Guides / Integration

Integration Practices

The experience ends. The work begins.

Integration is the process of making meaning from what you encountered — weaving insight into behavior, understanding into daily life. Without it, even profound experiences fade into interesting memories. With it, they become turning points.

This guide offers practices. Not all of them will fit. Find the ones that do.

Why Integration Matters

Psilocybin can surface material — memories, emotions, patterns, grief, clarity — that the ordinary mind keeps at a manageable distance. The experience creates an opening. What you do with that opening in the days and weeks that follow determines whether it becomes lasting change or simply a remarkable event.

The clinical research supports this: outcomes are significantly better when experiences are preceded by preparation and followed by integration support. The session is the catalyst, not the cure.

Practices

Write. Immediately after, before analysis sets in, write down everything you remember. Images, feelings, fragments, what surprised you. Don't edit. The goal is preservation. The interpretation comes later.

Rest and eat. The day after an experience is not the day for major decisions, difficult conversations, or demanding work. Give your nervous system time to land.

Return to what arose. In the days that follow, return to your notes. What themes emerge? What keeps coming back? What did you understand in the experience that you want to carry forward?

Move your body. Walking, swimming, yoga — physical movement helps process what the experience surfaces emotionally. This is not metaphor; it is physiological.

Talk to someone. A trusted friend, a therapist familiar with psychedelic experiences, a community of practitioners. Integration is not a solo practice. What you encountered needs to be spoken to become fully real.

Give it time. Integration is not complete in a week. Some experiences take months to fully metabolize. Be patient with the process.

When It Was Difficult

Not every experience is peaceful. If yours was hard — frightening, confusing, or surfaced something painful — the integration work is more important, not less. Difficult experiences are often the most generative, but they require more care in the aftermath.

If you are struggling: talk to someone. A psychedelic integration therapist is ideal. If that's not accessible, a trusted person who can listen without judgment. You do not have to metabolize a hard experience alone.

Resources

The field of psychedelic integration is growing. Practitioners, therapists, and communities exist. We will continue to add to this directory as LOON develops.

For support now: Inside Transformation (insidetransformation.life) offers integration support rooted in genuine personal practice. The Zendo Project and MAPS also offer harm reduction resources.

This guide is for educational purposes only. LOON does not provide therapeutic services.