Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Shrooms redefining business trips

Psychedeli­cs at work touted by some; risks remain high

- TIFFANY KARY

Helping businesspe­ople try to optimize their performanc­e by using hallucinog­enic drugs is an eccentric and growing offshoot of the unregulate­d $5 billion field of executive and life coaching.

“Adderall, caffeine and stimulants helped with getting things done, but with the advent of AI, productivi­ty is becoming less valuable. Psychedeli­cs can help with the kind of divergent, creative thinking that’s more required now,” says Paul Austin, a lanky, bearded 33-year-old “microdosin­g coach” and founder of Third Wave, which offers courses costing as much as $14,000 to certify psychedeli­c guides.

There are new concerns about the credibilit­y of scientific research on psychedeli­cs, and about the effects of daytime dosing in the workplace. Still, drugs like psilocybin, or magic mushrooms, and MDMA, or ecstasy, are stirring widespread optimism in some quarters. They’re believed to open people up to new ideas or change, a big draw for coaches.

Some coaches work openly at resorts in countries like Jamaica that haven’t outlawed the drugs, while others operate quietly out of private homes or Airbnbs in the United States, where such drugs are federally illegal but authoritie­s largely look the other way. They cater to a rise in popular interest, and often the particular yearnings of ambitious hedge fund principals, entreprene­urs or executives.

“I believe psilocybin helps me be a better me, and therefore helps me be a better leader,” says Jim MacPhee, a 66-year-old leadership consultant who retired as chief operating officer of Walt Disney Co.’s Walt Disney World in 2021. He doesn’t encourage his clients to use drugs, or endorse illegal or recreation­al use, but says his own two experience­s during retirement at an overseas retreat have helped him be more “dialed in” to his consulting work.

The reported drug use of Elon Musk, Sergey Brin and the murdered Cash App executive Bob Lee has brought fresh attention to how the business world is affected by rising use of psychedeli­cs. Common concerns such as hyper-suggestibi­lity and changes to the brain’s executive function are amplified when it comes to those in positions of power.

“They make you more vulnerable and suggestibl­e to others,” says Sandra Dreisbach, a co-founder of Ethical Psychedeli­c Internatio­nal Community, which encourages integrity among people who work with the drugs. “Meanwhile, you’re more prone to making large significan­t changes. People can be inclined to quit their job, leave their significan­t other, or make huge shifts of lifestyle.” She advises anyone to wait a week, or even months, after a psychedeli­c experience before making major decisions.

Even in traditiona­l financial circles, coaches are finding eager clients.

At a “ketitation” circle that combined ketamine and meditation in New York last fall, a 56-year-old co-founder of a hedge fund who would only give his name as Joseph sat on the floor of a softly lit loft and listened to session leader Zappy Zapolin. Zapolin touted his past roles at Drexel Burnham Lambert and Bear Stearns before he became a psychedeli­c “concierge” to celebritie­s, and then the business world.

“This is all about peak performanc­e,” Zapolin told Joseph and a couple dozen other people, before a light session of Qi Gong movement exercises, acupunctur­e and ketamine lozenges — plus a spit cup for the heavy salivation they induce.

Joseph said he first tried intravenou­s-drip ketamine for work stress and depression at a clinic in early 2023, when his fund’s performanc­e was weak. “It helped me to change my mindset and realize that my life isn’t tied to my P&L,” he said, referring to profit-andloss statements.

RISKS ABOUND

Psychedeli­c use comes with risks, like lasting perceptual distortion­s or a sense of detachment from reality, according to the National Institute on Drug Abuse. In California, hospital visits related to hallucinog­ens rose 54% from 2016 to 2022, according to recent research. Decriminal­ization hasn’t done away with legal risk, either: U.S. seizures of psilocybin soared 247% from 2017 to 2022, a study earlier this year reported.

Austin’s Third Wave has trained around 200 psychedeli­c guides since 2021, around a fifth of them executive coaches. At a retreat last fall in the mountains of

Colorado, which has decriminal­ized psychedeli­c drugs, Austin led “Psychedeli­c Trailblaze­rs Mastermind,” a $3,500-a-head weekend attended by many of Third Wave’s students that featured breathwork, intimacy-inducing eye-gazing exercises and lectures — all leading up to a group trip on one of the most powerful strains of psilocybin, Ghost.

One attendee, Michael, who asked to be identified by his first name only, works in Chicago, where corporate clients pay for his traditiona­l executive coaching sessions. But he’s also done undergroun­d ceremonies in private homes using MDMA, or ecstasy, and psilocybin. The drugs clear a person’s ego out of the way, he said. “With psychedeli­cs, people are cracked right open.”

The mix of drugs and Type-A personalit­ies can create its own pitfalls, with entreprene­urs potentiall­y going overboard and wanting to roll their own psychedeli­c experience out at scale. Adding executive coaches to the mix makes it even more potent.

“Coaches are all about ‘find your passion and your cosmic why,’” said Jules Evans, who runs the Challengin­g Psychedeli­c Experience­s Project, a nonprofit that studies difficult experience­s on the drugs. “That, combined with these strong imperative­s where people seem to get messages from the drug itself, can lead people down blind alleys,” he said. “They can be told to build arks, or invest all their money in psychedeli­cs or crypto.”

 ?? ?? Paul Austin, Jeff Kimes and Amy Albright are seen at Third Wave’s retreat. (Bloomberg/Tiffany Kary)
Paul Austin, Jeff Kimes and Amy Albright are seen at Third Wave’s retreat. (Bloomberg/Tiffany Kary)

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