Kennerly Clay - Author, adventurer, psychonaut, boldly going.
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The Ketamine Diaries

a sober psychonaut explores psychedelic medicine for depression

What happened during integration circle (group support) for ketamine therapy

2/21/2022

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Read Sober Psychonaut disclaimer for people in sobriety exploring psychedelic medicin
As part of the comprehensive Mindbloom package, which includes not only your consult with a clinician, your prescribed ketamine pills, a trained guide or coach available to help you work through anything that comes up for you during ketamine treatment sessions, along with myriad online articles, soundtracks and supporting resources—you have access to Integration Circles.
 
These are small private groups of Mindbloom customers just like you who are on the ketamine treatment journey and are looking to “integrate” their experiences with the medicine by sharing with and listening to others via facilitated discussion. Here's how my Integration Circle went.
Picture
Image by S. Hermann & F. Richter from Pixabay 

The ground rules: Heart-centered communication

One of the Integration Circle leaders reached out to me several times to work me into one of her groups but they always seemed to fill up quickly and my schedule never matched up.
 
One day she announced an open slot that worked and I was able to join the Zoom call with five or six other participants.
 
To ensure privacy, discretion, respect and presence, the leader of the Integration Circle had us agree in advance on “heart-centered communication,” defined as:
 
  • Not being all up in your head when someone else is talking, thinking about how their experience relates to you (great advice for communication in general)
 
  • Responding respectfully and thoughtfully so people know where you’re coming from by using “When you said X I felt or thought”-type language
 
  • Or “When I heard X I was curious about…” and making sure to ask people if they were open to questions or feedback vs. unsolicited commentary
 
Several participants were dealing more with anxiety than with depression, but seemingly for many years and having tried many different types of medications and therapy.
 
One guy shared about ketamine therapy and how the experience of blank thoughts and blank mind have been so peaceful. He found that journaling was also helping and he was also sleeping better. Talking with his guide, he said, had been one of the most impactful parts of his experience.
 
“I can feel the pressure building up again,” he said. “There are definitely easy and hard weeks, and how to deal with each is greatly helped by my guide.”
 
Everyone in the group seemed to nod when the topic of thinking ketamine would be a magic pill, came up. Managing expectations was an engaging topic, from how intense a “trip” would be from one session to another, to what to expect between sessions, or at completion.
 
“The work,” as one participant pointed out, “is always in between sessions, and it’s up to me.”
 
Another girl explored the idea of boredom during ketamine therapy as there are moments of vacuousness where the ethereal music seems to just go on and on and you no longer feel like much of anything but a deep meditative state.
 
“I ask boredom, What I can learn from this?” she said. “Why is it showing up now and what does it have to teach me?”
 
I was the most emotional or had the most emotional experience to share as I reflected on my first ketamine treatment in which an emotional burst and message of loss and fear came up.

Ketamine integration circle wrap-up

Several of the participants were already at their sixth and final course of treatment and were looking to go deeper, an option to continue with other Mindbloom packages or to simply continue to integrate the experiences and insights they’d had so far to see what opened up in the coming weeks and months.
 
Among the rest of us, you could feel the anticipation of what the next ketamine therapy session would bring, and all the questions still remaining:
 
  • Would it heal me?
  • Would it work long term?
  • Would I have to do it again?
  • Am I getting what I’m supposed to get?
  • Will I always be this way?
 
The chatter that’s always there. The human condition, just louder for some of us, perhaps.

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Look up, look up! Look to the sky

2/6/2022

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Read Sober Psychonaut disclaimer for people in sobriety exploring psychedelic medicine
As part of my ketamine therapy integration work, I took a winter walk some days before I left for Costa Rica and aside from the fact that it was icy and worth watching my footing, I found myself looking down the whole time. 

​When I realized my eyes were peeled to the ground, my neck was bent, my physical energy "jagged" in a way⏤I told myself, "Look up!" Metaphorical, as it were, for looking up not only at the sky but at life with a positive, upward view.

The next few times I walked or stepped outside, I had to force my head skyward, such was the tendency to look down⏤same as our tendency as humans to always find something wrong or negative, to hijack good things in life with "yeah buts" or "hopefully x won't happen" when everything's rolling along pretty well.
Picture
Image by MAX1993 from Pixabay 

When I look to the sky, does it change anything?

Absolutely.

Here's how looking to the sky instantly changes things:

Pride and posture
It instantly changes your posture, for one, so physically you're standing taller with spine pulled erect. That alone creates a feeling of confidence and pride in self.

Bigger things in life
Visually observing the sky reminds us of the vastness with-out, momentarily pausing the detrimental daydreaming (mindfuckery), reminding us to observe, "Hey, there's the sky. Wow, there's an airplane. Look, the trees are blowing in the wind." Looking to the sky stirs awe and wonder. All that's happening out there signals to us that there is far more going on in the world than what's going on in "here" (my, at times, deteriorated mental state). 

Spiritual connection
The sky also prompts me to connect with God, the Universe, Spirit, whatever floats your spiritual boat. But something about looking up⏤it's as ancient as human history and wonderment at how it all began and how it all became and how it all will be. 

"Look up, look up!" has become a mantra, of sorts, whenever my neck is bent too long on a phone or a mundane task or the monotony of my steps. It's a reminder not to tarry too long at things that don't inspire.

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  • HOME
  • MEET KENNERLY
  • BOOKS
    • CALLING OF ANCESTORS: FINDING FORGOTTEN SECRETS IN MY DNA
    • LETTERS FROM EAST OF NOWHERE >
      • EAST OF NOWHERE
      • 60s COUNTERCULTURE
      • CHOWANISMS
      • WRITE A LETTER
  • ANCESTRY
  • TRIPS
    • THE KETAMINE DIARIES >
      • SOBER PSYCHONAUT DISCLAIMER
    • GYPSYSOUL SEARCHING >
      • GYPSYSOUL BLOG
  • CONTACT