How to Navigate Psychedelic Experiences

What we do during a psychedelic journey influences the experience. Safe and effective journeys require a holistic and careful approach rooted mindfulness.

The way we navigate a psychedelic journey profoundly shapes the experience. Safe, effective journeys require a mindful approach rooted in trust and surrender, in addition to self-awareness. Both modern and ancient traditions outline stages of the journey, emphasizing introspection as a key component of navigating experiences like ego dissolution. While facing challenges can be uncomfortable, it is central to the healing process. Whether journeying alone or with others, being mindful of group dynamics is essential for creating a meaningful and transformative experience.

Man cannot discover new oceans unless he has the courage to lose sight of the shore.

— André Gide

Journey Stages

A psychedelic journey typically unfolds in four distinct phases: entry, immersion, reflection, and emergence. Each phase contributes to the overall experience, guiding self-discovery, healing, and transformation.

Entry: Onset & Expansion

The entry phase marks the beginning of the psychedelic experience, where you transition into an expanded state of consciousness. Feelings of excitement, anxiety, or fear may arise as your perception begins to shift. These sensations are normal, as you adjust to the unfolding experience. It’s common for the ego to activate defences during this phase, attempting to maintain control over unfamiliar changes.

To navigate this phase, focus on relaxation, breathe deeply, and trust the process. This is the time to let go of expectations, release personal and social concerns, and allow the journey to unfold naturally. Your facilitator can offer reassurance and help you revisit your intention if needed. Listening to music, meditating, or focusing on your breath can also help ease the transition.

  • Focus inwards and let go of expectations

  • Meditate on breath and body

  • Trust the process and your facilitator's presence

As you move deeper into this phase, your consciousness will expand, preparing you for the next stage. Staying present and grounded will ease any anxiety or fear, allowing you to embrace the journey ahead.

Immersion: Peak & Discovery

The immersion phase is the peak of the psychedelic journey, where the experience reaches its greatest intensity. You may encounter vivid emotions, visions, memories, and sounds. At this point, it’s common to feel as though you are no longer in control of the experience. Surrendering fully to the flow of the journey is essential. The ego may resist by trying to hold onto familiarity, which can lead to feelings of confusion, fear, or being stuck. However, if the ego relaxes and surrenders, ego dissolution can occur, allowing greater potential for a deep sense of connection, healing and spiritual awakening.

During this phase, unconscious psychological material, emotional wounds, and past traumas may surface. It’s important to embrace these experiences without resistance, as they offer opportunities for profound healing. Your inner healing intelligence will guide you through this process, helping release emotional contractions and resolve long-standing issues. At times, transpersonal experiences or insights into your life’s purpose may emerge.

  • Surrender to the flow of the experience

  • Focus inwards, let go of control

  • Let emotions, visions, and memories surface without resistance

The immersion phase holds limitless possibilities, from confronting emotional wounds to encountering entities and experiencing profound spiritual insights. Fully embracing this phase leads to profound transformation and personal growth, allowing you to uncover hidden aspects of yourself.

Reflection: Comedown & Calm

As the intensity of the journey begins to subside, you enter the reflection phase. During this time, your ego gradually reintegrates, and you start to reenter the shared reality of the facilitator or companions. This phase is marked by a sense of calm, as the overwhelming emotions and visions of the immersion phase give way to clarity and understanding.

Now is the time to reflect on the insights gained during the journey. Many of these insights may feel like intuitive truths that don’t require further logical analysis. As you reflect on these revelations, you may begin to see your life, relationships, and personal experiences from a new, larger perspective. Gratitude, joy, and love may emerge, but it’s also possible to encounter less pleasant emotions as you process the experience and reflect on some of the material that arose in the immersion phase.

  • Meditate on the breath or body sensations

  • Write, paint, dance, or create to express what you’ve learned

  • Stay present and allow insights to unfold naturally

The reflection phase is a time for integrating the lessons and insights from your journey without using the logical mind. As you naturally process your experience, you may gain a deeper understanding of your relationships, life’s purpose, and psyche. This phase offers an opportunity for healing and awakening.

Emergence: Return & Relax

The final phase, emergence, is the gradual return to normal reality. While your perception is almost back to baseline, it may still be slightly heightened. During this phase, the insights from your journey can be remembered and reflected upon more clearly. Some people feel relief as they return to everyday consciousness, while others may experience a sense of loss or difficulty adjusting.

As you emerge from the psychedelic journey, it’s important to remain grounded and present. Some individuals may feel fragile or emotional during this phase, needing time to fully reintegrate. Whether the journey was positive or challenging, the emergence phase is a time for reflection, relaxation, and self-care. Your facilitator can help by offering support, listening, or simply being present.

  • Meditate on breath and body, focus on grounding

  • Engage in light activities like eating, journaling, or creating

  • Reconnect with reality at your own pace

The emergence phase allows you to process and integrate the final lessons of your journey. Whether you feel relief, clarity, or emotional sensitivity, this phase offers a space for grounding and reflection as you return to everyday life with new insights and perspectives.

The four phases of a psychedelic journey offer a general framework for the flow of consciousness during the psychedelic experience. However, each journey is unique, and the process may not unfold exactly as outlined.

You lie down, you shut up, and you pay attention.

— Terence McKenna

Introspection

The journey of the spirit lies within, much like pearls found in the vast, unexplored depths of the ocean. Focusing your attention inwards during a journey is essential to fully unlock the therapeutic and transformative potential of psychedelics.

Your inner healing intelligence will guide you through this process, supported by an appropriate set and setting, a trusted facilitator, and a curated playlist of journeying music or soundscapes. Introspection allows for a deeper exploration of consciousness, fostering self-discovery, spiritual awakening, and personal growth.

While grounding yourself in the outer world during the psychedelic experience is valuable, there comes a time when further exploration requires turning inward. Outer focus—keeping your eyes open and engaging with material, social, or linguistic phenomena—feels more familiar and comfortable. However, profound insights and transformations occur when you close your eyes, use eye shades, or immerse yourself in total darkness. This inward focus, often supported by meditative practices such as breath-awareness of body-awareness, opens the doors of perception completely.

Introspection Considerations

  • Practice surrendering to your breath: Let the rhythm of your breath, and especially the letting go that comes naturally with the exhale, to guide you fully into the present moment.

  • Use eye shades or darkness: Eye shades or a completely dark room can assist in directing your consciousness inward, reducing external distractions.

  • Curated music or silence: Let consciousness be guided by a prepared music playlist without lyrics, or embrace the challenge of journeying in silence to allow deeper self-exploration. We do not recommend journeying in silence until you have extensive experience with psychedelics.

  • Trust your intention and inner healing intelligence: Surrender to the wisdom within and without, trusting that your inner healing intelligence and your intention will lead the way.

Introspection during a psychedelic experience is a form of meditation, which is why meditation is recommended as a support system for safe and effective journeys. Without introspection, your psychedelic experience will remain superficial and won’t unlock the full therapeutic and transformative potential of the experience.

Let everything happen to you. Beauty and terror. Just keep going, no feeling is final.

— Rainer Maria Rilke

Trust & Surrender

Trust yourself, your nervous system, your natural healing intelligence and nature. Surrender to the medicine and the process of the psychedelic experience.

Remain open, relaxed, fluid and humble. Be like water.

Trust and surrender are the key to fully embracing the psychedelic journey. Letting go of control and allowing the experience to unfold without interference from your small self, or the ego, is crucial.

Avoid rationalizing or resisting—simply let go and be fully present.

As you cross various thresholds of consciousness and enter new, unfamiliar realms, the ego may react with excitement or fear, perceiving these moments as points of no return. Surrendering during these times isn’t always easy. Resistance may arise, requiring deliberate effort to let go and focus inward.

When resistance emerges, here are some techniques to help you surrender:

  • Adopt an open posture: Lie on the floor with arms and legs spread, or sit in a comfortable meditation position to express openness and surrender.

  • Breathe deeply: Focus on the breath, following its flow and the sensations it creates throughout your body. Deep, mindful breathing encourages relaxation.

  • Use a mantra or chant: Repeating a meaningful mantra or chant can anchor you through difficult moments. Choose something personal or spiritually significant.

  • Ask your facilitator for support: Ask for a hand on your shoulder, or a hand in your hand. Ask for spoken reassurance. Remember to use your facilitator for support.

To fully surrender, it’s helpful to release the need for mental record-keeping. If you have a facilitator, trust them to hold space and document key insights for you. If journeying alone, use a voice recorder or journal to capture your thoughts without interrupting the flow of the experience.

Mantras and Chanting

A mantra or chant can be a powerful tool during the psychedelic experience, especially during challenging moments. Whether you create your own or use a traditional one, it can offer comfort and focus. Consider these examples:

  • Remember love

  • Let it happen

  • Let it go

  • I am safe

  • All is well

  • Grow with the flow

If you have faith in a spiritual figure such as God, Buddha, or Krishna, you might find comfort in invoking their presence during your journey. Prayer, regardless of religious or spiritual background, can also be a beneficial practice before, during, and after the psychedelic experience.

Have faith. Trust in nature, which is to say, yourself.

Hold onto nothing, and let everything flow freely. Simply trust and surrender.

Don’t resist. Just let it all go. Simply be here now, without attachment.

The cave you fear to enter contains the treasure you seek.

— Joseph Campbell

Ego Dissolution

Ego dissolution refers to the temporary loss of self-identity, a natural and safe part of the psychedelic experience. This process requires complete surrender of your ego, allowing the mind to release its grasp on self-identity and rational control.

During ego dissolution, it’s important to relinquish effort to control or intellectualize the experience. Simply allow your mind to "turn off" and float down the stream of consciousness. Relaxing and surrendering fully to the experience is key.

As bodily tension and psychological defences begin to soften, feelings of fear or even terror may arise, particularly for those new to psychedelics. This is a normal part of the process as layers of unconscious defense mechanisms, which maintain both physical and psychological survival, begin to dissolve. A common sensation during this stage is the feeling of "dying," which is simply the ego—your sense of self—holding on before it fully dissolves under the effects of the psychedelic.

It’s important to remember that the sense of dying is just the ego struggling to maintain its identity. Ego dissolution can feel bizarre, anxiety-inducing, or even like impending doom, but it is not harmful. The loss of the ego is only terrifying from the ego's perspective. By surrendering your sense of self, approaching the experience with neutrality, curiosity, and a centred mindset, you can allow the process to unfold without fear. Remember to bring a beginner’s mind to ego dissolution, meaning have no expectations.

Complete surrender to the experience, trust in your inner healing intelligence, and support from your facilitator are essential when navigating ego death. While ego dissolution may not occur in every psychedelic journey—especially at lower doses—larger doses often bring about this transition. The complete dissolution of the ego may lead to transpersonal experiences, where you no longer identify with your personal self but with your soul, spirit, and other forms of consciousness.

If you become aware of ego dissolution, just let go of that thought and be present.

Don’t think, just be. Be like water. Flow freely. Hold onto nothing.

After the psychedelic waters finish crashing over you, the ego will remain akin to a rock planted among a raging stream. Although at times it may seem as the rock has vanished under the raging current, the water passes, and the rock remains.

There is no coming to consciousness without pain.

— Carl Jung

Facing Difficulty

Facing challenges is a natural and important part of healing and growth. The process of building resilience and the courage to explore our inner world is at the core of the therapeutic and transformative potential of a psychedelic journey.

During a psychedelic experience, you may encounter emotions, sensations, and visions that feel new, more intense or more uncomfortable than ever before. While some feelings can be deeply pleasant, others may be difficult to face. However, these challenges are part of the journey and offer opportunities for profound growth, healing, and self-discovery.

It’s important to distinguish facing difficult emotions or material from experiencing adverse effects like psychosis, which are rare and much more likely in uncontrolled settings and without preparation. When difficult psychological, emotional, or spiritual material arises, it’s crucial to remain present and approach the experience with openness, curiosity, and trust in your inner healing intelligence and facilitator.

At times, you may feel like you’re losing control, experiencing confusion, or even feeling detached from your sense of self. You might temporarily forget who you are or worry that you’ll remain stuck in a particular state. These feelings are completely natural and, though uncomfortable, they are temporary. Letting go of control and surrendering to the flow of the experience is key to navigating these moments.

If you encounter difficulty, remind yourself that the sensations you are experiencing will pass. The less you resist, the smoother the process becomes. Conscious breathing, grounding through the senses, and focusing on physical objects can help bring you back to a place of calm and surrender. Simple practices like deep and gentle breathing, repeating a mantra, or placing your hands on your heart or belly can ease discomfort. If you have a facilitator, they can provide comfort by holding your hand or giving you a hug, helping you find your center.

Techniques for Navigating Difficulty

  • Ground yourself with deep, conscious breathing: Slow, mindful breaths can help you regain balance and ease feelings of discomfort.

  • Use a meaningful object: Hold something that has personal significance to ground yourself in the present moment—this could be a stone, teddy bear, or other comforting object.

  • Change your physical environment: Subtle changes to your environment can shift your mental state. Adjust your bodily position, change the music or sounds, or modify the room’s lighting or temperature. Moving your body through walking, dance, or yoga can also help reset your experience.

  • Use sensory engagement: Engage your senses through nature, food, drink, or art. Simple activities like smelling a flower, drinking tea, or gently touching an object can bring you back to the present.

It’s important to remember that you have support systems to rely on throughout the experience. Whether it's through meditation, conscious breathing, the presence of a facilitator, or grounding with meaningful objects, there are many tools available to help you navigate difficult moments.

By remaining present and surrendering to the flow of the experience, you allow the healing and transformative potential of psychedelics to unfold. Trust in yourself, your inner healing intelligence, and the process, knowing that you are on a journey of self-discovery and growth.

The psychedelic process often involves confronting unconscious struggles, such as trauma, unprocessed emotions, and past experiences. While this can be challenging, healing occurs when the journeyer embraces openness, curiosity, and the courage to face and process these difficult aspects of their being.

By allowing yourself to fully feel and release these emotions, the discomfort and pain will gradually pass. This is the essence of the healing process—trust it, and let it unfold naturally. You are whole.

Psychedelics have the power to help us evolve from a cultural or behavioural perspective so we can be better citizens of Earth as a species, which starts with hundreds, and then thousands, and then millions, and then billions of individual revolutions within.

— Zoe Helene

Group Dynamics

Journeying with companions can be profoundly transformative, but it also requires clear communication and mutual respect.

Before embarking on a group psychedelic journey, it’s essential to have a pre-journey discussions to establish boundaries, comfort levels, and shared expectations. Once psychedelics are taken, it may become difficult or impossible to set healthy boundaries or provide meaningful consent. Discussing these aspects in advance is crucial.

Pre-Journey Discussions

Before the experience begins, it’s important to address topics such as:

  • Communication preferences: Establish how much or how little communication each person is comfortable with during the journey.

  • Noise and sound: Determine acceptable noise levels or types of music, and whether silence is preferred.

  • Touch and physical contact: Discuss comfort levels with physical touch, as some may prefer to be left alone, while others might need reassurance through touch.

  • Nudity and personal space: Clarify boundaries regarding nudity (some people like to get naked), personal space, and physical proximity.

  • Displays of affection or sexuality: Set clear boundaries around displays of affection or sexual energy to ensure the experience remains safe and consensual for all participants.

Addressing these topics beforehand can help create a safe, supportive environment for everyone involved. Group psychedelic therapy, for example, emphasizes the importance of shared understanding and mutual respect to foster wholeness within the group.

Respecting Individual Experiences

During a group psychedelic journey, it’s vital not to assume you know what another person is experiencing. Psychedelics often produce altered perceptions, and it’s common for journeyers to believe they have insights into another person’s thoughts or emotions, or even to feel as though they are communicating telepathically. However, these assumptions are frequently inaccurate and can lead to misunderstandings and relational challenges.

To avoid potential confusion, always ask direct questions and respect each person’s boundaries. Avoid making assumptions about another journeyer’s state of mind, and be mindful that everyone’s experience is highly personal and unique.

The Power of Group Dynamics

Group psychedelic therapy and ceremonial settings have been shown to amplify the healing process through shared experience, empathy, and collective support. In these contexts, the group can serve as a container for individual healing, where participants benefit from the presence and energy of others, while still navigating their own inner journey. These group settings are often guided by a skilled facilitator or therapist, who ensures that the group remains focused and respectful of each individual’s process.

In ceremonial traditions, group dynamics are harnessed to create a sense of community and shared purpose, often deepening the spiritual and transformative aspects of the psychedelic journey. However, whether in a therapeutic or ceremonial setting, it’s essential to maintain clear communication, respect personal boundaries, and honor each person’s individual process.

Key Guidelines for Group Psychedelic Journeys

  • Clarify boundaries and consent: Discuss boundaries for communication, touch, noise, and personal space before the journey begins.

  • Avoid assumptions: Do not assume you know what others are thinking or feeling during the experience—always ask before making any judgments.

  • Respect individual experiences: Remember that each person’s journey is unique, and what one person experiences may be vastly different from another.

A successful group journey requires a foundation of trust, respect, and clear communication. By preparing together and honoring each individual’s experience, the group can create a supportive environment where healing, transformation, and spiritual connection are possible.

Group dynamics during a psychedelic experience can be complex, particularly when journeying with others. To ensure safety, comfort, and mutual respect, have an open discussion about boundaries, communication, and personal preferences before the journey begins. This helps set clear social expectations and prevents misunderstandings during the experience.

For a smoother, more supportive experience, it’s essential to journey with people you trust and feel comfortable being vulnerable around. Avoid group journeys with individuals you’re unsure of, as the experience often requires openness and emotional safety.

Life is really simple, but we insist on making it complicated.

— Confucius

Navigation Checklist

Essential tips for navigating the psychedelic experience:

  • Remember your intention: You don’t need to hold onto it tightly, but you can return to your intention whenever you feel overwhelmed, lost, or need to refocus.

  • Trust your inner healing intelligence: Consciousness is intelligent, and psychedelics activate an innate and evolutionary process of healing and transformation. Trust in the journey.

  • Everything is a teacher: Every sensation, thought, or vision during your psychedelic experience has the potential to teach you something valuable. Approach it with curiosity.

  • Surrender to the flow: Trust in nature and the process. Let go of control and allow the experience to unfold naturally. All flows.

  • Approach with openness and compassion: Cultivate a sense of openness, self-compassion, and acceptance throughout the journey.

  • Follow your breath: Your breath is your guide. Pay attention to it, explore its rhythm, and use it to ground yourself in the present moment.

  • Use meaningful objects for grounding: Keep a comforting or significant physical object nearby to help you stay grounded, whether it’s a stone, a blanket, or something personal to you.

  • Pay attention to your body: It’s easy to forget basic needs during the journey. Stay mindful of your body’s signals—drink water, move gently, and notice how you are positioning yourself. Your body is your anchor.

  • Change your set and setting when needed: If you feel uncomfortable or stuck, remember you can shift your mental and emotional state by changing your physical environment. Move your body, adjust your posture, change your breathing, or switch up your music to influence your mindset.

  • Explore both outer and inner space: While much of the psychedelic experience involves introspection with eyes shaded and music on, take breaks to explore the outer world. Look at flowers, interact with your pet, write or draw, stretch, do yoga, or even look in the mirror if you feel called to introspect in a new way.

Remember, you're not here to "figure it all out", you’re here to grow with the flow, to feel to heal. Trust the process, breathe deeply, and don’t be afraid to explore both the outer world and the vast inner universe. You've got this, and even when the journey feels a little wild, just remember: everything you need is already within you.