3.8 Article

Spiritual Experiences in Psychedelic-Assisted Psychotherapy: Case Reports of Communion With the Divine, the Departed, and Saints in Research Using Psilocybin for the Treatment of Alcohol Dependence

Journal

SPIRITUALITY IN CLINICAL PRACTICE
Volume 8, Issue 3, Pages 177-187

Publisher

EDUCATIONAL PUBLISHING FOUNDATION-AMERICAN PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.1037/scp0000242

Keywords

spiritual experience; psilocybin; healing; psychotherapy; addiction

Funding

  1. Heffter Research Institute
  2. Turnbull Family Foundation
  3. B.More, Inc.
  4. CH TAC LLC

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Psychedelic substances have been used in religious and shamanic healing practices across cultures, and have shown promise in treating mental health issues in western medicine. There is growing evidence supporting the therapeutic potential of psychedelic-assisted psychotherapy and the importance of integrating spiritual aspects into traditional healing processes.
Psychedelic substances have been central to religious and shamanic healing practices of various cultures for generations. More recently, in western medicine, psychedelic substances have demonstrated promise in the treatment of various mental health indications. A growing evidence base supports not only the therapeutic potential of psychedelic-assisted psychotherapy, but also the importance of integrating spiritual aspects of psychedelic experiences into the traditional therapeutic process. Psilocybin, a classic psychedelic, is a serotonergic hallucinogen that can elicit profound spiritual experiences even in the research setting. Our group is currently conducting a randomized controlled trial exploring the therapeutic potential of psilocybin-assisted psychotherapy for alcohol dependence. Over the course of the trial, many individuals have reported experiences that take a variety of forms, including spiritual insights, beatific visions, and communion with the Divine. Here we present three case studies of experiences involving communion with a deceased loved one, with a holy figure, and with the Divine from our clinical trial. These cases have been selected to illustrate the diverse nature of the spiritual experiences observed in this clinical trial, and to also explore elements of spiritual care that may be supportive in the psychotherapeutic process during and after themedication experiences. Should psychedelic medicine continue to show treatment promise in clinical trial stages, there is a strong possibility that these medicines will become an integral part of psychotherapy, which will require integration of direct spiritual experiences and spiritual care into the healing process.

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