Psychedelic medicines can bring powerful insights that allow us to reframe our circumstances and consider new ways of living. In the after-glow of an experience, we have valuable time during which we are more mentally flexible to implementing practical, positive changes into our day to day lives.

Psychedelic guides and researchers have long considered this key period, called “integration”, a vital component of psychedelic work. Integration protocols and strategies including breathwork and mindfulness can help achieve the best possible long-term therapeutic outcomes from psychedelic experiences.

What is Psychedelic Integration?

During a psychedelic journey, it is common to have out-of-body experiences, ineffable visions, and insightful personal downloads. However, after the initial revelations, the experiences and lessons learned can quickly dissipate like a dream, becoming lost in the fast pace and stress of modern life. We return home to our usual environment, where it is easy to fall back into old ways of being and doing. Ongoing support for integrating new insights can facilitate real, lasting change.

This is where integration comes in. As we have heightened neuroplasticity after psychedelic medicine use, it is the best time to introduce practical changes and habits to ground new insights into our lives. Combining psychedelics with a daily integration practice helps people sustain long-term shifts in their behaviors and maintain a more positive attitude.

“If one’s intention is the seed of what they are calling into their life, and a journey is the ritual that opens that seed into a sprout, then integration is nourishment that helps it grow healthy.” – Kristina Hunter in Consciousness Medicine

In his book, How to Change Your Mind, Michael Pollan uses a metaphor to describe this new neural flexibility. He describes it as a fresh snowfall covering all the old tracks you would take down a ski hill. As we get older, these tracks tend to get deeper, and it’s easy to become stuck using the same ones over and over. With psychedelic use, you have the opportunity to start fresh and create a new path.

Previous bad habits, however, can be more powerful than new insights. If we don’t commit to introducing positive changes, old behaviors tend to reemerge. Common integration practices include counseling or psychotherapy, sharing your experiences with trusted friends and family, journaling, creating art, singing, massage, meditation, yoga, and breathwork. These practices allow the insights from medicine work to continue to foster personal transformation several weeks after the experience itself.

What is Breathwork?

The term breathwork is used to describe the mindfulness practice of conscious breathing. Practicing breathwork involves actively controlling the length and depth of your inhales and exhales, to have an effect on emotional and physical state.

Breathwork is an ancient mind-body practice with numerous health benefits. Eastern religions and spiritual practices such as Buddhism, martial arts, yoga and Tai Chi have long encouraged the practice of deep breathing. In these practices, diaphragmatic breathing is thought to contribute to physical health, emotional balance, and social adaptation.

More recently, the academic literature is beginning to examine and acknowledge the value of deep breathing exercises on our well-being. Breathwork can help to support the benefits of psychedelic therapy by reducing stress, decreasing anxiety, enhancing psychological flexibility, supporting the autonomic nervous system, promoting emotional release, boosting mood and increasing self-esteem.

Breathwork in Psychedelic Integration

As mentioned above, practicing breathwork can have a huge range of positive effects on the mind and body. We are learning that our breath is one of the core pillars of health that has long been overlooked in western medicine. There are several powerful benefits to incorporating a breathwork practice in psychedelic integration. The following are five of these powerful benefits.

Creating similar altered states of consciousness

Breathwork styles such as Holotropic breathwork developed by Dr. Stanislav Grof —one of the foremost researchers in non-ordinary states of consciousness— are recognized to create very similar experiences to psychedelics themselves. This allows people to bring the magic of these abstract experiences into the day-to-day, and continue their relationship with this mystical space of expanded consciousness.

Reducing stress and anxiety

The theme of slowing down and enjoying life in the present moment is common amongst psychedelic insights. Slow, deep breathing practices have a powerful effect on our nervous system, taking us out of our overwhelmed “fight or flight” mode, and powerfully reducing stress and anxiety. Breathing techniques can be used daily for as little as 2-10 minutes to connect with ourselves and enhance our present awareness.

Reducing depression and boosting mood

Breathwork has been shown to reduce depressive symptoms and boost mood. Studies have found deep breathing to promote brainwave activity associated with enhanced emotional control and psychological well-being. With the growing mental health crisis, breathwork has great potential as an adjunct therapy in depression and mood disorders.

Releasing trauma

Psychedelic medicine is becoming known for its positive effects in breaking addictive patterns as well as reducing symptoms of PTSD. Psychedelics often show us the root cause of addictive behaviors and allow us to reframe our circumstances with greater self-acceptance and self-love.

Deep breathing programs have been identified as a great complementary therapy with benefits in PTSD as well as addiction. In a similar manner to psychedelic medicines, there are advanced breathwork practices that shut down the pre-frontal cortex, turning off our self-identity and allowing the body to process stored emotions.

Improving self-esteem and self-awareness

Holotropic breathing has been shown to boost self-esteem and self-awareness. In a 2015 study, several positive self-awareness changes were reported including improved scores for temperament, interpersonal problems, boundary setting, and hostility.

3 Guided Breathing Exercises for Psychedelic Integration

The following are three guided practices that can be used to integrate psychedelic experiences. The first two are daily breathwork practices to support the creation of a healthy mindfulness routine, and the third is a longer session to provide emotional release and support expanded consciousness.

Coherent breathing

Coherent breathing —also called resonant breathing— is a slow breathing pattern of roughly 6 breaths per minute. In her book Heart Breath Mind, Dr. Leah Lagos advocates the benefits of coherent breathing to increase heart rate variability (HRV), which is a marker of our adaptability to stress.

This specific type of breathing is recognized by several academic studies to have health benefits including reduced markers of depression, decreased stress and anxiety, and greater self-reported well-being. If the psychedelic experience has indicated more restorative integration practices, coherent breathing is perfect for calming the nervous system.

The video below is a morning practice, designed to help you feel balanced, energized and accomplished all before your feet hit the floor. It will begin with coherent breathing and continue into more up-regulated breathing styles, while also combining visualizations, affirmations, journaling and incredible music, leaving you empowered and ready for the day.

To practice coherent breathing at home, follow this video.

Up-regulated breathing

Up-regulated breathing was popularized by Wim Hof as a method to boost energy, feel empowered and relieve stress. This breathing exercise involves more effortful deep breathing to elicit a powerful response throughout the body. If the psychedelic experience has indicated more uplifting and motivating integration practices, up-regulated breathing is a great practice.

The following short up-regulated breathing session will help you feel energized in only 14-minutes. In three short rounds of up-regulated mouth breathing, you will be guided into a state of complete bliss and receptivity. Paired with energizing music and a sensory body-scan, this breathwork session will give you exactly what you need to feel good now. This practice is perfect to integrate into your morning routine, or boost your energy for a productive afternoon.

To try this 14-minute up-regulated breathing session, follow this video.

Breathing meditation

Longer, up-regulated breathing sessions help to shut down the conscious mind, allowing the body to release negative emotions and experience altered states of consciousness without the use of psychedelic medicine. After a psychedelic experience, it is recommended to do these longer sessions every 1-2 weeks for continued integration.

Up-regulated breathing can feel like work at first, but stick with it. After an initial effort, your body will continue the breathing pattern more easily and you can experience very powerful emotional releases.

This final guided breathwork session will take you through 5-rounds of up-regulated mouth breathing and an 8-minute inner child meditation, leaving you feeling refreshed and ready to take on life.

To try this longer, 29-minute up-regulated breathing session paired with a guided meditation, follow this video.

Integration practices should feel good, practical, and supportive. There are many different styles of breathwork that can support you on your integration journey to get the most out of psychedelic experiences. To get started at home, try the Inward Breathwork free, 3-day breathwork mini-series delivered to your inbox.

Congratulations on completing your first, or one of your healing sessions. The window of time after your session is a highly conducive opportunity for continued healing, integration, and growth to occur. It’s natural to want to use this time wisely, and get the most out of your neuroplastic integration window. This piece explores how to approach the window of time after your latest ketamine treatment session.

What to do Directly After / Day-of Session

If you have just completed a session, the rest of the day should be oriented around rest and recovery.

There are significant experiences, emotions, and insights that can arise after a session. Though it can be tempting to immediately get to work, or take courageous action, it’s important to give your mind and body the time to properly rest and recover. Consider this a break after a good day of work and self-care.

Also, keep in mind the medical and clinical requirements after a session:

  • Do not operate heavy machinery or drive a car.
  • Do not consume alcohol or other substances.
  • Do not make major life decisions and act on them, as you are still under the effects of the medicine.

Beyond the basics however, this is a wonderful opportunity to practice taking care of yourself. Reward yourself with space, silence, and stillness. Even if it feels like nothing happened, there are still many unfolding events under the surface in your body and your subconscious that need continued space to deeply root themselves.

Taking some time to journal about your experience is a powerful practice. Although you may not be able to fully articulate the experience, as they tend to be indescribable, writing about your current mental, physical, and emotional state helps this process.

Doing activities that you enjoy, such as reading a book, speaking with a loved one, or taking a walk or a bath, are all generative to this process and assist your healing journey and the recovery process. If you feel called to eat, rehydrating yourself and eating whole, nourishing foods is a helpful step in this rest process.

In the day after your session, find space, stillness, and silence. Let the medicine continue to work, let the lessons and experiences settle down, so that you can come back strong and composed in the days that follow for your remaining integration work.

What to do During the Integration Period

The integration period is where the real healing happens. This is when you begin to materialize the insights, experiences, and emotions you had during your session in the world and in your life directly.

You can think of the session itself as a glimpse of what is possible. The actions that you want to take, the emotional states you can experience, the beauty that is available all around you. It provides the embodied recognition that this is all possible, but it doesn’t yet make it real in your life. Integration is the process of acting on these experiences and grounding them in your day to day life and behaviors.

There are a few helpful ways to approach your integration window.

Clarify the experience

Continued journaling, meditation, or self-reflection on the experience will help you clarify and crystallize the important parts of your experience. This will help you create an overview of action steps, behavioral changes, or areas to focus on during the integration period.

Build momentum

Some integration actions can be quick and straightforward, like cleaning your living space. Others can be more ambiguous or larger undertakings, such as big health changes, important conversations, or rethinking your future life plans.

It’s helpful to start small, and build momentum. Take care of the small, actionable steps first, so you can immediately see the fruits of your labor and build personal confidence. You can then carry this feeling with you as you take on some of the bigger integration tasks.

Be Gentle With Yourself

The sessions themselves are only one aspect of your healing journey, and the healing process will continue in the days, weeks, and months that follow. If you miss a day or two, or if you find yourself tired or challenged in any way, this is okay. It is part of the process. Be gentle with yourself, maintain your self-care habits and normal routines, and as mentioned before, start small, do what you can in the moment, and build momentum over time.

Join an Integration Circle

As part of your Mindbloom journey, you have the opportunity to join integration circles. To discuss your experiences and your process with a trained Guide, and to learn and grow from the wisdom and experiences of other clients. Being witnessed in your process, and joining into community are powerful tools to assist your integration period.

Use Your Support

Working with a therapist, or discussing what arises with your Guide/Clinician, are resources you have available to help understand the nature of your experience and create an integration plan for yourself. You are not alone in this process, and have support available, use it.

The important point with your integration period is that integration is an ongoing process. There is no deadline for your integration work. You are not judged on it afterwards. These are steps you are taking for yourself, for your life, and for your future. If you have the motivation to take action, that’s wonderful, plan it out and act on it. If your body is asking for continued rest and recovery, that’s wonderful as well, honor it.

How to Maximize the Neuroplastic Window

The 7-10 days after a treatment session open up your neuroplastic window — where your brain and neurobiology are in a more flexible, open, and suggestible state. This is a very powerful window for behavioral change, working on your self-image, or trying things you may have previously been resistant to.

As your mind is more open to new behavior patterns, it’s very powerful to begin building new habits if that was something that came up in your session. Your mind is more receptive to these new developments, and the neuroplastic window will help them settle in more deeply, increasing the likelihood they stick and endure once the neuroplastic window has passed.

With a more open and suggestible state, it is helpful to continue exploring your session, your emotions, and your life in general. With care and compassion, you can reflect on challenging areas with more levity and grace, which can help surface key insights, or clarify next steps to be taken. As you can see, continued reflection is a helpful component of maximizing your neuroplastic window.

Overall, if you’d like to work with the medicine and the opportunity it provides, manage your energy throughout this time. Use this neurobiological window as a catalyst to take clear, decisive action on new habit formation, on new ways of relating to people, and on designing the life that you want for yourself.

Understanding the Healing Process

The healing process is not linear. Some days may be slower or more challenging than others. Some days may be filled with motivation and energy. All of this is normal and okay. Your healing process will be unique to you, your life circumstances, and what you need most at this time.

You may find that more challenging emotions arise even outside of the sessions, this is your mind and body’s way of letting go of pent up or repressed emotions or experiences. If this happens, come back to your foundations of reflection and self-care. Be an ally to your own healing process. Give it space, compassion, and love.

Some integration actions may arise that seem very large or overwhelming, such as career changes or significant relationship shifts. You don’t need to tackle everything at once. Break them down into smaller actions, digestible chunks, and address each one when you have the energy and capacity to do so.

It’s very easy to begin comparing yourself to others, but be wary of this trap. Their process is not yours.

Some individuals may have highly conceptual or abstract experiences, while others may have the majority of their session be focused on their body and physical health. The key is to stay rooted in your immediate experience, what you are feeling, what insights/experience arose for you, and how you would like to move forward with them.

Everything that comes up for you throughout this healing process is an opportunity. An opportunity to show up more for yourself, an opportunity to give yourself the love and affection you give to others, and an opportunity to safely and confidently move towards challenges, as they will lead you to growth, healing, and wholeness.

Each day is a new opportunity to continue your healing process. Most of your healing, and the real changes you see in your life, will come outside of your treatment sessions. These days are just as important and significant as the treatment sessions. This is when it all becomes real. Take a deep breath, use the support you have, make an integration plan, manage your energy, and begin cultivating the life that you deserve.

Conclusion

It’s easy to put all of the responsibility for your own healing on the medicine and the session experience itself. But in the days or weeks following your sessions, how you approach them, the work you do, the love you express are just as powerful as the sessions themselves.

As you move into your post-session window, first and foremost continue to take care of yourself. Make time for rest and recovery, for silence and stillness. Let your mind, body, and inner healing intelligence do what they do best. When appropriate, join in this process by taking small, clear, and confident steps forward towards your future.

The more you make this an innate practice of figuring out what you want, where to go next, and acting on it, the faster, deeper, and more exciting your healing process will be. You will begin to see results, feel the changes, and recognize the immense value of the work you are doing. Enjoy the process, embrace your healing, and walk boldly towards your future.

What comes after a powerful psychedelic therapy session? How do you begin to process the experiences, insights, and emotions that may have surfaced? And what does it look like to turn a powerful session into a long-lasting, positive personal transformation?

The answer to these questions is the domain of psychedelic integration, an important and essential component of the psychedelic therapy process. It is not commonly discussed as often as the psychedelic therapy sessions themselves, but it is just as important to help deliver lasting change and solidifying and validating the experiences. Rooting the lessons deep in normal life.

This piece will explore the definition, utility, history, future, scope, and specifics of psychedelic integration — and how you can use this in your own life to provide powerful experiences and make long-lasting personal change.

What is Psychedelic Integration?

The definition of integration is to bring disparate parts together to become a whole.

This is why integration is the term used when processing and working with the lessons and insights provided in a psychedelic therapy session. You are taking disparate insights —or parts of yourself that you may or may not have been aware of — and intentionally bringing them into yourself, into your way of Being, to become whole and facilitate personal healing.

The specifics of integration can take many shapes. Here are some examples:

  • Taking physical action on outstanding tasks
  • Healing, addressing, or letting go of past trauma or personal blocks
  • Cultivating new hobbies and making time for your relationships and playfulness
  • Taking better care of your health

The specifics of integration will depend on the experiences that you have in your sessions and throughout the course of the program overall.

As each person comes into psychedelic therapy with different intentions, life circumstances, and aims or aspirations,  it naturally follows that the integration process and the specific activities will look differently. As is a recurring theme with this work, the journey of healing towards wholeness is very personal and intimate, and will look different for each individual.

The Power of Psychedelic Integration

Psychedelic integration is a term still coming into its full fruition within the psychedelic therapy space. It’s solidifying its place as a central pillar in the full experiential arc of a psychedelic therapy program.

The driving force behind these developments is the deep and essential utility of psychedelic integration. It makes the experiences, and the subsequent change, real. It is the driving force that takes the intangible potential presented in the sessions and grounds them deeply in reality, into your day-to-day existence, and makes them a lasting and enduring part of your life.

Without integration, much of the psychedelic experience itself lives as potential. Part of the beauty and power of the psychedelic experience and psychedelic therapy are the experiences and insights that it provides.

Someone may have a visceral experience of an emotion that they had not felt in a long time —joy, peace, opportunity, excitement, for a few examples. Or perhaps it facilitates novel insights, such as how past traumatic experiences have influenced the way they perceive reality now, and that it needs to be addressed and healed. These experiences are absolutely essential, they are life-affirming and freeing. There is no doubt to this.

However, they demonstrate the potential life the individual can have. They shine a light on a destination or state of being that the person can inhabit in the future. It demonstrates potential. Emotions that can be experienced, the life that can be lived, the peak of the mountain waiting to be ascended.

But the crux of integration is action.

Integration is about taking the lessons, insights, feelings, experiences and translating them into actions, habits, behaviors, and beliefs that carry through the rest of your life. Without acting on these experiences, they remain as potential. Something possible, waiting for action, waiting for movement.

This action —the embodied example of the lessons that arise in session— is the domain of psychedelic integration.

Some integration actions can be small and quick, such as cleaning up your living space. Others take more dedicated time and energy, like making healthier diet choices, or preparing and making career transitions.

Others still don’t have a defined end date, and are an ongoing process throughout life. Examples like speaking the truth, practicing kindness and compassion to others. All of these ideas and experience can arise within the sessions, and thus are all the domain of integrative work.

If you make integration a habit, and see it as a vital and necessary part of psychedelic therapy and the psychedelic experience, a dramatic possibility opens up. By combining thorough and sincere integration work with clear intentions and the sessions involved in the particular protocol or program, individuals have the possibility of making rapid and long-lasting progress.

As new experiences arise, an integration plan for them is made and enacted, helping create new baselines, new normals for the individual’s experience. From this place, new intentions are set, new experiences are had, and the cycle begins again.

This upward spiral, or path of personal progress, can help tackle everything from major mental health concerns, to radical life changes, to deepening relationships, and everything in between.

Progress can take time, and sometimes integration work is challenging. For example, having tough conversations, or getting out of toxic patterns or living situations. These areas arise in awareness and the experiences for a reason: to help you move towards integrated health and wholeness.

History of Psychedelic Integration

The earliest known use of the psychedelic experience as a tool for insight and healing is based in shamanic and indigenous cultures, dating at least 1000 years back, but it’s entirely possible traditions have endured longer than this.

Psychedelics were used for general healing in the community, convening with spirits for guidance and assistance, and as coming-of-age tools in the community. Because the use and practice of these experiences was so fundamentally ingrained in, supported by, and accepted in the cultures that used them, there was not a great need for a formal integration process afterwards. Indeed, the concept of integrating psychedelic experiences did not exist in some psychedelic-medicinal cultures.

However, in today’s modern age, re-entry into society after a significant psychedelic experience or program is not always as smooth as it was for those in ancient cultures. The road back into life and society after these experiences can be challenging or turbulent. This “re-integration” birthed the need for effective and support-based psychedelic integration.

Through this need, modern psychedelic therapy integration techniques have emerged and continue to develop. Individuals undergoing psychedelic therapy programs may face difficulty when sharing these experiences with others, who may not understand or be as supportive. Individuals may also face internal friction when returning back to “normal” life, working to understand what the experiences meant or the potential they have for their future.

The integration world is still maturing, coming into full understanding of best practices, techniques, frameworks, and supportive ideas to assist individuals who have chosen to work with these healing experiences.

Across cognitive, physiological, emotional, and sometimes spiritual levels, the techniques and practitioners who utilize them are emerging, filling the present need for the support and guidance of communities and the wisdom they contain.

Psychedelic integration is also developing and emerging alongside the resurgence of research and study being done into the science and practice of psychedelic therapy. It’s constantly refining itself, orienting around how to best serve individuals, offer support, and help unearth gems of insight and experience that arise during the experiences. This helps them ground clients in everyday reality, action, and growth.

Planes of Integration (PEMS & ACE)

There are a number of ways to approach psychedelic integration, and a number of techniques, models, framings, and practices that you can use alongside your practitioner to deeply solidify and enact the lessons that arose during sessions. There will be links to additional resources/outlets at the end of this article.

There are two common approaches to breaking down the psychedelic therapy experience and understanding what it is asking of you: the ACE model and the PEMS Energy System.

The byproduct from some sessions can be intense. Perhaps it was a particularly emotional experience, or there was a lot of content that surfaced. Beginning to take the first steps of sizing it down and listing out integration activities can be difficult. It’s helpful to have frameworks that help you manage and compartmentalize these experiences.

PEMS ENERGY SYSTEM

The PEMS energy system stands for: Physical, Emotional, Mental, Spiritual.

This system is a way to bucket or segment the experience and its integration activities. Some experiences may have lessons or insights or experiences that fit into each category, while other experiences may be heavily focused on only one or two.

Breaking things down this way helps you notice themes, and more easily identify next steps for integration, getting specific about what activities/actions/habits will help you integrate the experience.

Physical

Physical energy has to do with your body, your health, your level of energy or physical stress, etc. You might have an experience that focuses most on returning to your body, on getting out in nature more often, in reducing stress levels.

This is predominantly physical — and integration activities surrounding this category may include making changes to your diet, dealing with your sleep hygiene, making more time for movement and exercise, and/or cleaning up your living space.

Emotional

Emotional integration is a process of ensuring that the emotions were fully expressed, had a chance to complete the release process, and adequate time has been spent with them.

The novel states of consciousness provide a safe space for deeply rooted or suppressed emotions to arise and express themselves for release. There may be cathartic moments of grieving, ecstatic moments of appreciation, or novel states and mystical experiences.

For example, if you had an experience of grieving a loved one, or a past relationship, integration can look like dedicating time to intentionally reflect on this. This includes journaling about how you feel, or making space to continue the emotional expression if it is required.

Another example of emotional integration may be expressing something that you have been holding in, whether that be frustration, appreciation, fear, love, or any other emotion. Make dedicated time to give your emotions their full expression and release.

Mental

Mental, or cognitive integration, involves making sense of the experience, or taking action on the more literal and physical aspects of your life.

Activities like journaling or talk therapy can help to make sense of ideas, emotions, and experiences that remain unclear. Cognitive integration can also involve taking action on still unresolved areas of your life, like sorting out personal finances, creating conducive environments at home, or seeking out additional support in life where required. Cognitive integration helps to fit the experience inside the narrative arc of your life, to more effectively see where insights lie, what next steps may look like, and how to orient yourself as you move into your future.

Spiritual

It would be disingenuous not to discuss the potentially spiritual or transcendent realms of the psychedelic experience that may arise through these therapeutic programs. Feelings of oneness, of connection with self, others, and world — can be a moving and profound experience for many. Sometimes after these experiences, individuals may be moved to integrate these lessons by starting, developing, or further exploring the spiritual avenues of their life. Perhaps reading scripture, further exploring their native religion or world religions, cultivating a personal practice to help embody these realizations, or investigating for perhaps the first time these transcendent areas of their lives.

ACE Integration Model

The ACE integration model is another useful framework. It’s a starting point to begin relating to a recent experience from your sessions, and seeing what is surfacing. This helps define the integration process, and any insights or emotions that arose during the session.

Accept

The first step in this approach is accepting the experience that you had as real and valid. Some of it may be useful and warrant further exploration. Some of the experience may be less useful. All the same, the experience happened. It was real for you, and it came up in the way it did for a reason.

Your psyche, in combination with your inner healing intelligence, was trying to convey something. Accepting your experiences as real and valid is an important first step, it is the first step of the integration process. Accepting that this experience happened, and beginning to further explore it.

Connect

The second step of the ACE model is to connect. Once you have accepted that the experience happened, was real, and is valid, the next step is to connect to it.

This helps to explore the experience further, inviting the lessons in so that you can see what the experience meant. You can begin to explore what it is asking of you to integrate, and the messages that were conveyed. It is only when we connect in good-faith to the experience, that you can begin to discern the meaning, wisdom, and next steps that are nested within it.

Embody

Through the connection with your experience, next steps and integration activities start to be gleaned. The next approach here is to embody them.

This is what is meant by being integrated: to bring the lessons fully into your being, embodying them so that they become a new normal for you. Embodiment can look like any of the systems from the PEMS approach, embodying new ways of being across the physical, emotional, mental, or spiritual domains of your life.

With continued investment in embodying these lessons and insights, you begin to integrate them fully into your life, the core process of creating long-lasting change through psychedelic therapy.

How Long Does Psychedelic Integration Take?

A common question that arises after psychedelic therapy sessions, once the discussion of integration begins, is “how long does integration take?” Or similarly, “how will I know once I’m done integrating?” Let’s address each of these separately.

As you should be familiar with by now, the immediate response here is that it’s entirely dependent on the individual. The psychedelic therapy process is unique, highly focused on the individual. It’s also highly dependent on their current context, and available time and energy.

This is the most dramatic factor that will influence the length of time that integration takes. There are some other factors, including: dedication, complexity of the activity, and time/resources available.

Dedication to the integration

As with any personal change, habit development, or transformational work, your level of dedication has a large influence on the amount of time it takes, and the depth that it settles in at.

Someone who shows up to work each day will likely make more progress than the individual who shows up once a week. This applies directly to psychedelic integration work: the more you commit to the process, the more you show up, and the more deep the transformation will be. Dedication will increase the speed at which you will begin to recognize the shifts that are taking place.

Complexity of the integration activities

Some integration activities are much more simple than others, and naturally will take less time and/or energy to complete. Cleaning your living space will normally take less time than executing a career change, or developing a new creative hobby.

All of these examples can easily arise in the experience and be on the list for integration. Naturally, the more complex an activity, the larger it is in overall scope. It will take longer to integrate fully and become a part of your life.

Available Resources

The amount of time, energy, and resources you have available to you will also influence the time it takes to fully integrate some lessons.

If you would like to make a career change, but it requires taking an online course, someone who has all day to dedicate to the course can likely take action and integrate this fully faster than someone who can only dedicate 2 hours every Sunday morning due to other commitments.

Time —and your dedication levels mentioned above— is a big factor. Also, aspects like financial resources are involved if you are planning to move to a new home, or live alone. Having the resources available can simplify or accelerate the integration process — though given enough time, it is possible to integrate nearly any experience or insight that arises for you.

Integration Action Timelines

As for timelines in particular, it’s most useful to break this down by immediate, short-term, and long-term/ongoing actions.

Some integration activities are short with defined timelines, others are much larger undertakings requiring many months or years, and others simply do not have ending dates as they are part of an ongoing process or pursuit. Let’s look at each of these a bit closer.

Immediate Integration Actions

Immediate integration actions are quick, well-defined actions that could be completed in a shorter manner of time, from a few minutes to an hour or so.

This could include activities or actions like: cleaning up your space, signing up for that new hobby, calling a friend or family member, or having the discussion you’ve been putting off. These are easily defined, and often don’t take too long.

This is not to say that the tasks are easy. Though having an important conversation doesn’t take a long time, it’s easy to put this off to avoid conflict or expressing your truth. Never underestimate the power of these small, immediate activities.

Sometimes the first domino is all that needs to fall, setting off a chain reaction of positive developments and momentum that can carry you far on your journey towards healing and wholeness. If after your experience(s) you find yourself with a good deal of energy and motivation, these activities are often the easiest place to start. Integration and growth is a long game, and building momentum at the beginning is extremely helpful.

Short-Term Integration Actions

Short-term integration actions are undertakings that cannot be done in a day. They may take a few days, a few weeks, or a few months to fully settle in and reach a stage of completion that you’re happy with.

Forming new habits, extended practice of new hobbies, or moving locations are all examples of integration activities that may fall into the short-term category. Solidifying new habits often takes a few weeks to a month for the habit to become fully ingrained, a part of your new way of being, to integrate fully into your life.

These activities are often the cornerstones of integration work — as many of the insights or experiences in sessions often find their roots in these short-term, but long-lasting developments. A new habit of yoga is something that can be with you for decades to come. A new living situation can bring with it a whole host of new opportunities and experiences.

You’ll also begin to notice an overlapping set of interrelations between these timelines, as these short-term tasks (developing a yoga practice) often can be broken down into the immediate activities mentioned above (do 30 mins of yoga each day). In this way, you begin to develop a holistic orientation towards your integration work — holding long-term visions and plans, while having a set of immediate, well-defined activities, steps along the path, that will move you in that direction.

Long-Term / Ongoing Actions

The final integration timeline is long-term, or ongoing — having no defined end date. These are much larger, more conceptual aims and visions that may arise for you during your sessions.

Long-term activities can include: making a change of careers, building a business or a family, or cultivating deeper relationships. These activities can take months or years to fully develop, bear fruit, and become a new natural way of being for you.

As a specific example, making the move from your current job to a new domain may take some time to train the new skills, build a network of connections in the space, and finally land a new position (or make one yourself!).

These long-term activities will also have accompanying short-term and immediate integration activities as a part of them. When making a career change (long-term), you may need to develop a new skill (short-term), and sign up for the programs/classes that will teach them (immediate). The beauty of these overlaps is that it helps clarify the path forward, as you then have a list of activities that you can do each day, making you more confident that you’re moving in the direction that you want to go.

The final, and most amorphous integration timeline is the “ongoing” category. Think of this as things that don’t have an ending date. They are just new ways of being in the world, that will always be a part of your day to day existence.

Some of the lessons or experiences that you may have in psychedelic therapy can surface themes such as: expressing love more often, speaking your truth, being a supportive partner, or being of service to the world. These are high-level visions that don’t have an end date — you can be integrating and enacting this in your 20’s, all the way through to your final years of life.

These are the north stars, the guiding principles of life, and integrating them isn’t so much about completing the tasks, as it is continually renewing your commitment to uphold and enact these values.

A Note on Integration

An important note on psychedelic integration — it doesn’t have to be a chore, nor should it be perceived this way. These activities need not live as an endless series of overbearing or overwhelming tasks on your to-do list.

Integration is an opportunity.

It’s an opportunity to realize and actualize the profound potential inside of you, which psychedelic therapy is uniquely adept at revealing to you. It’s an opportunity to become the person you want, to have the life you envision for yourself. It is a labor of self-love, of self-compassion, and of showing up with your full being to the spectacle of life.

“After ecstasy, the laundry.” — Jack Kornfield

This quote, from renowned American Buddhist meditation teacher Jack Kornfield is particularly apt when discussing psychedelic integration, or when integrating any form of highly transformative experience.

Psychedelic therapy and the psychedelic experience can launch you into beautiful realms of possibility. They can connect you deeply to your heart, your worth, your compassion, and your potential. Returning to the “normal” world after such experiences can be challenging or disorienting. It can be difficult to see how to make sense of the messages that surfaced in the sessions, or to have a sense of where to go next.

By slowly and diligently grounding the revelations and experiences that psychedelic therapy provides in earnest integration work, you rise up to meet those transcendent realms of possibility that live within the psychedelic experience.

Integration is a process. But it is a process of evolution, and of blooming into the fullness of your being. None of this means that the work is easy. The best rewards rarely have an easy path to receive them.

Integration is life-long, life-level work. Approach it with compassion, and expect that there will be setbacks, mistakes, and some backward progress at times. If you show up with renewed vigor, compassion for yourself, and gratitude for the sublime opportunity that you have to become what you have always wanted to be,  psychedelic integration will be a profound tool of self-actualization and personal development and healing.

The Future of Psychedelic Integration

Just as continued research in psychedelic science will continue to push forward the potential and best practices of psychedelic medicine and therapy, there is just as much potential for this work to impact, improve, and further the expertise and available opportunities in psychedelic integration.

Psychedelic integration is still an emerging field, both an art and a science, based in grounding the lessons of psychedelic therapy. There is certainly room for further development. This includes: establishment of qualifications, techniques, processes, and understanding around what works, what is most helpful, and how to best personalize the integration process for each individual and for each experience.

As with any emerging field, the future looks bright, but there is much work to be done. As with each initiative, with each client and practitioner, the body of knowledge continues to grow, expand, and refine itself.

In the future we would expect to see new and improved containers and support systems to help individuals process their experiences, define an integration plan, and offer continued guidance and resources throughout the individuals integration journey.

There will likely be the further proliferation and expansion of tools and techniques that are uniquely effective at integration. This would include supplementation routines, movement and embodiment exercises, and multimedia experiences to help return individuals to the expansive states of psychedelic therapy.

There is already an emerging market of trained therapists and practitioners who are uniquely skilled at helping make sense of the experiences and support the integration process. Establishment of unified qualifications, and improved awareness and access will also come with continued investment in this space.

The more integration is seen as a necessity to psychedelic therapy and healing, instead of an ancillary option or supplement, the faster the progress will be.

You can help this process, by encouraging responsible psychedelic experiences, and underscoring the importance of grounding the experiences back in the lived experiences.

Everyone who works in, or embarks on a journey of psychedelic therapy has a unique signal to contribute to psychedelic integration. The growth of good-faith conversations and sharing will only help the entire field mature and refine itself further, ultimately helping all who come to this work in the future.

Psychedelic Integration Resources

The list below can be considered a jumping-off point. These resources help if you are in need of additional support with your integration process, want to contribute to the growth of psychedelic integration as a field and practice, or if you would simply like to see what is currently available to the public and in what form.

As with anything in this line of work, this list is not exhaustive, as new initiatives are currently in development.

Psychedelic Integration Handbook – The Integration Handbook from Ryan Westrum is a comprehensive guidebook to embarking on and integrating a psychedelic experience or program. Combining both theory and practice, it is an asset to anyone wishing to explore the realm of psychedelic integration further.

Psychedelic.Support – Psychedelic.Support is a fantastic outlet to help individuals find a mind/body practitioner uniquely skilled and focused at helping individuals process their experiences and work through the things that come up throughout the integration process. Though integration is a personal journey, that does not mean it needs to be done alone.

MAPS Integration List – MAPS is a pioneering and influential organization in the psychedelic therapy space, they have put together their own resources list to help individuals find support and other practitioners to assist with the integration process.

Fireside Project – A 24/7 hotline that can help individuals in need during and just after an experience. Powerful psychedelic experiences can be intense, and having the support available on hand, or having someone with the knowledge to help point you in the direction of next steps can be an asset.

Hakomi Method – The Hakomi method is another technique and therapeutic approach that is useful to help unpack and understand experiences, feelings, or insights that arise throughout psychedelic therapy programs. They have a list of practitioners available that can be of service to anyone moving through the integration process.

Traditional Psychotherapy – Traditional therapeutic techniques and experiences are helpful when it is difficult to make sense of the experiences or insights that arise in psychedelic therapy, or throughout the integration process. It is not always immediately clear what the next step or best course of action is. Working with skilled therapists and clinicians help accentuate and accelerate this process, and unearth new insights and drive new connections that may not have arisen if it was done alone.

Somatic Bodywork – Making sense of the experiences in an embodied fashion, not merely on the cognitive level, can be just as important or useful along these journeys. Somatic experiencing and somatic bodywork is a useful outlet when navigating trauma healing or approaching integration work from a body-based perspective.

Mind/Body Practices – Ensuring that you are supporting yourself with a mix of mind/body practices on your own provides important scaffolding and support to continue diving deep into the integration process. Techniques like meditation, journaling, yoga/movement, or breathwork can all be helpful to make the re-entry and integration into life at home smoother.

You’ve reached the end of the Basics program here at Mindbloom, the introductory program that all clients are required to begin with.

What comes next?

There may be a whole host of emotions and thoughts surfacing about what to do and where to go next. Common questions include:

  • Is the process fully complete?
  • Do I have more work to do?
  • What options are available to me if I want to move forward?
  • Are there other programs, and if so, what’s the difference between them and the Basics?
  • Do I have to keep moving forward right now?
  • How long will the effects of this first session last?

We’ll be covering these questions in our resource below. As always, if you have any questions whatsoever, feel free to reach out to your Guide or to our team for support and additional guidance on what your unique path moving forward can and will look like. These are not decisions you need to make on your own, and working alongside your care team to make the best decision for yourself is a wise decision.

Let’s take a look at the three common paths individuals take upon completing the Basics program.

The Three Paths

As always, it is important to note that your particular path is unique to you, and may look different than the paths listed below.

With that said, after working with many clients through their completion of the Basics, there have been 3 broad paths that seem to arise as classic next steps.

Returning Home

The “returning home” path simply implies that you have done the work with Mindbloom that you came here to do. You have a specific healing intention/goal, and feel like it has been largely or completely resolved through your work in the Basics program.

Some clients have reached this point after only the Basics program. However, it is common to feel like things aren’t fully resolved by the end of the Basics, which leads to the additional two paths.

Integration Hiatus

The second path is a brief hiatus to allow yourself to fully integrate the experiences and insights that arose throughout the Basics program.

This is a helpful step and taking care of the “homework” you receive from your experiences will help provide a sturdy foundation for the following program, and when you return to continue on with additional programs.

This hiatus may be a few weeks, it may also be a few months. This is entirely up to your discretion, and you can consult your care team if you would like additional input on this. Taking some time in between programs can let the lessons be more fully embodied, so you can see what areas or ideas you’d like to work on next, and what work remains to be done.

Some clients come in to work on depression, and then recognize that anxiety is a significant component as well. They can then continue with a secondary program focused on anxiety. Once again, checking in with yourself and working with your care team is helpful to determine the next steps in your care plan and the length of time between programs that is best for you.

Other available supplements to this integrative work include the Group Integration Circles available to you. Sharing your experience with others, and hearing others’ experiences can be powerful catalysts on your own integration journey.

You can also sign up for additional direct integration sessions with your Guide to explore your experiences in more detail.

Continuing Programs

You may arrive at the end of the Basics program feeling like you are just starting to build momentum and see positive results. This includes becoming more comfortable within the ketamine experience, improvement in mood symptoms, and the surfacing of new and positively reinforcing experiences during the sessions.

As a result, after consulting with your clinician, you make the decision to continue right along into another program and maintain this momentum that you have been building.

As Mindbloom currently has 4 secondary programs available, uniquely catered to different states or desired outcomes, this is always an option. Please note that for any secondary program, you will need to check in with your clinician again and get approval to continue on. This is for your safety, as each program continues along with a prescribed treatment.

In general, these are the common paths that clients take once they have reached the end of their Basics program. They may stop ketamine treatment entirely as they feel they have gotten what they need. There may be a pause before embarking on an additional program, while others may continue directly on to a new program to support maintenance of progress made or further healing and growth.

If you take either of the latter paths, it’s helpful to note what programs are available to you. There are currently 4 secondary programs available, with new ones arriving every few months.

Additional Mindbloom Programs

There are presently four secondary programs you can move forward with here at Mindbloom.

Going Deeper

Going Deeper is the next evolution of the Basics program with Dr. Casey Paleos. This program explores additional fundamental aspects of the psychedelic and ketamine experience.

This program explores the T.L.O. mantra, or “trust, let go, and be open.” This is a timeless and time-tested mantra helpful both within the experiences themselves, and also as principles for moving forward in your life. These are covered in the preparation meditations.

In the integration meditations, Dr. Paleos dives deeper into the neuroscience behind ketamine treatment. These meditations are focused on neuroplasticity, what this means for you, and how to use the integration periods to your greatest advantages.

Learning to Love Yourself

Learning to Love Yourself is directly focused on the most important relationship you have in your life: the one that you have with yourself.

Featuring our own Shannon Starr, it provides ideas, intentions, and practices to cultivate a deeper relationship with yourself. It’s aim is to improve your self-image, self-love, and your self-worth.

A core aspect of therapy is returning to a feeling of love and “at-homeness” with yourself, and this is the central focus of the Learning to Love Yourself program.

Overcoming Anxiety

Overcoming Anxiety is directly focused on helping provide the skills, ideas, and practices to manage and mitigate symptoms and experiences of anxiety.

It also teaches how to work with them, and make anxiety a powerful signal that you mold into behavioral change. This is the core focus on this program, and it is led by our Lead Clinician, Kristin Arden.

Beyond Depression

Beyond Depression is the complementary other half of Overcoming Anxiety, and is specifically focused on learning how to work with, and move beyond, experiences or symptoms of depression in your life.

This is also led by Mindbloom Lead Clinician Kristin Arden, and is focused on helping individuals manage depression, while rediscovering joy, passion, and purpose in their lives: the antidote to depression.

These are the secondary programs currently available at the time of publication. If there is any confusion around which program may be the best next step, or which one might be best suited for you, you can always reach out to your Guide to open a dialogue around this, or discuss this with your clinician directly.

You are supported in this decision, and do not have to make it alone.

Unavailable Options

There are a few questions that we receive from clients around potential avenues to move forward with that are outside of the scope of Mindbloom’s platform.

A few things that Mindbloom does not offer or provide once the program is complete include:

  • Microdosing: Mindbloom does not prescribe ketamine in microdose amounts for daily use.
  • Different Ketamine Applications: Mindbloom does not currently prescribe or provide ketamine in the forms of IV infusions, IM injections, or nasal sprays (Spravato).
  • Different Psychedelic Medicines: Mindbloom works only with Ketamine, and does not provide programs with compounds such as MDMA, psilocybin, LSD, or other psychedelic compounds.
  • Daily Dosing Protocols: Similar to microdosing, Mindbloom clinicians do not write prescriptions for “daily use” or smaller, more frequent dosing sessions. All of our programs correspond with clinician-prescribed dosages tailored to each individual, and based on the number of sessions in the program.

Honoring Integration Periods

A final note on honoring integration windows as they arise, both between the sessions in your program, and in the longer windows after your program is complete.

You have likely come to work with Mindbloom to achieve some form of long-lasting positive mood/behavioral change. The integration period is essential for facilitating and supporting these long-lasting changes.

We’ve written extensively on the integration process and how to approach integration periods, and why and it’s important to honor these in yourself as you move throughout this process. Some experiences or insights may be quite straightforward to integrate and not require significant time/energy, while others may take weeks, months, or be a continued, ongoing process of aspiring and working towards more transcendental ideals.

As a result, if you are considering moving into a new program, or even if you have made the decision to pause your relationship with Mindbloom, it’s important to check in with yourself and your care team. This helps to make sure the integration period is beneficial and that it receives the attention it deserves, helping you on your way to healing and wholeness.

Showing up fully for the integration process is not an exact science, it’s not always easy to pin an exact date of completion on some of the integration tasks you may have in front of you. It’s helpful to ask yourself, and your care team, to have a sense of when you are in a good state/place to move forward with future programs and session work.

Conclusion

Hopefully this resource laid out some of the potential paths available to you when moving forward after the Basics program. None of them are any more correct than the others. This is a matter of tuning into yourself, honoring where you are at, respecting what you may still need, and placing importance on working with your support systems.

Your path will always be unique, and you have a community of support around you to keep moving forward and giving you strength, input, and ideas. If you ever want more direct help, you can reach out to your Mindbloom clinician, your Guide at Mindbloom, or your primary care provider outside of Mindbloom. There is a community of support here for you, all ready to be of service to your process and help you along the way in whatever way is helpful.

Regardless of what you choose, here’s to the rest of your journey towards healing and wholeness.

Psychedelic integration is a growing field right now, and for good reason. In order to facilitate the lasting personal and habitual changes psychedelic therapy can provide, integration is an essential component of that process.

Transformational experiences —psychedelic-assisted or otherwise— wouldn’t be possible without the deep work that follows them. Integration is a vital, necessary, and important part of long-lasting growth and development.

What is Psychedelic Integration?

Psychedelic integration refers to taking the gained insights, emotions, or attitudes from your experience, and processing them into desired areas of your life. Integration as a general definition means “bringing parts together to make a whole.” Psychedelic integration helps to achieve a sense of “wholeness” clients seek through their set intentions for treatment.

Examples of intentions may involve taking ownership of mistakes, speaking your truth, or reconnecting with the parts of yourself that you may have turned away from in the past. It is this wholeness, this ownership of all parts of ourselves, that creates the strong, sovereign, calm foundations the rest of your life can be built upon.

Psychedelic experiences have the potential to open up very dramatic or significant ways of being, ways of viewing others, and how you view yourself. It may bring to light new goals you have, things you want to do, say, or move towards.

Once you have these experiences, integration is the process that turns your intentions into reality. It makes your insights tangible.

An example of the integration process and its related work

As an example, during your psychedelic experience, you may have an important insight around taking care of yourself and your physical health. The related integration work around this insight would be actually carrying that out: perhaps adjusting your sleep schedule, going for more exercise, or changing your diet. 

You are integrating the lessons that came up. You are moving the insight of physical health into the reality of changed behavior.

As each person’s psychedelic experience can be radically different, so too will their integration process be radically different. For some it may be focused around a larger, particular “theme,” such as communication, honesty, relationships, career, or health.

Sometimes the tasks may be small and easily managed, such as “call your parents and tell them you love them.” Sometimes the integration activities may be more nebulous, or have no firm deadline, like “I need to speak my authentic truth and say how I feel.”

All of these are valid integration activities, and the follow-up integration work will vary based on your unique circumstances, your specific intention for the session, and who you want to be and where you want to go in life. 

Types of Psychedelic Integration

Despite the nuances for each individual, there are a few common categories of integration that tend to arise, often related to common areas of our own personal health, expression, and energy levels.

Physical or somatic integration

Sometimes the integration process is a highly physical one. Perhaps it’s around taking better care of your body, taking time to decompress and release some pent up stress that’s been accumulating, or spending more time in nature. It’s highly focused on the body, on the sensations and feelings you have. 

The integration work for this takes the shape of embodied activity:

  • Going outside for a walk
  • Moving your body through exercise or yoga
  • Taking care of yourself and your physical or mental health

Psycho-spiritual integration

In other cases, the integration process may revolve around how you view yourself, others, and the world, and the relationships between all of them. There are very significant and important themes that can arise in this area of the psychedelic experience, and many of them will take dedicated integration work to process and bring into your being.

Your relationship with your own mortality, your metaphysical relationship with existence, your relationship (or lack thereof) with religion and spirituality. These themes can present themselves in many ways through psychedelic experiences, and will take some integration work to process fully and integrate.

Psycho-spiritual integration can also take the form of looking into your future:

  • What kind of person do you want to be?
  • What kind of person are you now?
  • What kind of relationships do you want to have?
  • What work do you want to be doing?

Reflections of this nature can be catalyzed by the psychedelic experience, and integration is the process of continuing to answer them. Once you have an answer, you can begin to take decisive action towards making them a reality.

Emotional integration

Emotional integration relates to the processing of emotions and feelings that come up in your life. There are times when you don’t want to feel these feelings, and be fully present with them. Instead, they may stay inside of you, waiting to be processed and released.

For example:

  • Grief – Perhaps you weren’t ready to process the loss of a loved one, partner, or family member, as it’s often painful event at the time
  • Forgiveness – Forgiving those who may have hurt you, or even yourself for any number of reasons.
  • Gratitude work – Consciously choosing to focus on the beautiful parts of yourself and your life, instead of only the difficulties.

Managing, processing, and regulating your emotions are essential to your well-being and general affect. Psychedelic experiences can provide the insights that there is work to be done here, catalyzing the recognitions. The integration process is actually carrying the emotional work out for yourself and your future.

How Long Does Psychedelic Integration Take?

As with most general questions surrounding the psychedelic experience, the answer is that it is dependent on the person, their intention, and their unique context.

Some of the actions or integration activities that come up can be handled quite quickly. For example, calling an old friend or signing up for a gym membership can often be done without much difficulty. As a result, integration of those lessons —if they arise— isn’t too difficult.

However, there are much larger themes that can surface in the psychedelic experience, which can take much longer periods of time to integrate fully. Sometimes, there isn’t even an ‘end point’ to the integration. Integration can be the process of a lifetime, because you are always changing, and the world around you is always evolving.

Some examples of extended or lifelong integration might be: “I want to be a better friend or family member” or “I want to change the work that I do,” or even “I want to speak truthfully.” Some of these themes, such as ‘speaking truthfully’ don’t have an end date, and the integration work is simply a process of trying, to the best of your ability, to meet and live up this ideal. Things like changing careers to find a vocation you truly love can take weeks, months, or years to fully bring into being.

Integrating psychedelic experiences can take anywhere from a few minutes to a few years. It depends on the lessons and insights that come up, the work you are willing to do on them after, and the nature of the experience itself and the content that arose.

Why is Psychedelic Integration Important?

Psychedelic integration is an essential part of the psychedelic experience because it is the activity that makes the insights real. It is work that moves the insight from the conceptual to the actual.

The psychedelic experience without integration is potential. The experience can show you new ways of being, and it can surface important feelings or insights about your life —but it is only showing you these things. It’s like highlighting a potential destination on the map of your life. “This is somewhere you could be. This is who you could become.”‍

Integration is the process of actually moving from where you are now, in the direction of a new, desired destination. It is the one-foot-in-front-of-the-other walk that takes you from where and who you are now, to where and who you could be.

Having a beautiful and therapeutic psychedelic experience is wonderful, and everyone deserves to have these significant moments in their lives. But most people show up to do this work because they want to create long-lasting, significant change. If that is the case, integration work must be a part of the conversation.

Without showing up for the integration work (which only starts when the psychedelic experience ends), you won’t create the long-lasting change that you’re looking for. 

Psychedelic integration work isn’t just important, it is an absolutely essential component of what makes psychedelic therapy and psychedelic medicine so life-transforming for some.