Entrepreneur

FROM THE GROUND UP

Rachel Aidan grew up between Nebraska, Texas, and New England, one of four children born to religious extremist parents. By the time she was five years old, two of her siblings had died. She had been exposed to group ritual sexual abuse that continued until her early 20s. She was raped at 15, followed by abortions, and tried to kill herself twice. She found herself pregnant again at 19. That’s when it all changed. “I call my oldest daughter ‘the angel baby,’ because it was the reason that I looked up and said, you know, my life matters,” she says.

Aidan would eventually be diagnosed with PTSD. She would go on to become a serial entrepreneur in the health and beauty space, and was for the most part getting by, but eventually hit a wall with traditional therapy. She began experimenting with psychedelics, starting with an African shrub and ceremonial hallucinogen called iboga, which she says helped her break patterns she’d been unable to break on her own. Then she explored more. In her early 40s, she used Google to find out who was offering these experiences legally and learned about The Synthesis Institute, a Netherlands- and Oregon-based startup offering guided retreats and practitioner training in psychedelic medicine. She was on a plane the next week, started working for the company a month later, and is now its CEO.

She starts investor meetings with an abridged version of this story, by way of saying: She is not your typical CEO, but she is the typical Synthesis client. She is also a typical leader in this burgeoning psychedelic therapy industry—which is to say, she entered it for a deeply personal reason and wants to think very differently about what it means to build a business in the space.

That’s the part that gives some investors pause.

There’s a lot of buzz around psychedelic medicine, ever since early research has reported positively on the use of psilocybin in treating patients with depression; another in the journal found that, when paired with counseling, MDMA (commonly known as Molly) was highly effective in treating patients with severe PTSD.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Entrepreneur

Entrepreneur9 min readPopular Culture & Media Studies
15 Side Hustles You Never Knew Existed
If you don’t get squirmy around creepy-crawlies, try breeding insects! Crickets, Dubia roaches, and mealworms are all easy to cultivate, and lizard-owners never stop needing to feed their reptiles. Jeff Neal learned this in 2016, when he bought his d
Entrepreneur2 min read
Weathernews Inc.
“Asia will be the furnace in which a new era is forged,” according to global consultancy McKinsey – and Japan, as the continent’s second-biggest economy, will play a central role in this. The key engine of growth is likely to be services, which accou
Entrepreneur2 min read
The Loss That Changed My Company
When I was 17, I founded a company to save police officers’ lives. We distribute and manufacture body armor and other protective equipment. And yet, I will admit: For the first eight years, this work felt abstract—like watching war unfold on the nigh

Related Books & Audiobooks