As a therapist, you’ve likely noticed the shift. More clients are showing up curious about psychedelics, or returning from a journey with a lot to unpack. You may feel uncertain-how do you ethically, competently support them when you haven’t studied this world?
Here’s the good news: You don’t have to become an expert in psychedelic therapy to be a strong ally in your client’s healing.
What you can do:
🛡 Start with Harm Reduction
Help clients understand basic safety: sourcing risks, testing kits, drug/medicine interactions.
Encourage caution around dosing, settings, and especially combining substances.
🧭 Support Preparation
Explore the client’s intention: What are they hoping for? What’s motivating the journey?
Help them identify internal and external supports for a safe experience.
Discuss set and setting in trauma-informed terms they already trust from your work together.
💬 Invite Integration
After the experience, open space for trip reporting: images, body sensations, shifts in meaning.
Reflect-not interpret. Let the client lead.
Ask: “What are you noticing about your relationships? Your body? Your story?”
📚 Connect to Case Conceptualization
What arose in their experience that aligns with your existing treatment plan?
What new insights might deepen trauma work, grief processing, relational patterns, or self-concept?
You don’t have to push or shut it down. You just have to be a good therapist-one who’s willing to hold the whole of a client’s experience with care.
