The Addict's Body: What Nobody Told You About Addiction
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In this deeply personal episode, Steve opens up about his decades long battle with addiction and shares groundbreaking research on Ibogaine, a treatment showing an 88% reduction in PTSD symptoms after just one dose.
Steve traces the path from childhood trauma to compulsive comfort seeking and ultimately, to healing. As he records, his fiancée Lia's brother Justin, missing for months and struggling with methamphetamine addiction, has just made contact. The urgency is real, and the treatment they're hoping will save his life is illegal in the United States.
He explains:
⬛ Addiction is compulsive comfort seeking—a nervous system that never felt safe looking for relief.
⬛ 92% of people struggling with addiction have significant childhood trauma.
⬛ Dysregulation comes first, addiction comes after—substances are the best tool an overwhelmed nervous system can find.
⬛ Ibogaine resets dopamine receptors in one treatment, eliminating the 6-18 month "gray fog" of traditional recovery.
⬛ Stanford research shows 88% reduction in PTSD, 87% in depression, 81% in anxiety after one Ibogaine treatment.
⬛ Ibogaine triggers 2,000-3,000% increases in BDNF, the protein that helps neurons grow and repair.
⬛ Ibogaine keeps the brain in an open, changeable state longer than any other psychedelic, up to four weeks or three months.
⬛ Ibogaine opens a window of neuroplasticity, but lasting change requires integration, therapy, and ongoing work.
⬛ Most compulsive comfort seeking looks "normal"—scrolling at 2am, binge shopping, needing alcohol to be social.
⬛ Corporations engineer products to hijack dopamine systems just like drugs do.
⬛ Ibogaine was made illegal in 1970 without evaluation, despite having no recreational value.
⬛ American veterans are medical refugees, including decorated Navy SEAL Marcus Luttrell.
⬛ Texas committed $50 million to Ibogaine research with bipartisan support led by Rick Perry.
⬛ Just one person who shows care can be the difference between life and death.
Chapters:
00:05 - Reframing addiction as compulsive comfort seeking
02:26 - First blackout at age five
04:46 - From childhood trauma to hedge fund success and crack cocaine
07:10 - Steve's father's WWII trauma and untreated PTSD
09:35 - The addict's body: Daily pressure building
11:50 - Dysregulation comes first
14:08 - Why people relapse: 6-18 months of gray fog
16:31 - Helen Sapourn: Breaking three ribs to attend her son's wedding
17:29 - Losing his mother at 27
19:10 - The friend's first line and 40 rehabs later
21:17 - Lia's brother Justin reaches out
23:05 - We're all compulsively comfort seeking
25:33 - What Ibogaine actually i
28:00 - The Stanford study: 88% PTSD reduction
30:27 - Witnessing transformation in veterans
32:44 - One and Done integration center
34:51 - Why is Ibogaine illegal?
37:16 - Rick Perry and Marcus Luttrell unite
39:20 - Veterans as medical refugees
41:49 - You are not broken, you are not weak
43:40 - Breaking the cycle
About Steve:
Steve Sapourn is a longtime entrepreneur and storyteller who spent decades achieving external success while battling childhood trauma and addiction. Through somatic therapy, psychedelic work, and nervous system rewiring, he rebuilt his life from the inside out. The Neuro's Journey is his mission to explore healing, courage, and the human experience with depth and honesty.
Follow Steve:
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/theneurosjourney/
TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@theneurosjourney
Resources:
Americans for Ibogaine - americansforibogaine.org - 404-368-9923
One and Done (Texas) - Integration center for veterans
Beond Clinic (Cancun, Mexico) - https://beondibogaine.com/