If you’re reading this right after coming down from a psychedelic trip, you may have missed your shot at integration this time. But if you’re considering taking the plunge for the first time - or again at some point - you’re in the right place.
Psychedelics have experienced a resurgence in popularity in recent years, and the benefits seem to go far beyond the mystical. The hype and the science might have you convinced to try psychedelics, and naturally, you might be wondering what happens after.
This article will explain how you can process and interpret psychedelic experiences after they happen. You’ll also learn key steps to integrating your experience in a healthy and constructive manner.
For many users, psychedelic experiences are more than whimsical highs. People frequently seek out and utilize psychedelics at retreats or clinics to both glean deep personal insights and tackle mental health ailments.
However, even though approaching a psychedelic experience with a firm, concrete purpose can enhance the effects, the experience itself is often opaque, mystifying, or abstract. That’s where integration comes in.
Psychedelic treatments dredge up large amounts of raw emotional material. To help one make sense of things, psychedelic-assisted therapies (PATs) incorporate what’s called integration.
Psychedelic integration encompasses a collection of practices and techniques that help create a bridge between the acute psychedelic experience and one’s sober, waking life, allowing one to apply beneficial insights into one’s life at large.
It’s essential to realize that integration isn’t a discrete process; there usually isn’t an “eureka” moment where everything snaps into place.
Psychedelic voyagers employ various integration techniques across the hours, days, and even weeks following a psychedelic drug session. Diligent integration codifies the emotional insights you gleaned from your experience.
But integration actually begins prior to taking anything. To “focus your aim,” you’ll typically outline goals or objectives around the trip - what you want to get out of it, why you’re there in the first place, and so on.
Don’t expect to leave a psychedelic retreat, dive right back into your old ways, and see significant change. Psychedelic therapies can “work” - and you increase the odds of that happening if you also do.
Processing a psychedelic experience is an active endeavor; you can’t always sit on the sidelines and expect the best possible outcome. That said, psychedelic sessions can sometimes be distressing. Studies show you can risk diminished benefits if you don't manage that distress.
The neuroplastic window is the crux of psychedelic integration. Drugs like psilocybin, LSD, or ketamine open new pathways in your brain and trigger heightened neural sensitivity. The neuroplastic window is hard to pin down; some studies suggest it can last for weeks after a single dose, depending on the amount and type of psychedelic you consume.
Sticking to proper integration covers your bases, helping ensure you capitalize on your own neuroplastic window. How?
Reflective practices like journaling hold value in helping you organize your thoughts, whether you’ve had a psychedelic experience or not. For the psychedelic voyager, putting pen to paper can work wonders. Rendering thoughts into written words is a potent cognitive process that externalizes internal experiences, which can yield significant psychological, cognitive, and emotional benefits.
Reflective journaling isn’t like writing an essay in English class. You don’t necessarily need to have a defined thesis - freewriting, where you write impulsively, not stopping to locate or shape a defined thought, is a great jumping-off point.
When you’re writing about your psychedelic experience for the purpose of integration, it pays to ask yourself questions like:
Journaling is a helpful starting point, but one issue with reflective writing is that it’s not interactive - a diary can’t identify a contradiction, press you to explore deeper, or nudge you toward a breakthrough.
Talk or group therapy have give-and-take built in. In group settings, you’re typically sat alongside those who underwent the same psychedelic voyage you did, allowing you to find common ground. You may also have individual sessions with your therapist or facilitator, who can refer to your pre-session notes to provide personalized feedback.
Psychedelics affect the mind, so it stands to reason that meditation and mindfulness can make a real difference in how you feel after your session. Researchers have pinpointed a “synergistic match” between mindfulness meditation and psychedelics, arguing that the approaches complement each other by “enhancing the experience of ego-dissolution” - setting yourself free from traumatic burdens and expectations, self-imposed or otherwise.
Just as you take a spectator’s view of passing sensations during your trip, you should aim to acknowledge, observe, but not interact with, thoughts and feelings that pop up while meditating. The goal is to divorce yourself from the impulse of acting on every feeling that crops up.
Psychedelics are often described as out-of-body experiences. During integration, somatic (“of the body”) rituals, or exercises with physical components, are sometimes used to help voyagers find their way back to their bodies.
Group-based music-making, chanting, or dance have long been part of psychedelic use, particularly in indigenous cultures, and are often part of a psychedelic retreat experience. The scope of a somatic ritual is widening, though, with techniques like acupuncture also receiving “substantial interest.”
The majority of psychedelic users don’t have distressing experiences. In rare cases, “functional impairment” can last for multiple days and may require medical attention. Here’s what to keep in mind ahead of a psychedelic experience.
Even though most users report no significant distress after ingesting psychedelics, your integration may differ. Psychedelics aren’t all sunshine and rainbows, even if they often help you feel content, joyful, or euphoric.
As with any intervention that affects the mind, you should expect a variety of feelings to flow during the trip. Some of those emotions may be unwelcome, unhelpful, or uncomfortable. You can stay grounded by remembering your “why” and that, while sometimes negative, intense experiences retain their value provided you do the hard integrative work that follows.
You may even find productive insights within the chaos of a difficult trip. Psychedelics teach you about yourself - you might learn more about your own emotional resolve or perspective by encountering threatening feelings or ideas.
During your trip, you can think of these feelings like exhibits in a museum. You’re browsing. You don’t need to interact with everything that catches your eye. Acknowledge the negative emotion, afford it an appropriate amount of space, and continue with your journey.
Turning away from unpleasant feelings won’t make them disappear. True healing comes from not avoiding the shadowy, uncomfortable corners within yourself.
Psychedelic facilitators act as both guides and guardrails. At psychedelic retreats or in guided therapy sessions, facilitators, who often have professional backgrounds in fields like psychopharmacology or mycology, supervise you during your trip.
While limited, the data we have on facilitator impact paints a compelling picture. One study looked at the largest available data set and determined that facilitators “may play a clinically meaningful role” in shaping psychedelic treatment outcomes - particularly for users hoping to address specific issues.
If you’re taking psychedelics recreationally and are generally “healthy,” a facilitator may not be necessary. You should, however, still have a sitter present to ensure you don’t put yourself in harm’s way during your trip.
Integration requires intent, action, and application. Techniques like journaling or talk therapy can move the needle, but you must make a conscious effort to apply newfound perspectives towards your everyday life.
However, bear in mind that these changes should be gradual. Don’t expect to pull a 180 on your whole worldview after psychedelic therapy. Users turn to psychedelics for all sorts of reasons, some of which may be extremely deep-seated.
Untangling a years-long web of trauma, or digging up a troublesome past experience to come to grips with it, takes time. Psychedelic therapies get the ball rolling, but it’s your job to keep it in motion.