Psychoanalytic Politics, Ketamine, and the “Medical Model”

The Therapist (1937) by Rene Magritte


I recently attended a lecture entitled “Bridging Psychoanalytic and Psychedelic Therapies: Ethical Considerations” hosted by the UNC School of Social Work. It was sponsored by the North Carolina chapter of the American Association for Psychoanalysis in Clinical Social Work.

The lecture was light on both psychedelic and ethical considerations, focusing mostly on a “case” of long-term therapy — eight years — and, late in the presentation, the introduction of ketamine into the therapeutic relationship. In the case history, the introduction of ketamine is closely associated with what is suspected to be the impending conclusion of the relationship.

The respondent, a psychiatrist on the faculty at Duke University, expressed his worry about ketamine-assisted therapy like this: ketamine exposes therapists to the temptation of “magic,” or the allure of mysticism. We are in big trouble, he warned, if what we are left with is mysticism.

By magic, the Psychiatrist seemed to mean the “unknown” — the worry that ketamine will situate therapists in theoretical territory beyond the reach of standard psychoanalytic technique. But his concern about mysticism reveals something more. 

Mysticism is often anti-authoritarian. It is also, in my view, masturbatory. It does not lend itself to a relationship outside of the self.

The difference between psychoanalysis and, say, reading a book is that there is another person in the room. A therapy that collapses into mysticism loses that other person — and with them, the entire point of the treatment.

During the audience question period, the anti-authoritarian subtext became text. The predominant concern felt like this: Is ketamine like “AI” in the therapeutic space, reducing the importance — and authority — of psychoanalysts? 

What is ketamine figuring in this conversation between medicine and psychoanalysis?

Ketamine is becoming another chapter in a long history of attempts to alter the analysand’s consciousness (think hypnosis). The idea is that because psychoanalytic treatment is so beset by defenses, the time and effort involved in treatment could be signfucantly reduced by relaxing or altering consciousness. 

It is already quite clear that ketamine does alter consciousness, allowing repressed or traumatic or embarrassing materials to surface. But what is one to do with that material, especially if it is revealed outside the therapeutic “container”?

The so-called “medical model” clearly threatens psychoanalytic “practitioners” (a strange fact given the early wedding of medicine and psychoanalysis: e.g., Freud, Winnicott, and Laing were all medical doctors). If the mere appearance of unwanted material, combined with the specific neurological repair ketamine provides, resolves the underlying psychological issues — then why, indeed, is a therapist necessary?

This is where an unexpected ethical consideration surfaces, and it is not the one the lecture explicitly promised. The question it raises is: What is the analyst’s responsibility to the analysand?

Let us assume that one of the things ketamine does is alleviate psychological pain — more or less, and for good — thereby empowering patients to better live their everyday lives outside the doctor’s office.

Why isn’t a goal of psychoanalytic treatment to free analysands from psychoanalysts, by training them, through the treatment itself, to think psychoanalytically for themselves, outside the therapeutic container?

I asked a similar question of the presenter. It was taken in the most trivial way possible: Isn’t the goal to help the patient live without the analyst?

Practitioners may need ketamine treatment to think about the question I did ask: why must psychoanalysis end when the psychoanalytic relationship does?

The Psychiatrist dismissed my question as an instance of the “fetishization of Freud” (Freud was never himself analyzed). But I would describe my ongoing obsession with Freud as a desire to think psychoanalytically about my everyday life. 

The liberation of psychoanalysis from the “therapeutic container” is not mysticism. It is, or ought to be, psychoanalytic politics.

Several practitioners attending the lecture were explicitly curious about — and, it seemed to me, suspicious of — the presence of a theologian in their midst. With good reason, perhaps. 

Why would “patients” (like me) want to hear themselves spoken of as “cases,” as susceptible to falling off the wall of dissociation as Humpty Dumpty, as incapable of learning to think about their own lives in such a “specialized” way?

There is a reason psychoanalysts don’t run for office or have much to do with public policy.

What was presented at that lecture as an ethical consideration was, in fact, an institutional one. And, as far as I could tell, nobody in the room wanted to see the difference.

I left the lecture feeling depressed.

In fact, my experience of the lecture is best illustrated by what I witnessed beforehand.

I arrived early (as instructed) to park and register. The School of Social Work was locked. I only got into the building because a door was left ajar.

People started showing up for the lecture, but now all the doors to the School were locked. I let people in. In fact, the School’s representative mistook me for the lecturer.

Eventually, the Organizer of the event noticed the locked doors and propped one open: a very reasonable, and long-overdue, solution to the locked-door problem. Even so, the Organizer asked the School’s representative if “they had a better or different solution.”

What would that be, exactly?

God’s Semen and Alien Mushrooms: The Christology of Joe Rogan?

– AI generated image based on the content of the post below –

Recently, Joe Rogan has become part of my daily podcast routine, helping me pass the time while taking the kid to and from theater camp, nearly an hour away from home. I was surprised to find that The Joe Rogan Experience is very entertaining and engaging. I was especially amused by pieces of what I take to be Rogan’s christology, shared in two recent episodes of his cast: #2356 with Mike Vecchione and #2357 with Sarko Gergerian.

Does Rogan believe Jesus Christ is an alien mushroom born of God’s semen?

In #2356 with Mike Vecchione, a comedian and actor, Rogan brings up the discovery of a large object that seems to be on an unusual trajectory toward earth. Discovered on July 1, 2025, 3I/ATLAS has been the subject of ongoing observations by astronomers, who are monitoring its movement through space. Rogan notes that Harvard scientist Avi Loeb believes it could be an alien spacecraft.

They go on to discuss the idea of extraterrestrial life, including the possibility that Mars may have supported life. Here it is (2:49:00):

R: It’s weird.

M: Well, just because we [can’t] exist there doesn’t mean other life forms [can’t] exist there.

R: Or other life forms used to exist there.

M: Right.

R: [I]f Mars at one point in time had a sustainable atmosphere, like millions and millions of years ago, what if there was life on Mars? What if we are the offspring of the life on Mars? What if those fucking guys just realized like, hey, this place is falling apart, let’s shoot over to earth and reestablish?

M: Yeah.

R: I mean, that might be why we’re so different than every other primate that’s here.

M: I never thought about it like that. That might be true. I just think it’s so vast, and we know so little about everything, it’s possible. . . . [I]t’s all possible, the universe is infinite, and we know very little about it.

If Rogan is correct, we humans (thus, Jesus) are descendants of an alien race from Mars.

Add to our alien origins Rogan’s observations, shared with Gergerian, a police lieutenant–and therapist trained to use psychedelics–serving in Winthrop, Massachusetts, about God, Jesus, and mushrooms (1:32:30):

R: Have you ever heard of John Marco Alegro’s book, The Sacred Mushroom and the Cross?

G: No.

R: It’s a book that he wrote after he was one of the people that was, he was contracted to decipher the Dead Sea Scrolls. It was like a 14 year job where they were deciphering the Dead Sea Scrolls. And he was the only one on the committee that was agnostic.

He was an ordained minister, but through his studying of theology, he started becoming agnostic because he recognized that there’s just too many religions and too many parallels and like, what’s the real religion and root of this all? Or origin rather, and root of this all. So he wrote this book after 14 years where he, I’m gonna sort of paraphrase, but he thought that the entire Christian religion was based on the consumption of psychedelic mushrooms and fertility rituals. . . .

And it’s a fascinating book. It’s a fascinating book because he translates or he breaks down the word Christ to an ancient Sumerian word, which was a mushroom covered in God’s semen. And this is what he’s saying is that they thought that when it rained that this was God, his semen on the earth, which has caused all life to rise from.

We all need water. And then plants, of course, need water. And then after rainfall, they would find these mushrooms.

Because mushrooms grow incredibly quickly. And they would consume these mushrooms and have these religious experiences. And this was a hugely controversial book, of course.

And to really be able to know if he’s right or wrong, you would have to have a deep understanding of ancient languages and the Bible and so many different things.

There you have it: The Joe Rogan Experience of Jesus Christ: a descendant of an alien race from Mars, the offspring of God’s semen, who grants us access to the realm transcendental.

As Elder Cunningham from the musical The Book of Mormon exclaims, “I’m interested!”

I am especially interested in how Joe Rogan talks. Why is his podcast so popular? My theory, or one part of it, is that he talks how most of us talk: there is a thread of intelligibility that allows for improvisation, insight, transgression, creativity, honesty, and so on.

Democratic politicians should do more than go on Rogan’s podcast. They should also study how he talks to people and why people find him so compelling to listen to–even when he is talking about alien beings and God’s semen (and maybe even especially so).