Host Natasha Levinger and her co-host/husband/producer, Brett are excited to talk with Microdosing Facilitator Kayse Gehret.
In this episode, they discuss:
- How Mark Slaughter features in the Sliding Doors version of Natasha's life
- The unbelievable true story of Natasha and the belching massage therapist
- Kayse is the least likely person to work with magic mushrooms
- She avoided all kinds of mind-altering substances due to gran mal seizure disorder
- Microdosing healed Kayse's seizures, but also brought a host of other benefits
- She started a microdosing community during Covid
- That community effort has grown to include a podcast, a website, and training others
- to do the work of guiding people through microdosing
- The different medicines that can be used for microdosing
- Microdosing is a sub-threshold dose, which means you don't feel altered.
- It allows you to get the benefits of these medicines in a bite-sized way that is easier to incorporate into your day-to-day life
- Microdosing is a different experience for everyone
- How to make sure you're getting the dose you expect
- How Kayse guides people remotely
- The gift of everyone going online during the pandemic was being able to spread communities around the globe
- Some popular misconceptions about these medicines
- These medicines should not be called "drugs"
- Are there specific medicines for specific conditions?
- The power of restful sleep for a regulated central nervous system
- How modern society contributes to nervous system overload
- The surprising overlap of microdosing guides with corporate HR
- The spiritual side of microdosing for Kayse
- How plant medicine quiets the "me" part of our brains
- Common misconceptions about microdosing
- What if microdosing doesn't seem to work?
- Community is an important part of the microdosing work
- And more!
Plus...
Kayse Gehret's info:
Getting to Know Woo is a podcast dedicated to dispelling the rhetoric that so-called "woo-woo" practices such as energy work, energy healing, inner child healing, chakra clearing, and more are impractical and ineffective, and instead are pragmatic, transformative, and powerful.