Transitioning from the elite echelons of the Navy SEALs
to civilian life is rarely the clean break many imagine. For men like Michael Higgs
, a former Command Master Chief, the end of a thirty-year career signals the moment the "train of life" finally catches up. In the high-pressure world of Special Operations, operators are selected for their ability to suppress discomfort, manage extreme risk, and project a facade of total competence. This selection process, while necessary for the mission, creates a dangerous internal environment where vulnerability is equated with being "sidelined" or labeled as weak.
The trauma these individuals carry is rarely isolated to the battlefield. It is a compounding interest of childhood adversity, moral injury, and what Martin Polanco
identifies as the core biological insult: Mild Traumatic Brain Injury
(mTBI). Repetitive exposure to blast overpressure—from breeching charges, heavy weaponry, and even constant gunfire—rattles the brain in ways it wasn't designed to withstand. This physical damage manifests as neuro-inflammation and hormone dysregulation, providing a volatile foundation upon which psychological PTSD
is built. When the structure of the military is removed, these suppressed injuries often collapse into a "meltdown," leaving veterans like Higgs navigating suicidal ideation while being intimately familiar with lethal force.
The Molecular Reset: Ibogaine and the 5-MeO-DMT Synergy
Traditional Western medicine often fails veterans because it focuses on mitigating symptoms rather than addressing the root biological and psychological causes. Martin Polanco
through The Mission Within
utilizes a specific, potent combination of Ibogaine
and 5-MeO-DMT
to facilitate a profound neural and emotional restructuring. Unlike many pharmaceutical drugs that target a single receptor, ibogaine is a "dirty drug" in the most beneficial sense, interacting with roughly 50 different neuroreceptors across the dopaminergic, serotonergic, and opioid systems.
Physiologically, ibogaine stimulates the production of Brain-Derived Neurotrophic Factor
(BDNF), effectively acting as fertilizer for new brain cells. This neurogenesis is paired with the "shadow work" of the experience, which allows a person to view their life through an objective, observer-standpoint. This is critical for processing pre-verbal trauma—injuries that occurred before the age of five and are stored as energetic patterns rather than language. By re-contextualizing these memories without the accompanying emotional pain, veterans can finally achieve reconciliation with their past. Following this, the administration of 5-MeO-DMT—often called the "God Molecule"—reduces the systemic inflammation caused by TBI and provides a mystical experience of unity. This one-two punch addresses the biological inflammation and the psychological isolation simultaneously, offering a level of healing that decades of talk therapy often cannot reach.
Navigating the Space: From Fear to Surrender
The initial step into psychedelic treatment for a Special Operations veteran is often more terrifying than any overseas deployment. For a group of people trained to maintain absolute control, the prospect of pharmacological surrender is a significant hurdle. Michael Higgs
describes the sheer terror of sitting with a red pill in a van with fellow frogmen, facing the one thing they had spent decades avoiding: themselves. This is why the preparation phase, led by coaches like Cynthia
, is non-negotiable. It isn't just about safety; it's about framing intentions and building a psychological container that prevents a veteran from viewing a difficult journey as a failure.
Higgs's personal experience highlights the sheer intensity of these modalities. After his initial treatment, he pursued a massive 20-gram dose of Psilocybin
on a Native American reservation. While such high doses are not for the faint of heart, for Higgs, it was the final stage of "peeling the onion." He moved from reliving the link-diagrams of his career to finally meeting his younger self and walking him back through both the light and dark stages of life. This process of re-integration allows the veteran to move from a reactive state to a mindful one, where they can sit with discomfort rather than masking it with the cocktail of 12 or 13 medications many are prescribed by the VA.
The Future of Veteran Care and Collective Healing
The current legal landscape for these treatments remains a patchwork of gray areas. While Ketamine
is widely available in the U.S. as a short-term intervention for suicidal ideation, ibogaine and 5-MeO-DMT require veterans to travel to countries like Mexico
where they are not scheduled substances. Martin Polanco
is currently expanding this work to Mexico
, focusing on the families of veterans, including spouses and adult children who have suffered secondary trauma. New research is also underway at UT Austin
to study the effects of psilocybin and 5-MeO-DMT on "prolonged grief" in Gold Star widows.
The shift toward psychedelic-assisted therapy represents more than just a new medical tool; it is a shift toward authentic connection. As veterans like Higgs transition from operators to coaches and facilitators, they are breaking the "veil" of silence that has characterized the Special Operations community for generations. By sharing their underbelly and admitting they needed a "life ring," they are creating a new culture where asking for help is an act of courage, not a surrender of status. The goal is no longer just to survive the transition home, but to truly return—fully integrated, unmasked, and at peace with the child they were before the war began.