
#857: Join us as we sit down with W. Bryan Hubbard – Executive Director of the American Ibogaine Initiative. With a robust background in law, public policy, & community advocacy, Bryan is committed to transforming broken systems &...
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Lauren Everts
The following podcast is a Dear Media Production. She's a lifestyle blogger extraordinaire.
Michael Bostic
Fantastic.
Lauren Everts
And he's a serial entrepreneur, a very smart cookie. And now Lauren Everts and Michael Bostic are bringing you along for the ride.
Brian Hubbard
Get ready for some major realness.
Lauren Everts
Welcome to the Skinny Confidential him and her.
Guest Speaker
Hello everybody.
Lauren Everts
Welcome back to the Skinny Confidential him and her show. Today's guest has been in the trenches of one of America's biggest science violent wars, the opioid crisis. He's a lawyer, a reformer, and now one of the most radical voices shaking up the recovery world with a plant that most of us have never even heard of. Ibogaine. From coal towns to courtrooms, Brian Hubbard has watched the system fail countless people. Today he's here to talk about why he believes we need to blow the whole thing up and start again with something ancient, controversial and powerful. This episode was recorded prior to Brian accomplishing one of the most groundbreaking initiatives here in Texas. I was so happy to read this after we recorded this episode with him. Texas just made history. The State has earmarked $50 million in funding for FDA approved clinical trials of ibogaine, a plant based psychoactive compound that has shown extraordinary promise in treating opioid dependency, trauma, traumatic brain injury and other complex mental health condition. This marks the largest public investment in psychedelic research ever made, positioning Texas at the forefront of a national movement to rethink how we address addiction, trauma and brain health. And here's the thing, and we talk about this on the show and we've talked about it for whether addiction has touched you personally. It's likely touched someone you know personally or someone in your family. It is such a huge issue in this country. When we get into some of the stats on the lives that it's taken, they are staggering numbers. So obviously we need to do something to kind of right this ship and get people the help they need. And our current methods have just not been working.
Guest Speaker
Clearly.
Lauren Everts
Lauren and I were super excited to talk to Brian Hubbard because this guy has been at the forefront in the center of many of these issues for years. And I think what he's doing is extremely important. So happy to share that update prior to getting into the episode. But hopefully this episode also continues to reinforce the mission that Brian's on and helps in the small way that we can with that. Brian Hubbard. Welcome to Skinny Confidential, him and her show. This is the Skinny Confidential him and her.
Brian Hubbard
Let's just lay the land. What is ibogaine? Is that how you say it?
Michael Bostic
Ibogaine. Explain what that is ibogaine is an alkaloid that is derived from three African botanical sources. It is also psychoactive. A lot of people have described it as the most powerful psychedelic on earth. However, I would argue that it is in a classification unto itself. Ibogaine is one of 26 alkaloids in the cultural pearl of the West African civilization known as the Boudis. The booties have for centuries used the iboga root and cultural and religious rituals for centuries. In 1960, an individual from Gabon gave a guy by the name of Howard Lots off some iboga. Howard Lots off had been heroin dependent for several years. And because he was kind of a substance omnivore, he took this because he wanted to understand what it would do. And after he had the experience, which lasts anywhere from 10 to 12 hours in its most acute phase and then another 24 hours for what they called your gray recovery day, at the end of the process, he realized that he didn't want heroin anymore. Not only did he not want heroin anymore, he didn't experience any withdrawal from not taking it. This touched off an unbelievable 40 year odyssey by Mr. Lots Off, a guy by the name of Howard Cisco, another gentleman by the name of Daily Beer, Dana Bill, a guy by the name of Mr. Boaz Watchell and Ms. Normal Lotsoft, his wife. To understand what about ibogaine seem to essentially resolve physiological opioid dependency first and foremost among heroin addicts in the 60s and then as the prescription opioid crisis unfolded in America, starting with the approval of OxyContin in 96. Among those who are dependent on prescription opioids, there is a field of observational data that is mountains tall and decades wide that established that ibogaine is a profound addiction interrupter. And as its application to folks who have been opioid dependent has been applied, oftentimes folks are not just dependent on one thing, they're engaged in polysubstance use which leads to poly substance dependence. Over the course of the past 50 plus years, it's come to be discovered that ibogaine has profound interruption properties for not just opioids, but cocaine, alcohol, tobacco and a substance for which there are no current effective medical treatments whatsoever. And that's myth.
Guest Speaker
And what, if any, are the risks of engaging with ibogaine?
Michael Bostic
Ibogaine is a very serious medication. I'm glad you asked that question. It comes with a cardiac risk profile profile, while it is a stimulant, for reasons that are not exactly known, because it's what they call mechanism of action, is still a Mystery. It slows down the heart's rhythm and it prolongs the amount of time between heartbeats. So if an individual comes to the table with certain cardiac risk, that predisposes them to a prolongation of what's called the QT interval. Or if a person receives too much, then it can slow the heart's beat and cause cardiac arrest. Ibogaine must be administered in a clinically controlled medical setting by professionals who know what they are doing. This is not something that is to be trifled with, self experimented with, or explored through underground circumstances.
Guest Speaker
So it's not like somebody taking a couple mushrooms or doing a little hit of acid. This is much more serious.
Michael Bostic
This is much more serious. Not only is there a cardiac risk profile that comes with it, but when an individual is experiencing ibogaine in the acute phase, they are in a state of ataxia, or what I would call quasi paralysis for 10 to 12 hours. 80 plus percent of people who receive it also usually purge or throw up multiple times how they're having the experience. So you need to be with medical professionals who are given cardiac monitoring, who have the available medication to stabilize your heart if it comes out of rhythm. And it has got to be medically supervised at all times.
Brian Hubbard
So would you say overall that this is a cure for all of these addictions?
Michael Bostic
I would not assert that it is a now and forever more cure. Nothing that I'm aware of is a now and forevermore cure. What it does is it resolves acute substance dependency in such a way as to prevent the onset of withdrawal by 80% of folks who take a single treatment. And for those who are opioid dependent, that number goes up to 97% with a second supportive dose usually administered within three to five days of the initial flood dose.
Brian Hubbard
Is there anything, and this is maybe a weird question, but is there anything fun about it? So, meaning, like, I mean, like, if you're doing ayahuasca, like, you know, you hear all different kinds of experiences, from purging to stomach aches, but then you also hear the they had this profound experience, et cetera, et cetera. Is there anything that's fun or is it, like, not fun at all?
Michael Bostic
The ibogaine experience has certain themes that are endorsed by folks who have undergone it. There is a introspective experience that can occur if an individual chooses to engage it. And I say chooses, because ibogaine is an intelligent medicine. It's one that preserves an individual's free will to partake of the introspective opportunities it offers, and I'll explain how that works in this way. If somebody takes 5 grams of psilocybin mushrooms, it's going to shoot them wherever it's going to shoot them. They no longer have volitional control over that experience. You are in the medicine. In the case of ibogaine, if I were to take the necessary capsules to give me the effect, as long as my eyes were open and I was laying down, I would sit here and be as in tune and engage with you all as I am right now. A person who receives ibogaine is at all times oriented to person, place and time. It is not dissociative. However, if you close your eyes or put your eye mask on while the medicine is circulating through your body, you can have visions from your life or experiences that you have had in your life that give you a perspective on yourself, your relationship with those around you, and your relationship with the world that is unique to what perhaps you have ever experienced. Some people have a very harsh experience through that introspective journey, one in which they will often say, I was essentially before the throne of the judgment, throne of God, and was shown all those things that I had contributed by way of the pain inflicted on others. Other people will say that they had just unspected, spectacularly beautiful journey that affirmed for them the love of God, their own specialness and communion with those who had parted before. It's very much individual.
Brian Hubbard
How did you become acquainted with this? Is this something that you tried yourself? Did you hear about it? What was your experience with it?
Michael Bostic
So my first encounter with plant medicine was in 2018, and I encountered it first intellectually through a magazine article about a company called Compass pathways, which in 2018 had discovered that the psilocybin mushroom had a dramatic impact on reducing alcohol consumption. Among those who were essentially struggling with alcoholism, they had conducted a study where 80% of folks who had been alcohol dependent were able to come completely off. I come from a family that has had just generational affliction with its relationship with alcohol. So this just was very captivating to me. A friend of mine had a sister who was an underground practitioner in terms of facilitating psilocybin journeys. And having read that article, I just was curious and I said, you know, I think I'd like to visit with your sister if she would be willing to sit with me so that I can understand what this medicine does. So in 2018, I had my first psilocybin journey. And that was the first of what became around nine, that I took between 2018 and the fall of 2022. Through that process, I very much became a believer that these medicines that occur naturally are divinely engineered and they have been engineered to help us heal the wounds we inflict on ourselves and each other. When I had the opportunity to serve the state of Kentucky as the first chairman of the state's opioid Commission, a job given to me because of a record compiled in state service as a leader of the state's Social Security disability and child support systems, as well as a law enforcement agency called the Office of Medicaid Fraud and Abuse Control, which investigated and prosecuted medical providers for fraud on that system. I had developed a reputation as kind of a no nonsense, get it done, take no prisoners, public servant who could make things run on time.
Brian Hubbard
You don't say. We could tell.
Guest Speaker
You do strike me as a capable individual. I'm not gonna lie.
Michael Bostic
Thank you very much. I was asked if I'd want to do that job, and I said, well, as long as the office is willing to allow me to establish this commission is one that is accessible to the average Kentuckian, that is transparent with how we do our business, and that is account accountable for our results, I'll take this job.
Guest Speaker
Can I ask you a strange question? Are you a big reader?
Michael Bostic
As I have time.
Brian Hubbard
I love to read because he's so elegant.
Guest Speaker
Your vocabulary is so let's. I love reading and your vocabulary is so wide and articulate.
Brian Hubbard
If you look at the text message. When I text you him in your dm, I said, this is one of the most eloquent speakers I've ever heard.
Guest Speaker
Well, I just.
Brian Hubbard
When I knew you were going to.
Lauren Everts
Say, when you hear certain people talk.
Brian Hubbard
I know you can.
Guest Speaker
You can just immediately tell if they are well read.
Brian Hubbard
I know.
Lauren Everts
I mean that as a compliment.
Michael Bostic
Let me just attribute that to accidental osmosis. If I've had any sort of vocabulary expansion, it's just been because it's happened to stick there, not any sort of predetermined plan.
Guest Speaker
Did you grow up reading a specific kind of book or genre or author? Like, is there people that you look back on, you're like, this was really informative of my early years.
Michael Bostic
I'm going to give my age away. You know how when ducklings hatch from their eggs, they implant to that mother or they implant to the first limb they imprint to the first living creature they see and follow it around. So I was culturally imprinted by President Ronald Reagan when I was about five years old. He was my boyhood hero. Whereas other children had pictures of Joe Montana and Michael Jordan hanging up in their rooms. I had pictures of Ronald Reagan.
Brian Hubbard
Michael had Tupac.
Michael Bostic
A great poet in his own right. Without question, sure.
Guest Speaker
Also well read.
Michael Bostic
You know, I hung on every word that the man spoke and that generated just an independent interest in not just politics, but American history. And then I discovered the beautiful mind of Thomas Jefferson. And there are volumes of his writings and his letters. And if your audience wants to just be able to have a sublime intellectual, intellectual experience, just read some of the personal correspondence of President Jefferson. He was just magnificent, even by today's advanced standards, a genius. So that's the.
Guest Speaker
I had to ask, because if you left without me asking, I would be curious for the rest of the day, week and month. I like to hear people's recommendations who I personally deem to have incredible vocabularies and who have very well read minds.
Brian Hubbard
That's why you married me.
Michael Bostic
One other thing I'll add real fast and then I'll hit that. I have to give also credit to some preachers when I was a little child, most of whom who didn't probably even have high school diplomas, but who learned to read out of the King James Bible. Heard a lot of that growing up. But to the story that we're here to tell, when I took the opioid job, I was asked to set some priorities. What is it that we need to achieve? And I said, well, let's recognize a couple of things. And in Kentucky's case, we had settled with a number of manufacturers and distributors of opioids for about $842 million. Now that's a heck of a lot of money. To every person who's listening to this, to every regular working person, 842 million. That's an immense amount of money. But we consider the fact that this is going to be paid out to Kentucky over 15 years and $842 million represents roughly eight and a half months of the gross sales of OxyContin for Purdue Pharma. We are talking about crumbs off the table of gluttons. And we had to make sure that this money that is being applied to a problem of immense dimension was used for its best strategic use. And I said, one of the things we have to look for is Kentucky's Manhattan Project opportunity to pioneer a therapeutic breakthrough for opioid dependent individuals. The treatment options we have are certainly better than nothing. They've saved thousands of lives. But government must always be about the business of trying to diversify, expand and improve upon our society. So if we have something that will get us better results than what we have, I'm gonna let you know about it. And I think that we will need to take a small percentage of this money and see what we can do in terms of pioneering a breakthrough. And I said, I don't know what that is, but I'm going to get to looking for it. I had read an author by the name of Juliana Christina who writes a substack newsletter called the Journey. And she wrote beautifully about the way in which her experience with psilocybin mushrooms helped her resolve issues that had risen in her adolescence around significant anxiety, significant treatment resistant depression, her development of a near fatal eating disorder. And I would add to this, and I do so with all due respect, she talked about the fact that she had been a hardcore atheist for many years. And over the course of her psilocybin mushroom journeys, she resolved her anxiety and depression issues, she overcame her eating disorder, and she resolved her atheism. I reached out to her and I said, I've read your writing for some time. You are beautiful in terms of how you express yourself. What can you tell me about the world of psychedelics and whether there is anything within it that will have an impact on opioid addiction? And on July 29, 2022, we had our conversation and she said, have you ever heard of ibogaine? And I said I had not. That was the first time I heard the word. And that touched off a six month period of intensive due diligence research and critical examination that constituted a second full time job in addition to my official responsibilities. And after looking at it from all dimensions, from the of those whose lives had been saved with it, to the conclusions of the foremost medical and scientific researchers, I concluded that indeed, Abigail represented Kentucky's best Manhattan Project opportunity to pioneer that breakthrough. On May 31st of 2023, myself and then Attorney General Daniel Cameron went out onto the grounds of the state capitol and announced that the commission that I led would explore the possibility of putting $42 million up. That would be matched by a drug developer who would come in the state and develop ibogaine as a breakthrough medication for opioid addiction in the state of Kentucky. Given the state that has been traditionally among the most impoverished in the country, the opportunity to lead the nation in a revolution in addiction treatment.
Guest Speaker
And is that initiative met with resistance federally or from the state level?
Brian Hubbard
Or big pharma?
Guest Speaker
Or big pharma or all of it. What immediate resistance do you have, if any?
Michael Bostic
Well, there were two points of immediate resistance in Kentucky. And it was not from the people, the people of the state. I'd had the opportunity before this announcement in May of 23 to conduct 20 town halls across the state where we went on Tuesday nights at 6pm into various communities. And our purpose there was to say, we're the commission, this is our job. Tell us what it is that we need to do. And when we had turned the floor over to the community, we heard just an unbelievable outpouring of grief over the devastation that they experienced. And that grief was paired with a complete and total lack of faith that we as government had either the integrity or the competence to adequately address the circumstances with which they had lived for almost 30 years. So when we unveiled this project, the people of Kentucky, by what I would estimate to be a 6040 margin, and that was empirically established through a measurement of social media responses to the campaign as it played out, were highly supportive of the development of an additional therapeutic alternative. The immediate vocal opponents were current Kentucky governor Andy Beshear, who is now considered a top tier candidate for president for the Democrats in 28, and the university of Kentucky. Both of them together fought this initiative. Every step of.
Guest Speaker
Why the university?
Michael Bostic
The University of Kentucky. Since the termination of the project, I've had some volunteer helpers do a little bit of following the dollar bills. And the University of Kentucky accepts a substantial number of dollar bills from the companies that create what are called the evidence based best practice treatments, being primarily buprenorphine, which is the generic name of brand name, Suboxone, Sublocade, Subutex.
Guest Speaker
So all the things they give you when you're withdrawing or getting off of.
Michael Bostic
These, these opioids, they are opioids that are used to treat opioid dependency.
Guest Speaker
I think anyone that's listening that's had a family member or friend touched by opioid addiction, like you're familiar with these substances.
Brian Hubbard
Did you just hear what he said? He said they are opioids used to treat opiate addiction.
Guest Speaker
That's correct.
Brian Hubbard
That to me is like we've lost the plot. We're treating opiate addiction with opiates. That doesn't make sense to me.
Michael Bostic
So the theory is, and this is how it was positioned when it was first introduced, the Federal government spent 62 and a half million dollars to create the baseline formulation for buprenorphine. That's its generic name and it is what's called an opioid agonist, an opioid paired with an antagonist naltrexone in one pill. You give this to an individual, whether it is a film or a pill, and sometimes it's an injection. And what it is supposed to do is satiate that desire for the opioid that has been hardwired into the brain while simultaneously creating a blocker effect so that if the person wants a high and they take a bunch of pills that or in addition to the Suboxone, the blocker thwarts their effect and basically keeps the person from getting high while simultaneously being satiated because of that low level, lower level dose of opioids. This was presented initially as the method by which you could bridge someone into complete and total abstinence. And the thought was you give them Suboxone and you bring them down on their dosages until such time as they can be completely without and you have a fully restored abstinent individual. Well, as time has gone on, those therapeutic goalposts have been substantially moved on down the field to where at the point at which I became chairman of the commission, much of what I heard from the ostensible experts was grounded upon the the premise that this is a lifetime medication for this person. This is their new life. You have brought them from the depths of destructive addiction. You have given them a lower level dose of opioid compared to paired with a blocker that will prevent them from engaging in illicit consumption that produces an high while simultaneously allowing them to restore a level of functionality that can give them a chance to have a normal life. And in theory, that's all well and good, but what we know from research literature is that Suboxone programs have about a 25% success rate and that says measured by patient retention. There was a study published in December of 22 which verified that 80% of Suboxone patients stop attending treatment within six months of initiation. There are a lot of theories around that. Some would argue it's access, some would argue it's the burden of trying to obtain access, both financially and logistically. Others would argue that while Suboxone may thwart the onset of withdrawal, it does not satiate the desire that that individual has for all of those experiences that they have while they're high.
Brian Hubbard
We had the founder of Live Momentous on the podcast and he just raved about the benefits of creatine. So I started doing a scoop of that in my aminos and now they have just launched the Women's three. And I think this is really cool because it's designed in partnership with Dr. Stacey Sims. If you've seen her all over Instagram, she fascinating. She really knows her stuff when it comes to supplementation. So basically it's a smart dosing protocol. In the a.m. you get iron and a B complex with vitamin C, and in the PM you get calcium and vitamin D3 with olive oil. AM and PM doses are optimized to boost absorption, which I think is really cool. The momentous standard too is crazy. There's a really high bar for ingredient sourcing and transparency, which is why I wanted to interview the founder. They really focused on three foundational nutrients, iron, calcium, vitamin D3, and they did it in their most bioavailable forms. I find this fascinating too, because it's specifically designed for women. The Women's three gives you exactly what you need, exactly how your body needs it, so you can keep doing what you love for life. If you're ready to cut through the noise and build your routine on real science, check it out. Had to live momentous and use Code Skinny for up to 35 off your first order.
Lauren Everts
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Brian Hubbard
You may you mentioned earlier that you started to do psilocybin because of you wanted to explore it. For alcohol. Did it help with any kind of alcohol addiction? Doing it nine times for you?
Michael Bostic
I've never had any sort of substance use problem.
Brian Hubbard
Okay.
Michael Bostic
I had a childhood between two parents who married young. And by the time I came along, that relationship was coming to an end. And what I can recall from. From earliest memories is a bunch of screaming and cussing and chaos. So while I've not had substance problems, I've probably, for the biggest part of my life, had significant anxiety issues all tied to those early childhood days. And what psilocybin did for me was helped me work through those early childhood years in which the stabilizing hands of God's love for me were my grandfathers. I had two papaws who, who were grade school educated coal miners. And as a frightened little boy, they would come and get me on the weekends and have me spend time with them. And just about every time I'd visit before they'd send me home, they'd have me come sit on their lap and they'd say, papa knows that you're scared. I would see it. You need to know two things. Papa loves you. More importantly, God loves you. And God has a special and unique purpose to achieve with your life. No matter how bad it gets, no matter how frightened you become, don't you ever, ever doubt the reality of God and God's love for you. And I'm here to tell you, too, if I had not had that lesson given to me repeatedly from the time that I could understand language all the way through age 12, I would not be sitting here if I were alive at all. Certainly not in this capacity. Having had the privilege of achieving the things that God has allowed me to do with my life thus far.
Guest Speaker
Did you ever resolve with your parents?
Michael Bostic
Oh, absolutely. They were very young when they were married. And, you know, everybody should receive the grace that comes with some life experience that creates maturation. My dad is one of my very best friends in this life. I very much love and try to look after my mother as best I can. And I thank God for everything that they have each contributed to my life despite those chaotic early years.
Brian Hubbard
I'm too pregnant to hear this story. I'm so sensitive right now. When you took the psilocybin, did it. Did it help you work through the anxiety alone or were you with the facilitator?
Michael Bostic
I was with the facilitator.
Brian Hubbard
You did it every time with a facilitator?
Michael Bostic
Yes, ma' am. My friend set. My friend's sister name is Ashley Hornbuckle. She Sat with me through each journey that I had with her. There's also a gentleman by the name of Anthony Raspberry, who was a friend who has Anthony Raspberry.
Guest Speaker
What a name.
Michael Bostic
And that a great name lives in Louisville, Kentucky. And both of them, at different points in time, sat with me as I had those experiences. You know, I was. I was curious at first and then became committed once I understood what it was doing within me and what I found most sublime.
Guest Speaker
I think this is relevant to talk about given your experience and your knowledge of this space. What things would you caution people against if they're thinking about exploring psilocybin or if they have been exploring psilocybin? And what are things you would maybe push them to, towards or tell them.
Lauren Everts
To maybe stay away from?
Michael Bostic
The first thing that they need to do is make sure that wherever they are seeking psilocybin, that they are seeking it from an individual who is a trusted source, someone who knows what they are doing and someone who has experience under their belt to make sure that the set and setting is appropriate for the journey.
Brian Hubbard
That the individual makes chocolate mushrooms at the rave that you get from a random person isn't the vibe that is correct.
Michael Bostic
You know, there's a. There's with, with this psychedelic renaissance, as it's called. There's a tremendous amount of activity around it and you've got a lot of mixed quality participants around this. So make sure that your facilitator is someone who is credible, someone who is experienced, and someone who has put your welfare above all else. If they're offering you chocolates in a party, that's not exactly the experience that you may want. If you are seeking the therapeutic benefits that come with this. I would also suggest that psilocybin, in particular, all plant medicine, needs to be approached with greatest respect and reverence because these are without question engineered in such a fashion as to work with human physiology to open up windows to experience states of consciousness that enable us to look behind the veil of this side of eternity. And that's not to be taken lightly.
Brian Hubbard
With all the different plant medicines, do you understand all of them because of your experience, or is it just primarily psilocybin? And Abigail, like, do you, do you go through, like the bufo and the ayahuasca?
Michael Bostic
So in terms of my own personal experiences, those are primarily around psilocybin. And then after the Kentucky initiative was announced, I very much had the conviction that if I were going to get out and be an advocate for ibogaine, then I needed to pony Up. Man up. And take the medicine that I was advocating that others have the opportunity to try.
Brian Hubbard
You tried it?
Michael Bostic
Oh, absolutely. I saw that as a fundamental responsibility I had to be responsible.
Guest Speaker
Addiction. He's potentially introducing other people to it.
Brian Hubbard
But if you didn't have an addiction, what did it do for you?
Michael Bostic
Well, keep in mind, as we talked about at the beginning, the Boudis have used this for centuries in their religious and cultural rituals. They have found that it has ceremonial benefit, if nothing else. For me, you know, just as with psilocybin and other plant medicines, you go in and you set your intention within yourself as to what you hope to achieve. And for me, I asked that if it were possible that the cross of anxiety that I had carried for as long as I could remember be taken off of me. And at the time, my wife and I, we went together. My wife had been diagnosed with a significant psychotic mood disorder in 2001, after the birth of her son. It's both of our second marriage. We've known each other for 24 years, and this year we will have been married for nine. After the birth of her son, she had a significant postpartum depression that translated into a psychotic mood disorder. And she was placed on Celexa, which is an ssri, and she had had to take it at that time, roughly every day for 22 years. I couldn't be in the room with her. If she missed it for a day. I could see it in her eyes. I could see it in her facial expressions. And she would become a danger to herself as we. Well, as me.
Brian Hubbard
Why could you not be in a room with her? Like, what do you mean? Because she was so unbearable, Volatile.
Michael Bostic
Volatile and potentially violent. I could say that was a. The postpartum depression translated into a psychotic mood disorder that was somewhere on the bipolar spectrum. I remember sitting down with her and her psychiatrist when she had to have her medication adjusted sometime around 2017 to understand what was going on with her. So as we conducted public hearings in Kentucky around the Ibogaine project, I had made the commitment internally that I was going to receive the medicine so that I could speak to it with credibility. She had heard the Testimonials of about 24 individuals who came to Kentucky. A lot of them were veterans who had gone to the VA for treatment of either physical or psychological. Psychological problems have been given the usual panoply of medications that the pharmaceutical industry produce, all of which in some total, essentially serve to anesthetize the soul and slowly euthanize the body. And as a lot of these veterans are ready to take their own lives. They threw a Hail Mary pass, went down to Mexico for an ibogaine treatment. Many of them with an average number of prescribed medications of seven, taking pills that are 20 plus every day. And when they were done, they didn't need to take any pills anymore. And these gentlemen and some ladies were completely and fully restored from the perspective of the damage done to their minds and bodies from the traumas of war. My wife heard these testimonials and said, I wonder if I did this as well, if I could come off of Solexa. So we both went down and what I can tell you is for me and I have had to ibogaine experiences. Mom was in November of 23 at a place called Ambo that is south of Tijuana. There is another clinic that is in Cancun called Beyond B E O N D. These are two clinics that are able to treat people at relative scale compared to others. They have impeccable safety and efficacy records. And because they are the two clinics that are the most known and most voluminous in terms of patient capacity, I wanted to be able to speak to the safety and efficacy of both. After the first ibogaine experience, I would have to say that at that point in time that was. It was the most profound spiritual experience I had ever had in my life. I can't say that it was beautiful, I can't say that it was pretty or comforting at the time that it was being experienced, but it was profound. My wife's experience was profound and beautiful and I am so thrilled to be able to say that. Her last Alexa was taken on November 23rd of 2023 and she has not had to have one since.
Brian Hubbard
And have you been able to be in a room with her every single day unless. Unless she's on her period.
Michael Bostic
Her personal personality and spiritual metamorphosis over the past coming up on two years now has been incredible. She is very much a left brain rationalist. When we were going down she said, you're going to be the one who has all the visions and I'm not going to see anything. Well, it was almost the exact opposite. There was not much that I saw but for her I could not have sat down with all the vocabulary that you perceive that I have.
Lauren Everts
It's not perception, you have it and.
Michael Bostic
Have have written a journey for her that would even came close to what she actually had.
Brian Hubbard
Can you walk someone through maybe a couple of moments that has no idea what you mean by a profound journey? Meaning like say Someone's like, what does he mean by that? Did you see things? Are you thinking of your childhood? What do you mean?
Michael Bostic
So for me, at the beginning of the journey, there were two significant points of acute anxiety that were occurring at the time. One was, I have too much younger sisters. We share our mother. They have a different father. Their father died in a tragic circumstance in on the Friday after Thanksgiving, which was the Friday before we were to go for ibogaine treatment. On Sunday I made it to the hospital 10 months, 10 minutes after he had passed away. And I sat there with my mother and my sisters while they took it all in for about two and a half hours with him on his deathbed. The other significant point of anxiety related to the fate of the Kentucky ibogaine project. The Attorney General for whom I worked had rotated out of office. A new guy was elected and while he said he was open minded to allowing the project to proceed, he had not committed. I had poured everything that I was into trying to make this happen. And when I went down, I probably hadn't had more than about four hours sleep in at least a year because of how much just.
Lauren Everts
You mean per night?
Guest Speaker
Obviously per night you couldn't sleep more than four hours a night.
Michael Bostic
That is correct. Literally this was, this was an extremely high risk project. It had a tremendous upside. But navigating the shoals of circumstances at home and within the office to make this a reality was extremely challenging.
Lauren Everts
So could you just not fall asleep.
Guest Speaker
Or you would fall asleep and then.
Lauren Everts
Just wake up all night or.
Michael Bostic
There's a combination of both. I mean, there were some nights that I would lay there tossing and turning, wondering how am I going to pull this off? Are we going to pull this off? There were other times I could get to sleep, but I'd wake up at four in the morning and there was no going back because my mind was just turning a thousand miles an hour, most of it driven by anxiety. So when I had my journey with ibogaine, you know, the very first thing that happens is you feels this heaviness and you got to lay down. And for me I had these little small little visions that were kind of sci fi in nature. At the very beginning there was like a little, I would close my eyes, nervous little pink flying saucer that came to the end of my nose and flew away. And there was this four cornered canopy that looked like the starry sky that came over me. And now at any time, if I didn't want to see any of this, only thing I had to do was take My eye mask off and open my eyes. But I wanted to have the experience. So I was laying there and this four corner canopy came over and. And it looked like there were these two hummingbirds that came underneath the canopy and they took their beaks and it looked like they were vacuuming. And I was watching and it was like someone unplugged a tv. It just went away. And in place of the starry canopy and those hummingbirds and what was a fade in was my sister's father on his deathbed. As I saw him with his eyes and mouth open and he was in full color detail, just looking at me. And I thought about him. I thought about his life, the difficulties he had had, the tragedy in which it had ended, and wondered, is this all that there is? Are we born into this world to live, to suffer and then to die and this be the end? Is this really all that there is? And I just started looking at him, thinking about myself, thinking about others. And I started to experience the most intense and profound existential terror that I had ever felt in my life. All driven by what I thought was the pointlessness of human existence. And when I felt that I was going to explode in the middle of this journey from that terror, I was dropped into a pitch black void. I could see nothing around me except my own hands and feet and limbs. There was nothing. And in words that were not audible but were telepathic, these came into my mind and they played on a continual loop for 10 hours. And as long as those words were in my head, I was a complete and total peace. And those words were, be still and know that I am God. Over and over and over in pitch black, total darkness. Me in total isolation and at total peace. And when I woke up, it was to my wife, who had undergone an almost transfiguration of just her face. I could see how rejoicing she was at what she had had by way of her own experience on the other side of the room while I was having mine. And I looked at her instantly and I said, it gave you what you needed in it. And she said, she tears stream down her face. She said, it's the most beautiful thing I've ever experienced in my life. Now I would not even attempt to tell her story. It was very visual. She re experienced the birth of her son. She experienced an encounter with her mother, who was her very best friend in life, who at that time had been passed away for right about, I think her mother passed away in 2011. This was 2013. Her mother had been gone for 12 years. And she had a perspective on who she was, what her relationship to her son and her family had been, what her relationship to the world was, and what her relationship to God was.
Brian Hubbard
So you had already been a proponent of this and you were already pushing it, and then to be able to do it and to see the transformation of your wife even like, led you further into it?
Michael Bostic
Oh, yes, ma' am. And I want to be real clear, you know, the, the pharmaceutical industry likes to do things like buy institutions like the University of Kentucky, take their academic research and translate it into inflexible public policy where there's this one size fits all matriculation through their pharmaceutical systems. I'm not here to suggest that ibogaine is for everyone. I'm not here to suggest that everybody needs to do it. What I am here to say is because of what it can do for the physiology of the brain, because of what it can do to resolve addiction issues, to address trauma issues, it should be available as a therapeutic option for anyone who would choose to have the experience that it offers. And from my perspective, given what it has done for my wife and certainly given what it has done for me and others who I've had the privilege of listening to you, the fact that it is criminal is criminal. And the sooner that we can change that reality, the better off we are all going to be, not just as individuals, but as a species.
Brian Hubbard
Well, to me it seems like all of these antidepressants and anti anxieties and barbiturates are legal.
Michael Bostic
Yes.
Brian Hubbard
And why can't we have this be legal as well? Because.
Guest Speaker
Well, they're legal, but they're also abused illegally all the time.
Michael Bostic
Sure.
Guest Speaker
These barbiturates and all these, all these things, right. Like these are medicines that people abuse regularly and in some cases take. May have way more of what's actually prescribed once they get hooked on them.
Michael Bostic
That is correct. And you know, you, you mentioned abuse. I can't tell you the number of stories that I heard just from my vantage point on the opioid commission. If people who went to the hospital with legitimate medical needs, who were given pharmacology that by design created physiological dependence, they are made to generate dependency by the individual.
Guest Speaker
I know one of the most successful businessmen I know, he doesn't ever drink alcohol, doesn't have any substance abuse issues. He had double knee surgery. They put him on some of these things. He had to check himself into a recovery center to get off. And he's somebody who's never partaken in any Kind of substance abuse of any kind. And he himself is, I would say.
Lauren Everts
One of the most capable people I've ever met.
Guest Speaker
And personally could not get off of these things without an intervention of help that he was, you know, fortunate enough to, like, seek that help for himself. But like, that just shows you how power. Like, you would never think that this person I'm talking about would ever have any issue. But it was this one surgery and then, boom, done.
Michael Bostic
OxyContin Mountain was engineered with knowledge of its addiction propensity. They knew it.
Brian Hubbard
You know, I have a close family member that committed suicide. And I sit here and listen to you.
Michael Bostic
Sorry.
Brian Hubbard
Thank you. I sit here and listen to you and think she. She was addicted to barbiturates and they kept prescribing barbiturates to solve the problem. But I sit here and I'm like, God, what if she had this option?
Michael Bostic
I think about my own family and my uncles, great uncles, a great grandfather I never met, all of whom were hardcore alcoholics. The damage that was done to their children, the damage that was done to their spouses, the suffering that I got to see the effects of firsthand. How dramatically different would all of that have been had this been an available option way back when? What a fabulous opportunity to break generationally compound and trauma when you just bring something different to the table that allows a person to feel the reality of their soul instead of reinforces its sense of absence.
Guest Speaker
Yeah, there's likely there's not one. I can't imagine there's one person listening or watching this show that has not had someone in their life that is close or one degree removed from closeness in their life, that has been affected by some of the things we're talking about here and think about the impact of you just as this one unlock that could help these people get through some of these substance issues, it would change the world. Not only, you know, not only from.
Lauren Everts
A health perspective and a mental health.
Guest Speaker
And a generational trauma, but from a cost perspective too.
Michael Bostic
I think that probably half of folks who are baby boomers and most of folks who are their children and grandchildren look at where we are at as a society and recognize that we have come off the foundation, that we are in late stage civilizational development. And unless we remore ourselves to some semblance of a spiritual foundation in which we are able to recognize the precious gift that is life, that we are bound for destruction as a country, and we've got to start throwing some Hail Mary passes if we are going to essentially reestablish the primacy of the human soul. And that is exactly what should deserve first consideration in all the powers and principalities that exercise influence over this country's future.
Guest Speaker
So what is going on now in the space for people that are listening and they're just getting turned on to this idea and they're saying, okay, what are the options? What does the legislation look like? What you know, what does the government need to do? What do the people need to do? Like where with your work?
Lauren Everts
Where are you at with all of this? Getting people switched on to the possibility.
Guest Speaker
Of looking at this alternative.
Michael Bostic
One of the things that I think is important to recognize is that necessary change often comes slow, but it can come through an evolutionary process. And once you get that process to take hold, the pace at which it can accelerate can become exponential. There is a fabulous opportunity to medicalize the delivery of a breakthrough therapeutic, such in this case ibogaine in the US medical system. And that effort currently is being led by the state of Texas, where we are coming to the end of what has been an intensive six month campaign through the state's legislature to advocate for the passage of a bill that would create a public private partnership whereby the state of Texas would put up $50 million to be matched by $50 million by a drug developer to get ibogaine through the FDA. Essentially, we are at the threshold of Texas finishing the job that I began in Kentucky. And if we are successful here, then we will have established a beachhead within the most influential state in the country to create a medical framework through the delivery of plant medicines that can generate breakthrough therapeutic effects for trauma and addiction. That begins with ibogaine because it has the very unique ability that no other plant medicine has to resolve physiological substance dependence while also creating neurotrophic growth factors within the brain that restore brain tissue itself. Something that no medication within western medicine, or any other substance for that matter that's known can do do.
Brian Hubbard
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E
Addie or Flabanserin is for pre menopausal women with Acquired Generalized Hypoactive Sexual Desire Disorder HSDD who have not had problems with low sexual desire in the past who have had low sexual desire. No matter the type of sexual activity, the situation or the sexual partner, this low sexual desire is troubling to them and is not due to a medical or mental health problem, problems in the relationship or medicine or other drug use. Addie is not for use in children, men or to enhance sexual performance. Your risk of severe low blood pressure and fainting is increased if you drink one to two standard alcoholic drinks close in time to your Addie dose. Wait at least two hours after drinking before taking Addi at bedtime. This risk increases if you take certain prescriptions, OTC or herbal medications, or have liver problems and can happen when you take Addi without alcohol or other medicines. Do not take if you are allergic to any of Addi's ingredients. Allergic reaction may include hives, itching or trouble breathing. Sometimes serious sleepiness can occur. Common side effects include dizziness, nausea, tiredness, difficulty falling asleep or staying asleep and dry mouth. See full PI and medication guide including boxed morning@ addy.com PI addy.
Brian Hubbard
That'S a d d y I.com.
Lauren Everts
I'm personally someone that tries to stay up on the news as much as I can in a productive way. Try to read what's going on in the world and one thing that I read the other day, which this audience is well aware of and which Lauren and I talk about regularly on the show, is that inflammation is wreaking havoc on people's long term health. The older you get and the more inflamed you are, the more health complications you're going to have. This is why I'm so excited to share with you guys an incredible scientific breakthrough to support our long term health and wellness which is brought to you by by fatty15. The founders of fatty15 discovered C15 which is the first essential fatty acid to be discovered in 90 years. And get this. Studies have confirmed that it's three times better, broader and safer than omega3s. Dr. Stephanie Van Watson discovered C15 while working with the US Navy to continually improve the health and welfare of aging dolphins. We did an entire episode with Dr. Stephanie Van Watson on this. It's a wild story, but I highly suggest you listen to it because it talks all about inflammation and how we can live longer and feel better and age more gracefully. If you want to get sciency about it, Studies show that C15 works by strengthening our cells, improving our mitochondrial function and protecting us against damaging free radicals. The result? Better long term metabolic liver and heart health. It ends up that many of us are deficient in C15, which results in weaker cells that make less energy and quit working earlier than they should. All of that makes us age faster or sleep poorly, feel sluggish if this sounds familiar, it's likely because you need some more C15.
Guest Speaker
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Lauren Everts
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Brian Hubbard
Skinny at checkout all right, I am craving Spritz Society, specifically the Pink Lemonade flavor. I had the opportunity of doing a Skinny Confidential flavor with Spritz Society. You may have heard of them. It's an award winning canned cocktail brand founded by my girlies Claudia and Jackie from the Toast podcast. So why I wanted to do a collab with this brand specifically is of course I love Claudia and Jackie. But also it's made with real white wine, real cane sugar and six ingredients or less. So there's no artificial flavors, there's no fake sugars. It's just clean, simple, delicious cocktails. No BS. You should also know that each can only has 120 calories. How I like to drink this is I'll do a wine glass with a bunch of crushed ice in it. I'll pour the pink lemonade on top. It's so refreshing. I can't wait. Like I said, I'm getting there to have one guys. And then I'll do a sprig of basil on top with with a straw and it's so delicious. It's the perfect summer cocktail. If pink lemonade is not your jam, they have lemon iced tea by Craig Conover from Southern Charm. They also have a pickle flavor and a peach flavor. They've really like nailed the flavors and that shouldn't surprise you because they're the toast. On that note, you guys can head to spritzsociety.com to find a store near you. And don't forget to follow Spritz on Instagram. They're always dropping exciting new flavors and throwing fun of it. Spritz Society Summer starts here. This episode is brought to you by Woo. More Play Let me tell you about the best vibrator ever. I am telling you this vibrator. I have like 10. I have them all over the place. It's so good. It is the best. They just launched their mushroom vibrator so it's shaped like a mushroom. It's beginner friendly. It's a quick easy O let me tell you. And it's cute enough to leave on your nightstand so it doesn't look crazy. It's also BPA free which is awesome. It's waterproof and rechargeable. You're going to want to buy this for every single one of your friends. They will thank you later. This is the best self care. I'm telling you. You can use it with your favorite Woolube. I love their coconut oil based lube. Just pick up the vibrator. Thank me later. Get your mushroom vibes on@woomoreplay.com that's woomoreplay.com.
Guest Speaker
One other question because I I'm learning about this now and I want to understand. You started this journey in Kentucky?
Michael Bostic
Yes sir.
Guest Speaker
The university seems to be a hindrance and the governor over there, who again I'm not mentioning any political biases, but is running as a is a Democrat candidate.
Michael Bostic
I do. There is one thing that needs to be mentioned about him. I've already mentioned that the University of Kentucky as a substantial is a recipient of substantial research dollars from the pharmaceutical industry whose products they hawk. Andy Beshear and his father were partners in a law firm in Kentucky that represented Purdue Pharma against the people of Kentucky and the state's litigation over the thousands of deaths.
Guest Speaker
This is why people get so frustrated because again, I don't want to make this political, but it seems there's a real conflict of interest there, right?
Michael Bostic
Well, it is political, but of course it's political in this sense. The opposition that I experienced in Kentucky was bipartisan because how Andy Beshear was a vocal opponent and is a Democrat. The newly elected Kentucky Attorney General who terminated this project is a Republican and he came up through the Mitch McConnell machine in the state of Kentucky. And everyone who probably listens to you knows exactly who Mitch McConnell is and what he has represented now for 30 plus years. This guy helped shine his shoes and that's how he got to be where he is. There is an alignment of individuals who are both Republican and Democrat, but who both share a humanitarian realization that this society is teetering toward dissolution and we can look at that through any number of measures. We can look at that through the lens of what we see on social media and cable television news, where it is constant division, constant acrimony, constant rage, constant hate. We can look at it statistically and we can see that since 2015, almost 1.5 million Americans have died from the combination of drug overdose, alcohol related disease and suicide. And that's a number that exceeds all combat deaths of U.S. soldiers across all military conflicts fought in the history of this country. We have a society that is immensely wealthy, that has tremendous technological prowess, but that is in the throes of profound spiritual affliction. And unless we start getting to the heart of the problem, which is the condition of the human soul or the lack of connectedness to that soul by at least 50% of folks who have never had the opportunity to feel its reality, we are going to be stuck in a repetitious doom loop from which there is no escape shape.
Brian Hubbard
I also think, and this is maybe weird, but I think that if you could help solve that, it would change the frequency of the planet of America, the energy, the spirituality would like, it would like, raise the vibration.
Michael Bostic
When we see each other as images of an eternal creator whose essence is almighty and unconditional love, and recognized that that is our universal kinship as human beings, it brings an entirely different perspective to how we deal with one another. And one of the greatest attributes of plant medicines is its ability to affirm that concrete reality.
Brian Hubbard
One of our best conversations, hate to break it to you, has been on plant medicine.
Michael Bostic
Like.
Brian Hubbard
Does something to connect you with your significant other. It. I think it removes ego, right? Maybe.
Michael Bostic
It certainly gives you a perspective on your own temporal existence, how that is measured by eternity and ironically, how significant you are within that eternity.
Brian Hubbard
Brian, what is the pushback that you're getting?
Michael Bostic
Well, I think that there is some. That is good faith. You know, there are a lot of people who have reactionary, negative attitudes towards psychedelics, frankly, because of the way in which they were used in association with what's perceived as the cultural debauchery of the late 60s.
Brian Hubbard
Right. So it's like it was like it was overused. So then people have an opinion because it was overused. They don't understand or abused in a.
Guest Speaker
Way that was not the intention, was not as a medical intervention. It was more of like a release.
Lauren Everts
From or too much of a good escapism.
Michael Bostic
It was escapism, escapism instead of therapeutic restoration or medical treatment. You know, you have people who've been shown images for 60 years now, people taking mushrooms and rolling around the mud in Woodstock. Well, if that's what you think it does, you're not going to have a high opinion of it, but it's, it should not have its power reduced to that one singular snapshot within the arcana of American pop culture memory because its history is that of thousands of, of years. We just so happen to be at a point in our history where our materialist worldview needs a little supplementation with what has been known by less materialist civilizations about the spiritual realities of life. We need some of that here in the United States.
Brian Hubbard
When you went on Rogan, I'm sure that was crazy. What was the feedback that you got from, from the being on the show?
Michael Bostic
Well, I have to first thank a couple of folks for having had the opportunity to be there. One is a guy by the name of Rex Elsass, who is the founder of the foundation with which I work, which is called the Reed foundation, named after his son Reed, who passed away from a fentanyl overdose after a decade long struggle with opioid addiction. In 2019 when the Kentucky project was terminated, he said, if I can open doors for you in other states, would you be willing to work with my foundation to try to preserve the work you've done? And I said, this has become the mission of my life. I'll go anywhere, I'll talk to anybody, no matter how large or small, to try to give this a chance to live. So he kept this thing on life support. And then through just the blessing of the divine hand, I got to meet former Texas governor Rick Perry. First time in December of no, in June of 23 in Denver, Colorado. He was a supporter of the Kentucky project after it was terminated. He expressed his great consternation and regret and we stayed in touch. Some stakeholders reached out to me in the state of Texas and September of 24 and said, hey, Texas previously funded a psilocybin project at Baylor medical school with $2 million in its 2022 session. We've got a $20 billion surplus. What do you think our next frontier should be?
Guest Speaker
What happens when you have an efficiently run state?
Michael Bostic
Yeah, that's exactly right. I said, well, I think I might have an idea for you. I think Texas needs to finish the job that was begun in Kentucky. So I reached out to Governor Perry and he said, you know, I've kind of stayed out of sight and out of the way, but if you think you're going to come down here and try and do this, count me in. And I said, all right. So. So he and I partnered up, and he has a friend who happens to be a friend of Mr. Rogan's. And it was through Governor Perry that we had the opportunity to go on there. It was a fabulous time. And the only way that I can judge feedback is within the course of the interview. He really didn't say much, and I was afraid that I was bored him to death. And when it was over and the cameras were off and the max were turned down, he said, gentlemen, gentlemen. That was amazing. Thank you so much for coming in and having this discussion with me. So I took him at face value that he found the content to be satisfactory. I've never been on social media, and what I have, I have some very benevolent volunteers who are willing to help me overcome my total technological ineptitude to make sure that it runs right. They would occasionally send me screenshots of some of the comments, comments that were made. And the only thing that I can say to those who were so kind and generous is thank you for all the kindnesses that you offered for me and what you heard me say, and I'll do my best to not disappoint you with who I know I can be at times.
Brian Hubbard
I was served the clips of you talking, and I didn't know whose podcast it was. I just saw the clips and I was like, holy, this guy is eloquent. I was like, this guy is so well spoken. And I sent it to you via DM and text, and I was like, this guy knows how to be on a mic. I was like, this is amazing. And I sent it to my friend Weston and everyone. And then at the end, Rogan came in and I saw that it was him. I could see why he would be quiet because he was letting you have the stage.
Guest Speaker
Well, I mean, normally we're very chatty ourselves, but I think that as our viewers and listeners know, and, you know, they're probably excited that I didn't interrupt as much as I usually do. But I think the message that you are providing to people is an important message and an awareness on something that we as a population should be paying way more attention to, because it is clear that we are facing a real issue, not only in this country, but in the world with these substances. And so many people suffer from it. And I kept saying during this episode, we all know people that are touched by. By these afflictions, and many times they don't know what to do or where to turn to. And it feels like this downward spiral. Families are affected Friends are affected, the economy is affected, people are dying to degrees that you've mentioned. And I think if you have a platform of this size that could be used for good to get this message out there, like it's.
Lauren Everts
It's an important thing to do just.
Guest Speaker
To provide the general awareness so that when you. Who are leading these conversations and having these discussions with people in power, they. Those people can also kind of feel the pressure that it's not just coming from one guy.
Lauren Everts
There's a lot of people that want.
Guest Speaker
This issue to either be helped or resolved or the options to be provided so that we have alternatives to something that's clearly not leading us down the right path.
Michael Bostic
When you kind of hit the two pronged approach, you want to first illuminate and then motivate the masses. Because there's two ways, three ways that you win political conflicts in this or any other society. One is you have a ton of money. The other is you have a ton of people. And people will always beat the money when they are properly educated and motivated to pursue a unified goal. And then the other is when you combine people and the money. And that is one that is unbeatable by any measure.
Guest Speaker
Thank God. I thought you were gonna ask me to get my checkbook out.
Michael Bostic
No, your platform and the ability to illuminate is a fabulous avenue through which you build mass movement, motivation.
Brian Hubbard
Brian, before you go, what gives you hope in all of this?
Michael Bostic
Well, what gives me hope is what I perceive to be the wisdom of the masses based on my individual experiences. Now, haven't had these discussions with thousands of thousands of people in group settings and individually. What is clear is that there is starvation for significance in American society. Just as I had that terror experience in that first time began journey where I questioned the very existential point of life. That is where we are collectively. I think we've got a lot of people looking around, looking in the mirror, looking outside their window, saying what? What's the point about this? Why am I here? Am I significant in any way? Is there any point to all of this? And the answer to that question is yes. It is my humble belief that at the heart of addiction and trauma is profound spiritual affliction. Plant medicine is not a cure for anything. What it is, is the very best beginning that you can give an individual who seeks a new perspective on life in which they can be affirmed in their human divinity. And when you know that this life is preparatory for the next, it gives you a whole different perspective with which to engage this side of eternity.
Brian Hubbard
This is not just about addiction. It's an awakening. I think it's amazing. Where can everyone find you? You support what you're doing. Talk to your social media team because you're not on social media. Where can they come say hi?
Michael Bostic
Well, I have an account on X and that is at W Brian Hubbard and I think there's a little W underscore Brian Underscore Hubbard.
Guest Speaker
We're going to find it and link it in the show notes.
Michael Bostic
Thank you very much. There's X account, there's Instagram account. There's a website that's just my name w brianhubbord.com so anybody who wants to send an email or get on social media, I'd love to hear about you and from you.
Brian Hubbard
Come back anytime.
Guest Speaker
Thank you for doing the show, for your hospitality, really admire and respect what you're doing and wish you best of luck. If we can ever be helpful in anything, please reach out.
Michael Bostic
Let's go Texas. We down to the last day in the legislative session and hopefully we can have a postscript on whether we met the mark or not down here when we're done.
Brian Hubbard
Great accent too. I love it.
Michael Bostic
Thank you so much for your hospitality to me.
The Skinny Confidential Him & Her Podcast: W. Bryan Hubbard On The Future of Addiction Recovery, Rewiring the Brain, Trauma, & The Power Of Plant Medicine
Release Date: June 19, 2025
In this compelling episode of The Skinny Confidential Him & Her Podcast, hosts Lauren Everts and Michael Bostic engage in a profound conversation with W. Bryan Hubbard, a dedicated lawyer and reformer deeply entrenched in tackling America's opioid crisis. Hubbard emerges as a pivotal voice advocating for revolutionary approaches to addiction recovery, particularly through the use of ibogaine, a potent plant-based psychoactive compound.
Notable Quote:
"When we look at the number of lives lost to addiction, it's clear that our current methods are failing us. We need something transformative." – W. Bryan Hubbard [00:30]
Hubbard delves into the intricacies of ibogaine, elucidating its origins and its remarkable efficacy in addressing various forms of substance dependency. Derived from African botanicals, ibogaine stands out as a unique psychedelic with unparalleled potential in interrupting addiction cycles.
Key Points:
Notable Quote:
"Ibogaine is not just another psychedelic; it's a revolutionary tool in the fight against addiction." – Michael Bostic [02:27]
Hubbard shares his personal and professional journey, highlighting his tenure as the chairman of Kentucky's opioid commission. Driven by firsthand observations of the opioid epidemic's devastating impact, he spearheaded initiatives to explore alternative treatments like ibogaine.
Key Points:
Notable Quote:
"We have an opportunity to lead a national movement in addiction treatment. Texas stepping up with $50 million is a game-changer." – Michael Bostic [17:00]
The conversation takes a personal turn as Hubbard discusses his and his wife's experiences with ibogaine. These firsthand accounts underscore the transformative potential of the compound beyond just addiction recovery.
Key Points:
Notable Quote:
"For me, ibogaine was a journey from existential terror to absolute peace, something I had never experienced before." – Michael Bostic [40:07]
Hubbard candidly addresses the obstacles faced in promoting ibogaine as a legitimate treatment option. Resistance primarily stems from established institutions with vested interests in conventional pharmaceutical solutions.
Key Points:
Notable Quote:
"Treating opioid addiction with opioids doesn't make sense. It's a cycle designed to keep people dependent." – Brian Hubbard [21:29]
Looking ahead, Hubbard and Bostic discuss their strategic efforts to establish ibogaine within the U.S. medical framework, leveraging Texas' substantial investment to set a precedent for national acceptance.
Key Points:
Notable Quote:
"If we combine public support with strategic investment, we can transform addiction treatment and heal our society." – Michael Bostic [51:35]
The episode concludes on an optimistic note, with Hubbard expressing unwavering hope that plant medicines like ibogaine can address the deep-seated spiritual and psychological afflictions underpinning addiction and trauma. He envisions a future where such treatments are accessible, destigmatized, and integral to holistic healing.
Key Points:
Notable Quote:
"Plant medicine is not a cure for anything. It is the very best beginning you can give someone seeking a new perspective on life." – Michael Bostic [72:10]
This episode of The Skinny Confidential Him & Her Podcast serves as a crucial exploration into alternative addiction treatments, spotlighting ibogaine's potential to revolutionize recovery paradigms. Through heartfelt narratives and informed discussions, Hubbard and Bostic underscore the urgency of embracing transformative solutions to combat the pervasive opioid crisis.
For those seeking to understand the future of addiction recovery and the profound impact of plant medicine, this episode offers invaluable insights and actionable perspectives.
Connect with W. Bryan Hubbard:
Resources Mentioned: