Integration support for psilocybin experiences, available now — with full facilitation, including administration, becoming available as my Colorado trainee license is completed.
A threshold is not a destination. It's the place where one way of being ends and another has not yet begun — and it asks to be crossed deliberately, not rushed.
This is integration support for psilocybin experiences, offered within Colorado's Natural Medicine Act framework — available now, to anyone who has had or is planning a journey elsewhere and wants depth-oriented support in making sense of it.
I'm currently completing my Colorado trainee license through the University of Colorado Denver's psilocybin facilitator training program. Full facilitation — including the administration of the medicine itself — will become available once that license is complete. Until then, this pillar holds preparation conversations and integration work: the parts of the threshold that don't require the license to walk alongside you on.
Psilocybin tends to work on the body and the unconscious directly — often before it works on the conscious mind. Whether we're preparing for a journey you'll have elsewhere or making sense of one that's already happened, the aim isn't to manufacture an experience or interpret it on your behalf, but to build a container sturdy enough that whatever wants to move, can.
This work is layered onto an existing foundation in Jungian depth psychology and trauma-informed somatic care.
A journey unfolds across three phases. Two are available now; the third is on its way.
Preparation. Available now. We meet beforehand to clarify intention, review history and context, and build the relational trust the work will rest on — whether the journey itself happens here or elsewhere.
The session itself. Coming soon. Once my Colorado trainee license is complete, I'll be able to hold the administration of the medicine directly, in a setting designed for safety and depth.
Integration. Available now. The session is often the easy part. Integration — making sense of what occurred, letting it actually change something — is where the real work happens, over the weeks and sessions that follow.
This is not a shortcut and not a performance. It is slow, careful work with a substance that can open a great deal — and it is held accordingly.
Whether you're preparing for a journey, making sense of one that's already happened, or simply have questions about what's ahead as my facilitation license is completed — an initial conversation is the first step.
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