Psychedelic Assisted Therapy
A return to wholeness
In a time where many are walking through life carrying invisible grief, trauma, or disconnection, psychedelic-assisted therapy is re-emerging as a powerful pathway back to wholeness. It’s not a magic cure — but in the right hands, with the right intention and support, it can open doors that talk therapy alone often cannot reach.
I don’t say this lightly.
I say it as someone who works with the deep, complex layers of human pain — intergenerational wounds, family conflict, survival patterns, and the parts of us that have learned to split off, dissociate, or shut down just to stay functional.
What I’ve seen (and felt) is that psychedelics — when held within a safe, somatic, and relational container — can help people access those fragmented parts of self with honesty, tenderness, and clarity.
Not Just a Trip — A Process of Deep Integration
Psychedelic therapy isn’t just about the medicine. In fact, the medicine is only one part of a much bigger picture.
Preparation is everything.
Integration is everything.
This is where the work is.
It’s in how the experience is approached, how safety is built, and how insights are woven into real life — relationships, habits, values, parenting, boundaries, grief, joy. Psychedelic states can give us glimpses of what’s possible, but it's the slow, sacred process afterward that turns insight into transformation.
Staying connected to the body as truth-teller, drawing on inner, ancestral and ecological knowing, remembering we heal in relationship, not isolation; Embracing the capacity to observe, reflect and make meaning.
It’s a whole-body, whole-self, whole-systems approach. Not just mind. Not just spirit. Not just symptom relief.
Ethics, Safety, and the Unspoken Risks
This work must be rooted in integrity. That means clear boundaries, ongoing consent, trauma-informed practice, and the ability to know when psychedelic therapy isn’t right for someone — or not right now.
I don’t offer medicine. I don’t administer substances. But I do provide preparation and integration support for people who are engaging in psychedelic work — legally or illegally, safely or unsafely — because the reality is: people are doing this anyway. My role is to help hold the process with dignity, responsibility, and care.
And it’s messy sometimes. There are no neat outcomes. But there is often profound, soul-level insight, especially when grief or trauma has calcified in the body for years.
A Word to the Skeptical
If this feels too far out for you — I get it. I come from a clinical, ethical, trauma-informed background too. I’ve also seen how traditional therapy sometimes hits a wall when people are stuck in patterns that can’t be shifted by insight alone.
Psychedelics can soften that wall. They can bring what’s unconscious into the light.
But they must be met with respect — not performance, not bypassing, not escape.
This isn’t a shortcut. It’s a calling to sit with yourself more fully than ever before.