As research continues to evolve, conversations like this are helping bring more attention to the importance of clinical structure, medical screening, and responsible approaches within psychedelic-assisted treatment.
Clip featuring Tim Ferriss on the Jay Shetty Podcast.
TTim Ferriss on Ibogaine, Brain Repair & the Future of Psychedelic Treatment
In this conversation, Tim Ferriss discusses ibogaine as one of the most complex and potentially far-reaching compounds currently being explored in psychedelic research.
The episode references the work of Stanford researcher Dr. Nolan Williams and emerging research around GDNF (glial-derived neurotrophic factor), a protein associated with neuronal repair and the restoration of brain pathways.
If research begins to catch up with what is already happening on the ground,
this could mark the beginning of a more responsible and safer future for this work.
This is not about hype.
It is about clarity.
A quiet shift is beginning to happen around ibogaine.
For many, this conversation is new.
For us, it reflects a reality we have been working within for years.
People have been traveling across borders in search of something that could help when nothing else had.
Not out of curiosity.
But out of necessity.
At Inner Realms Center, we have seen this firsthand.
And we have also seen how important structure, screening, and clinically supported care truly are.
Modern medicine often manages symptoms.
It rarely addresses the root of psychological suffering.
Psychedelics, when clinically supported and properly guided, are shifting that paradigm.
Not a panacea. Not for everyone.
But a real possibility for deeper healing.
Inspired by Dr. Jane E. Caplan: Imagine hitting a reset button for your mental health.
A 12-hour deep inward journey… intense, confronting, yet potentially life-changing.
This is not a shortcut. It is a doorway.
If you or someone you love is carrying the weight of unresolved trauma, complex emotional patterns, or depression , we invite you to start the conversation.