The AfterMeth: Gay Men Recovering from Crystal Methamphetamine and Chemsex Addiction
Vision:
To eradicate crystal meth addiction and chemsex misuse, especially among the gay male population.
Mission:
Using the power of social media, The AfterMeth will increase awareness around the characteristics and effects of crystal meth and chemsex on the community of men who have sex with men, provide stories of hope to inspire struggling users and produce a repository of tools to be used by the loved ones of men who want to break free from the addictive patterns of chemsex.
Join Dr. Dallas Bragg every other week. You can find The AfterMeth Podcast anywhere you listen to your favorite podcasts. Find answers to:
How can I stop relapsing?
How can I heal my addiction?
How does crystal meth addiction affect gay men?
How can I get sober?
The AfterMeth: Gay Men Recovering from Crystal Methamphetamine and Chemsex Addiction
EP 3:11 Meth-Induced Psychosis with Patrick
Use Left/Right to seek, Home/End to jump to start or end. Hold shift to jump forward or backward.
Supplemental Study Guide: https://www.recoveryalchemy.org/newsletters/blog/posts/psychosis
In this episode of The AfterMeth Podcast, Dallas opens with a raw recounting of his own experience with meth-induced psychosis — nine days without sleep, curled in a corner convinced his house was surrounded — before welcoming Dr. Patrick Lockwood, a licensed clinical psychologist based in Los Angeles who has spent his career working across every level of substance use treatment. Together they unpack one of the most stigmatized and least-discussed dimensions of chemsex: paranoia, hallucinations, and meth-induced psychosis.
Dr. Lockwood breaks down the spectrum of psychotic symptoms, distinguishes paranoia as one type of fixed false belief, and offers the grounding metaphor that intrusive thoughts and delusions function like reflexes — closer to a sneeze than a character flaw — which reframes the work from "fixing" the experience to skillfully managing it through distraction, reality testing, and reducing catastrophic thinking.
The conversation moves into deeply practical territory for men in recovery: how to set realistic expectations for brain healing, why patience and self-compassion matter more than timelines, when antipsychotics or beta blockers may help (and when they won't), and how to find support through professional care, telemedicine, or peer communities like Crystal Meth Anonymous.
Dallas and Dr. Lockwood also speak tenderly to the lingering trauma carried by men who experienced violence, abandonment, or terror while in psychotic states during use, and to those still trapped inside delusions without knowing it. The episode lands as both a clinical primer and a permission slip — a reminder for listeners around the world that they are not broken, not crazy, and not alone, and that healing the chemsex-affected brain is possible with time, support, and grace.
Find Patrick here:
Website: https://www.lockwoodconsultingsolutions.com/
My Twitter: @alobhapatrick
The AfterMeth:
Join our Facebook Community: https://www.facebook.com/groups/theaftermeth/
Dallas Bragg
Subscribe to our weekly newsletter: https://www.drdallasbragg.com/newsletters/blog
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/drdallasbragg
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/drdallasbragg/
TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@drdallasbragg
YouTube: The Aftermeth Podcast
X: https://twitter.com/Drdallasbragg
Free online course to End the Relapse Cycle: https://www.drdallasbragg.com/offers/e7c2Eo22/checkout
Meth-Free Blueprint EBOOK: https://www.drdallasbragg.com/offers/o8qFhK5i/checkout
So suspiciousness in and of itself isn't bad or even clinical. It's actually adaptive in certain settings. But when you're suspicious just hanging out at dinner, when the people you're hanging out with at dinner have done or said nothing, indicating that they're trying to harm you or plot against you, that's where it becomes kind of a problem. So you can think of suspiciousness and paranoia on a spectrum of like very, very mild and ordinary and not causing you a bunch of distress and not making your life difficult to the other end of the extreme spectrum, which is it's there all day, every day, and it's causing you to chemsex.
SPEAKER_00Sexualized drug use among men who have sex with men, typically involving methamphetamine, methadrone, and GHB, among others. Chemsex misuse is a worldwide epidemic that needs attention, dialogue, and hope for those lost in it, which is the purpose of the Aftermath Podcast. Please note the views expressed by the host and guest on this podcast are not to be taken as medical advice, and the content around sex and drug use can be triggering. Welcome back to the Aftermath Podcast. I'm your host, Dallas Bragg. So glad you're here. Thank you for joining us for another season. Hope you're enjoying the season so far. I've had some really big names this time and um big topics. Topics that really, when I started doing the podcast, I wanted to cover and just never have. Um, but today, before I get to the guests, I just wanted to give a little background. And for those of you who are have been in the chemsex scene can identify with this that there was a time when I experienced meth-induced psychosis. And I had been up probably nine days. That was my average. Um nine days in a row. And typically I would just pass out. Um, but for on this particular night, for whatever reason, something clicked, and I spent the night curled up in a ball in the corner of my room, thinking that I was surrounded the house had been surrounded. This was right after I was literally arrested. I was arrested the first time, and I was on probation. So I think that, of course, that had something to do with it. I really thought the house was surrounded. I thought that they were trying to get inside. I forgot how to use the phone. The the natural way when I'm high from to use my phone was I went straight to Grinder. And I started texting for help to people on Grindr. So you can imagine how that might have gone over. Um and so it was a crazy night. Just I really thought it was true. I don't know at what point I I finally passed out. So real and so vivid what I was seeing, the shadows moving in the windows, you know, the shadows in the window. Um, so that was for me one of the only times that I had psychosis, but I was around so many men who were in it often while we used, but the men who stayed in it too, after. I always had a just a just a soft spot for them. And so I have been looking for somebody with experience in this to come on the podcast and kind of help you listeners be seen and be heard and to feel less stigmatized and less like you're crazy, um, and help us understand this a little more. And so I found a gym, Dr. Patrick Lockwood, who's in LA. Uh, he's friends, he is a friend of our friend, Mel McCracken, who's been on the podcast several times, um, and we'll probably be back. Um, but Patrick, can you introduce yourself, please? Yeah, absolutely.
SPEAKER_03Thanks for thank you. Really appreciate you having me on for various reasons. And uh this topic is something that's really important to me because of not only my professional life, but also a lot of the people I know in my our community who struggle with this. So it's a personal thing and a professional thing for sure. So uh for the folks that have never heard of me or seen me anywhere, I'm a licensed clinical psychologist in California. I live in LA, roughly speaking, and I have spent most of my career in what I affectionately call rehabistan, because um the different uh rehabs have different philosophies and beliefs, as you know. And so uh I've spent most of my life uh in a non-kidding sense. I I've helped people with very severe substance use disorders that usually are called addictions. And I've worked at every level of care, I've worked in every kind of program, fancy rich programs, community mental health programs, psych hospitals. So I kind of know the entire system inside and out. And my uh other life is being a professor at California Lutheran University. So I have the privilege of teaching future doctors, doing clinical supervision with them, and things like that. And so as a clinical supervisor and as a professor, as a treatment professional, uh, I've tried to look at this problem we call uh chemsex uh as many different ways as we can. And, you know, just to toss something out there for you and for everyone, one thing that really sticks out to me about the challenge of psychosis when it comes to chemsex is it really adds a dimension to an already very complicated emotional issue that I think people are afraid to talk about because psychosis is kind of a spectrum. It's not like a black and white, you're psychotic or you're not experienced, right? So if you think of you know the diagnostic version of things, most psychotic disorders have kind of three categories of symptoms. There are the so-called positive symptoms, which are the hallucinations or delusions, and then there are the so-called negative symptoms, which are like poverty of speech, poverty of thought, uh motivation, stuff like that, things that are absent that should be present. So you should have motivation, right? And then you have just general disorganization as a person, right? And so depending upon how much meth you use or whatever substances you're combining, you might be very disorganized just because of the polypharmacy of it all, right? And if you find yourself in a chemsex situation where there's just lots of people because it's like a bathhouse or an orgy or whatever it is, there's just psychological disorganization because of the setting that you're in, right? And so chemsex to me is an extremely complicated problem, especially as it relates to psychosis, because you're already in settings, in my opinion, often, that are disorganizing in and of themselves. And then when you add the chemical disorganization because of meth or whatever it is, it just makes an already difficult experience ten times more difficult. So I feel a lot of sympathy for people in our community who go through this because they have this like quadruple whammy of an experience beyond just the shame around sex and sexuality and and compulsive sexuality. Then there's that chemical version of it, but then there's also paranoia. So it's just it's there's just so much going on that's hard for any person to handle. You can be the smartest person or the sanest person or the healthiest person, but as we all know, meth is not something you can just mess around with casually. There's in my life, I've never myself met a casual meth user. It sounds good on paper for some people, but it's it's hard for that to be a casual habit, you know what I mean?
SPEAKER_00Right. Yeah. Yeah, I get that's one of the questions I get asked often. Can I use this casually? Can I use this recreationally? And that's and I'll always say, if you could, I would be doing it. I would be using it casually. Right, yeah. And if you could, you wouldn't be talking to me right now. Um, right. Um yeah, so can you talk about then the spectrum of psychosis, if you if you don't mind? And what's the difference between psychosis and parano paranoia?
SPEAKER_03Well, paranoia is just one feature of psychosis, right? So let's talk about paranoia first, and then we'll talk about like the spectrum idea, right? Because I think a lot of people have like black and white thinking about these mental health topics, and I I want to make sure that you know the real complexity is honored so we can honor where people are at, you know? So paranoia is just a type of delusion, basically, right? It's it's a filter that your brain has, right? So there's different types of delusions. There's grandiose delusions where you think you're more special and amazing than you are. There's delusions of love where you believe people are in love with you when they're actually not, right? Yeah. Yeah. And so, and just so everyone knows, a delusion is just simply a fixed, false belief, a belief that doesn't change when there's new evidence presented to you, right? And so all of us have incorrect beliefs, but usually those change when we're presented with new evidence. But a delusion is a complicated system of beliefs that is resistant to true and accurate information, right? So, you know, so a paranoid delusion basically is where the individual has fixed false beliefs about suspiciousness, about being harmed or being threatened that aren't grounded in actual experiences of threat, right? So classic paranoia involves, you know, believing that a person you're interacting with has ulterior motives or hostile motives when they've actually not said or done anything in reality. Yeah. Yeah that warrants that judgment of yours. Or just general suspiciousness that's not warranted, right? So suspiciousness is perfectly ordinary, actually. We should all have, or at least my opinion, is we should all have some some like garden variety suspiciousness because like that person might be staring at their phone and cut you off while they're driving, right? So you should be a little suspicious of the people driving next to you, right? Yeah, right. Not in the sense that you have a a psychotic disorder, but in the sense of like, is that person actually paying attention to the road? Or are they just staring at their phone because they're kind of selfish, right? So suspiciousness in and of itself isn't bad or even clinical. It's actually adaptive in certain settings. But when you're suspicious just hanging out at dinner when the people you're hanging out with at dinner have done or said nothing, indicating that they're trying to harm you or plot against you, that's where it becomes kind of a problem. So you can think of suspiciousness and paranoia on a spectrum of like very, very mild and ordinary and not causing you a bunch of distress and not making your life difficult, to the other end of the extreme spectrum, which is it's there all day, every day, and it's causing you to read into things that the average person wouldn't read into, and it's making you really stressed out all day, and it's causing a lot of impairment in your life, right? So I think of it like very, very mild and not problematic to very extreme and all day and causing lots of problems and distress for you, if that makes sense.
SPEAKER_00Yes, yeah. Yes, so fixed false belief, paranoid delusion. So a common one is there are cameras in my house. Right. There are cameras in my lights or my sp sprinklers or my vents. Um and no amount of picking apart, tearing apart, pulling from the wall proves even if you take the smoke alarm apart, you it you're not convinced that there's not a camera in it. Is that right? Yeah, absolutely. If that if if I'm in that though, what or or let's take it from both sides, if I'm in that, uh how do I then uh ease up on it? Is there a way for me to if I if if evidence doesn't resolve it, then what does at that point?
SPEAKER_03Yeah, so uh what uh when I think about most of these topics, I like to have a metaphor on deck that might make it easier to to have realistic expectation. Because I think you and I both very much care about realistic expectations as people, as providers, right? Right. So I think most people now this is just a metaphor, so it's not literally true, just so everyone's clear. So don't you know cancel me or whatever. Right. But like but if you think of most of our mental health symptoms as reflexes, it really helps. So like a reflex that I don't think anyone believes they can control is a sneeze, right? So if your nose is irritated, either because of nose candy, or because of allergens and pollen, or because you know it's all dried out because you're dehydrated or you're not drinking enough water or whatever. Whatever's causing your nose to be irritated will will force you to sneeze, right? That's a reflex. It's not under our control. I don't think people, I'm to my knowledge at least, can't make themselves sneeze. And so no one in their right mind would be like, I need to sneeze less. Right? Right, right. And as much as you know, we can have a sneezing fit where we sneeze over and over and over again, and it's really upsetting and you get lightheaded and whatever, but no one thinks I have a pathological sneezing problem, right? And I kind of think I think of these intrusive thoughts and delusions in a very similar way. These are reflexive things that your brain is doing to keep you safe, right? Even though your brain is misreading the environment and is misjudging how unsafe you are, okay, the delusion itself, the paranoia itself is just a reflex, like a sneeze. And so you can't really keep yourself from sneezing. But what you can do is you can notice what's irritating your nose, right? And likewise with the paranoia, you can notice what's irritating this paranoia reflex, right? So, what are the stimuli that are causing you to misinterpret reality, right? And I say cause very like casually, not like technically and scientifically, right? So you might look in the vent in your ceiling and think there's a camera there, or you might misperceive something in your vent or whatever. And you're right, no amount of taking the vent apart is gonna get rid of that. But then the question is, is that what's causing the sneeze, or is it your perception that's causing the sneeze? Right? So you're you're looking at something, you're putting your attention on something, and can we do something with that attention? I wonder. So you find yourself staring at the vent. Could we distract ourselves for a little bit, for instance? Distraction in small doses is very useful. It's like an intentional interruption skill, if that makes sense. Yeah. But it doesn't solve the problem, it doesn't get rid of the paranoia, it just temporarily gets you out of that fixation so that you can maybe engage in some of what we call metacognition to get your brain back focused on something else that's more productive. You know? Or can we do some reality testing? If you're feeling comfortable enough in your skin, can we try some reality testing? You know? Can we check on what do I believe? On what basis do I believe that this is real?
SPEAKER_02Right.
SPEAKER_03Yeah. You know? So distraction and reality testing are skills that take time to develop, but they don't solve paranoia, they just help you manage it once it sets in. If that makes sense.
SPEAKER_00Yes. Yes. I think it's important for the listener to know to manage the expectation.
unknownYes.
SPEAKER_00So if you're ex if you're expecting to solve it, you may get disappointed, you may get uh frustrated, you know, you're you're you're going to set it yourself up for failure almost. Yes. But if you say, I'm going to manage this, this is here, it's not going anywhere, I'm going to sneeze anyway. Yes. So I'm going to manage to sneeze, I'm going to put my arm up. Right. Right. Exactly. But it's not everywhere.
SPEAKER_03Yeah. We're kind of talking exactly that. Like we're managing. Yeah. Because the paranoia does not magically go away even with the best psych meds, you know? So it's a question of can we find temporary coping skills that allow us to feel just a little less worried and anxious? And also at some point start to feel more in control again. Because most people with paranoia feel out of control.
SPEAKER_00Right. Right. Right. Okay. All right. Okay. So for you listening, is the the distraction, the metacognition by distracting yourself and then the reality testing, you know, and what do I believe? But at the end of the day is is in control of it and managing it. Just manage it. Because it uh I I and you correct me if I'm wrong here, but one thing that I see is is the response to it as well that can ignite it. Yeah. So when I look at the vent and I think there's a camera in it, if my response is, oh my God, I'm crazy. I can't believe this is happening. I there's something wrong with me. I'm damaged goods. I'm what I'm never, I shouldn't have ever done that myth. Is this the rest of my life? Those kinds of thoughts to me are not healthy and can it to I I don't know if it's scientific, if it's scientific or not, but it it it couldn't help matters, right?
SPEAKER_03Yeah, we call that catastrophic thinking or catastrophizing, right? Right, right, right. And so every time we're catastrophizing, it's usually making our life worse. Now, obviously, there are examples where catastrophizing is perfectly useful. You get in a car accident, you should be catastrophizing because, like, oh my God, am I hurt? Is my car screwed? What's going to happen? So the catastrophizing will force you to focus on the immediate situation and solve a problem. But catastrophizing while you're paranoid is definitely going to make everything worse, for sure. So managing catastrophic thoughts through either reframing, perspective taking, other cognitive coping skills, or just taking a breath, taking a step back and taking a breath. If you're in the headspace where you can kind of get yourself to take a breath and just try to center yourself if you can for even five seconds, you know, that would be good. You know, anything that gives you a break from the immediate distress is good.
SPEAKER_00Yeah, so there's a billion examples. And if you're listening, I know like you you think the same person is following you, or you know, all sorts of things. There's there's cameras in your uh laptop, you know. It used to be the first thing when a guy would come over to my house for a chem sex party, he would he would deck duct tape on all the cameras. Yeah, you know, oh yeah. On the laptops, everywhere, right? Um, duct taping the blinds down and all of that kind of thing. Yeah. Um, this is before you got high. Right. And and so what we're talking about here to me is when you're not high, when you're not, you know, you're you're not high on crystal meth, when you're high, this method-induced psychosis of when you're high, um, that that comes in, and and I'm guessing, uh do you help men? Do they do are they able to recall any tools to help them through that when they're high? Like, is there something that we can help if if you do use, if you have psychosis when you're you know you're chemically induced, is it are there any chances that that they might remember something or or make it a little less?
SPEAKER_03Yeah, it's tough. I mean, because like everyone's different when they're high. So there are some commonalities around euphoria and power and all that stuff, and and even psychosis too. But the idea that there's like a universal way people are gonna be able to remember things or not, I don't know. Like, I once once upon a time uh I used to run a tree. Program called La Fuente, which is a LGBT spot here in Hollywood. And a lot of our Kim Sex folks had very diverse experiences with being like present while they were high. Like some people did have the presence of mind to remind themselves or use metacognition to reorient themselves. And sometimes, I don't know how much this has happened in your life or in your coaching life, but like sometimes people have like a moment of clarity in the midst of doing something that they're like, I can't believe my life has come to this or something like that, right? Yes. And um, sometimes you can capitalize on those moments, right? Uh, I just think people are very different, you know, it depends upon how much meth you're actually using, if you're using other substances, if you're trying to come down with something, all these things, right? So I don't know. But if you if you do have the presence of mind to go, hmm, can I do something to feel better right now? Then there's lots of things you can try, but for most people, it's a time problem. It's like you gotta wait until it's out of your system, you know?
SPEAKER_00Right. Right, right. Yeah, yeah, yes, yeah. Okay, thank you. This is this is really helpful so far. Very helpful, actually. Is there do you know why? And this is worldwide. You know, it doesn't matter where where a man DMs me from, the paranoia, the the psychosis, it has the very same, it's all similar, similar. You know, it's it's all thinking that people are watching me. It's the paranoia of someone's after me. You know, the the the the cashier is in on it. You know what I mean? Like it doesn't matter, like from China, Australia to Europe to Canada. I I get I get these calls from men who are inside their home, scared, they can't speak to me above a whisper because they're convinced everything they do is being recorded. When it I had a guy say, when he goes, he he there's a grocery store across the street, he puts a hood on, sunglasses, he runs as fast as he can, grabs the food, runs back. Like this is his life. It's uh is there any research, and I maybe I should have done research, but I mean, why is it so similar no matter where? Is it just and why does it affect the brain that way?
SPEAKER_03Yeah, well, let's I guess we could back this up a little bit, right? So I think first we should talk about what people there's there's like a dozen things I want to say. I'm gonna try and filter it down to a couple so we don't spend six hours talking to each other. So uh I think you have things you want to do too. So I would say so. We need to, I think, talk about what normal actually is, right? I think if we have a real candid conversation about what it means to be a regular person, I think maybe this will be less stigmatizing for people who are struggling with paranoia. So Okay, okay. My my understanding, you know, having looked into this both on the chemsex side of things, but just on like the, you know, I teach a lot of psychopathology classes for Cal Lutheran. So I've done a lot of looking into how does the brain normally process information, especially emotional information, because I'm trying to teach people about other disorders. So one thing that I think a lot of people take for granted is the power of denial and how good our brain is at filtering out information. So, like right now, you and I are both being bombarded by dozens and dozens of sensations. Visual sensations from the computers and the lights in our room and shadows and all these things. We're also being bombarded by sensations from our ears because we have headphones on and all these things, but we're also being bombarded by the sensations of our skin and the clothes that we're wearing and the temperature and push and pull. And so basically, our brain is always literally being bombarded by dozens and dozens of sensations. And all day long, your brain does this beautiful job of just filtering out what you should actually quote unquote pay attention to. So our attention is very limited to a few things, three or four things, maybe, maybe five things if you're super aware. You know, advanced meditators might be able to notice six or seven or eight things, but like most people only really attend, they put their conscious attention to a couple of sensations. Okay. Right? Okay. But but that doesn't mean your brain is not being bombarded by dozens and dozens of sensations, maybe hundreds of sensations at any given moment. But your brain filters them out so you don't pay attention to them. Right? So the average person, if they could pay attention to all the sensations that are happening in a given moment, probably would lose their mind.
unknownRight. Yeah.
SPEAKER_03Because our brain's not good at processing hundreds of things at once consciously. It unconsciously processes a bunch of things. Right? So does that generally make sense?
SPEAKER_00Well, it makes sense to me, so probably everybody who's listening to it too. Yes. Okay, cool.
SPEAKER_03So part one of my little thesis here is we're bombarded by sensations all the time, but we have denial that keeps us from paying attention to them. Because it's just not useful. Like, why do we need to give a shit about the noise outside? It's not gonna kill me. Right. But but now imagine, imagine you were to take a substance or have a meditative experience or something that could transform your ability to focus. And as we all know, methamphetamine is a phenomenal focusing substance. Yes, sure does. Yeah. Right? But the problem is when you're focusing, when you're hyper-focusing on getting late or whatever it is, or getting high, or both, that doesn't mean your attentional resources are literally only devoted to that. All of your other senses are now heightened, which means you can now pay attention to more things. Unfortunately. Right. So meth has this beautiful and tragic gift of allowing you to take that ordinary denial mechanism we all have to not give a shit about the dozens of other sensations, and it starts to erode it and allow your consciousness to pay attention to more things, which is anxiety-inducing and paranoia-inducing for all people. Right? Like, I'm just gonna give a completely silly example. So most of us have the gift of denial all day around so many things because it's not evolutionarily useful. We'd lose our mind if we actually told the whole truth to ourselves. So, for instance, right now, again, just making a completely hyperbolic example. Right now, we're sitting on a rock in the middle of space that's going thousands of miles an hour and could basically be bombarded by an asteroid at pretty much any time. Theoretically, NASA could detect it, etc. But like in reality, that threat's always there. Number one. Number two, here in California, earthquakes could happen. Who knows at any time? Just, you know, I'm near the coast, it could fall into the ocean, and so on and so forth. That's threat number two, is earthquakes. So threat number one is asteroids. Threat number two, earthquakes. Threat number three, nuclear war. Uh, I don't remember the name of the person, but there's a journalist who did research on like how quickly would things happen? Could we protect ourselves from a nuclear war? And I'm pretty sure it's like we have less than 45 minutes to get our shit together, and we're all probably gonna die anyways, basically. Right. Right, right. So threat number three is nuclear war, right? And I can go on and keep listing things that are quite literally present threats that could realistically happen, but we're really just gloriously in denial about them all day, every day of our lives, right? So I just listed three catastrophic things, right? But for the most part, none of us walk around catastrophizing about the asteroids, the earthquakes, or the nukes, right? Because we believe that you know mutually assertive destruction is going to keep us from nuking each other, right? It's not true, technically, right? But it's it's denial. So our brain, our brain is all day, every day engaging in ordinary denial. Like we we have defense mechanisms to keep us sane. And sanity is not the absence of real information. Sanity is the absence of real information in a way that allows us to feel calm over time. That's all it really is. But there's a bunch of real information that is actually paranoia-inducing. Like your government literally is listening to you through your phone. That's not a myth, that's not a meth hallucination. We know that now. Right. Thanks to Edward Snowden and a bunch of other whistleblowers, we know that the federal government has literally been listening to people through their cameras. So all the the tweakers actually have it correct, believe it or not. You know? Yeah. Yeah, yeah. So, so, you know, we live in a world with actually constant threat, even though it's, you know, here in the West, it's it's better than it's ever been. It's technically true that if you were to actually pay attention to all the real threats that exist in your life, then you would be a little suspicious and paranoid walking around every day. But most of us have the gift of denial, this normal defense mechanism, which is a reflex, to not give a shit about these things and focus on the present moment or focus on this podcast or focus on work or whatever it is. Yeah. Yeah. Because we would just lose our minds if we thought about all the very true things all day, right? So, to me, one of the reasons why I just a long-winded answer to get back to why I think everyone has the exact same kinds of suspiciousness and paranoia is because it's actually very rational to believe that the people you're randomly meeting at the supermarket could kill you because technically they could. Yeah. Right? Yeah, yeah. That that cashier might have a weapon on them. That cashier, that cashier might be on drugs that makes them violent, for instance. Right? So those are not unrealistic threats. It's just that our brain loves to be in denial about them because, well, nine times out of ten, that's not gonna happen to me. So why should I care about it? Right? And so to me, I think paranoia is just acknowledging reality, unfortunately, that our brain's normally in denial about because it doesn't serve us to be out of denial about it, if that makes sense.
SPEAKER_00I see. I see. Yeah. See, this is a this is a very it's a a a perspective shift that I think can help a lot of people. Yeah I I'm just seeing I'm just paying attention to reality that others aren't.
SPEAKER_03And adding a layer of meaning that most people don't.
SPEAKER_00Yes, and adding a layer of meaning that most people don't. So what is most in my control perhaps is the meaning I'm making.
SPEAKER_03Exactly, because the attention's not gonna go away. Right. Right. Not until you've had some time and you've gotten better and your body's regulated, your brain's regulated. But the meaning, this you know, the suspicious meaning of like that person looked at me, right, and I think they have plots against me, it's that meaning that you can play with. Right.
SPEAKER_02Yeah.
SPEAKER_03How can I play with that? Practically. I mean, the the coping skill from cognitive therapy is called per perspective taking. Right? So perspective taking is quite literally what it sounds. You're just paying attention to the original perspective you had, which is I think this person's out to get me. And can we add alternative perspectives to that? Okay. We're not trying to get rid of or challenge the original perspective. We're just adding alternative perspectives. Okay. Right? So if someone's actually psychotic, they still have like schizophrenia as a diagnosis, you don't challenge the paranoia. What you do is you help them tolerate the feelings, like we were talking about, but then you also help them look at alternative perspectives if they're open to it. But if you're not open to it, don't force it. Okay. Right? Okay.
SPEAKER_02Okay.
unknownOkay.
SPEAKER_03Because when you force it, you're trying to confront reality. And that does not work if you're experiencing psychosis, whether it's drug-induced or due to schizophrenia. So if you are a little more open-minded despite the paranoia you're experiencing, you can try adding alternative perspectives. But be be careful because it might spin you out if you add a bunch of negative and suspicious alternatives. Right. Right. It could go the other way.
SPEAKER_00It could go the other way. Right. Yeah. That person is talking about me. An alternative perspective might be that person the opposite. That person is not talking about me.
SPEAKER_03Yeah. Or they're having or maybe they have a bad look on their face because they're pissed off at themselves. Or they hate their job, right?
SPEAKER_00Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
SPEAKER_03Right. The cashier hates his job. The cashier had a bad day. The cashier's boss is a dick.
SPEAKER_00Okay. Okay. Yeah. If you're open to that, those are all different things. Yeah.
SPEAKER_03And if you're not, then don't force it. You know, because when you're when you're in a very fearful place and you're very resistant, then pushing on yourself will not work. Especially if you're paranoid.
unknownYeah.
SPEAKER_00If you're struggling with paranoia. Would this also be an opportunity to ask on what do I believe the reality?
SPEAKER_03Yeah, you can ask yourself that question. If you're up to it.
SPEAKER_00If you're up to it, yeah.
SPEAKER_03Okay. But you know, my favorite thing is if someone is really struggling, the first question I always have is, what do I want to do to feel better right now?
SPEAKER_02Okay.
SPEAKER_03Because you're going to be able to do that right now. Yeah, because there's usually something super simple. I can take a breath, I can go outside and get some sun, or I can go to a quiet place, or whatever it is.
SPEAKER_02Yeah. Yeah. I love it.
SPEAKER_00What about a word or a mantra or something like that? I guess anything that can anything that can bring you out of it.
SPEAKER_03I mean, some people might respond well to that. Yeah, you're like trying to you're trying to train your brain to like snap out of it, right? That's I I think that's a great idea. Some people might do well with it, some people might not.
SPEAKER_00Yeah, yeah, yeah. Yeah, I mean, I I I have a feeling this is very much individual to uh all of it, all everything, every treatment. So each person, if you're listening to this, uh just understand that it could work for you, it might not work for you. Um, but be you know, trying it all until you find something that works, right? Yeah.
SPEAKER_03Yeah. And it it requires experimentation, in my opinion. Like I've never worked with someone clinically who was struggling with psychosis where I just had the perfect playbook and it just worked.
SPEAKER_02Yeah.
SPEAKER_03It's always we've got to experiment, we've got to play. I like the word play. We've got to play with how much anxiety I can tolerate right now. We've got to play with how much reality I can tolerate right now. Like it's not black and white. It's very gray. It's very situation and person specific.
SPEAKER_00Yeah. Yeah. Okay. All right. Thank you. All right. So a a big question I get is will my brain for lack of better words, heal. I don't know that heal is the right word here, because it's not broken. But will I will it resolve over time if I continue on my meth-free, you know, consecutive time frame? And I know there's probably no time frame to tell them, but is there do are there rates, there are percentages or or or is that also individual? It's very individual.
SPEAKER_03Okay. We we have some like national level data that's kind of helpful, but I I uh to me, I don't want to overpromise things for people. It's not it's not very reasonable. I think most people I've met, especially in a treatment setting, can certainly have substantial symptom relief. However, the timeline, being patient with yourself, is really important because I think back to the expectations thing. If we're not patient with ourselves, then we usually set ourselves up for you know failure, right? And so, you know, do you expect to feel completely fearless or something in six months? Probably not super realistic. I guess it's possible. I mean, I don't know that there's a quick way for anyone to feel better is if they're having meth-induced psychosis. I think it's a question of are you doing everything that you have in your power right now that's reasonable to feel better, right? Because some people maybe they work a really complicated job and they don't have time to take care of themselves as much. Uh, maybe they have certain disabilities that make it harder for them to do good things that are for recovery, like, you know, exercising is good for everybody's brain. But with the right kinds of disabilities, you can't really do that as much. So you have to find alternatives. And so, you know, being reasonable and being patient is extremely important if you have meth-induced psychosis. And when I say reasonable, I mean like reasonable with yourself, expectations for yourself. You know, it's okay to want to feel better quicker because you probably are terrified, you probably have shame and stigma, and you're tired of being seeing yourself as broken, right? I want to fix myself quickly. When you and I both know there's no such thing as fixing yourself, number one. Yeah. Yeah. Number two, it takes time for your brain to heal. And so, depending upon how long you've been using, what other drugs you've been using, what other behaviors you've been doing that hurt your brain, you know, it could take longer. And we have to be reasonable, we have to be patient, you know? So, you know, if you have the resources and the time to do extra things to take care of your brain and help it heal to eat better food and get better sleep. And, you know, if you need meds, take meds. If you drink enough water, like all the simple stuff, do as much of it as you can. And all the extra stuff, if you have the resources, I hope you can do it too.
SPEAKER_00Yeah. Yeah. I I I I like you said, I think the most important step first is to manage the expectation. That's right. And set the stage, right? Um, I asked a couple of places for questions, and I was just going to check one more time to make sure I didn't get any questions. Um there was a and then I lost the question that I had when I looked. The psychotic meds you've mentioned a couple of times, uh are those difficult to attain it.
SPEAKER_03It depends upon where you live, because some areas have a lot of uh telemedicine nowadays, and some areas don't, right? So obviously it'd be ideal if you could go see a provider in person. Now, if you're having some kind of extreme symptoms, like if you're having excessive anxiety or excessive fear or panic, or the hallucinations are causing voices that are very, very loud and you can't control them, you can go to like an emergency room or an urgent care, and there's a good chance they'll prescribe you something to help you calm down right away. It might be a benzodiazepine or it might be an antipsychotic. Um that being said, in an ideal world, it'd be great if you could find a psychiatric nurse practitioner or a psychiatrist who can help you with maybe some comfort medications like beta blockers or something to help you feel less anxious. Okay. Or uh if needed, if it's actually recommended, certain antipsychotic medications can help. But usually for delusions, they help less.
SPEAKER_02Okay.
SPEAKER_03Delusions, they help less. Yeah. So if you're experiencing a lot of grandiosity or a lot of paranoia or things like that. Sometimes medications, you know, will help a little bit because they're cutting down on how hyper-dysregulated you feel, but the content will not shift usually because of the medications. But they might sedate you basically.
SPEAKER_00Okay. Okay. How about hallucinations? And uh the the so I I used to do this only when I was high, but then sometimes when I wasn't, turn the shower head on, I would hear Billy Joel all of a sudden, you know, coming through. Or I would hear I would be here in my my windows closed, somebody's walking, I don't know, a mile away, I could hear them talking in my ear. Right. Is that specifically or officially hallucinations and the medic would the medicine help with that?
SPEAKER_03Like antipsychotics. Hallucinations. Antipsychotics do help with hallucinations for sure. Okay. Okay. Yeah. And so like depending upon who you're seeing, what kind of provider you're seeing, they might temporarily give you an antipsychotic. They'll give you like a week's worth of like a zyprexa or something like that. As an as an example, I'm not saying that's what you should take. It's just an example. So it'll sue me or whatever. But uh like in some cases, they'll give you a very short-term antipsychotic while the hallucinations dissipate, especially if the hallucinations are really impairing your ability to like sleep or or whatever, you know?
SPEAKER_00Yeah. I mean, we all know about the shadow people. We've all, you know, dealt with the shadow people and the voices and all of that kind of thing. Uh you know, I had a the only near-death experience I've ever had was with um someone in he was psychotic, he had schizophrenia. And we we got hi high together and it triggered him. And he turned into uh he I guess I I don't know if it was whatever, I don't want to diagnose it, but he turned into a different person. Breath, voice, everything about his face, he had a different name and he, yeah. I don't want to go into the the details, I don't want to trigger anybody because it was really bad. But I almost died. I was really close to dying. Um that was schizophrenia or something deeper for sure. Yeah. Um, you know, um I don't know whatever happened to him. But you know, those kinds of experiences also linger with a lot of guys that I'm talking about. So some guys go straight into paranoia once they inject or smoke, and they get made fun of or pushed out of the house onto the street. Um, they get, you know, they get uh there's violence kind of they're they're violent treated violently because they're buzz, they're a buzzkill now. You know, they're you know, and so those those type of experiences while you're high are traumatic. Yeah. Um, and so what I I know you can't tell, you know, I mean, uh the answer is see a therapist. Um, but are there any any advice you could give us if we're still kind of dealing with that and it's affecting us now in our sober life?
SPEAKER_03Well, if if people have like real trauma of some kind, um, and you need help, please definitely see someone if you can. Um I guess I think there are a couple of alternatives to therapy. So there are different types of self-help groups. So, you know, out here in LA, CMA is fairly popular, Crystal Meth Anonymous. And, you know, there's a lot of really good support there for a lot of people because a lot of people have experienced the things you're talking about, and um, whatever feelings you might have about AA and related things, it's a lot of the same community, it's a lot of people who get it, it's a lot of people who've been through very traumatic and tragic things together, and so they will understand you. And sometimes just being with someone else who understands you can help you feel safer. Um, and you know, even if you don't actually join like a CMA or something, you might find somebody at a meeting that it can at least be your friend and help you walk through this so you don't feel alone. Because to me, the worst thing is trying to deal with anything alone. Yeah, you know, we are we're mammals, and mammals are a social species, which means we're we're designed to feel good together. We're also designed to feel bad together. We're not designed to be miserable by ourselves. This really isolated world we live in is not good for anyone's sanity. So I hope that you find some kind of support, some group of people, or even just a couple of people, if you can. And if it's professional, that's great. And if it's just self-help, that's also great, in my opinion. You know, so I I hope that if you are struggling with trauma, you try to walk through it with people who have your back and understand you to the best of their ability.
unknownYeah. Yeah.
SPEAKER_00Yeah. Yeah. You know, I'm not the I I try to be because I I just have such a a soft spot for these guys, but when they call me in this state, you know, I really try to be the best uh support that I can in terms of just giving them this space to allow them to be what they are and to feel what they feel. Um it's it it it's it's just heartbreaking. It's heartbreaking. Um do you see a difference and and I won't keep you too much longer, but uh uh so there's uh the broader umbrella of sexualized drug use, and then there's chem chem sex, men who have sex with men. Do you do you see any differences in the way the psychosis shows up in maybe uh and in in the heterosexual uh demographic um and and I wonder why if there's a difference?
SPEAKER_03No, that's a good question. You know, I've I've worked with a lot of hetero folks who use a lot of meth. And uh, you know, I think the paranoia seems to be relatively similar. Um you know, uh my very first job at the ripe old age of 19, all these years ago, was working in a drug rehab that no longer exists, unfortunately, in Missouri, where I'm from, called Daybreak. Daybreak used to be this like state-funded program where basically you either went there or you went to jail, basically. Yeah. And so at the time, we actually had a lot of bikers because back in when I was a younger person, Missouri was the meth capital of the world, number one producers and distributors, because we had all the bikers that could, you know, go live in the woods and distribute, you know, main highway through all parts of the country, basically.
SPEAKER_00Right, Hills Angels or something.
SPEAKER_03Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. And so I dealt with a lot of them, and you know, their paranoia was pretty much exactly the same. They always thought that regular people were out to get them, they had an uh a suspiciousness that wasn't earned, all these kinds of things. Um and so I don't know that maybe obviously the sex is different, but the uh but even a lot of the sexual behavior was the same. There's a lot of group sex that they wouldn't normally be having if they were sober, doing a lot of out-of-control things they wouldn't normally be doing when they were sober. I don't know. I mean, there's some similarities, but there are also some differences in terms of like, you know, types of sexual behaviors and types of paranoia. But a lot of the paranoia seem very similar, like suspicious of the cashier, you know, hearing voices, you know, in the other room, all these things, you know, shadow people, um all seem very similar. And you know, across my career, it's you know, all the heterophobes I've dealt with also seems pretty similar in many ways, just maybe different settings or different, obviously very different sexual norms. Right. Right.
SPEAKER_00Okay. I was curious about that. Um yeah, so kind of wrapping up if you're listening, is g show yourself some compassion. Please. And understand that you're not broken. Okay. I just I'm just getting emotional. I'm like, this must be my crying season. I'm like crying on all these episodes. I don't know what's going on. This is just uh this is near and dear to me because of my past experiences too, but um just seeing people in in their sober state or being trapped. It's you know, there's a difference between there's a difference between the men who know they're uh having a paranoid delusion and those that are just trapped inside it. Yeah. And just don't know it. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah, it's hard. Yeah. Um but go back and listen to everything that that Dr. Lockwood said today and really take notes. Um, as you know, we send out a study guide with every episode. Pay attention to that. The link will be in the show notes. Um, this is very, very helpful information, and I think it's going to help you just calm, calm down a bit about you know, the the fears that you have, but also manage them in a way that's that brings peace to your life and just a little more peace every day. Patrick, is there anything I didn't ask today? Is there anything I left out that you felt like would have been important for us to mention?
SPEAKER_03I think I'd love to have a bigger conversation with you about the the broader spectrum of chemsex at some point, but I don't think that that's on topic today.
SPEAKER_00I would love that too. Uh when we spoke before, you were talking about three types of chemsex users. Yeah, yeah. I want to have that conversation. Yeah. I want to dig into that. Um yeah, uh this this topic I I really wanted to get to. I want to get to that. Uh if you if you don't mind, I would love to do another episode with you. I think you're going to be very popul you're going to be extremely popular on this podcast. I can tell you that. Um I I feel like this. Yeah. I feel like this is going to set a lot of men free around the world. You know, only half only half of my listeners are in the US. The other half. Yeah, the other half are uh all around the world, all around the country, all around the globe. Um and um we're all unified. Doesn't matter where you are, we're all unified by this same behavior and the same character, the same struggles. Um, and paranoia paranoia is one of them. So um I hope that this does set you free if you're listening. And um appreciate you being here. And thank you, um, Dr. Patrick Lockwood for sharing your your vast, extremely well-articulated knowledge here. I really, really greatly appreciate it. You've taught me a ton today, so thank you. Glad to hear that. Thanks for having me. Appreciate it. Of course. All right, guys, stay tuned, and we will see you next week.