logo
"I was broken": Veteran touts medical benefits of psilocybin at Roundhouse

"I was broken": Veteran touts medical benefits of psilocybin at Roundhouse

Yahoo17-03-2025
Mar. 17—SANTA FE — After being injured during combat tours in Iraq and Afghanistan, Chris Peskuski returned to civilian life damaged both physically and emotionally.
Even before deciding to leave the U.S. Marine Corps in 2011, the Albuquerque resident said he was starting to spiral due to alcohol abuse, a brain injury and post traumatic stress disorder.
"It took me a long time to admit this to myself, but I was broken and I was scaring myself enough to know that I needed to get out," Peskuski said in a recent interview.
But Peskuski said he was able to turn his life and his marriage around after traveling to South America to use psilocybin, or magic mushrooms.
Now he's one of several veterans who have been sharing their stories at the Roundhouse, as lawmakers debate creating a state-run psilocybin program for medical patients.
A bill that would make New Mexico just the second state in the nation with such a program, Senate Bill 219, passed the Senate last week on a 33-4 vote. It's scheduled to be heard in its only assigned House committee on Monday and could reach the House floor later this week.
The advocacy of Peskuski and other veterans at the Roundhouse has already made an impact.
During the Senate debate on the bill this week, Sen. Jay Block, R-Rio Rancho, said he was previously staunchly opposed to a state-sanctioned psilocybin program.
But he said he changed his mind after a heartfelt conversation with Peskuski, who sat on the chamber floor alongside Block while his wife and 7-year old son watched from the Senate gallery.
"There are many veterans who haven't come yet," Block said at one point during the Senate debate on the bill, referring to struggles with mental health issues.
Peskuski said he was encouraged to share his story with lawmakers by other veterans like Crystal C. Romero, who spoke about her own struggles with post traumatic stress disorder at a recent Senate committee hearing.
"I know that our voices have made an impact and changed some people's minds up here," Peskuski said.
Going forward, he said he wants to become a psychedelic facilitator to help other veterans experiencing similar struggles to his own.
"There's a lot of stigma around it in the Marine Corps," Peskuski said. "Mental health issues weren't really talked about."
NM would follow Oregon's lead under bill
The bill advancing at the Roundhouse would create an advisory board under the New Mexico Department of Health to oversee supervised use of psilocybin for patients.
At least at the start, patients with four conditions would be eligible for the program, which would officially begin in 2028. Those conditions, which would have to be certified by a physician, are depression, substance abuse disorder, post-traumatic stress disorder and end-of-life care.
It would also decriminalize the production, prescription and possession of medical psilocybin.
If the bill is signed into law, New Mexico would follow in the steps of Oregon, which became the first state to decriminalize possession and legalize use of psilocybin in 2022, though such use must be monitored.
Some other countries have also decriminalized or partly legalized psilocybin, including Australia, Brazil, Peru, Portugal and Switzerland.
Sen. Angel Charley, D-Acoma, also pointed out during the Senate floor debate that psilocybin has been used for thousands of years by indigenous healers.
"This medicine is not ground-breaking," she said. "It's only new to western modalities of healing."
But several skeptical senators pointed out the drug is still illegal at the federal level, since it's classified as a Schedule 1 substance by the Drug Enforcement Administration, and raised questions about its side effects.
An unlikely road to healing
After leaving the military, Peskuski said he tried more traditional types of therapy at his wife's urging, including a psychotherapy treatment and acupuncture, but found them only mildly helpful.
At one point, he said he was using a daily regiment of pharmaceutical drugs including Adderall to get out of bed in the morning, and alcohol mixed with Tramadol go to sleep at night.
"I was just super depressed, and became completely demoralized to the point where I really didn't care anymore," Peskuski said.
With his health deteriorating, he said a friend referred him to a nonprofit group called Heroic Hearts that helps U.S. military veterans navigate psychedelic therapy.
But that group had a lengthy wait list, so Peskuski decided to travel to Peru on his own to undergo a psilocybin medical treatment.
"I'm either going to die in Peru doing this medicine, or I'm going to die here one way or another," he recalled thinking. "I was pretty much at the point where I had nothing left to lose."
Peskuski said he had previously tried psilocybin as an adolescent but just for recreational purposes. He recalls the experience as "just running around tripping."
As an adult using the hallucinogenic drug in a more controlled setting, he described the experience as profound. Specifically, he said it prompted him to take ownership of his personal struggles, while also reminding him of his resiliency.
"In my core, I am a warrior and I had forgotten that and I'd become a victim in so many ways," Peskuski said.
He said he's now able to be a better husband and father, though he said he also sticks to a daily routine of meditation, breath work and martial arts to remain grounded.
"What it really comes down to is I'm here — I'm present wherever I'm at, and I can be present for my family," said Peskuski.
"I'm not worried about the future, and I'm not dwelling on my past," he added.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Gov. Cox says he's ‘grateful' he didn't know about new law's impact on Senate president's relative
Gov. Cox says he's ‘grateful' he didn't know about new law's impact on Senate president's relative

Yahoo

time29 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Gov. Cox says he's ‘grateful' he didn't know about new law's impact on Senate president's relative

Gov. Spencer Cox speaks with members of the media during the governor's news conference broadcast by PBS Utah at the Eccles Broadcast Center in Salt Lake City on Thursday, August 21, 2025. (Pool photo by Rick Egan/The Salt Lake Tribune) An at times heated Utah Gov. Cox sparred with reporters Thursday over the fallout from reports that Utah Senate President Stuart Adams initiated passage of a law that later helped his 18-year-old granddaughter reach a plea deal in a criminal case involving sex with a 13-year-old. Cox said he didn't think an ethics investigation or a third-party review is warranted, saying 'there's nothing to investigate.' 'The facts are abundantly clear. It's been reported. I don't think anybody's denied that what happened, happened,' Cox said, adding he learned about the situation when The Salt Lake Tribune first reported it earlier this month. Cox argued the most pertinent question is whether Adams 'should have told me about it' or 'should he have leaned on me.' 'I can only imagine how people would have reacted if he had done that,' the governor said. 'Look, there have been times in my term as governor, when I've been so mad at Stuart Adams that I couldn't see straight on certain bills,' Cox said, without naming those instances. 'That has happened a couple of times. I can tell you this is not one of those times.' Cox said he believed Adams acted appropriately by not publicly weighing in on the bill or disclosing his relatives' involvement to other legislators other than his right-hand man, Senate Majority Leader Kirk Cullimore, R-Sandy. 'I think it was appropriate for the top person in the Senate not to weigh in on this bill, which is exactly what happened,' Cox said. In fact, Cox — who signed the bill after it passed last year — said he's 'very grateful that I had no idea that this was impacting someone in his family, in his granddaughter's family, because it may have changed the way I reacted to the bill.' Instead, he said he was able to focus only on the policy. The governor added that there's 'no controversy about whether people knew this was in the bill or not.' 'The only question I have is this is the right policy? And this is a really tough one, guys,' Cox said. 'This is a hard one. You have kids in high school being treated differently, depending on where their birthday falls during the year. And if their birthday falls in May instead of June, then they get treated the same as a 50-year-old who had a sexual relationship with a 13-year-old. And that's the question. Is that fair?' The Tribune reported that Adams, 'surprised by the severity of the charges' that were first filed against his relative, confided with Cullimore and asked him to look into the issue. The original charges included two counts of child rape and two counts of child sodomy, all first-degree felonies, with the possibility of 25 years to life in prison and requirements to register as a sex offender, the Tribune reported. Cullimore also said he consulted Cara Tangaro, the defense attorney representing Adams' granddaughter, for more information on the case and to help draft language that was later put into a sweeping criminal justice bill, SB213, during the Utah Legislature's 2024 session. That provision allowed lower-level charges to be filed against 18-year-olds still enrolled in high school, allowing them to be treated the same as 17-year-olds in similar cases. The bill was not retroactive, and Adams' relative was not charged with the lower penalties it created, but the new law was referenced in court hearings before the case was resolved with a plea deal. 'You saw the legislative change,' Tangaro told Judge Rita Cornish at sentencing, the Tribune reported. 'We all agree that's not retroactive, but the government did change their offer based on that.' Ultimately, Adams' 18-year-old relative took a plea deal that meant she would not serve additional time in jail, would serve four years on probation, and would not register as a sex offender, the Tribune reported. In the interview with and Deseret News, Adams said his granddaughter made a mistake, but he also argued she received appropriate penalties, saying she was arrested at her high school, spent eight days in jail, and spent more than 500 days under house arrest with an ankle monitor. 'What a humiliating event,' Adams told the outlets. 'Now we're heaping on her a scarlet letter on her forehead. It's wrong. The stories are wrong. … She's been convicted and tried, and now we're doing it again in the media and it's wrong.' The 13-year-old victim's mother, however, told the Tribune she felt like she was 'punched in the gut' after she learned about the law change, and she felt as though her child was an afterthought both in the policy debate and the criminal case. 'I feel like a law is the law, regardless of who you are, but that wasn't what was going on here,' the mother told the Tribune. 'I feel like [the 18-year-old] just got special treatment …and nobody was going to say anything about it.' In wake of the Tribune story, calls for Adams' resignation have come from some Democrats, including Sen. Nate Blouin, D-Millcreek, and Utah Democratic Party Chair Brian King. They've also come from some corners of the right, with roughly 100 mostly conservative people rallying at the Utah Capitol in Salt Lake City over the weekend to call for Adams to resign. SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX Adams has rejected those calls and has denied any wrongdoing, telling and Deseret News that he didn't tell legislators about the case involving his granddaughter in an effort to keep the process fair. In an interview with the outlets, Adams and Cullimore also argued that the bill's process was proper and not unusual. 'There's nothing unusual about how this bill came about,' Adams told the outlets. 'Every bill that we run has some type of connection to a constituent, to a lobbyist, to an industry leader, to a personal experience a legislator has.' Other Republican lawmakers, including Sen. Todd Weiler, R-Woods Cross, have defended Adams and the process that led to the bill's passage. He told and Deseret News that he didn't know about the connection to Adams' granddaughter when the bill was debated, and that's how it should be. At least one Republican legislator, however — the House sponsor of the bill, then-House Majority Whip Karianne Lisonbee, R-Syracuse — has expressed concerns that that section of the omnibus criminal justice bill didn't go through the same vetting process as the rest of the bill. In a statement issued last week, House Speaker Mike Schultz, R-Hooper, said due to 'heightened attention on SB213, I believe it's important to reconvene stakeholders for further discussion to ensure we have arrived at the right policy.' 'I have spoken with President Adams, and he agrees,' Schultz said. 'We will convene a working group to conduct a comprehensive review of state policy in this area to ensure our laws protect public safety, uphold accountability, and serve the best interests of all Utahns.' Cox on Thursday left the door open to changes to the law, saying when he signed the bill it was a 'close call.' 'Maybe it's not the right policy. Maybe now that we have an opportunity to reflect on it, maybe it doesn't go far enough or it goes too far, and that's what we do. That's the process,' Cox said. The governor again defended Adams' role in the bill. While he brought it to Cullimore to address, he didn't publicly debate it or tell legislators about his connection to the issue. 'Every single legislator has experiences in their life where they see something that they feel may be unjust, and that influences the way they bring legislation to the table,' Cox said. 'Again, I have lots of reasons to get upset with Stuart Adams. This was not one of them. I'm really grateful he never talked to me about it.' SUPPORT: YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE Play Farm Merge Valley

Pence calls for secondary sanctions on Russia
Pence calls for secondary sanctions on Russia

The Hill

timean hour ago

  • The Hill

Pence calls for secondary sanctions on Russia

Former Vice President Pence urged the Senate on Thursday to pass a major sanctions bill against Russia, arguing that the hefty tariffs, along with continued military aid to Ukraine, provide the best 'pathway' to reaching peace in Eastern Europe. 'He's fully capable of doing the diplomatic thing and being friendly and shaking hands and at the same time saying, here's the economic consequences that are going to happen, unless you step forward,' Pence said of President Trump during his appearance on NewsNation's show 'The Hill.' 'If we pass those secondary sanctions, Vladimir Putin will understand that we could literally break their economy and by providing continued military support for Ukraine, that combination of efforts, I think, is the best pathway to peace,' the former vice president told host Blake Burman. The sanctions bill, which has been pushed by Sens. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) and Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.), would impose 500 percent tariffs on countries purchasing Russian oil and gas. The measure has over 85 co-sponsors in the upper chamber, but the Senate left for recess before advancing the bill, deferring to Trump to give the green light. 'We propose in our bill 500 percent. If it's 250 percent, I could live with it. Even if it's 100 percent, possibly. But you ought to impose bone-crushing sanctions that will stop them from fueling Russia's war machine,' Blumenthal said earlier this month. Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-S.D.) said on Monday that Trump should be 'commended' for his efforts to end the Russia-Ukraine war and signaled the Senate is 'ready' to provide the president 'any economic leverage needed to keep Russia at the table to negotiate a just and lasting peace in Ukraine.' Trump has pushed to end the three-and-a-half-year war, meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin on Friday and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, along with seven European leaders, on Monday at the White House. Since then, Russian officials have expressed doubt about the possibilities of a speedy peace deal with Ukraine, including agreeing on security guarantees for Kyiv and scheduling a bilateral meeting between Putin and Zelensky, for which the president has advocated for some time. Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov questioned Zelensky's legitimacy on Thursday and stated the security guarantees under ongoing talks are 'hopeless.' Lavrov claimed that Putin is ready to meet with the Ukrainian president with the 'understanding that all issues that require consideration at the highest level will be well worked out.' Trump said Thursday that 'interesting times [are] ahead' and slammed his predecessor, former President Biden, over his administration's policy of barring Ukraine from using U.S. long-range weapons to strike deep inside Russia. 'It is very hard, if not impossible, to win a war without attacking an invaders country. It's like a great team in sports that has a fantastic defense, but is not allowed to play offense. There is no chance of winning! It is like that with Ukraine and Russia,' the president said on Truth Social. Pence, in the interview with NewsNation, argued that one of the reasons why Putin did not invade Ukraine during Trump's first White House term is that the Trump-Pence administration 'had the credible threat of the use of force.' 'He saw us take action, unleashing our military to take down the ISIS caliphate,' Pence said on Thursday. 'Send cruise missiles into Syria to take down Qasem Soleimani, the Iranian Revolutionary Guard leader.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store