Clients are bringing psychedelic questions and experiences to therapy. This six-part series gives LMFTs a clinically grounded, culturally informed approach to discussing psychedelics within scope—with tools for education, harm reduction, and integration. It is not a “how to do PAT” course. You’ll learn the current research/ethics/legal context (incl. religious-use carve-outs), cultural considerations, and concrete safeguards around risk and boundaries. Clinicians will leave with clear language for discussing benefits/risks and integration interventions.

Sessions (at a glance – click link for details):

*Please note that you have to register individually for each session

*Education and integration within LMFT scope; no sourcing or dosing guidance.

As I wrote in Should ChatGPT be your therapist? there is hardly a week when a client doesn’t tell me they consulted AI about something therapy-related. I think that’s fantastic. AI can help by providing psychoeducation, which in turn allows us to deepen our healing work.

AI is an excellent information resource, even in the field of therapy, however, I don’t believe artificial relationships should replace human connection. We also need to keep in mind that this technology is so new that it’s still impossible to know what the long-term impact of such a replacement could be.

Every day we hear about the many things AI can do—both the unprecedented promises and the potential perils. As someone who has been studying the evolution of consciousness for decades, I’ve been following both trends with great interest. Below you’ll find a non-exhaustive list of resources (prepared with ChatGPT’s help) that includes some cases where things have gone wrong. It may help keep things in perspective.

I’ve also been working on an AI companion for therapy. I figured that if my clients are going to keep using AI, they might as well have access to one I can trust. More on that soon.

One-stop incident trackers (good “master links”)

Suicide / self-harm–linked interactions

Harmful or unsafe advice

Manipulation / paranoia / “grandiose” dynamics

Youth safety & companion platforms (policy actions)



I’m fascinated by this topic and its evolution. Are we witnessing a new step in the evolution of consciousness, the birth of the transhuman, or, as James Barrat has suggested, are we on the verge of the end of the human era? What do you think?

Honoring indigenous wisdom and ethics in psychedelic therapy

This conversation explores how modern psychedelic practice risks losing its heart as it becomes mainstream. It reflects on how true healing lies in balancing Western psychotherapy with ancestral and spiritual wisdom. The discussion highlights the importance of ethical and well-trained guides, deep personal work, and honoring traditional relationships with plant medicine—emphasizing that integration, humility, and love are central to authentic psychedelic practice.

A pesar de la prohibición de los hongos con psilocibina, cada vez más terapeutas, facilitadores e improvisados se dedican a tratar pacientes con esa sustancia. Mientras el Senado analiza la despenalización y regulación en México, un sector busca enseñanza y guía entre los sabios y sabias de los pueblos originarios. En la tierra de María Sabina, en Oaxaca, Alejandrina Pedro Castañeda es la mazateca más visible que apoya la despenalización, ante la mirada crítica de colectivos de la comunidad indígena, que exigen respeto y ponen distancia.

Lea el artículo completo aquí:

https://www.gatopardo.com/articulos/hongos-sagrados-medicina-ancestral-en-la-sierra-mazateca

There is an ongoing discussion in different forums about the problem of abuse in psychedelics circles and the need to train guides better. I could not agree more. We all need to make a solid commitment to safety, professionalism, and accountability in the field of psychedelics-assisted guiding and psychotherapy, insisting on the importance of comprehensive training for guides. It is my hope that the psychedelic community worldwide, both above and underground, takes notice and keeps this conversation going.

 – – – –

Helping others to work with expanded states of consciousness is not an easy job. Of course, every profession has its occupational hazards; still, I am convinced that due to what it attempts to achieve, being a psychedelic guide is not for the faint-hearted.  

Psychedelics can be defined as unspecific amplifiers or catalysts that make it possible to take a journey into one’s psyche and explore otherwise inaccessible deep recesses of the unconscious[1]. This means that they bring whatever is hidden deep in the unconscious to the surface. As any psychotherapist can tell you, this has an incredible healing potential AND conceivably is also a recipe for disaster.

It is common knowledge that the unconscious holds all kinds of repressed and disowned material. Among other things, it includes our darkest impulses, hidden wounds, and private fantasies (often of a sexual or aggressive nature). If that was not enough, we must add archetypal and transgenerational forces dwelling in the collective unconscious.

The psychedelic guide job’s description includes the willingness and ability to work with these wild subterraneous currents, operating both in the clients and the guide, to facilitate healing and growth. A good guide must be able to engage not only at the mental-emotional level but also focus on the body, energetic, archetypal, and spiritual ones. To do this, they must become skilled in Western psychotherapy interventions as well as those emanating from the spiritual and shamanic traditions of the world. Quite an undertaking!

With such a high bar to meet, mistakes are bound to happen. In Mexico, an old proverb says: “In the soap maker’s house, everybody either falls or slips,” meaning that one should not be quick to judge others because, sooner or later, we too will make a blunder. In a way, guiding happens at the soap maker’s house[2]. But how can we reduce the risk of making such mistakes? The answer is quite simple: training, training, training. Or, more specifically, learning, doing our inner work, and staying humble (and getting plenty of supervision too!) 

Being fully aware of the pitfalls of guiding, any guide training should begin by discussing ethics. Then, continue talking about it throughout, and end by reminding trainees again about the value of ethical behavior and their responsibilities towards clients. When I teach, I spend time talking about the transference (including the erotic one) and countertransference, working with shadow material (the client’s and the guide’s), teaching about working with physical touch, respecting boundaries, working with childhood and attachment wounding, appreciating the power-differential in the guiding relationship, etc. I put particular emphasis on reminding students how and why the stakes are even higher when clients are in expanded states of consciousness.

However, talking about ethics is never enough. I help students to understand why these ethical principles and healthy boundaries are needed. Experience has shown that ethical principles rarely work when presented as a list of “thou shall not.” They only function when guides internalize and commit to upholding these principles.  

As it is often pointed out, psychedelics are going through a “renaissance.”  Among the many aspiring practitioners who want to become guides, a few always want to do it for personal (often unconscious) reasons. There is often a guru or messiah syndrome somewhere to be found or old hidden childhood wounds crying for attention.  I see my job as an opportunity to teach them that being a guide requires a profound humbleness, an endless openness to learning, and an unwavering commitment to serve others. As expressed initially, being a psychedelic guide or a psychedelic-assisted psychotherapist is not for the faint-hearted. It demands standards of care, ethics, and practice well above those in most related professions. The stakes are higher, and the potential for damage (and healing) is formidable. Let us all reiterate our pledge to continue working to become guides entirely devoted to such standards. Let’s do it together.

Monthly NEwsletter

Stay Up To Date .

Subscribe to stay informed of new articles.