Your guest has verbalized the absolute best description of our current mental health situation/system. And we have been so mislead by big pharma on the wonder drug one pill depression eliminator SSRI's. I have slowly left those and can report with a little effort; life is now much better. I stepped into a moral real me with help from a psychedelic recently, and Double Blind and Shelly accompanied me. They provided the knowledge, support to make everything okay (we all need that).
I read a lot of Oliver Sacks, even beyond Awakenings. He really had a way of writing about the human aspect of his experiences with incredible empathy. He was a great man.
like most things, ego and greed will F it up but a little good will come out of it, for those who see through the BS, not enough folks will ✌️💚. Shelly and Double-blind are doing it right ❣️
DB Guys, Women: (this may be later edited) Great job, keep them comin' plz, - Shelby, - Love your work, keep at it. IE Why do You struggle with Happiness?, inner critic? from what? why? and what do psychedelics do for/to You? Others/Anyone?Everyone?, Doctors?, - the 'Human perspective", 'personal use, feelings, why?" that's what I would like to know // - Anything beneficial doesn't need hype ; it speaks for its self,
At 8:25 Shelby starts talking about a woman that "we had on a few episodes ago". What episodes are we referring to, considering this is just episode 2 of this podcast?? I would love to know where to find that interview that was mentioned. Sounds interesting.
psychedelics aren't supposed to be fun or positive, but they can be. if you have a negative experience, you take it on the chin and get your ass back up and hopefully you learn something from it! respect the medicine and others and it will be ok. you have to be willing to change when you consume psychedelics, because you are going to change, like it or not, that is a fact !
Extra description info from Spotify. Not sure if topics are in order. No timestamps. What We Cover (Expanded) 1. Shayla Love's Background in Health Journalism: We explore her transition from local news to a focus on neuroscience, psychology, and mental health influenced by personal experiences. 2. The State of Psychedelic Journalism: We discuss the decline of psychedelic-focused media with the closure of prominent platforms like Vice, and the unique position of DoubleBlind. 3. Ethical Concerns in Psychedelic Patents: We analyze how patents could restrict therapeutic innovations and the ethical implications within the burgeoning psychedelic industry. 4. Psychedelic Research and Mainstream Acceptance: The growth of psychedelic journalism as scientific research on these substances gains more mainstream media attention. 5. Personal Experiences with Psychedelics: Shayla's personal neutrality towards psychedelics, which she believes helps her maintain an unbiased perspective in her journalism. 6. The Challenge of Accessibility in Psychedelic Therapy: Concerns about the commercialization of psychedelic therapies and how it could limit access to those who might benefit from them. 7. Psychedelics and Mental Health: A deep dive into the potential and limitations of psychedelics as a treatment for mental health issues, including depression and PTSD. 8. Legal and Societal Implications of Decriminalization: The outcomes of psychedelic decriminalization in Oregon and Colorado, focusing on public health issues and drug policy. 9. Public Perception and Media Responsibility: The role of the media in shaping public perception of psychedelics and the responsibility to provide nuanced, accurate reporting. 10. Future of Psychedelic Therapy and Regulation: Discussion on the future implications of FDA approvals, the role of psychotherapy in treatment, and the ongoing evolution of regulations in the psychedelic space. Shayla Love is a freelance science journalist based in Brooklyn, and a staff reporter for The Guardian and Psyche. She started writing about psychedelics as a senior staff writer at VICE News, and has extensively covered psychedelic research, culture, ethics, and business. Her work has also appeared in The New Yorker, The New York Times, WIRED, Scientific American, The Washington Post, STAT, The Atlantic, Undark, Harper’s, and more. She has a Master’s Degree from Columbia University in science, environment, and medicine journalism, and has received a number of awards and fellowships, including The Ferriss - UC Berkeley Psychedelic Journalism Fellowship.
I don’t know how you can claim that your info isn’t behind a paywall. Some of your “info” is literally only available thru classes. That you have to PAY for. That is a PAYWALL. and the most ironic part is that all of those “courses” are info that you can actually find for free from other creators who aren’t trying to make any type of profit.
This specific issue is much larger than we are acknowledging.
And a little more complicated
Your guest has verbalized the absolute best description of our current mental health situation/system. And we have been so mislead by big pharma on the wonder drug one pill depression eliminator SSRI's. I have slowly left those and can report with a little effort; life is now much better. I stepped into a moral real me with help from a psychedelic recently, and Double Blind and Shelly accompanied me. They provided the knowledge, support to make everything okay (we all need that).
patenting things one can grow or simply make themselves or with friend is absolutely ridiculous! human greed breaks beautiful things.
I just love podcasts, this is such a gift. I hope get a gazillion subs and make millions 🙏🙏🙏
this is informative and insightful, reminds me of the cusp of what was done with cannabis
The podcasts are ace, look forward to the next ones :) thank you!
I read a lot of Oliver Sacks, even beyond Awakenings. He really had a way of writing about the human aspect of his experiences with incredible empathy. He was a great man.
like most things, ego and greed will F it up but a little good will come out of it, for those who see through the BS, not enough folks will ✌️💚. Shelly and Double-blind are doing it right ❣️
thanks for the love!
Shelby's ebullience is inspirational. Great interview!
Well used somewhat rare word: ebulliant!
Oh cool. There's meditation too. I didn't know Doubleblind was one of the only publications of it's type.
❤we try to stay true to ourselves!
Love this channel❤
Necesitamos subtitulos y traducción el video no tiene subtitulos automáticos
Apologies! They are one now
@@DoubleBlind excelente muchísimas gracias.
DB Guys, Women: (this may be later edited) Great job, keep them comin' plz,
- Shelby, - Love your work, keep at it. IE Why do You struggle with Happiness?, inner critic? from what?
why? and what do psychedelics do for/to You? Others/Anyone?Everyone?, Doctors?,
- the 'Human perspective", 'personal use, feelings, why?" that's what I would like to know //
- Anything beneficial doesn't need hype ; it speaks for its self,
At 8:25 Shelby starts talking about a woman that "we had on a few episodes ago". What episodes are we referring to, considering this is just episode 2 of this podcast?? I would love to know where to find that interview that was mentioned. Sounds interesting.
Sorry about that! Our publishing order got updated so Shelby was referring to a previous interview which will be coming soon.
You guys should get Shane Norte in there on Spiritual Mycology and Spirit 🎉
Shane is great! We had a whole feature on him in the sixth issue of our print magazine and also published it online: doubleblindmag.com/shane-norte/
psychedelics aren't supposed to be fun or positive, but they can be.
if you have a negative experience, you take it on the chin and get your ass back up and hopefully you learn something from it! respect the medicine and others and it will be ok.
you have to be willing to change when you consume psychedelics, because you are going to change, like it or not, that is a fact !
Timestamps please? This is an hour and 15 😂
Extra description info from Spotify. Not sure if topics are in order. No timestamps.
What We Cover (Expanded)
1.
Shayla Love's Background in Health Journalism: We explore her transition from local news to a focus on neuroscience, psychology, and mental health influenced by personal experiences.
2.
The State of Psychedelic Journalism: We discuss the decline of psychedelic-focused media with the closure of prominent platforms like Vice, and the unique position of DoubleBlind.
3.
Ethical Concerns in Psychedelic Patents: We analyze how patents could restrict therapeutic innovations and the ethical implications within the burgeoning psychedelic industry.
4.
Psychedelic Research and Mainstream Acceptance: The growth of psychedelic journalism as scientific research on these substances gains more mainstream media attention.
5.
Personal Experiences with Psychedelics: Shayla's personal neutrality towards psychedelics, which she believes helps her maintain an unbiased perspective in her journalism.
6.
The Challenge of Accessibility in Psychedelic Therapy: Concerns about the commercialization of psychedelic therapies and how it could limit access to those who might benefit from them.
7.
Psychedelics and Mental Health: A deep dive into the potential and limitations of psychedelics as a treatment for mental health issues, including depression and PTSD.
8.
Legal and Societal Implications of Decriminalization: The outcomes of psychedelic decriminalization in Oregon and Colorado, focusing on public health issues and drug policy.
9.
Public Perception and Media Responsibility: The role of the media in shaping public perception of psychedelics and the responsibility to provide nuanced, accurate reporting.
10.
Future of Psychedelic Therapy and Regulation: Discussion on the future implications of FDA approvals, the role of psychotherapy in treatment, and the ongoing evolution of regulations in the psychedelic space.
Shayla Love is a freelance science journalist based in Brooklyn, and a staff reporter for The Guardian and Psyche. She started writing about psychedelics as a senior staff writer at VICE News, and has extensively covered psychedelic research, culture, ethics, and business. Her work has also appeared in The New Yorker, The New York Times, WIRED, Scientific American, The Washington Post, STAT, The Atlantic, Undark, Harper’s, and more. She has a Master’s Degree from Columbia University in science, environment, and medicine journalism, and has received a number of awards and fellowships, including The Ferriss - UC Berkeley Psychedelic Journalism Fellowship.
Working on it!
I don’t know how you can claim that your info isn’t behind a paywall. Some of your “info” is literally only available thru classes. That you have to PAY for. That is a PAYWALL. and the most ironic part is that all of those “courses” are info that you can actually find for free from other creators who aren’t trying to make any type of profit.