psychophobia* podcast – Details, episodes & analysis

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Podcast psychophobia* podcast

psychophobia* podcast

psychophobia*: liberating minds

Society & Culture
Health & Fitness

Frequency: 1 episode/9d. Total Eps: 9

Hosting podcast Substack
Challenging how we think about extreme mental states and the institutions that claim to treat them. Essays, conversations, and more from Dr. Michael R. Montgomery, international Existential Psychoanalyst.

psychophobia.substack.com
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Apple Podcasts

  • 🇬🇧 Great Britain - philosophy

    12/06/2026
    #92
  • 🇬🇧 Great Britain - philosophy

    11/06/2026
    #57
  • 🇬🇧 Great Britain - philosophy

    16/05/2026
    #82
  • 🇬🇧 Great Britain - philosophy

    29/04/2026
    #66
  • 🇬🇧 Great Britain - philosophy

    11/04/2026
    #46
  • 🇬🇧 Great Britain - philosophy

    10/04/2026
    #93

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Episode 0: Psychophobia* Teaser

Season 1

mardi 31 mars 2026Duration 06:53

What if the institutions designed to help us understand the human psyche are actually afraid of them? Hosted by Dr. Michael R. Montgomery, this podcast explores the uncomfortable questions. Together, we’ll examine how the mental health systems meant to heal us instead perpetuate cycles of dependency. Welcome to the Psychophobia* Podcast.

Follow us on*

psychophobia.com — SubstackLinkedIn — @psychophobia_projectYoutube

Dr. Michael R. Montgomery is an existential psychoanalyst whose work explores the far edges of human experience- including complex trauma, extreme states, addiction, and the psychological aftermath of conflict. Trained at Regent’s University London, the Tavistock and Portman, and the Anna Freud Centre, his clinical work focuses primarily on community-based care for individuals often excluded from traditional mental health systems. He is the founder of Logic23.com and Peacefire.us and a regular contributor to the Society for Existential Analysis, the R.D. Laing Symposium, and ISPS-US. He has published more than 30 peer-reviewed works and is currently developing a new book alongside the Psychophobia podcast.



This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit psychophobia.substack.com

Episode 02: When the World Goes Quiet - Invisible Disabilities, Radical Sensitivity, and the Healing Power of Silence

Season 1 · Episode 2

mardi 28 avril 2026Duration 54:39

psychophobia* podcast

“All of humanity’s problems stem from man’s inability to sit quietly in a room alone.” — Blaise Pascal

— —

Inside one of the quietest rooms on earth, the usual assumptions about the mind begin to break down. The anechoic chamber at Orfield Laboratories was originally built for acoustic research, but it has become something else entirely - a place where people encounter their own perception in ways they rarely have before.

In this conversation, Emma Orfield, Director of Therapeutics at Orfield Laboratories, explores how extreme silence can reveal hidden dimensions of sensory experience. We discuss invisible disabilities, sensory sensitivity, autism, PTSD, and the possibility that what psychiatry often labels as a disorder may sometimes be a response to a world that has become overwhelmingly loud.

“All you’re left with is you. — Emma Orfield

— —

Relevant Links

Follow us on

psychophobia.com | Substack | LinkedIn | Instagram | Youtube

Follow Emma

Orfield Labs

Send us a message: https://www.speakpipe.com/psychophobia

— —

Emma Orfield-Johnston is a researcher and executive at Orfield Laboratories, a multi-sensory design and research firm focused on human perception. Her work explores how environments, sound, light, temperature, and other sensory factors shape human experience and well-being. Emma leads the lab’s therapeutics program, researching the psychological effects of extreme silence using the facility’s renowned anechoic chamber, often described as the quietest place on Earth. Her work focuses particularly on sensory sensitivity and invisible disabilities, including autism, PTSD, and other perceptual differences.

Dr. Michael R. Montgomery is an existential psychoanalyst whose work explores the far edges of human experience, including complex trauma, extreme states, addiction, and the psychological aftermath of conflict. Trained at Regent’s University London, the Tavistock and Portman, and the Anna Freud Centre, his clinical work focuses primarily on community-based care for individuals often excluded from traditional mental health systems. He is faculty, and a supervising analyst at the New School for Existential Psychoanalysis, CA. He is the founder of Logic23.com and Peacefire.us and a regular contributor to the Society for Existential Analysis, the R.D. Laing Symposium, and ISPS-US. He has published more than 30 peer-reviewed works and is currently developing a new book alongside the psychophobia* podcast.

— —

Episode Chapters

0:00:05 – Introduction: Psychophobia and the Anechoic Challenge

0:00:37 – Setting the Scene at Orfield Labs

0:02:00 – What Is Orfield Labs? Multisensory Design & Human Perception

0:02:20 – Inside the Anechoic Chamber – From Product Testing to People

0:04:27 – Invisible Disabilities, Sensitivity, and Self-Selection

0:07:02 – Debunking the “You’ll Go Crazy” Myth

0:10:58 – First-Time Reactions & “Doing More by Taking Away”

0:14:27 – Perceptual Silence and Autism-/PTSD-Informed Design

0:19:25 – Measuring the Unconscious & the Harley-Davidson Case Study

0:43:53 – Intuition, Embodiment, and the Body Teaching the Mind



This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit psychophobia.substack.com

Episode 01: Self-Stigma - When the Diagnosis Becomes the Prison

Season 1 · Episode 1

mardi 31 mars 2026Duration 01:27:22

psychophobia* podcast

“Madness need not be all breakdown. It may also be breakthrough.” — R.D. Laing

— —

What if the institutions designed to help us understand the human psyche are actually afraid of them? Hosted by Dr. Michael R. Montgomery, this podcast explores the uncomfortable questions. Together, we’ll examine how the mental health systems meant to heal us instead perpetuate cycles of dependency. Welcome to the psychophobia* Podcast.

Leah Giorgini has lived on both sides of the psychiatric system - as a patient diagnosed with psychosis in her teens, and as a clinician working inside the very institutions she once feared. In this conversation, she and Dr. Montgomery pull apart the seams of modern mental health care: the DSM’s grip on human suffering, the silent violence of self-stigma, and why the fire truck shows up when all you needed was someone to sit with you for two hours. They confront the uncomfortable truth that care, real care, can’t be billed, coded, or timed. And they ask the question the system refuses to answer: what if recovery isn’t about fixing someone, but returning their agency to them?

“No one is coming. And when people find their own agency, they are liberated.” — Dr. Michael R. Montgomery

— —

Relevant Links

Follow us on

psychophobia.com | Substack | LinkedIn | Instagram | Youtube

Follow Leah

ISPS-US | Leah Giorgini on Linkedin

Send us a message: https://www.speakpipe.com/psychophobia

— —

Leah Giorgini is an occupational therapist and a person with lived experience of psychosis. She serves as Executive Director of ISPS-US (the International Society for Psychological and Social Approaches to Psychosis), an organization that questions whether conventional psychiatry has misunderstood some of the most extreme states of mind. Her work focuses on trauma-informed and recovery-based approaches that attempt to understand psychosis as a human response to overwhelming experience rather than simply a disease to be medicated away.

Dr. Michael R. Montgomery is an existential psychoanalyst whose work explores the far edges of human experience, including complex trauma, extreme states, addiction, and the psychological aftermath of conflict. Trained at Regent’s University London, the Tavistock and Portman, and the Anna Freud Centre, his clinical work focuses primarily on community-based care for individuals often excluded from traditional mental health systems. He is faculty, and a supervising analyst at the New School for Existential Psychoanalysis, CA. He is the founder of Logic23.com and Peacefire.us and a regular contributor to the Society for Existential Analysis, the R.D. Laing Symposium, and ISPS-US. He has published more than 30 peer-reviewed works and is currently developing a new book alongside the psychophobia* podcast.

— —

Episode Chapters

00:00 — Introduction & What Is Psychophobia?

00:45 — The DSM-5: Bible or Blunt Instrument?

02:28 — Defining Psychosis — and Leah’s Own Story

04:13 — Stigma, Self-Stigma & Identity After Diagnosis

09:16 — Medication, Hospitals, and the Pharmakon Idea

11:29 — The Pharmakon Paradox: When Treatment Is Also the Poison

14:17 — Culture, Anti-Psychiatry, and Carceral Trends

16:23 — Crisis, Containment, and Systemic Failure

19:26 — Crisis Response: the Fire Truck, Police Car & Ambulance

23:41 — Trauma, Meaning, and “No One Is Mad”

26:49 — UK vs. US Systems & McDonaldization of Care

29:29 — No Tick Box for Love

32:47 — What Actually Helps in Crisis?

36:30 — Iatrogenic Harm and Tick-Box Care

39:55 — Agency, Iatrogenic Harm & What Recovery Actually Requires

41:36 — Clozapine, “Treatment Resistance,” and Medication Dogma

49:20 — Love, Therapy, and Dependency vs. Self-Efficacy

51:44 — Homelessness, Housing First, and Basic Needs

59:58 — Agency, Suicide, and the Limits of Non-Intervention

1:06:53 — Radical Agency, Neurodiversity, and Knowing Your Mind

1:09:56 — Rediscovering Agency as the Heart of Recovery

1:14:02 — “No One Is Coming” and the Fear of Suffering

1:16:30 — The Painful Work of Healing & Safety as a Precondition

1:19:26 — ISPS-US, Informed Consent & What’s Next

1:22:58 — ISPS-US: Conferences, Negative Symptoms & Advocacy

1:24:58 — Informed Consent, Polypharmacy, and Veterans

1:26:08 — Closing Reflections: Hope, Momentum & Mutual Support

Please note that while I am a therapist, I am not your therapist. This podcast explores mental health and the human experience, but it is not a substitute for therapy, medical care, or professional advice. Any decisions regarding your mental health, including changes to medication or treatment, should be made in consultation with a qualified healthcare professional you trust.



This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit psychophobia.substack.com

Episode 04: Alcohol and Agency - The Question of Informed Choice

Season 1 · Episode 4

mardi 12 mai 2026Duration 01:36:07

psychophobia* podcast

“The chains of habit are too weak to be felt until they are too strong to be broken.”— Samuel Johnson

— —

Alcohol is one of the most culturally protected forms of psychological escape - normalized, celebrated, and rarely examined with the seriousness it demands. Beneath its social acceptability lies something more unsettling: a substance that numbs not only pain, but possibility. Michael sits down with Gary Allen, nearly eight years alcohol-free, to explore what happens when someone steps outside drinking culture entirely. Together they examine the mythology surrounding alcohol, the quiet ways it becomes a solution to existential discomfort, and how removing it often reveals deeper psychological terrain beneath. Moving beyond addiction narratives, the conversation turns toward informed choice, cultural conditioning, and the illusion that alcohol helps us face life when it may actually help us avoid it. If alcohol numbs across the board - dulling anxiety, but also clarity - what happens when the numbing stops, and you’re left with yourself?

“If people are liberated to see that they have agency and they have choice, they are empowered and potentially self-liberated.” — Dr. Micharl R

— —

Follow us on

psychophobia.com | Substack | LinkedIn | @psychophobia_project

Follow Gary

garyallen.ie | Gary Allen on LinkedIn

Send us a message: https://www.speakpipe.com/psychophobia

— —

Gary Allen, PCC is an alcohol-free coach, group facilitator, and advocate for a more conscious relationship with substances. After stepping away from alcohol nearly eight years ago, he experienced profound shifts across his emotional, physical, and professional life, ultimately transitioning from a 30-year career in IT into coaching and human development work. Today, Gary helps individuals examine their relationship with alcohol, explore ambivalence without shame, and reclaim agency in a culture where drinking is often treated as the default, emphasizing informed choice, curiosity, and sustainable change over rigid labels or all-or-nothing frameworks.

Dr. Michael R. Montgomery Dr. Montgomery is an existential psychoanalyst with international expertise in complex trauma, extreme states, addiction, and conflict resolution. He trained at Regent’s University London, the Tavistock and Portman, and the Anna Freud Centre. He is the founder of Logic23.com and Peacefire.us, and his clinical work is primarily community-based, focusing on patients typically excluded from quality care. A regular contributor to the Society for Existential Analysis, the R.D. Laing Symposium, and ISPS-US, he has over 30 published peer-reviewed works and is currently developing a new book alongside this podcast.

— —

Episode Chapters

00:05 — Intro to Psychophobia & Meeting Gary Allen02:50 — Eight Years Alcohol-Free & Life Transformation06:39 — One Day at a Time & Building New Habits09:56 — Reframing Sobriety & Drinking Culture17:39 — Alcohol, Numbing & Underlying Mental Health22:24 — Gary’s Story: Disability, IT Career & Coaching38:27 — Agency, Relapse & Curiosity Over Shame49:58 — The Cost of Drinking vs. The Cost of Not Drinking53:29 — Alcohol, Habit & Informed Choice1:19:54 — How to Start & Where to Get Help

— —

Please note that while I am a therapist, I am not your therapist. This podcast explores mental health and the human experience, but it is not a substitute for therapy, medical care, or professional advice. Any decisions regarding your mental health, including changes to medication or treatment, should be made in consultation with a qualified healthcare professional you trust.



This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit psychophobia.substack.com

Episode 03: Psychedelic Narcissists - Why taking a chainsaw to the psyche requires more than good intentions

Season 1 · Episode 3

mardi 5 mai 2026Duration 01:39:44

psychophobia* podcast

“You are an explorer, and you represent our species, and the greatest good you can do is to bring back a new idea, because our world is endangered by the absence of good ideas. Our world is in crisis because of the absence of consciousness.”― Terence McKenna

The psychedelic renaissance is being sold as a revolution in healing- but beneath the hype lies something far messier. Michael sits down with Noah Cebuliak to explore the promise, peril, and commercialization of psychedelic therapy, from ketamine telehealth to integration, trauma, narcissism, and the dangerous fantasy of a shortcut to transformation. Together they ask what it actually means to prepare for an altered state, why some people come back more inflated rather than more whole, and what happens when capitalism collides with the sacred. At the heart of the conversation is a deeper challenge: if these substances amplify what is already present, then what exactly are we bringing to them- and what are they bringing out of us?

What if the problem isn’t psychedelics but the culture using them?

— —

Follow us on

psychophobia.com | Substack | LinkedIn | @psychophobia_project

Follow Noah

Noah’s Website | Noah Cebuliak on Linkedin

Send us a message: https://www.speakpipe.com/psychophobia

— —

Noah Cebuliak is a coach, educator, and former psychedelic therapy practitioner specializing in integration, inner work, and transformational experiences. He previously worked as a guide in ketamine-assisted therapy programs, supporting hundreds of individuals through altered-state experiences and their psychological integration.Today, Noah works independently with clients on personal development, psychedelic integration, and nervous system awareness. Alongside his coaching work, he is also a music producer and collaborator on transformational music projects designed to support meditation, breathwork, and psychedelic-informed therapeutic settings.

Dr. Michael R. Montgomery Dr. Montgomery is an existential psychoanalyst with international expertise in complex trauma, extreme states, addiction, and conflict resolution. He trained at Regent’s University London, the Tavistock and Portman, and the Anna Freud Centre. He is the founder of Logic23.com and Peacefire.us, and his clinical work is primarily community-based, focusing on patients typically excluded from quality care. A regular contributor to the Society for Existential Analysis, the R.D. Laing Symposium, and ISPS-US, he has over 30 published peer-reviewed works and is currently developing a new book alongside this podcast.

— —

Episode Chapters

00:05— Intro to Psychophobia & Reconnecting with Noah03:21 — Noah’s New Path: Coaching, Independence & Transformational Music04:55 — The New Psychedelic Wave: Hype, Harm & Commercialization12:30— Allostatic Load, Respect for Medicines & Somatic Stress16:54 — What Is Integration? Bridging Trip Worlds into Daily Life23:00— Psychedelic Narcissism, Set & Setting & Container Design43:18 — Foundations: Meditation, Nervous System & Walking the Razor’s Edge1:03:02 — The Industry: Roots to Thrive vs. McDonaldized Ketamine1:24:11 — Breathwork as a Safer Doorway & Group Healing1:33:32 — Music as Medicine & Practical Music Tips for Sessions

Please note that while I am a therapist, I am not your therapist. This podcast explores mental health and the human experience, but it is not a substitute for therapy, medical care, or professional advice. Any decisions regarding your mental health, including changes to medication or treatment, should be made in consultation with a qualified healthcare professional you trust.



This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit psychophobia.substack.com

Episode 08 Part I: When Treatment Becomes the Problem - How modern psychiatry lost the human being

mardi 9 juin 2026Duration 56:20

"These are not the side effects of the medication. These are the effects of the medication." — R.D. Laing

— —

The former head of the American Psychiatric Association once called Robert Whitaker "a menace to society." Bob says he'd put it on his gravestone. In this conversation, Michael traces the through-line from the unlikely apprenticeships that taught Bob to take seriously the people most of the world had discounted - driving a New York cab with no partition in the late 1970s, working the overnight desk at an SRO hotel, running a tutoring program inside Attica prison after the riots - to the 1998 Boston Globe investigation where he found himself holding two irreconcilable narratives: one from the experts, one from the patients. The book that followed, Mad in America, did something simple and unforgivable. It took the patients' story seriously, followed the data, and found that the data agreed with them. They walk through the World Health Organization's own cross-cultural findings, the Harvard study showing long-term outcomes had declined, the Harrow-Jobe data Bob brought back to the researchers themselves, and the central tragedy his decades of work circle back to: a model of care that transforms what could be episodic difficulties into lifelong chronic conditions.

The good news, Bob argues, is that the official narrative has collapsed in the research literature. The bad news is that prescribing practices haven't.

— —

"We have a form of care that transforms what could be episodic problems into chronic conditions." — Robert Whitaker

— —

Relevant Links

Follow us on

psychophobia.com | Substack | LinkedIn | Instagram | Youtube

Follow Bob

Mad In America

Books

Mad In America | Anatomy of an Epidemic | Psychiatry Under the Influence

Send us a message: https://www.speakpipe.com/psychophobia

— —

Robert Whitaker is an American journalist and author who has won numerous awards as a journalist covering medicine and science, including the George Polk Award for Medical Writing and a National Association for Science Writers' Award for best magazine article. In 1998, he co-wrote a series on psychiatric research for the Boston Globe that was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize for Public Service. His first book, Mad in America, was named by Discover magazine as one of the best science books of 2002. Anatomy of an Epidemic won the 2010 Investigative Reporters and Editors book award for best investigative journalism. He is the publisher of madinamerica.com. He is a Clinical Assistant Professor (Adjunct) in the Lewis Katz School of Medicine at Temple University, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Science.

— —

Dr. Michael R. Montgomery is an existential psychoanalyst whose work explores the far edges of human experience, including complex trauma, extreme states, addiction, and the psychological aftermath of conflict. Trained at Regent's University London, the Tavistock and Portman, and the Anna Freud Centre, his clinical work focuses primarily on community-based care for individuals often excluded from traditional mental health systems. He is faculty, and a supervising analyst at the New School for Existential Psychoanalysis, CA. He is the founder of Logic23.com and Peacefire.us and a regular contributor to the Society for Existential Analysis, the R.D. Laing Symposium, and ISPS-US. He has published more than 30 peer-reviewed works and is currently developing a new book alongside the psychophobia* podcast.

— —

Episode Chapters

00:00:05 – Intro & Why This Episode Took So Long

00:01:25 – The Yellow Cab: Driving New York 1978-1984

00:04:45 – No Partition: The Vulnerability of the Encounter

00:08:28 – The SRO Hotel, Orwell & The Stories Told at 3 AM

00:11:36 – Inside Attica: Tutoring After the Riots

00:17:59 – A Menace to Society: The Question

00:19:11 – The Boston Globe Series & Two Competing Narratives

00:24:48 – The Harvard Study & The WHO Cross-Cultural Findings

00:30:23 – Why Being Challenged Made the Work Stronger

00:31:27 – Anatomy of an Epidemic & The Harrow-Jobe Story

00:38:07 – Why Informed Consent Is Treated as a Threat

00:42:17 – Michael's Story: Walking Onto the Psychiatric Ward

00:43:39 – Malaysia & The Business of Big Pharma

00:48:25 – Two Impulses Behind Broken Care

00:50:04 – Episodic Problems Made Chronic

00:50:52 – Open Dialogue, The Collapse of the Narrative & Today's Mismatch

— —

Please note that while I am a therapist, I am not your therapist. This podcast explores mental health and the human experience, but it is not a substitute for therapy, medical care, or professional advice. Any decisions regarding your mental health, including changes to medication or treatment, should be made in consultation with a qualified healthcare professional you trust.



This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit psychophobia.substack.com

Episode 07: Use It or Lose It - The Brain, Lifelong Learning, and the Courage to Stay Curious

Season 1 · Episode 7

mardi 2 juin 2026Duration 01:16:28

I am still learning. — Michelangelo, at age 87

Sandy Halperin was a Harvard professor so brilliant he could deliver two-hour lectures from memory. A decade into his early-onset dementia diagnosis, Steve Orfield says he was still sharper than most people who didn’t have the condition. When Steve asked CNN’s producers why their ongoing feature kept telling the story of Sandy’s decline rather than what he was still able to do, they refused. It’s the kind of story that runs through every part of this conversation. The founder of Orfield Labs in Minneapolis is a polymath in the old sense -- self-taught in acoustics, lighting, architecture, philosophy of science, and at seventy-something, he says he learns twice as fast as he did in his fifties. He and Michael walk through the principle that anchors his work -- that the parts of the brain you use grow, and the parts you don’t shrink -- and the design philosophy it has produced: facilities for people with dementia where residents start engaging, socializing, and moving like they’re ten years younger; autism buildings that look “boring” to architects because they are quiet and simple, and work for that exact reason; an entire body of evidence that what we call decline is often the environment failing the person, not the other way around. Along the way: the autistic artists whose gestalt perception has taught Steve more than psychology departments, his fractional self-diagnosis of HD without the AD, the international dementia research award his first project won outright, and the worry that AI is quietly making us less able to finish our own setences.

If decline is not what we have been told it is -- if the right room can give a person with dementia ten years back, and the wrong room can take them -- then the harder question is what we have agreed to call inevitable, and who pays the price for it.

In my 70s, I can learn twice as fast as I could in my 50s. -- Steven Orfield

— —

Follow us

psychophobia.com | Substack | LinkedIn | Instagram | Youtube

Send us a message: https://www.speakpipe.com/psychophobia

Follow Steve

Orfield Labs | Steven Orfield on LinkedIn

— —

Steven Orfield is a pioneering polymath whose work spans acoustics, lighting, architecture, and sensory science. Founder of Orfield Labs in Minneapolis, he has spent decades designing environments that enhance human perception, from dementia and autism facilities to cutting-edge research in silence and sensory processing. Orfield combines rigorous science with a deep understanding of human experience, challenging conventional approaches to mental health and neurodiversity. He reframes cognitive differences as “filters” rather than deficits, using research and design to improve quality of life. A lifelong learner and innovator, his work demonstrates how thoughtful environments can unlock human potential and transform perception.

Dr. Michael R. Montgomery is an existential psychoanalyst whose work explores the far edges of human experience, including complex trauma, extreme states, addiction, and the psychological aftermath of conflict. Trained at Regent’s University London, the Tavistock and Portman, and the Anna Freud Centre, his clinical work focuses primarily on community-based care for individuals often excluded from traditional mental health systems. He is faculty, and a supervising analyst at the New School for Existential Psychoanalysis, CA. He is the founder of Logic23.com and Peacefire.us and a regular contributor to the Society for Existential Analysis, the R.D. Laing Symposium, and ISPS-US. He has published more than 30 peer-reviewed works and is currently developing a new book alongside the psychophobia* podcast.

— —

Episode Chapters

00:00:05 – Intro & The Anechoic Chamber Challenge

00:02:00 – Peace, Polymaths & A Mind Without Boundaries

00:07:08 – 25 Years of Invisible Disabilities: Autism, Asperger’s & The Daily “Replay”

00:15:44 – Schizophrenia, Stubborn Children & The Limits of Diagnosis

00:18:44 – A Daughter Diagnoses Her Father: HD Without the AD

00:25:42 – How Orfield Labs Began: A Storefront, A Chamber & A Building Prince Walked Away From

00:34:51 – Use It or Lose It: The Brain at Seventy & The Sandy Halperin Story

00:40:44 – Filters, Not Deficits: Designing for Autism & Dementia

00:52:41 – Kumbaya Meetings, Veterans & Whale Sounds in the Chamber

00:56:54 – Carl Beam, Ojibwe Art & The National Gallery

01:01:32 – Objective Reality, The Frog & The Limits of Perception

01:10:59 – Stupidifying the Population: AI, Education & The Loss of Liberal Arts

— —

Please note that while I am a therapist, I am not your therapist. This podcast explores mental health and the human experience, but it is not a substitute for therapy, medical care, or professional advice. Any decisions regarding your mental health, including changes to medication or treatment, should be made in consultation with a qualified healthcare professional you trust.



This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit psychophobia.substack.com

Episode 06: The Seduction of Certainty - Curiosity, Complexity and the Unknown

Season 1 · Episode 6

mardi 26 mai 2026Duration 01:25:46

I mean Negative Capability, that is when man is capable of being in uncertainties, Mysteries, doubts, without any irritable reaching after fact & reason.” -- John Keats

Certainty is seductive. It simplifies a noisy world, ends evaluation, and offers the relief of a settled answer. But the moment we feel certain, something else quietly closes down: curiosity, and with it, the capacity to perceive what is actually in front of us. In this follow-up to her first appearance, Emma Orfield returns to the conversation after Michael’s visit to Orfield Laboratories, and what began as a discussion about silence widens into a meditation on perception itself - how the anechoic chamber doesn’t add awareness so much as subtract the noise that obscures it, why contrast is the precondition for seeing anything at all, and what happens to a mind when the external world falls quiet enough that it begins to observe itself. From there they move into more uncomfortable terrain: hypersensitivity and the years spent masking it, the over-pathologizing of difference, the McDonaldization of clinical encounter, and the political fragility of nuance in a culture that rewards the tribal answer. They ask what it would take to build environments - therapeutic, social, even internal - where people feel safe enough to tolerate complexity rather than collapse it into judgment.

If the mind retreats to simple categories the moment it feels threatened, then the deeper question isn’t how to argue people into nuance - but how to make the world quiet enough that they can bear it.

— —

Relevant Links*

Follow us on*

psychophobia.com — SubstackLinkedIn — @psychophobia_projectYoutube

Follow Emma

Orfield LabsEmma Orfield on Linkedin

— —

Emma Orfield-Johnston is a researcher and executive at Orfield Laboratories, a multi-sensory design and research firm focused on human perception. Her work explores how environments, sound, light, temperature, and other sensory factors shape human experience and well-being. Emma leads the lab’s therapeutics program, researching the psychological effects of extreme silence using the facility’s renowned anechoic chamber, often described as the quietest place on Earth. Her work focuses particularly on sensory sensitivity and invisible disabilities, including autism, PTSD, and other perceptual differences.

Dr. Michael R. Montgomery* Dr. Montgomery is an existential psychoanalyst with international expertise in complex trauma, extreme states, addiction, and conflict resolution. He trained at Regent’s University London, the Tavistock and Portman, and the Anna Freud Centre. He is the founder of Logic23.com and Peacefire.us, and his clinical work is primarily community-based, focusing on patients typically excluded from quality care. A regular contributor to the Society for Existential Analysis, the R.D. Laing Symposium, and ISPS-US, he has over 30 published peer-reviewed works and is currently developing a new book alongside this podcast.

— —

Episode Chapters*

00:00:05 – Psychophobia & Reunion with Emma Orfield

00:01:55 – Freud, Authority & The Unconscious

00:03:25 – Anechoic Chamber Aftermath & Public Reactions

00:06:33 – Anechoic Silence: A Multi-Sensory View

00:11:09 – Darkness, Stillness & Internal Perception

00:17:19 – Homeopathy, Root Causes & Integrative Health

00:20:02 – Anechoic Chamber as Accelerator to Awareness

00:29:55 – Building the Anechoic Chamber Therapeutics Program

00:32:53 – Set, Setting & Safety vs Punishment

00:41:06 – Hypersensitivity, Neurodiversity & Misdiagnosis

00:52:22 – Nuance, Contrast & The Seduction of Certainty

01:23:31 – Scaling the Anechoic Chamber Beyond the Lab

— —

Please note that while I am a therapist, I am not your therapist. This podcast explores mental health and the human experience, but it is not a substitute for therapy, medical care, or professional advice. Any decisions regarding your mental health, including changes to medication or treatment, should be made in consultation with a qualified healthcare professional you trust.



This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit psychophobia.substack.com

Episode 05: Fierce Compassion - Mystification, and the Living Lineage of R.D. Laing

Season 1 · Episode 5

mardi 19 mai 2026Duration 02:01:35

psychophobia* podcast

'“Ultimately, we have just one moral duty: to reclaim large areas of peace in ourselves." — Etty Hillesum

— —

In a Rome Bookstore, Nita stumbled on R.D. Laing’s The Divided Self in her early twenties. She never quite recovered. What followed wasn’t a career path - it was a calling. Drawn to London in the early 1970s, Nita Gage entered the orbit of Laing’s radical communities, living inside households where people emerging from psychiatric institutions were met not with control, but with curiosity and compassion. Those years dismantled everything she thought she knew about healing, sanity, and what it means to truly be with another person.

Fifty years later, Nita and Dr. Montgomery move through breathwork, altered states, and the imaginal journey - into the harder territory of microaggressions, self-righteousness, forgiveness, acceptance, and why detoxing off a substance puts you at Ground Zero with your pain staring back at you. At the center of it all is a single, quietly radical idea: the healer was never the therapist. It was always you.

"If you do this well, your students will leave you, do much better than you in the world, and forget they ever learned any of it from you. That's the sign." — Nita Gage

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Nita Gage is a psychospiritual teacher, retreat leader, and author whose work integrates psychology, embodiment, and shamanic practice. She trained in psychoanalysis in London with R.D. Laing and colleagues at the Philadelphia Association during the 1970s, an experience that profoundly shaped her understanding of consciousness and healing. Over the past four decades, Gage has worked in clinical settings, addiction treatment, and transformational retreat work. She is the author of Soul Whispering: The Art of Awakening Shamanic Consciousness and continues to lead workshops and retreats focused on personal transformation and expanded awareness.

Dr. Michael R. Montgomery Dr. Montgomery is an existential psychoanalyst with international expertise in complex trauma, extreme states, addiction, and conflict resolution. He trained at Regent’s University London, the Tavistock and Portman, and the Anna Freud Centre. He is the founder of Logic23.com and Peacefire.us, and his clinical work is primarily community-based, focusing on patients typically excluded from quality care. A regular contributor to the Society for Existential Analysis, the R.D. Laing Symposium, and ISPS-US, he has over 30 published peer-reviewed works and is currently developing a new book alongside this podcast.

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0:00:00 – The Book That Changed Nita’s Life

0:02:30 – Entering R.D. Laing’s World

0:07:30 – India, Mysticism & Disillusionment

0:15:50 – The R.D. Laing Symposium

0:22:00 – Breathwork Explained

0:34:45 – Micro-Harm & Radical Self-Reflection

0:49:10 – Conflict, Fear & Human Needs

1:06:50 – Acceptance vs Forgiveness

1:23:00 – Addiction & Trauma

1:40:30 – Hoffman Process & Self-Compassion

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Please note that while I am a therapist, I am not your therapist. This podcast explores mental health and the human experience, but it is not a substitute for therapy, medical care, or professional advice. Any decisions regarding your mental health, including changes to medication or treatment, should be made in consultation with a qualified healthcare professional you trust.



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