The Joe Rogan ExperienceJoe Rogan Experience #1367 - Bridget Phetasy
At a glance
WHAT IT’S REALLY ABOUT
Bridget Phetasy on addiction, trauma, woke culture, and men today
- Bridget Phetasy joins Joe Rogan for a wide‑ranging conversation that moves from her history of addiction, trauma, and recovery into culture‑war flashpoints like woke ideology, gender politics, and social media outrage.
- She recounts a chaotic childhood, early drug use, sexual assault, and heroin addiction that led to rehab at 19, and explains why she’s fully sober today, including from weed, despite loving it.
- They discuss how 12‑step programs, therapy, writing, and comedy helped her build resilience and self‑worth, and how those experiences inform her views on feminism, sexual ‘empowerment,’ and victimhood culture.
- Rogan and Phetasy also dig into male identity, free speech, trans issues in sports, social media mobbing, and how podcasts have become one of the last uncensored spaces for honest, long‑form conversation.
IDEAS WORTH REMEMBERING
5 ideasAddiction often masks deeper trauma and chaos rather than simple hedonism.
Phetasy describes starting drugs young to cope with a violent, unstable home and later escalating to hard drugs after being drugged and raped; sobriety required facing underlying pain, not just removing substances.
Weed can be addictive and psychologically sticky, especially for trauma survivors.
Although culturally minimized, Phetasy notes that daily weed created a ‘smoky ceiling’ over her life and always led her back to harder substances, while quitting brought a long, difficult emotional comedown.
Sex isn’t inherently empowering if you’re not already empowered.
She critiques strands of third‑wave feminism that oversell ‘sexual liberation,’ arguing that promiscuity can deepen shame and self‑loathing when it’s used to chase validation rather than grounded self‑worth.
Trauma responses like being ‘triggered’ are real, even if the term is overused.
Helping a 19‑year‑old rape victim recently re‑ignited Phetasy’s own memories, illustrating how PTSD lives in the body and why support systems, rape crisis centers, and a less shame‑based culture matter.
Free speech is the hill worth dying on in the current culture war.
Both argue that compelled speech (e.g., mandated pronouns) and ideological litmus tests in comedy, media, and academia are authoritarian impulses that stifle honest inquiry and fuel backlash.
WORDS WORTH SAVING
5 quotesSex is not fucking empowering if you’re not empowered already.
— Bridget Phetasy
You could lie to your therapist. You can’t lie to mushrooms.
— Joe Rogan
What good is our freedom if we can’t use it to liberate somebody else?
— Bridget Phetasy (paraphrasing someone she interviewed)
You don’t want to be a nice guy; you want to be a dangerous person who’s nice.
— Joe Rogan (summarizing Jordan Peterson’s idea)
I tweeted my ass into the center of the culture wars.
— Bridget Phetasy
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