From horse tranquilizer to mental health treatment — what’s the real story about ketamine? Nick Pell breaks it down on Skeptical Sunday!
Welcome to Skeptical Sunday, a special edition of The Jordan Harbinger Show where Jordan and a guest break down a topic that you may have never thought about, open things up, and debunk common misconceptions. This time around, we’re joined by writer and researcher Nick Pell!
On This Week’s Skeptical Sunday:
- Ketamine therapy shows promise for treatment-resistant depression, PTSD, and chronic pain, but it’s serious medicine requiring proper medical supervision, not a recreational escape or wellness trend.
- Clinical ketamine treatment involves IV administration with precise dosing, vital monitoring, and trained medical attendants — drastically different from recreational use that can cause severe bladder damage and other complications.
- The rise of telehealth ketamine clinics and mail-order treatments represents a concerning trend — proper vetting requires full psych evaluations, bloodwork, and screening by legitimate medical professionals, not vague promises.
- Recreational ketamine use carries significant addiction potential and health risks, particularly bladder damage from chronic high doses — clinical settings minimize these dangers through controlled administration.
- If you’re considering ketamine therapy, start with a therapist and real medical doctor. Look for evidence-based treatment with proper intake procedures, not spa-like “optimization centers” making grandiose claims.
- Connect with Jordan on Twitter, Instagram, and YouTube. If you have something you’d like us to tackle here on Skeptical Sunday, drop Jordan a line at jordan@jordanharbinger.com and let him know!
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Please Scroll Down for Featured Resources and Transcript!
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Resources from This Skeptical Sunday:
- What to Know About Ketamine | Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
- Ketamine as a Treatment for Depression | American Psychiatric Association
- Ketamine: 50 Years of Modulating the Mind | Frontiers in Human Neuroscience
- Antidepressant Effects of Ketamine in Depressed Patients | Biological Psychiatry
- The Ketamine Clinic Craze: Legalities and Possibilities | Harris Sliwoski LLP
- Where Is Ketamine Legal in 2024? | Healing Maps
- Ketamine Clinics Market Research Report 2033 | Growth Market Reports
- Dr. Matt Cook | BioReset Medical
- Penis Enhancement | Skeptical Sunday | The Jordan Harbinger Show
- TRT & Steroids | Skeptical Sunday | The Jordan Harbinger Show
1241: Ketamine | Skeptical Sunday
This transcript is yet untouched by human hands. Please proceed with caution as we sort through what the robots have given us. We appreciate your patience!
Jordan Harbinger: [00:00:00] Welcome to Skeptical Sunday. I'm your host, Jordan Harbinger. Today I am here with Skeptical Sunday co-host, writer and researcher Nick Pell. On The Jordan Harbinger Show, we decode the stories, secrets, and skills of the world's most fascinating people and turn their wisdom into practical advice that you can use to impact your own life and those around you.
Our mission is to help you become a better informed, more critical thinker. And during the week, we have long form conversations with a variety of amazing folks from spies to CEOs. athletes, authors, thinkers, and performers. On Sundays, though it's Skeptical Sunday, a rotating guest, co-host and I or breakdown a topic you may have never thought about and debunk common misconceptions about that topic, such as why tipping, makes no sense, acupuncture, astrology, recycling, chem, trails, hypnosis, and more.
And if you're new to the show or you wanna tell your friends about the show, I suggest our episode starter packs. These are collections of our favorite episodes on persuasion and negotiation, psychology, disinformation, junk science, crime, and cults and more. That'll help new listeners get a taste of everything we do here on the [00:01:00] show.
Just visit Jordan harbinger.com/start or search for us in your Spotify app to get started. Alright, now, today you might've seen ads for Ketamine on social media, and if you're like me, you're thinking. Isn't that a horse tranquilizer that Raver kids used back in the nineties? And while that's true, ketamine is actually doing a lot of work, helping people with depression, chronic pain, PTSD, and other ailments, both physical and psychological that are resistant to other kinds of treatments.
Not everyone with severe depression is gonna respond to things like talk therapy or even medication, or even more extreme treatments like electroshock therapy, which by the way is real and still exists. You might've even seen the headlines, like the Mental Health Revolution or a Cure in a Syringe. Or tripping to heal.
But what if it's not all that simple? Ketamine clinics are everywhere. You can get these treatments by mail even. But anytime there's a big promise, we here at Skeptical Sunday, we get a little skeptical. So what does the science say here to help me dose the truth with [00:02:00] minimal side effects is writer and researcher Nick Powell.
Now Nick, one of the reasons I had you do this is that you have done ketamine therapy yourself, correct?
Nick Pell: I did. It was multiple sessions over a period of. A year, maybe a year and a half. Okay, so what for? Can I ask about that? I have a post-traumatic stress disorder of the shitty childhood variety, not the watched my best friend die in Iraq.
Variety. It's variously called Complex PTSD or childhood. PTSD basically had classic a combination of unstable mother and absent father. Sort of understating it because lots of people have had it way worse than me, but how I had it was not super
Jordan Harbinger: great. Yeah. You told me a bit about your childhood, not normal in a lot of ways.
Nick Pell: Yeah. My best friend from high school a couple years ago told me, man, every time you used to tell me some funny story about your house as a kid, I was always just like, that is so messed up, man. My wife has likewise asked that I stop sharing [00:03:00] amusing. Anecdotes from my childhood because apparently they're not funny to anybody but me.
Jordan Harbinger: Okay. Yeah. Without dwelling too much on the specifics of your particular miserable childhood, walk us through your ketamine therapy experience.
Nick Pell: So, towards the end of my first marriage, I was in pretty rough shape. I was sleeping maybe. Two hours a night. I was waking up screaming all the time. I was having constant night terrors.
I had a super short fuse. I would get just absolutely enraged over really trivial stuff. My former mother-in-law was actually the first person to point out that I had all of the classic symptoms of C-P-T-S-D. And so I looked into it and I talked it over with my therapist and decided that it was worth looking into ketamine therapy.
Jordan Harbinger: Wow. So what was the process like? Do you just call 'em up and say like, Hey guys, I think tripping my face off is the key to unlocking better mental health. How does this begin?
Nick Pell: Kidding aside, it wasn't really all that different from that. I was pretty open about the fact that I used psychedelic drugs [00:04:00] pretty heavily in the past.
And that they were helpful for my mental state. Huh, okay. So I can
Jordan Harbinger: imagine what was their reaction to that? They were just kinda like, oh yeah, we get you guys all the time. Yeah, I can imagine. They're probably pretty used to that, honestly. So what was the intake like? I mean, are they just letting anyone get the treatment or is there some due diligence on their part?
Nick Pell: I can only speak from my experience, but they were definitely thorough. They did a whole round of blood work to see if my testosterone use was gonna be an issue for the treatment. The whole intake process took a few weeks. They were definitely not just letting any dude come in off the street and get a ketamine treatment.
Jordan Harbinger: Ah, okay. So it's good to hear that there was some kind of vetting involved. Tell us about the actual treatment though. What was that like?
Nick Pell: You go in, they take your vitals, you lay in a chair, they put an IV drip in your arm, and an hour later you're like, where the hell am I? I ended one session and asked, am I in
Jordan Harbinger: Arizona?
Okay. So do they kind of ramp you up or how does it work with regard to the dosage? Are you just suddenly [00:05:00] flying through space time or like what's it like?
Nick Pell: So when you first go in, you do it every day for a week, then you come back a couple weeks later, then they start stretching it out further. The goal is to get your dose right, but also to make it so that you're coming back less and less, or at least further and further apart.
When was the last time you went? It's been, I think two and a half years. Oh wow. Okay. Why'd you stop going? So I feel like this is a good time to tell people that I genuinely don't understand why anyone uses ketamine recreationally. It's not fun. It's not awful. But the best I've ever felt on it was like vibing.
Okay. I had my attendant hold my feet once because you don't even know that your body is there. Your attendant, yeah, you get a little trip buddy to hang out with you the whole time. They're a medical professional. They monitor your vitals. They had to gimme. Blood pressure meds once in the middle of a session.
Ketamine is a really serious drug. You can die. They can't just hook you up to an [00:06:00] IV and leave you there. But yeah, I asked one of them to hold my feet 'cause I was freaking out and another time I cried for I don't know how long, like I sure was covered in tears. So I assume I was going at it for a long time.
My attendant looked like she was really concerned about me, but you just, you have no sense of time.
Jordan Harbinger: So I don't wanna focus on my own experience here because I didn't do it for medical reasons, but I did do it with a doctor because I'm not crazy. Or maybe I'm crazy. I tried this with a doctor, not for depression or anything, just to, you know me.
I'm careful about recommending anything. Yo, you tried it for yolo. Yolo and also like, I'm not gonna recommend stuff that I haven't tried, even if it's a little out there. So. Again, I'm not recommending it at all. I'm not qualified to do that. I do remember falling through the floor, falling through the earth, and it was not fun.
It was like, you feel kind of sick. I was like, am I gonna die? She's like, no. And then when I was done, I was like, okay. That is medicine. That is not a thing you do for fun. And I know I was gonna joke [00:07:00] that you're really selling it here, Nick. 'cause it's like it's not fun. I don't like it. It's not something I ever wanna do again, it wasn't so terrifying.
I'm scarred from it. But people who drink because you lose your inhibitions and you have a fun night and then the next day you're miserable. This is like, oh, the experience itself is miserable. And then if you have something that it cures or helps you with like depression, then the benefits are later.
But if you don't have that, you're just subjecting yourself to needless, frankly, psychological torture. So again, it's not something I recommend, frankly, for that reason.
Nick Pell: Yeah, it's not a party drug. It's a serious medical treatment. Even when I was doing my own weight in mushrooms every week, the point was not really.
To party. I was trying to learn something about myself, and with the benefit of years of reflection, I think I was really trying to treat undiagnosed PTSD, and in this case, I wasn't snorting ketamine, I was getting an IV drip, so it was very accurately measured for my [00:08:00] specific body weight intolerance. You know, I wasn't just blowing rails of it until I fell into a K hole.
Tell us what a K hole is, by the way. I don't really know, man, because every time somebody describes a ka hole, I'm like, isn't this just what happens when you do ketamine? I guess it's like a profound sense of, it's not depersonalization, it's, it's like almost like an out of body experience. But yeah, like you don't know.
You have a body of no idea how much time is passing. You don't really know much to the point where it's, you don't even know that knowing things is a thing.
Jordan Harbinger: I'm just realizing you said fell into a K hole, and that's what they say My experience was falling through the earth, falling through space, falling through time, falling through.
So that must be pretty common unless it's just a random coincidence that people say falling into a K hole. It did feel like falling into an interdimensional massive hole. That's exactly what it felt like.
Nick Pell: I didn't really feel [00:09:00] like that. I know people say that, but that wasn't my experience. Mine was just like.
It's so difficult to quantify. Like anybody who's ever done any kind of psychedelic drug knows that people are like, what was it like? And you're just like, I can't tell you because this isn't really a thing I can put into words. But I would say that like extreme disassociation, that was the word I was looking for.
You have an extreme sense of disassociation. The feet thing is a really good example. I needed somebody to hold my feet because it was freaking me out that I couldn't feel my body at all.
Jordan Harbinger: Yeah, that makes sense. You're right about the psychedelic thing on a Feedback Friday episode a few weeks ago or months ago, whatever it's been.
I remember talking about my first mushroom experience in Amsterdam when I was like 19. And we took mushrooms and we were laying down and I was like, to my friend Hans, I go, dude, I don't know what how to explain this, but like when the base goes, the vines come in and when the base goes out, the vines go away from me.
And then I was like, I don't even know if that makes sense. And he goes, [00:10:00] dude. I know exactly what you mean. And we both started cracking up. 'cause it was like, of course you don't really, but you do. Because we're both like, what planet are we on? And I remember telling him, he goes, why are you walking like that?
And I said, because I'm like a penguin with a beach ball between my legs. And he was just like, oh, okay. Like that explanation makes total sense. Yeah, of course you're a penguin with a beach ball between your legs. Then when we sobered up, we were just like, what the hell was that? We're never doing that again.
At least not until tomorrow. Alright, so again, this is not medical advice, folks. These are stupid things we did as teenagers. Okay, but you haven't been back to ketamine therapy. Why? Because you don't need it. And hopefully not because you can't afford it, but you still need it. What's going on here?
Nick Pell: Yeah. I don't feel like.
I need it. The canary in the coal mine for my treatments was if my insomnia started acting up. I've had chronic insomnia since a very young age, just getting 15 to 20 hours of sleep a week. I don't have insomnia [00:11:00] anymore. I might get up for an hour. Maybe David, that's really rare. I have nights where I have nightmares nonstop, but I just go back to sleep.
Yep. That sounds awful, man. Geez. Uh, nightmares are such a nothing burger for me at this point. It's just a night of restless sleep, so I. If I ever get it back to that point. So do you think the ketamine made a difference? I know there's a correlation. You have to fill out paperwork where you score how you feel on a number of metrics.
Some of it's objective like hours of sleep, instances of suicidal ideation. Some of it is just how you feeling, man, I've made some changes to my life that helped keep things going. I quit smoking pot. I have a much less volatile living situation, I think. Ketamine really helped kickstart a lot of that process, and that's really important.
Jordan Harbinger: It's interesting, of course, but there's obviously more to ketamine therapy than Nick's personal story. I thought we'd start there though, because we've talked about it in the past. I know you have a really balanced take on the use of ketamine as a therapeutic drug. [00:12:00]
Nick Pell: Yeah, there's tons of men and women suffering for no reason who could get some serious long-term and potential life-changing relief.
Ketamine has absolutely improved my life, but I don't see any need to continue treatment, and honestly, that's kind of the best thing I could say about it. I never used antidepressants or anything and people, I always ask me why and because I didn't want to start taking drugs that I. Couldn't really stop taking.
And you're right, there's a lot more to this than my personal story, but that's
Jordan Harbinger: kind of it. Where does ketamine come from? Are ketamine plants growing in the jungle or is it synthetic?
Nick Pell: So it's totally synthetic actually. There aren't ketamine plants growing somewhere in the jungle. It weirdly starts off in.
American medical practice as an alternative to PCP.
Jordan Harbinger: So ketamine is essentially the supposedly safer alternative to PCP is angel dust, right? The stuff that makes people strip naked in a parking lot, get shot three times by the police and [00:13:00] or someone else, and then run half a mile before they feel they collapse that stuff.
Nick Pell: Yeah, I kind of laugh when I found this out about where Ketamine comes from. All I could think of is that scene in training day where Denzel Tricks, Ethan Hawk and the smoking Shem
Jordan Harbinger: is shrm PCP. What is that?
Nick Pell: Yeah.
Jordan Harbinger: Okay. You seem like the type of guy who will know why they call PCP
Nick Pell: Sherman Helmsley baby. He was apparently fond of angel dust.
Who is Sherman Helmsley? George Jefferson. Who's George Jefferson? Seriously, man. You know who George Jefferson is. I'm done with you
Jordan Harbinger: here. Yeah. Let's get moving on up to the history of ketamine then.
Nick Pell: So ketamine was first synthesized in 1962. It wasn't approved for use until 1970, and then they used it as an anesthetic in Vietnam.
Jordan Harbinger: Oh wow. And now it's helping soldiers. PTSD.
Nick Pell: Isn't that ironic? I'm still not, uh, completely clear on what the definition of ironic is, but it's interesting. Anyway, it was great for battlefield medicine [00:14:00] because it kicked in super fast and didn't suppress breathing like a lot of other anesthetics at the time did.
Now, while it was in use on the battlefield, doctors noticed pretty quickly that it made people hallucinate. What they weren't expecting though was that it improved people's moods, and it wasn't until the nineties that people really started taking the mood elevation side effects seriously. Huh? Side effects.
Jordan Harbinger: When did it move from the world of just study or to people actually getting treatment? Basically? When was this use for Ketamine approved or is? Not actually how it works.
Nick Pell: Yeah, it's still not approved. You can get ketamine inhalers, which is slightly different, but for the full on treatment, that's what we call off-label use.
Off-label use is when you take a drug, not for its intended purpose, but for what you might call therapeutic side effects. And is that legal? Or it's legal doctors can prescribe you stuff that works for your specific issues. Even if the drug isn't designed [00:15:00] to treat those issues, they're legally allowed to make that call.
In fact, the off-label thing only applies to drug companies. They can't legally advertise their stuff for off-label use. They can't sell ketamine and
Jordan Harbinger: say it's gonna make you feel great. Before we dive deeper into the K hole, let's take a quick detour into the cash hole where we'll attempt to disassociate you from your wallet.
We'll be right back. This episode is sponsored in part by Dell and Nvidia. Do you ever notice how much power your phone actually has over your life? Like what if it just decided that you don't exist anymore? If that's what happens in the latest episode of The Cybersecurity Tapes, a college rolls out this shiny new campus app that's supposed to make student life easier, IDs, maps, even meal plans, all in one place.
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I've got a few school apps on my [00:16:00] phone from my kids to track attendance, photos, all that stuff. And after listening to this episode, I was thinking, man, what if one of these went sideways? Like who's actually guarding the data? This episode digs into what happens when convenience meets overconfidence, and how one little update can take down an entire system.
It's a perfect mix of mystery, tech, paranoia, and yeah, a little bit of humor too. Check out episode 11, Campus Chaos, on The Cybersecurity Tapes Podcast. This episode is also sponsored by BiOptimizers. It's Black Friday Saving Season. This is a big one. You know the BiOptimizers products I've talked about on the show before?
The ones that are science backed, lab tested like Magnesium Breakthrough for sleep support, Masszymes for digestive support. From November 23 to December three, you get 25% off. That's a once in a year sale. You don't wanna miss it. Sure, you can always get 15% off with code Jordan, but if you want the biggest savings and gifts load up in your cart now check out between November 23rd and December 3rd to lock in a bigger discount of 25% off.
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After December 3rd, it's gone. So don't. Don't forget about our newsletter Wee Bit Wiser almost every Wednesday. It's very practical. Something you can apply right out of the box that will affect your psychology, your decision making. And again, it's a two minute read. Y'all love engaging with this. You seem to love reading it.
We certainly love writing it. jordanharbinger.com/news is where you can find it. It's a great companion to the show. Hope to see you there. Now, back to Skeptical Sunday. Okay, so the drug companies can't advertise it. But my Instagram feed can legally be full of people selling me Ketamine treatment through the mail.
That was like the episode we did on Dick Enhancement that came out a while back. But the only safe way to do that is hyaluronic acid filler, which is normally like a lip enhancement or something in your skin, on your face or something. But the off-label use just happens to supercharge a regular [00:18:00] penis into a porn dick.
Wait, what are we talking about again?
Nick Pell: Ketamine therapy. Mind out of the bladder, Jordan. Got it. I'm with you. I'm here. All right. Anyway, as crazy as it sounds. Yeah, that's right. The point is, yes, doctors can prescribe you things for reasons other than their officially intended purpose. The drug companies just can't advertise it to you that way.
The big change for ketamine treatment took place in 2000 when some researchers at Yale, most notably Dr. John Crystal and Dr. Dennis Charney. Found that even a single low dose was highly effective at helping people with treatment resistant depression. It was later found that it was also good for chronic pain, PTSD and other issues.
Jordan Harbinger: Why didn't this just revolutionize this field? I mean, why are people not going to the therapist and getting prescribed ketamine if they're having serious bouts of depression?
Nick Pell: I think the main reason is that ketamine is a Schedule three drug, which also includes heroin and cocaine. These are the most illegal of [00:19:00] illegal drugs, the one you go to prison for.
There's also the stigma against Ketamine because of recreational use, but again, I just don't get how this is fun for anybody.
Jordan Harbinger: Yeah, different strokes. So these guys at Yale discover what ketamine can do. A little bit of off-label use here and there, but now it seems like ketamine is everywhere. Man, I get tons of ads for this stuff.
It's insane. So how did a horse tranquilizer used by rave kids in the nineties become essentially like the news Xanax? The explosion happens after the FDA approves S
Nick Pell: bravado in 2019, which is a nasal form of s Ketamine, not ketamine, slightly different s Ketamine is weirdly stronger, but doctors can give smaller doses because of that and mitigate the side effects.
And a lot of doctors running Ketamine treatment clinics are anesthesiologists, not psychiatrists. It makes good business sense for them. These are after [00:20:00] all for profit. They're not. Really for charity. I'm not aware of any that are, I think mine was 500 bucks or so a session, so my intake week was about 2,500 bucks.
One session is just not going to cut it, and I can't imagine that anyone's insurance covers this for what it's worth, that's a green flag for me because I tend to trust places that exist outside of the insurance system more than those with that operate within it. But your mileage may vary on this. More importantly, I think, is that the impression that ketamine is everywhere now is not just in people's heads.
It's not selection bias Based on seeing these ads everywhere. By 2015, there were 60 clinics coast to coast. By 2018 it was 300. Now there's over 2000. My little podunk town in Arizona had one for a minute. The total market now is between seven and 9 billion. Yes, that's billion with a b.
Jordan Harbinger: That is crazy.
That's way bigger than I would've thought. I remember before the reason I found [00:21:00] my doctor, he happens to be in my town. But I found him through a friend that lives in like Iowa or something like that. I can't remember. He flew in from another state and most of the other guys that I met there also flew in from another state.
And now you can go to the place where your kid takes karate and just walk next door. Right? The other side of the strip mall is a ketamine clinic. This has really exploded. I'm curious about how this actually works. The majority of our audience, probably, of course not doctors. So what is the smart person who doesn't know a lot about science version of how ketamine actually functions?
Why does it work on people who don't see results from SSRIs or conventional antidepressants or conventional treatments for depression?
Nick Pell: Most traditional antidepressants are SSRIs. That's a selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor. Basically increase the amount of serotonin in your brain. They don't create new pathways in your brain.
They just try and flood the existing ones. With serotonin, that means [00:22:00] they take weeks to kick in, and for a lot of people, they just don't work at all.
Jordan Harbinger: Did you ever try SSRIs? Did you go down the road? Well traveled with this antidepressant stuff?
Nick Pell: No. They scare the crap outta me because you have to wean off of them, and there's a whole phenomenon of a guy who's deeply suicidal, but he takes SSRIs and all of a sudden he has the pet.
He needs to eat a gun. Thanks to the increased serotonin, which I didn't want to be that guy as usual. Do whatever you and your doctor think is best. I'm not saying they're bad. I am definitely not saying people shouldn't use them if they're working. I'm just saying that for me. No, thanks. Got
Jordan Harbinger: it.
Nick Pell: So what is
Jordan Harbinger: it that Ketamine does differently?
Nick Pell: Ketamine causes a chain reaction with four steps that works completely different from SSRIs. First, it blocks your NDMA receptor, which is the receptor responsible for learning memory and mood regulation. So that doesn't sound like a good thing. It [00:23:00] doesn't. Until you realize that this is going to cause your brain to surge in glutamate, to compensate, that's going to speed up brain activity.
Think of it like stepping on the gas of your brain function. It also enables learning and memory thanks to increased neuroplasticity, which is basically your brain's ability to make new connections. That's great, but what's maybe even better is that glutamate helps to balance your mood. The glutamate spike also increases your brain derived neurotrophic factor or BDNF.
The simplest way to envision this is miracle growth for your brain. All of this together leads to increased neuroplasticity. So more or less, your brain makes new connections and rewires old ones. Dr. John Crystal, chair of psychiatry at Yale, who I mentioned earlier, likens it to shaking up a snow globe.
Jordan Harbinger: Snow globe. Was that what your experience was like?
Nick Pell: More or less. That's the [00:24:00] thing. It doesn't just pump happy chemicals into your brain, it just throws a puzzle on a floor and puts it back together in a totally different way. I used to tell people when I would go in for treatment, that I was gonna get my brains z.
It's difficult to put it into words, but yeah, it shakes things up. A big part of how effective it's going to be, I think is what you choose to do with that kind of reset. The reason why it's become so popular is because it's going to work in hours rather than weeks or months.
Jordan Harbinger: What about side effects? Did you experience any side effects during or after?
Not that I remember, but
Nick Pell: as I mentioned earlier, I don't remember a lot about my treatments. I just used to. Put on my tunes and zone out. A lot of people don't like music with words when they receive their treatments, but I didn't have any issue with it.
Jordan Harbinger: Do you have a go-to playlist for your
Nick Pell: Ketamine treatments?
Frank Zappa's apostrophe. One of my handlers at the end of my treatment says, Zappa fan. Huh? And I go, how do you know that? And he said You were [00:25:00] singing about yellow snow. That's funny. Which you don't remember that. Don't remember any of it. Huh? That's funny. I know stuff happens when I'm fully dosed. I just don't remember it.
It's really impossible to communicate just how out of it you are. I don't remember any side effects, but they could include dizziness, nausea, hallucinations. I guess disassociation is a side effect, but I just think it's the thing that happens. Rather than a side effect the way that people usually think about them,
Jordan Harbinger: it's kind of the point, like it's only a side effect if you're trying to use it as anesthetic.
If you're not trying to use it to kill pain or whatever, tranquilized or, Nope. That is what I want. Right. I want dissociation. That's what, that's what we're here for. Yeah, exactly. What does the evidence say about the effectiveness of ketamine treatment? It sounds like it was pretty difficult for you at times, but it also sounds like you got a lot out of it.
Maybe anecdotally, look, I've known you for a long time. I can't believe how chilled out you are these days. I mean, the time periods between like, I won't say too much, but you're definitely like in a better place [00:26:00] mentally, emotionally these days. I would say by a lot, by a large margin.
Nick Pell: You're not the only person to notice this.
I defer to those who know me best with regard to that, but yeah, I mean, I definitely feel better. We only really have short-term tests at this point about the effectiveness of the treatments, but what they tell us is that ketamine treatments offer rapid relief, especially for suicidality, treatment resistant depression.
A lot of times ketamine treatment works when nothing else will. There've been some meta-analyses that show the effects are time limited and require repeated dosing. That's what I mean about how it matters. What you choose to do with your freshly scrambled brain. What we don't have are long-term studies.
There's not much in the way of standardizing the dosing protocols. There's also no placebo controlled blind studies, which I don't know how you would even do that.
Jordan Harbinger: Yeah, I think people might notice whether or not they are tripping their [00:27:00] face off in the fifth dimension. I don't know how you placebo that.
Nick Pell: Yeah, exactly. That's kind of a thing they can't really study. I think the other thing to really highlight is that just because people are seeing results doesn't mean that it's a cure all. It's probably going to be part of a broader treatment program as well as lifestyle changes. Some of the most promising work today is being done pairing ketamine therapy with traditional psychotherapy for trauma.
But this is all still early days. I think it can be great and a real game changer for the right person, but what it is absolutely not is a magic potion that's going to fix all of your problems.
Jordan Harbinger: It seems pretty clear that this has the potential to help a lot of people, but do you think it needs to be advertised as much as it is?
I go entire weeks where half my ads are for these Ketamine by mail therapy services.
Nick Pell: Yeah, and my phone's next to me right now, so I'm about to get a month's worth of ads for these places. I think there's a lot of problems with the through the mail thing. It's not a [00:28:00] controlled environment. You don't have a handler.
The lozenges or pills probably aren't as effective as just sticking into your blood supply. They may be better than nothing, but I definitely don't think it's ideal. I feel like it's an entirely different thing from what I did without a lot of evidence. Just general sense of how this works from having gotten testosterone through these types of remote clinics.
I suspect anyone with 300 bucks and a pulse qualifies for the treatment.
Jordan Harbinger: Yeah, it strikes me as dangerous to be using ketamine without somebody nearby. A lot can go wrong physically or psychologically, and it seems like you should have someone there with you, like you said before, monitoring your vitals to make sure that you don't end up getting your brain deep fried instead of lightly scrambled or whatever you're supposed to be doing there.
Or worse. Yeah,
Nick Pell: you can theoretically die from this. I'm not aware of anybody who has, but you can od on Ketamine. It's definitely a. Not in the same way that you could OD on water. Mm-hmm. It's a tranquilizer. So the other thing I think [00:29:00] is the same thing we talked about on the TRT episode, which is episode 1172 for anybody playing at home, some people might struggle with moderate depression, that could be fixed with lifestyle changes, diet, exercise, and they're getting sold.
Ketamine. To be clear, I am absolutely not telling everyone feeling depressed that they just need to work out and eat better. Obviously that's not the case. If you haven't tried anything, start there and then go to the more extreme solutions. If and when the simple ones fail, that would be a concern for me.
Jordan Harbinger: Unlike chronic ketamine, use of these ads won't destroy your bladder, though they might make it piss away a little cash. We'll be right back. I've got Homes.com is the sponsor for this episode. Homes.com knows what when it comes to home shopping, it's never just about the house of the condo, it's about the homes.
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Now for the rest of Skeptical Sunday, you mentioned that this works for depression and PS D and chronic pain, but as somebody who knows a thing or two about psychedelic drugs, I mean, [00:33:00] I've known an acid casualty or three in my life. You know the type. Is there a type of person who ketamine is gonna make go absolutely bonkers instead of healing them?
Nick Pell: Oh, 1000%. Yes. There are serious questions about the efficacy of ketamine therapy for people with schizophrenia, personality disorders or bipolar disorder. There's some evidence to suggest that it's going to make them worse. Worse. How? So we talked about a couple different disorders that are very different from one another for schizophrenics and people with schizoaffective disorder, it can increase psychosis.
In fact, ketamine is often used to model schizophrenic behavior in lab settings.
Jordan Harbinger: So it sort of just puts a magnifying glass on the whole thing, which is not good.
Nick Pell: With people with bipolar disorder, it can put them in hypomanic episodes and give them insomnia, which is a big deal if you're in a hypomanic state, or increase their overall sense of grandiosity, their racing thoughts, their impulsive behavior.
Like [00:34:00] with the schizophrenics, it just. Seems to take their existing problem and make it worse. And personality disorders like borderline personality disorder, ketamine can destabilize their entire personality and increase tendencies towards self-harm. Borderline personality disorder is extremely complex.
The main thing to note is that people with BPD have a very weak sense of self. They tend to change personalities a lot, and I don't mean they change styles or interest. Their entire personality changes sometimes multiple times in a day. Giving them something that depersonalizes them and weakens their sense of self causes many of them to panic and self harm.
Oof. Yeah. This is not a cure all for every mental health problem people experience. It's for a few very specific problems and disorders.
Jordan Harbinger: Anytime we talk about drugs, it's worth talking about dependence. So is there an addiction risk for ketamine? I've got a buddy who, according to him, he was addicted to ketamine.
I don't know how to diagnose that. And then you hear rumors like Elon Musk is addicted to ketamine or whatever, right? Look [00:35:00] at him, look at the ceiling. That means he's on ketamine. I don't know.
Nick Pell: It's complicated. There's actually very few drugs that are addictive in the way that most people think of it.
What you experience with ketamine is also true for a lot of non-addictive drugs and that people form emotional and psychological dependence on them. There is some evidence that there is addiction at very high recreational doses taken very frequently, but. Not what you're gonna get from your therapeutic structured dose at the clinic.
Tolerance is definitely real. I built up a tolerance very quickly to the point where they were giving me the maximum safe dose for someone of my weight.
Jordan Harbinger: So it's addictive in the same way that weed or mushrooms are, it's just habit forming in some way. Yeah,
Nick Pell: it's a good way of thinking about it. Again, with the caveat that very high, very frequent dosing can actually be addictive.
You're not. Typically going to get the shakes [00:36:00] from stopping your Ketamine dose. She might get irritated, bummed out, stuff like that. Jonesing, you know, not withdrawal. It's not like getting addicted to crack and you're gonna murder your mother for pocket change.
Jordan Harbinger: Based on what you've told me about the overall experience, I think if people are gonna get addicted to ketamine, it's probably not going to be because they used it in a medically supervised setting for a specific purpose.
Again, I've got a buddy who I know was addicted to it, but he was self-medicating, his anxiety, he had a whole lot of untreated stuff and he had trouble kicking the habit. He kind of felt like I'm better at life. He was a day trader and stuff, and he is like, I'm better at trading and stuff when I'm on ketamine.
As opposed to needing it to function. He added it as a recreational layer to his life, and I don't know if that distinction matters, but it was clearly unhealthy.
Nick Pell: Yeah. I'm gonna, again, take the opportunity to express my bewilderment about why anyone would do this for recreational purposes, but I think that's way more likely that someone is gonna form a [00:37:00] dependency or habit based on.
Sticking it up their nose at a rave than they are from laying in a clinic.
Jordan Harbinger: What are some other dangers of Ketamine therapy? I mean, you talked earlier about the potential emotional and psychological side effects. Is there anything more serious to be worried about? So apparently there's possible bladder and urological issues associated with frequent ketamine usage.
Oh, you know what? Now that you mention that, I remember seeing signs at the doctor in Taiwan and in government buildings in Taiwan. It was people like holding their bladder. And I remember saying, what is this about? And someone explained to me that there's this super popular recreational drug that kids and teenagers are taking all the time, and they go out all the time and they take the stuff all the time and they snort it.
They gave me the Chinese name and I looked it up and it was Ketamine. And I was like, oh, I had no idea that could. Do anything to your bladder. But apparently people come in with these problems all the time in Taiwan and they're like, Hey, are you using ketamine? And they're like, maybe, yeah. Do you know anything about [00:38:00] this?
Nick Pell: Ketamine used chronically at high recreational dosage can cause severe bladder damage. This is known as ketamine induced cystitis. This is apparently not a thing with clinical dosing. It's also very difficult to treat, so be careful if you're doing ketamine for fun.
Jordan Harbinger: Yikes. That sounds terrible. I don't know what cystitis is, but yikes.
Bladder. I know I'm
Nick Pell: a 45-year-old man and I can't sleep through the night without getting up twice, so. I ain't doing anything that's gonna increase my trips to
Jordan Harbinger: the bathroom. I need that thing functioning at peak performance or whatever the peak is at age 45. Exactly.
Nick Pell: There's also this phenomenon where people can get more depressed if the treatments don't work or they don't work as quickly as they want them to.
There's also anecdotal evidence that people become more suicidal after short-term relief, but again, not well studied, not really anything you would call data.
Jordan Harbinger: Do you think that there's a type of person who just uses ketamine therapy as an escape or a distraction rather than [00:39:00] actually using it to solve their problems?
Sure. Why not? So isn't that a danger?
Nick Pell: I don't think so. First of all, as I think you and anyone who has listened to any of my previous episodes knows. Like what adults do with their bodies is their business. It's not mine. I also think that there's just such a low potential for addiction here. This isn't your local heroin clinic.
We're talking about a drug that 100% of the people on this podcast find unpleasant. And it's also pretty expensive.
Jordan Harbinger: Yeah. But there is potential for addiction.
Nick Pell: Yeah. But again, it's recreational use at high doses, I think. A lot of people might be self-medicating and they're more the ones you should be worried about rather than people in treatment facilities.
So are people misusing ketamine therapy? Probably. But I just don't see any scenario where this is in the top 1000 problems in America today.
Jordan Harbinger: Could this be a kind [00:40:00] of gateway for other psychedelic drugs to be used in therapy? Maybe there are other options people can use that we should be exploring. I think it's
Nick Pell: entirely possible, and if that helps people, great.
I really hate what the weed industry has become in this country, but this doesn't seem to be the beginning of that. We're not seeing Ketamine dispensaries popping up across the street from middle schools.
Jordan Harbinger: Yeah, the by mail thing, but again, that's supposed to be therapeutic. Who knows? But medicalization of marijuana is what preceded its legalization for recreational purposes as well.
So I haven't looked at this closely, but I don't know if I see a huge difference here.
Nick Pell: Sure. I think that there are some key differences here though. First of all, ketamine is a hardcore drug. The weed on the market today is definitely a different beast than what people were smoking in the sixties and seventies.
But even then, I just, I don't really see it as comparable. You might be looking at some kind of chain reaction where we get medical mushrooms and medical Molly, and those could be moved [00:41:00] from medical use to recreational use, but. At this point, we've gamed this out like three steps ahead.
Jordan Harbinger: Yeah, fair point.
The, I think the bigger thing that's a threat right now is people who don't really need it, getting it through the mail without proper vetting. I know there has to be at least one person out there who is wondering if ketamine therapy is right for them, and I suspect they're probably not gonna wanna be doing pills by mail or going to some shady fly by night clinic and a strip mall.
What are those people gonna wanna look for in terms of a safe place to get treatment for this by somebody who's qualified?
Nick Pell: First, you're gonna want to get a full psych eval, some kind of health check During intake, you're probably also gonna want to talk to your therapist if you have one and you want to go to a place that's looking to screen out inappropriate candidates.
Jordan Harbinger: Okay. What about red flags? What are some things that should have people walking straight out the door as soon as they see it?
Nick Pell: Well, boy, I don't know, man. I, I don't want to get you in trouble with your potential [00:42:00] sponsors.
Jordan Harbinger: Well, don't worry. I don't think I would entertain a sponsor that did telehealth, ketamine, just because of, look, I got other sponsors coming in, genes.
No problem. Some software, no problem. And you know what? Let's not worry about pissing off any sponsors. I think if we find something negative about a sponsor, I also wanna know about it. People email me about this all the time
Nick Pell: for reasons I've, I've mentioned. I just don't think these distance clinics are the right approach.
Beyond that, the treatment is being touted as some kind of spa or self-improvement or optimization. That's not what this is about. Whoever you're seeing should hopefully have some kind of mental health professional on staff. In addition, vague promises in general are bad no matter what you're trying to buy, but especially when we're talking about horse tranquilizers.
Remember, ketamine exists to treat a limited set of very specific mental health issues. It is not vaguely about healing trauma or god [00:43:00] forbid, enhancing consciousness.
Jordan Harbinger: Yeah, definitely good advice all around. Remember guys, this is medicine, not a way to trip your face off legally. It's also a big business where, as Nick said, the purpose is to make money.
There's a huge difference between evidence-based treatment and selling an altered state to people desperate for any kind of solution. Follow the data, not the dopamine rush. If you're interested in this and you think it'll help you, the first place to start is probably by talking to your therapist. And if you don't have one, you should start by getting one.
After that, make sure that you talk to a real medical doctor, which neither Nick or I happen to be. And this is by no means any kind of medical advice. As always, thanks to Nick for guiding us down this key hole. Also a special thanks to Dr. Matt Cook out in Campbell, California for his expertise on this episode, helping us fact check this.
Make sure we weren't talking outta the wrong end. A link to his clinic will be in the show notes as well. Thanks to you for listening. Topic suggestions for future episodes of Skeptical Sunday to me, [00:44:00] jordan@jordanharbinger.com. Advertisers, deals, discounts, ways to support the show all at jordanharbinger.com/deals.
I'm at Jordan Harbinger on Twitter and Instagram. You can also connect with me on LinkedIn. And this show is created in association with PodcastOne. My team is Jen Harbinger, Jase Sanderson, Tadas Sidlauskas, Robert Fogarty, Ian Baird, and Gabriel Mizrahi. Our advice and opinions are our own, and yes, I am a lawyer, but I'm not your lawyer.
Of course, we try to get these as right as we can. Not everything is gospel, even if it is fact checked. So consult a professional before applying anything you hear on the show, especially if it's about your health and wellbeing. Remember, we rise by lifting others. Share the show with those you love. If you found the episode useful, please share it with somebody else who could use a good dose of the skepticism and knowledge we doled out today.
In the meantime, I hope you apply what you hear on the show so you can live what you learn, and we'll see you next time. Ever find yourself trapped in a cycle of always wanting more, never feeling content. You're about to hear a preview of The Jordan Harbinger Show, where scarcity brain, author Michael Easter unravels the [00:45:00] mysteries of our primal drives and how they can be both our downfall.
And our salvation.
JHS Trailer: I'm a investigative journalist, but I firmly believe that to understand a story, to understand all the mechanics of it, to get the information that you need to really tell a story, you have to go in person. Sometimes I get to go to the nice, shiny, comfortable labs where they bring me coffee and it's, you know, at Harvard or whatever.
But some days you find yourself in Iraq in a prison looking at cells of drug dealers and terrorists. But ultimately, I think that going there makes you get a better story, makes a story more interesting, and gets you better information to really understand it. Everyone knows that everything is fine in moderation.
So then the question is, well, why do we all suck so bad at it? People keep. Eating when they're full. We often find ourselves shopping when we already own a ton of stuff. We scroll through social media or keep binging news when we know it's not necessarily improving our mental health. When you think about how humans evolved, everything we needed to survive in the past, it was all scarce and it was all hard to find, right?
So everything from food. To possessions, [00:46:00] to information, even influence and status, the number of people we could influence, all hard to find, all scarce. And we lived like that for basically two and a half million years. And it wasn't until very recently in the grand scheme of time that we started to get abundance of all these things that were sort of built to crave.
So in the past, it always made sense to eat more food than you needed if you had the opportunity. To hoard items to try and get as much information as you can. Just keep seeking information, all that would give you a survival advantage. And then our environment's flipped and now we have an abundance of all this stuff and we're still compelled to just consume and consume all this stuff
Jordan Harbinger: for more about our insatiable desires and how to harness them for good, tune into episode 902.
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