9 a.m. - 12 p.m. PT
Psychedelic experiences can move across emotional, psychological, somatic, spiritual, relational, and existential dimensions, often within the same journey.
Through real-world practice examples, this workshop explores the interdisciplinary skills, competencies, and qualities that support well-rounded practice across preparation, medicine session, and integration — helping you orient to your own strengths, developmental edges, and opportunities for growth within the field.
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As Psychedelics Enter Mainstream Care, Defining Competent Practice Becomes Increasingly Critical
As psychedelic medicines become more widely accessible, attention is increasingly turning toward the question of how practitioners are trained to meet the complexity of this work.
For some, this field begins through personal experience with psychedelic states and a growing interest in how to support others responsibly. For others, it enters through established clinical, therapeutic, or somatic practice, alongside curiosity about how this modality may extend existing ways of working.
Both pathways enter a field where there is no single shared definition of what competent practice looks like. At the same time, research and lived experience continue to show that the practitioner plays an active role in shaping the conditions in which psychedelic experiences unfold, are navigated, and are integrated afterward.
The Need for Multidimensional Care
Contemporary psychedelic care draws from clinical science, trauma-informed care, somatic practice, relational psychology, spiritual traditions, Indigenous lineages, and lived human experience.
Most practitioners enter this work through a primary training lens. Each lens carries important strengths. At the same time, no single framework fully prepares a practitioner for the range of experiences that may arise in psychedelic states, or for the complexity of responding across multiple dimensions at once.
This creates gaps in how practitioners recognize, interpret, and respond to different dimensions of the experience.
In lived contexts, this may appear as:
- Clinically trained practitioners encountering experiences with spiritual or existential content that fall outside their training frameworks
- Spiritually oriented facilitators missing psychological risk signals or physiological considerations
- Somatic practitioners reaching the limits of their approach when meaning-making, narrative, or symbolic material becomes central
This raises practical questions for many emerging practitioners about what competencies are required to support others across the full arc of psychedelic work, and how those competencies relate to their existing training and experience.
This workshop offers a structured introduction to the competencies involved in supporting psychedelic experiences across preparation, medicine session, and integration.
It focuses on what these competencies look like in practice, how they function when they are well-developed, and how gaps or limitations can show up in real-world contexts.
Exploring What Whole Practice Looks Like
Across the Arc of the Psychedelic Journey
Who This Workshop Is For
Designed for those exploring working professionally with psychedelics and seeking a better understanding of what this work asks of practitioners
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Therapists and mental health professionals
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Coaches and facilitators
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Medical and healthcare practitioners
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Spiritual care providers
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Somatic practitioners
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Professionals exploring a future in psychedelics
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Workshop Materials
Complimentary Access
Lifetime Access
Secure Your Complimentary Seat
Thursday, July 9, 2026
9 a.m. PDT | 12 p.m. EDT | 5 p.m. BST | 6 p.m. CEST
About The Synthesis Institute
Raising the Standard of Care and Practice
Since 2018, Synthesis Institute has supported thousands of participants through legal psychedelic retreats and has trained more than 500 psychedelic practitioners through professional training programs emphasizing safety, ethics, relational capacity, and interdisciplinary learning.
Synthesis approaches practitioner development as a lifelong process of cultivating humility, self-awareness, relational capacity, and ethical responsibility. Our programs integrate scientific rigor with embodied practice and experiential learning to support well-rounded practitioners capable of working responsibly within the complexity of non-ordinary states.
This workshop is offered at no charge as a contribution to the field and to the standard of practice we believe it requires for psychedelics to meaningfully integrate into mainstream care.