The Road Ahead / Part 3

Zulema "Julie" Morales stands by trees in Rio Grande City, Texas
Zulema “Julie” Morales in Rio Grande City, Texas. Photo by Gabriel Gardenas

Psychedelics and the Texas Trip
Part 3: The Road Ahead
[ Listen on Texas Public Radio | Apple | Spotify ]

Episode three “The Road Ahead” of the three-part series, Psychedelics and the Texas Trip, explores ancient traditions of psychedelics as spirit medicines and what’s in store as psychedelics become mainstream.

Justice Leak, Alexandra Plesner, and Carly Dutch-Greene attend the 2025 SXSW psychedelic track sessions.
Justice Leak, Alexandra Plesner, and Carly Dutch-Greene attend psychedelic events at South by Southwest in Austin. Photo by Robin Berghaus

Our trip starts in Rio Grande City, Texas, where Zulema “Julie” Morales shares her family’s tradition and role as a peyotera. Morales is one of three people in the U.S. who is licensed to harvest and sell peyote to Native American Church members, the only people in the U.S. who can legally purchase it. To them, peyote is a sacramental medicine, which they have used for centuries.

Indigenous scholar and author Dr. Yuria Celidwen, a senior fellow at the Othering and Belonging Institute at UC Berkeley, shares how these ancient indigenous practices are under threat from their “medicalization” and “commodification,” and how collaboration between cultures can honor and preserve those heritages.

Then, we travel back to Austin and South by Southwest, where researchers, advocates, and business professionals gather to discuss the potential benefits and consequences of the psychedelic renaissance. Science journalist Jane C. Hu, shares updates on clinical trials and state laws that are aimed at making psychedelic therapies accessible in the U.S.

For our final trip, we head back to the Texas Legislature and speak with supporters, including former Gov. Rick Perry and W. Bryan Hubbard of the REID Foundation, about the state’s latest psychedelic bill, HB 3717, which would fund a public-private partnership to bring ibogaine therapy through clinical trials. Advocates believe ibogaine therapy could be a breakthrough treatment and help mitigate the opioid crisis.

Robin Berghaus speaks with former Texas governor Rick Perry and Bryan Hubbard about the Texas Ibogaine Initiative at KUT Public Media Studios in Austin.
Robin Berghaus speaks with former Texas governor Rick Perry and W. Bryan Hubbard, REID Foundation executive director, about the Texas Ibogaine Initiative at KUT Public Media Studios in Austin. Photo by Michael Minasi, KUT News

This special series is supported by a Ferriss — UC Berkeley Psychedelic Journalism Fellowship

Description

A three-part podcast series on Texas Public Radio that explores the potential of psychedelic therapies as a treatment for mental health conditions, and the science and history of the medicine.

Credit | Robin Berghaus
Writer, Producer, and Photographer

Additional Credits
Bonnie Petrie (Writer and Producer)
Dan Katz (Producer)
Jacob Rosati (Producer, Sound Designer, and Composer)

Gabriel Cardenas (Photographer)
Michael Minasi (Photographer)