
OODA Loop PTSD Breakthrough: Marine Aviator, Ibogaine Therapy, and The Mission Within
No Way Out
Policy work: VA research bill and bipartisan push
Jay describes partnering with Psychedelic Medicine Coalition to introduce VA centers of excellence for psychedelic research.
A Marine aviator who once introduced himself as a “raging asshole” sits down with us to share how everything changed—fast. Jay Kopelman had years of TBIs, PTSD, and white-hot anger had wrecked his home life and numbed his spirit despite therapy, SSRIs, sleep meds, and nightly drinks. A scholarship to The Mission Within took him to a clinically monitored retreat in Mexico, and the ibogaine journey hit where talk therapy couldn’t: the root. He saw his son always wearing a clown mask—a painful metaphor for forcing a mini-me that never fit—and walked away ready to meet the real person in front of him.
We get specific about safety protocols, screening, and why integration matters more than any single peak experience. He describes 5-MeO as cleansing and sacred, the moment a lifetime of guilt finally drained and love had room to land. Sobriety followed. So did a hundred small choices where calm replaced rage: the kind you only notice in the DMV line, with your kid watching. This isn’t hype; it’s habit change.
From there, we zoom out. As CEO of Mission Within Foundation, he’s now working with Psychedelic Medicine Coalition on a bipartisan bill to let five VA centers, paired with leading universities, research and deliver psychedelic-assisted treatments like MDMA, psilocybin, and ultimately ibogaine. We tackle stigma in veteran and aviation communities, outline the guardrails needed for safety, and talk incentives—how a sick-care model resists one-and-done therapies. Then we look at the science: brain imaging from Stanford and UT Austin pointing to neuroregenerative effects, early signals in Parkinson’s and MS, and ketamine’s role and limits.
If you care about veteran mental health, policy that saves lives, or simply how families heal, this is a candid, grounded listen. Subscribe, share with someone who needs hope, and leave a review to help others find the show. What question do you want answered next?
John R. Boyd's Conceptual Spiral was originally titled No Way Out. In his own words:
“There is no way out unless we can eliminate the features just cited. Since we don’t know how to do this, we must continue the whirl of reorientation…”
A promotional message for Ember Health. Safe and effective IV ketamine care for individuals seeking relief from depression. Ember Health's evidence-based, partner-oriented, and patient-centered care model, boasting an 84% treatment success rate with 44% of patients reaching depression remission. It also mentions their extensive experience with over 40,000 infusions and treatment of more than 2,500 patients, including veterans, first responders, and individuals with anxiety and PTSD
Stay connected with No Way Out and The Whirl Of ReOrientation
X: @NoWayOutcast · @PonchAGLX · @NoWayOutMoose
Substack: The Whirl Of ReOrientation - www.thewhirl.substack.com


