term issues. I heard you talk about this on
your show the other day and I have never tried
them before. My question to you is I'm considering some
alternative treatments, including micro dosing Psilocybin, m D M A

(36:59):
or therapeutic. I mean, I've read that in some instances
they are curing ptsd with these treatments, which I had
been told would never be possible. I'd rather try Psilocybin,
but that seems less legal at the moment and harder
to come by. I feel lost in trying to figure
out who to talk to about this. My doctor is
pretty judgmental and I would never bring this up to him.

(37:19):
Do you have any advice on resources to learn more
about these types of treatments? I've obviously googled it, but
I'm not sure who to trust. I can't be the
only one whose symptoms have become much worse during this
covid apocalypse time. Thank you both for doing what you do.
Your show has been a great source of comfort and
much needed laughter. Annie. Hi, Annie, Annie H that's Ethan.

(37:41):
He's our guest today. I'm so sorry that you're dealing
with this, Annie. Oh, thank you, but just know that
this is temporary. You're not going to feel like this
forever and you're not alone. So many people feel like
this after covid and have anxiety, and you know there
are ways to fix it. But Ethan, do you want
to start with some resources, because you're probably the man
for that. Just a few things, I mean. First of all,

(38:03):
I think when it comes to micro dozing with mushrooms
or something like that, if you can get a hold
of them, even just, you know, not even pure philocide mushrooms,
there's relatively little risk with doing that at a very,
very low level. I mean, maybe it helps, maybe not,
if there's not much evidence one it. I think the
place I'd start is with Ketamine, because ketamine is legal,
and I think the first place I probably the godfather

(38:26):
of ketamine assisted psychotherapy, as a fellow named Phil Wilson
up in Marin County in California and he's got a
whole bunch of websites. So just Google and Phil Wilson
and Kennamine. One of his top proteges is a doctor
in the New York area, Gita Bade. I actually interviewed
her on my podcast psychoactive not long ago and she
speaks about the art of doing psychotherapy assisted by Ken Amine.

(38:48):
And because that's legal, it's going to be easier to
access the challenges, to find the best therapists and I
think starting up with Phil Wilson, is a way to go.
Now M D M A is probably gonna get approved
by the food and Rug Administration, the FDA, sometime later
this year, next year for treatment of PTSD. So there
are already research programs. They're emitting patients. So if you

(39:08):
just Google Ptsd, m D M A, psychedelic therapists, something
like that, you'll probably see people popping up. The organization maps,
which is the multi disapine associated psychological studies, has been
the one driving this process for with the FDA and
they're training people all around the country to be therapists.
So that's probably the other place I would look. And
once you start nosing around, then people will start to

(39:32):
recommend to you therapists who are using m d m
a assistant psychotherapy, not fully legally yet, but where it's
becoming more and more common. Okay, thank you. Do you know?
Have you heard of maps? Annie, I have heard of maps.
I've done some reading about it. I just yeah, it
doesn't seem like it was widely available yet. So well,

(39:54):
they basically have research programs now. So sometimes if you
can still get into one of those, but once you
start are calling around, people will let you know about
psychotherapists who are providing this sort of help, either using
psilocybin or m D M A, but starting off with
Ketamine simply because it's legal. Just finding the right therapist,
I think, really is the way to go. Okay, perfect,

(40:15):
thank you. And what state are you in? Annie? I'm
in California. Oh okay, well, that's easy to find in California.
Guided Kenemie trips. I have a few friends that are
doing that. Oh okay, I didn't know that that was
really a thing here. I've seen it like in southern California,
but I'm in northern California. Phill Wilson is right up
in Marin and he's the godfather of Kenemine, so definitely

(40:37):
check out his website and see what you can find
out there. Okay, great, thank you. Yeah, and you know,
try and in the meantime Beta blockers, if you get
those prescription. That's a short term solution, but it also
does kind of the neuropathways. It changes those. In my experience,
I've taken Beta blockers and you don't have to take
them all the time. You take them and it kind
of sets up a new pattern of thoughts so that

(40:57):
you don't get that nervous energy. I do look at
it as a short term solution. I think that the
Ketamine and everything else is a deeper, more spiritual solution to,
you know, the anxiety and the discomfort you're feeling. Yeah,
there's also a brilliant doctor writer, think her, named Julie Holland,
who talks a lot about this stuff. So just Google
Julie Holland and I think you'll come across an interesting

(41:17):
information as well. Thank you. Okay, Annie, take care. Let
let us know how it go. Yeah, let us know
how it goes. Okay, well, thank you so much. Sure.
All right. Well, our next question comes from Katie. Katie
asks dear Chelsea, on the show, I heard you talking
about micro dosing chocolate mushrooms. I'm an elementary school special

(41:38):
ED teacher and my weed and ZAN x intake increased
substantially over the pandemic. I talked to her a little
bit about it and her zanex increase was really linked
to a really high stress job that she had. I'm
looking to take a break from the weed, but I
know I'll be very unpleasant. I'm curious about the chocolate
fun guy and where it can find them safely. Thanks Katie,

(41:58):
and she's actually here with us on the phone as well.
Hi Katie, hi there. Yeah, I think mushrooms are a
great pivot for you. Are Mushrooms legal? What? What states
legally sell mushrooms? Ethan, no, there's no place where its legal,
although if you figure out a way to grow it,
there's all these sort of guys to growing you at home,
and so large numbers of people are doing that now.

(42:20):
I'll also tell you. I don't know where you are,
but like here in New York City, where they have
all these marijuanna delivery services that are still illegal, but
nobody's going after them anymore. More and more of them
are selling chocolate mushrooms. I mean I've now seen these
menus which used to just be different types of marijuana,
edible and smokable, and now they're including, you know, mushrooms
in little powders and mushrooms and chocolates. So you know,

(42:42):
if you, if you know, where do you live? I
live in New England and I use a delivery one
of those, you know, same type of things, so I'll
have to check that out. I haven't even bothered to
look at their edibles. M Hmm. Yeah, just ask your
delivery service if they happen to provide mushrooms and, if
they don't, if they know so many us, because I'm
amazed and how much this it has taken off in

(43:03):
the Marilanna delivery world, if you're carrying these things as well. Yeah,
that's been my biggest issue, is being, you know, old
enough to know that online is not where it's at
to be trusted necessarily, and then not being young enough
to really know anybody that's still growing or got stuff
like that around. And so I was kind of stuck.

(43:24):
And my doctor was more concerned with the ZANEX used
leading to Alzheimer's more than anything else, which kind of
scared me. And then that was kind of like, okay,
I really like to back off of that and not
need it so much. So if I had a different
option other than the weed, that would be great, because
at this point I just smoke all the time. What

(43:46):
about with weed? I mean, because the ADEX is the
one from a health perspective. It has a lot more
risks and weed has relatively fewer risks and it might
be a matter of changing the way you're consuming weed
or the you know, maybe shifting to a drink couple
of self with low th H C content in it,
and those can be kind of Nice. I don't already
tried that. Yeah, my issue is that I my consumption

(44:08):
is just off the charts and like I'd make my
own tincture that's a hundred twenty milligrams per Melo leader
and make my own gummies and sometimes feel them. Chelsea
talked about chocolate mushrooms as as an alternative and I
was really curious about it. Yeah, I think what Ethan
said is pretty accurate, though, like anyone who's delivering weed

(44:31):
is also delivering mushrooms, because they're everywhere. Everywhere I go,
somebody hands me mushrooms. I wish I could hand them
to you right now. I want to go to there.
But yeah, but, yeah, you, you should investigate and if
it's not that we delivery service that you're using, look
for some other ones, because I guarantee you'll find them there.
You know, just don't Overdo it when you're trying mushrooms

(44:52):
for the first time again, make sure you're just doing
like a half a dose to see how what your
reaction is, and then once you're comfortable with it, you
know how to tight trate or increase or whatever you're after,
which is relief. Yeah, I was gonna say what is it?
How would you describe that? Feeling? Well, with mushrooms I
find that I just have a lot of clarity and
I feel up. If I take chocolate mushrooms, like with

(45:14):
my girlfriends, I'll take more to laugh, you know, and
just be silly, but mostly I take them. You know,
I took one yesterday. My friend had some mushroom morning mushrooms,
and it had like all these other ingredients in it
that we're just like wake up, natural ingredients and and
herbs and stuff like that. So and that stuff is
just so minimal. You just feel a little bit more

(45:35):
clarity and just a little sharper, you know, on it
and upbeat and ready to go, kind of like a
cup of coffee. Without it, I was just gonna say
my Tiktok Algorithm locked on into sending me mudwater. Is
that something similar to what you're talking about? Yeah, the
mudwater is I love it. I think it's very tasty,
but it's a little bit more of like a coffee
substitute rather than yeah, it's like adapt to Gen Mushrooms

(45:59):
for health and that sort of thing. But it's tasty,
it tastes like try t you know, but not gonna
get you high. No. So here's one more question too.
Would you both suggest that she sort of tapered down
the marijuana use before trying the mushrooms, or use them
in conjunction with each other? Well, what's the negative effect

(46:21):
of the MARIJUANNA use? Now for you, I mean my
bank account, but I have a home garden with all
a bunch of tomato plants and then one, one lovely
little sativa. So I'm, you know, trying that way. But
other than the fact that I'm spending a lot of
money and don't really get high anymore unless it's, you know,
what people would consider way overdoing it, like I went

(46:43):
through like a half an ounce in the last week. Yeah,
so your tolerance is pretty high. Yeah, I mean because
some people use marijuana as heavily as you do. It's
because you're getting some medical benefit from it. I mean
it may be serving this anti anxiety purpose. Definitely is
trying to hold back on the ZANNICS and maybe figuring
out a more cost effective way, the most cost effective

(47:05):
way to be consuming the marijuana. And I think if
you're gonna do the mushrooms. I don't know that you
need to cut back on the marijuana. You know it's
there are different substances. They operate differently on your brain
and if you're doing is chelse you suggest doing with
a little micro dose thing or smaller dose, try it.
I mean look for me, the advantage of not using
cannabis every day is that when I get high, I

(47:26):
really enjoy getting high. Miss that. I think I'd more
look at it through that Lens to see if you
in fact you can taper off on cannabis or had some,
you know, a cannabis free day or like each week
or something like that, and just see what that feels
like and then you can decide whether you want to
try something like a low dose mushroom either on your
marijuana day or even on the days you're doing marijuana. Okay,

(47:48):
I'm definitely curious. I might now that I know it's
it's in New York. I'm I'm ahead of there in
a couple of days, so I should tell You New
York they haven't actually opened up the doors for leak
sale until the beginning of the year. So so it
would still be a delivery service. will be a delivery
some places are opening up anyway and sort of daring

(48:09):
the cops to address them so you can find them. Yeah,
I mean they've got better things to do at this point. Really, exactly. Yeah,
but you can easily find a delivery service. I mean
that's what everybody in New York City does. You know,
if you get it delivered to whoever you're staying with,
you could figure that out easily. Awesome. That's so great
to know. Well, I really appreciate your your advice and

(48:30):
you know, it was cool to get to chat and
something that I wouldn't normally get to have a conversation
with on like an educated level. So that's pretty cool.
I appreciate it. Awesome, awesome, good luck to you. Keep
US posting all right by well, our next question really
fits well into what we just talked about with Katie.

(48:52):
Carrie wrote in. She says, Dear Chelsea, I've been dating
my boyfriend for four years now. We're in our late twenties.
He's always very openly loved smoking weed. I don't personally
partake very often because it makes my anxiety worse, but
lots of my friends and family do, so I'm very
familiar with being around it. In the early years of
our relationship I saw no problem with his smoking because

(49:12):
we were young. It seemed less destructive than drinking and
I didn't feel it was my place to judge. However,
he's almost thirty now and he smokes every single day.
He'll smoke right when he gets home from work and
again multiple times throughout the night until we go to bed.
On the weekends, he smokes almost immediately after waking up.
Often he can't even eat without it because he's used
to relying on it to induce hunger. To his credit,

(49:34):
his personality isn't altered much when he smokes. He doesn't
get quiet or sleepy, as I know some people do.
I still enjoy being around him, even though he sometimes
does have a bad memory because of it. My question is,
how do you know when smoking weed becomes a problem?
We're approaching the age where we make more serious commitments
like marriage and kids, and this feels like the elephant
in the room. I've spoken to Him Multiple Times about this,

(49:56):
but rather than having a conversation, he shuts down my
concern earns as me having an outdated and biased view
of marijuana. In his opinion, there are no bad side effects.
It's more widely becoming legal and there's really no reason
to stop or slow down. Since you openly enjoy weed
more than I do, it might be interesting to have
a perspective on when and if marijuana use can go

(50:17):
too far. Carry Ethan. Why don't you hit that out
of the park? Okay, what I would just say to
her is basically, if he's not really seeing any problems
with his youth. And then she said maybe his memory
isn't as good because he's smoking weed. But I think
the bottom line is basically don't worry about it. Getting

(50:40):
older is not an issue. He's getting defensive in the
relationship with you. Is Not going to be productive. He's
already indicated he can hear criticism of that side of
his life. Is quite possible that he's using this in
a way that's more medical than anything else, since he's
probably really not getting very high anymore. He's just using
it on a very regular basis. So I can understand

(51:01):
feeling a little irritated by the fact that that thing
is always in your life and it's not something you
share much, and maybe even feeling a little jealous of
it in some respect. But unless you can pinpoint problems
with it. I would just leave it alone and it's
quite possible that the day will come and the moment
will come when he comes to the conclusion that maybe
he wants to stop doing it. But if he's got

(51:22):
his backup because you're getting more and more critical about it,
I don't think that's going to go anywhere good. Yeah,
I would say the exact same thing. There's no reason.
You know, it is kind of an outdated stance on it.
I mean it is becoming legal everywhere. He likes using
it and again, what Ethan said is perfectly accurate. At
this point he's probably not getting that much benefit from it,

(51:43):
unless it is a health benefit, because he's certainly probably
not getting high at this point. I know when I
over consume marijuana, it takes so much to make me high.
So yeah, you gotta kind of just like get rid
of that way of thinking and, you know, just be
happy it's not something like drinking or another drug. That
would be a situation if somebody came home and they
relied on that. You know, marijuana is pretty benign and

(52:06):
it's helpful to a lot of people. So you don't
know what kind of anxiety he might have or what
other body aches he might have that this is helping
him with that he might not even be aware of himself.
It might just be to for him to equalize. So
I would just try and say be a little bit
more open hearted and open minded. Let him do his
thing and then you do your thing. Yeah, and there's

(52:26):
that old thing of when do you know something is
addictive or becoming a problem, and it's when you have
negative consequences. It sounds like he's not really having negative consequences.
You know, we've had people call into the show and
and say, you know, I really want to taper down
my marijuana use or or that sort of thing. So
I feel like if someone thinks that they do, then
like go for it. Definitely your body is telling you something,

(52:48):
your mind is telling you something, but it sounds like
he's not having any any negative consequences other than this
relationship issue. Yeah, I liked what you said that. My
definition of addiction is addiction equals depending plus problems. So
if you're dependent on a drug, whether it's coffee to
get up in the morning, whether it's a Statin for
your cholesterol or a heart drug, whether it's method on

(53:10):
because you were once addicted to heroin. It's not an
addiction so long as that dependence on the drug is
not a problem, and it sounds quite likely that with
this guy. It sounds like it's basically a dependence, a
serious dependence, but not really causing any problems. In fact,
it sounds like the biggest problem is it could become
a problem in his marriage, even if it's not causing
him any problems in his own personal life apart from that. Well,

(53:34):
on that note, we will take our break and we'll
be right back with Ethan Naielman and Chelsea. We're back. Fantastic. Well, Ethan,
did you have any advice you'd like to get from Chelsea? Wow, Chelsea,
you know I was thinking about that. The first piece

(53:55):
of advice, and if you is not specifically about drugs.
You have this very successful pie cast and I have
my podcast like co active, which I'm trying to turn
into a much bigger thing. So if you've got any
advice about how to get a building audience for a
podcast that talks about the whole spectrum of drugs and
drug wars and drug policies and drug use, I'm all

(54:16):
ears for advice about doing something like that. Well, I
mean you should book a couple of celebrity guests. I'll
volunteer to come on and talk to you about drugs.
That will help. The first thing. Yeah, to make it
a little shiny, but I've what I've learned about podcasts.
How long have you had your podcast? I'm in the
second season now, so we started just over a year ago. Yeah,
what I've learned is that it takes a couple of
years for anybody, whether you're a famous person or less

(54:39):
famous or whatever your platform is, that it takes a
few years to really build and grow. But when you
have a subject matter that's so many people are interested
right now and it's such a part of our Zeitgeist,
I mean, I have no I mean you've got a
great title and you're very knowledgeable, obviously, so I would
imagine that people are very interested in hearing more of
what you have to say. So I know that certainly

(55:01):
our listeners, plenty of them, will be interested in that too.
So I would just say, yeah, just keep doing it.
That's how you accrue more listeners, you know, you just
it happens slowly over time. Okay, Great. Well, I have
one other question for you. Which is, you know, when
I used to be a professor and I wrote books,
academic books and a lot of writing, but in the
last and twenty years I've been writing less and less,

(55:22):
and now I want to write a book about my
life and about drugs and I'm kind of blocked. And
I see that you've had like five or six best sellers,
and a lot of them about your life. So how
did you actually get those books done and out? With
a lot of cannabis. Quite frankly, that's really that. That,
that is the best use of cannabis that I've ever had.

(55:44):
When I have a task at hand, a creative task,
and I do all the work, but when I have
to go in and Polish and deliver, is when I
use cannabis and or mushrooms. Mushrooms also micro dosing mushrooms
helps me focus. But Yeah, because you get organized and
then you get hyper focused. Cannabis helps me lose myself
in something, but I have to have the subject there.

(56:05):
You know what I mean, like if I go work out,
I can lose myself, and working out, if I'm writing,
I can lose myself, and writing, if I'm sitting on
my bed, I'm gonna lose myself on my phone, but
you just I like to choose the activity that I'M
gonna lose myself in. But I would definitely say cannabis
has been a huge contributor to my the success of
my books. Wow, wow, well, I'll tell you. I keep
meaning to start a kind of microdocing mushroom routine, but

(56:27):
I keep forgetting to do it. So it may be
that that maybe the answer for me, because sometimes I
find with cannabis like I find a hard time writing
with it, because I sort of forget, like I lose
my train of thought. You know, I forget what it
was I wrote just it was just thinking a few
minutes ago. It's one reason I don't like giving a
speech or doing interview under the influence of cannabis, because
it's problematic in that way, whereas mushrooms can be more focusing.

(56:51):
So I maybe have to make more of a serious
effort there. Yeah, just put it together as your responsibility
to get your book done right. You're right, and you
need to start your mushroom routine. Sounds good. Sounds good. Ethan,
thank you so much for being on the podcast today.
I loved everything you had to say. Well, I look,
I love doing it. It was great to team up
with you on answering those questions, Chelsea, and I really

(57:12):
admire so all the ways that you've been out there
on the drug issue and on so many others. Are
Politics Aligned very much and I appreciate both your courage
and sort of really speaking, I saw you were speaking
out about this drug stuff before marijuana was legal, and
you were speaking about psychedelics and doing episodes about it
on Netflix and all those where when this was not
quite so cool and hips. So you were one of
the pioneers and getting this out and I really do

(57:34):
appreciate that. Thank you, thanks, sad thanks. Okay, bye, bye, bye. So,
if you'd like advice from Chelsea, just send us an
email at dear Chelsea project at GMAIL DOT com. Dear
Chelsea is a production of I heart radio, executive produced
by nick stuff, produced by Catherine Law and edited and

(57:54):
engineered by Brad Dickert.
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