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Psychedelics Today

PT 630 - TK Wonder and Cipriana Quann

Psychedelics Today

Psychedelics Today, LLC

Life Sciences, Science, Medicine, Health & Fitness

4.6 • 598 Ratings

🗓️ 9 October 2025

⏱️ 52 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Interviewers: Joe Moore & Anne Philippi
Guests: TK Wonder & Cipriana Quann (The Quann Sisters)
Recorded: June 18 during MAPS PS 2025

Content note: This episode discusses childhood sexual, physical, and emotional abuse, suicidal ideation, disordered eating, and recovery.

Identical twins, writers, and culture-shapers TK Wonder and Cipriana Quann join Joe and Anne for a frank, generous conversation about identity, resilience, and the long arc of healing. Cipriana recounts launching Urban Bush Babes in 2011 to center women of color in beauty and fashion—work that led to a Vogue "day-in-the-life" feature and collaborations with couture houses. TK shares the parallel path of her music career (opening for artists from Sting and Nas to Erykah Badu and Queens of the Stone Age) and the sisters' ongoing writing, public speaking, and mental-health advocacy.

They reflect on the fashion industry's policing of natural hair, how those daily microaggressions erode self-worth, and why legal protections like the CROWN Act matter. The heart of the episode is their survival story: a decade of abuse by their father, endured separately yet witnessed together. Seeing one another live through it—"a physical manifestation of survival," as they put it—kept them alive. As adults, daily check-ins remain their core practice.

Psychedelics entered their lives years later. With careful set and setting, education, and professional support, psychedelic sessions—especially ibogaine—helped surface grief, release shame, and reframe entrenched coping strategies. Cipriana's first extended session unlocked tears she'd been forced to suppress as a child; TK describes a transformative ibogaine experience that catalyzed a decisive shift away from refined sugar and ultra-processed foods toward sustained movement, earlier mornings, and mindful nourishment. Both emphasize that psychedelics are not "magic pills" in isolation: integration, therapy, community, and lifestyle design make insights durable.

The conversation also tackles safety and access. The sisters stress working with experienced facilitators and medical oversight, naming that these modalities aren't for everyone. They call for more affordability and BIPOC representation in a field that can still feel exclusionary, while holding a wide tent vision—everyone deserves the chance to heal. They note how narratives are changing (from early-2000s panic to mainstream book-club conversations), and how stories alongside science move culture and policy.

Highlights

  • Fashion, hair politics, and the CROWN Act's importance.

  • Sisterhood as lifeline; daily check-ins as grown-up therapy.

  • First sessions: somatic release, grief, and reframing shame.

  • Ibogaine's role in behavior change; why integration is the bridge.

  • Safety, access, and representation: making healing containers truly welcoming.

If you're exploring this work: educate deeply, choose qualified support, prioritize integration, and remember—your past is a chapter, not your whole story.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Hello, everybody. Welcome back to psychedelics today. This is Joe Moore. I am really excited about

0:24.7

today's episode. Anne Philippi from New Health Club and I got the opportunity to interview

0:30.3

TK. Wunder and Cypriana Kwan, who happened to be identical twins, their writers, artists,

0:36.1

mental health advocates, and much, much

0:37.8

more we get into their robust careers in the episode. We actually got to record this one at

0:42.8

Maps, PS 2025. In our hotel, we set up as a recording studio, which was great. And yeah, it was fun

0:51.0

to be able to work with Anne so closely over that one.

0:54.8

And it just so happens that she's releasing the video today.

0:58.9

So if you want to check out the video version, check it out at New Health Club.

1:03.4

And yeah, so in this episode, we talk about sisterhood as a lifeline navigating fashions, policing, like that pun, of natural hair

1:14.4

and why the Crown Act matters and how carefully held psychedelic work, especially Ibegain,

1:20.3

helped them release shame, shift long held patterns, and build daily practices that actually

1:25.4

stick.

1:26.2

Quick content note, we discuss some triggering things, abuse, emotional abuse, physical abuse,

1:33.3

and more, disordered eating, suicide, and recovery.

1:36.6

So that's not great for you.

1:38.5

Please feel free to skip this one.

1:41.0

But it's an amazing, tender, wise and practical episode. Thanks for listening.

1:46.3

Let's get into it after a brief word about navigators. For almost 10 years, we've been building

1:53.6

education and conversation around psychedelics. Through podcasts, courses, and events,

1:59.8

we've done a lot of things.

2:01.9

Now we're bringing it all together in one place.

...

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