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Dylan Beynon Profile
Dylan Beynon

@dylanbeynon

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3x Founder & CEO of Mindbloom, #1 provider of psychedelic therapy in the world – over 601,069 sessions facilitated. Time to wake up🔅

Austin, TX
Joined June 2010
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@dylanbeynon
Dylan Beynon
1 month
After a lifetime of addiction, my mom died of a fentanyl overdose. A year later, my sister did, too. Then my dad hit rock bottom. He didn't shower, shave, or leave the house for a month and texted me suicidal thoughts like, “you know I love you and if anything happens to me it isn't your fault, right?" Ketamine therapy saved his life. In August 2021, my mom was found dead in an alley from a fentanyl overdose. But I lost her a long, long time ago. As far back as I can remember, my mom was consumed by severe mental illness and addiction. We tried everything: countless medications, therapy, multiple rehabilitation facilities, and even eastern medicines. Nothing worked. We were a working-class family in Anaheim, not-so-affectionately called Anacrime. The local addicts that my mom befriended and often brought into our home created an environment of violence, chaos, and fear. By age 12, I stopped speaking to my mom and tried to avoid her completely, often staying with friends until I knew my dad would be home. By age 16, it became so dangerous that we had no choice but to evict her from our home. She spent the rest of her life homeless and I never saw her alive again. Losing my mom could have been the end for me, too. I never met my biological father, and most kids in my position ended up in foster care, or worse. But I won the lottery. My stepfather, a mailman and bus driver, adopted me and did his best to build a house full of love under impossible conditions. Too many Americans are needlessly dying like my mom did. And the mental health crisis is only getting worse. In 2024: - Nearly 1 in 4 adults experienced mental illness - 2M people attempted suicide - Drug overdose deaths hit record highs - Less than half of adults with mental illness received treatment But lack of access isn’t the whole story. Traditional treatments like SSRIs and therapy are failing: - Response rates for depression are below 50%. - 4 in 5 patients relapse within five years. - The “chemical imbalance” theory behind SSRIs has been widely debunked. - Nearly 50% of people experience debilitating side effects—insomnia, weight gain, sexual dysfunction, and even suicidality—that often persist long after stopping treatment. Fortunately, we now have better tools. Psychedelic medicine is a 10X better mental health treatment. Decades of research show that these medicines work — but they haven’t been available to most Americans. Today, ketamine is the only psychedelic medicine that is legal to prescribe in the U.S. Over 100 studies show that ketamine is an effective, safe, and fast-acting mental health treatment, prompting many to call it the “biggest breakthrough in the field of depression in over 60 years.” In 2022, the Journal of Affective Disorders published the largest-ever peer-reviewed study of ketamine therapy, with real-world outcomes data from over Mindbloom 1,200 clients. The study showed that after only four treatment sessions: - 89% of clients experienced reductions in symptoms of depression or anxiety - 63% experienced clinically-significant reductions in symptoms - 30% achieved remission Remarkably, ketamine therapy also eliminated suicidal thoughts for nearly two-thirds of people who were experiencing them prior to treatment. And this is just the beginning. Decades of research by MAPS and other organizations have proven psychedelics are highly effective for conditions like PTSD and depression, especially for underserved groups like veterans. I’ve seen firsthand how psychedelic medicine can be the difference between life and death. One year after my mom overdosed, my sister died the exact same way—just three weeks after she was discharged from inpatient rehab. I had tried and failed to get her into treatment with ketamine or other psychedelics, and it hurt to know she never got to try medicines that could have saved her. After losing my mom and sister, my dad, my hero, sunk into a depression so deep that I was confident he wouldn’t make it out. - He didn’t leave home or bathe for nearly a month - He texted me a list of all his accounts and passwords “just in case something happens to me” - He texted me not to throw everything away in the condo when he’s gone because he has silver hidden inside it - He refused to let me come see him or accept any help from me - He texted me “you know I love you and anything that happens to me isn’t your fault, right?” It was clear that he was preparing to end his life. My dad had resisted ketamine therapy for years, scared by the same stigma that prevents so many people from getting the help they need. Fortunately, rock bottom was the catalyst I needed to convince him to try at-home ketamine therapy through Mindbloom. Working directly with Mindbloom’s Medical Director and my friend, Dr. Leonardo Vando, to whom I will be forever grateful, my dad invested in his healing. The results were incredible: - He worked through his grief and found his will to keep going - He started exercising regularly for the first time in his life and lost 50 pounds - He reintegrated into his friend group and built his support network back up - He became open to finding a partner for the third act of his life, got engaged, and became a father to three new stepchildren—I officiated the wedding last summer. - He reached a place of happiness, vitality, and optimism I never in a million years thought I’d see him have again Psychedelic medicine saved my dad’s life, and it can help the millions of Americans who are still suffering. The tools we need to fix the mental health epidemic are right in front of us we just have to use them.
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@dylanbeynon
Dylan Beynon
3 hours
@alieninsect Hundreds of Mindbloom providers have facilitated over 600,000 ketamine therapy sessions. Haven't once heard a client who completed treatment say "hey that didn't feel like a psychedelic experience!"
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@dylanbeynon
Dylan Beynon
4 hours
Fringe theory for why psychedelic medicines are so effective for mood disorders is that they reduce inflammation in the brain.
@BellevueDoc
Julie Holland, MD
7 hours
I had a chapter in my book Moody Bitches called "Inflammation: The Key to Everything" (Inflammation and depression/anxiety are intimately linked.)
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@dylanbeynon
Dylan Beynon
21 hours
@KyleSherman Give that power fully back to the states. That's what state medical boards made up of providers is for.
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@dylanbeynon
Dylan Beynon
21 hours
@_TomHoward 3. Regulatory Capture is evil
@dylanbeynon
Dylan Beynon
21 hours
Anesthesiologists: "Sub-anesthetic ketamine for mental health conditions should only be provided by anesthesiologists." Common Sense: "Why?" Anesthesiologists: "Because?" Asking for regulators to gift you regulatory capture, be careful what you wish for...
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@dylanbeynon
Dylan Beynon
21 hours
Especially when your ask flies in the face of: 1/ 20 years of clinical practice 2/ 100+ clinical studies 3/ Patient access to life-saving treatments Purely profits-over-patients. Evil.
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@dylanbeynon
Dylan Beynon
23 hours
@AutismCapital Today I learned my wife has an IQ of >= 160
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@dylanbeynon
Dylan Beynon
24 hours
@ag_curious Also as a human who often sleeps 5.5 hours/night without the short sleeper gene, I don't recommend it.
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@dylanbeynon
Dylan Beynon
1 day
Optimism is the scientifically accurate mindset.
@waitbutwhy
Tim Urban
1 day
I still cannot believe that I can: - look at a world map and tap anywhere to zoom in at street level - instantly access any song, book, movie, tv show, or podcast ever made - have any conceivable question and get an immediate answer or video explanation - take a photo or video wherever I am and add it to my massive, searchable, always accessible personal archive - video call anyone in my life, at anytime, no matter where they are - watch live sports on a little wireless glass rectangle - type out these thoughts and have them read by thousands of people, all over the world, a few seconds later
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@dylanbeynon
Dylan Beynon
2 days
@algekalipso I'm 100% certain there's >= 1 QRI-informed DOGE staff and benefactor who also understands the extreme therapeutic value of DMT.
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@dylanbeynon
Dylan Beynon
2 days
@dcvilyz @nickcammarata GHB is alcohol2. - Moderately superior subjective effects - Massively superior recovery (improves sleep, 0 hangover) - Massively safer long-term - Moderately safer short-term when used responsibly Trade-off - Materially less safe short-term when used irresponsibly
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@dylanbeynon
Dylan Beynon
2 days
@ad0rnai @Noahpinion Biggest risk of ketamine is accident. Don't do in a pool, car, or running flights of stairs, kids. Relative to alcohol, ket not risky. As a mental health treatment, 10x less risky than SSRIs (50M Americans) or benzos (30M Americans).
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@dylanbeynon
Dylan Beynon
2 days
@_TomHoward @ad0rnai @Noahpinion If abused, totally. If abused, can lead to depersonalization, derealization, and even psychosis, too. The dose makes the poison.
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@dylanbeynon
Dylan Beynon
2 days
People are waking up to the danger and toxicity of alcohol Ketamine is 100x safer for self and especially others in short and long run, intellectually dishonest legality aside That said, it's anti-social America needs a safe and legal pro-social lubricant to sub for alcohol
@Noahpinion
Noah Smith 🐇
2 days
I've actually reduced the number of San Francisco house parties I go to, because everyone does ketamine and I fucking hate ketamine
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@dylanbeynon
Dylan Beynon
2 days
@_TomHoward @ad0rnai @Noahpinion In 60 minute short-run it reduces linear thinking (executive functioning, processing) and increases lateral thinking (creativity). In the long-term, responsible and especially therapeutic ketamine use increases net intelligence in most people. Psilocybin, lsd, etc same.
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@dylanbeynon
Dylan Beynon
2 days
@ad0rnai @Noahpinion Only when egregiously abused. Similar to how alcohol abuse causes cirrhosis of the liver. Ket is significantly less neurotoxic and physically toxic than alcohol.
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@dylanbeynon
Dylan Beynon
2 days
RT @PaulAustin3w: Psychedelics reveal the world as it is: interconnected, alive, and full of intelligence. The real trip is realizing how…
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@dylanbeynon
Dylan Beynon
2 days
RT @IterIntellectus: everything we’ve been told about aging may be wrong scientists just discovered that the “biological clock” tracking y…
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