Join us for Drugs Book Club where we’ll discuss I Feel Love by Rachel Nuwer. This book club meets quarterly. RSVP here.
The unlikely story of how the psychedelic drug MDMA emerged from the shadows to the forefront of a medical revolution—and the potential it may hold to help us thrive.
 “Riveting.” —Bessel van der Kolk, MD, author of The Body Keeps the Score 
Few  drugs in history have generated as much controversy as MDMA—or held as  much promise. Once vilified as a Schedule I substance that would  supposedly eat holes in users’ brains, MDMA (also known as Molly or  Ecstasy) is now being hailed as a therapeutic agent that could transform  the field of mental health and outpace psilocybin and ketamine as the  first psychedelic approved for widespread clinical use. In I Feel Love,  science journalist Rachel Nuwer separates fact from fantasy, hope from  hype, in the drug’s contested history and still-evolving future.  Evidence from scientific trials suggests MDMA, properly administered,  may be startlingly effective at relieving the effects of trauma. Results  from other studies point to its usefulness for individual and couples  therapy; for treating depression, alcohol addiction, and eating  disorders; and for cultivating personal growth. Yet scientists are still  racing to discover how MDMA achieves these outcomes, a mystery that is  taking them into the inner recesses of the brain and the deep history of  evolution. With its power to dismantle psychological defenses and  induce feelings of empathy, self-compassion, and love, MDMA may answer  profound questions about how we became human, and how to heal our broken  social bonds.
From cutting-edge labs to pulsing club floors to  the intimacy of the therapist’s couch, Nuwer guides readers through a  cultural and scientific upheaval that stands to rewrite our  understanding of our brains, our selves, and the space between.

