Elisabeth McKay
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Understanding who can handle what and understanding what the average person can perceive objectively versus what you're perceiving is incredibly important.
And unfortunately, many people with diagnosed schizophrenia, they can't find that delineation anymore.
That delineation also often goes away when we're talking about psychedelics, which is why I think so many people end up being irrevocably harmed by psychedelics because nobody was pre-screening for who was not a good fit for this.
And I do want to very much thank Dr. Dave Rabin for the work that he does because I believe he's really at the forefront of trying to create a very clear protocol and screening process so that the people I'm talking about are never subjected to psychedelic therapy in the first place.
So Dr. Dave Rabin.
He's the best.
Big fan.
I know he has a book coming out soon and he's going to join us, I think, in September.
So maybe we can bring up this conversation topic again.
But one of the things we talked about on his show was how important it is for people with personality disorders to not engage in this work.
This work is not for you.
If it's already challenging to align your awareness or your perception with the objective record, psychedelics are a terrible fit for you.
And
If you are seeking truth, right?
If you're somebody who has a, it's the best way to say this.
I have, this is the best way to say this.
I have a saying that I use all the time in my somatic movement practitioner certification and in break method.
And it is that you can seek truth or you can seek healing, but you can't seek both at the same time.
And there's a very specific reason for this.
When you are seeking healing, actual healing and integration, you have to be okay with operating in the gray and knowing that you may never know.