What is Psychedelic Integration Therapy?
Sometimes an experience opens something.
It could be a memory, grief, a previously unknown truth, a new softness, a storm, or a sense of "I can't go back to how I was," even if you can't name what's supposed to be next.
Integration is where that opening from a psychedelic medicine experience becomes livable and embodied. For those who participate in clinical trials, visit a ketamine clinic, or attend retreat settings where psychedelics may be legal, the experience isn't a performative act. Often, it's a last-ditch effort to find relief from long-term symptoms. Psychedelic experiences are often just the beginning; additional work happens after the 'journey' is over, during the brain's period of neuroplasticity (a time when the brain can form new neural connections).
Psychadelic integration therapy is a process grounded in making meaning, settling the nervous system, and translating what happened into embodied change in how you relate to your body, your choices, your boundaries, your relationships, and your life. It's not different than traditional psychotherapy. Integration here is grounded in somatic psychotherapy and informed by ongoing training and consultation in psychedelic integration. We focus on nervous-system stabilization, meaning-making, and practical change—without providing or directing psychedelic use.
Psychedelic Integration Therapy is Support for What Comes After a Psychedelic Experience
Whether the experience was gentle, disorienting, beautiful, destabilizing, or all of the above, it can be beneficial to work with someone to process the experience. You don’t have to have the perfect words for the experience or for what you feel afterwards. Integration is used in therapy for many different types of experiences, not just psychedelic experiences. I utilize somatic trauma-informed therapy to help give you the tools to process and integrate your experience. My approach is somatic and trauma-informed, influenced by Somatic therapy and Sensorimotor Psychotherapy, and evidence-based cognitive and behavioral approaches.
Psychedlic
Integration
Therapy
Integration Can Include
●Harm Reduction
●Making sense of confusing experiences
● Making meaning or generating useful narratives/stories
● Address lingering distress or symptoms
● Concretize insights or new perspectives
● Thoughtfully make changes based on new insights
● Resolve conflict between psychedelic experience and one’s prior belief systems
● Coping with the fading experience and returning to older habits and behaviors
● Addressing psychological content that emerges, such as trauma
● Adjusting back to regular life
● Building and increasing connections and social support
● Increase engagement with non-rational domains such as creativity, movement, art, dancing, nature, etc.

How Psychedelic Integration Works Here
My approach is influenced by somatic trauma-informed therapy and Sensorimotor Psychotherapy. If you’ve never heard those words, that's ok. They are interventions that work to help people develop a mind-body connection.
These interventions combine talk therapy with body awareness approaches, making them suitable for many mental health concerns, not just trauma.
As you move through processing and integrating the experience, whether it was gentle, disorienting, beautiful, destabilizing, or all of the above, we ask the question, what does your nervous system do when things get hard?
Do you tighten and push back? Speed up and explain? Go numb and disappear? Get irritable, controlling, avoidant, or stuck?
We track the body's cues, and the earliest one that signals a pattern is coming online.
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A tightening.
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A floaty numbness.
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A rush of heat.
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A sudden need to explain.
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The urge to go quiet and get small.
And then we do something different than ignore and “power through.”
We orient to the present, and find support and resources. We work in small steps to let your system touch what’s hard without drowning in it, and we practice returning to safety.
Over time, your nervous system learns: I can be here, I can feel this, and I can come back to a grounded state. We call this titration and pendulation.
Sometimes we also work with protective responses that got stuck, freeze, bracing, fawning, fleeing, by helping the body complete what it never got to finish, safely and at your pace.
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Feeling emotionally raw, open, sensitive, or “too porous” afterward
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Having trouble sleeping, regulating, or re-entering normal life
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Carrying a big insight but struggling to integrate it into behavior
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Feeling grief, fear, shame, or old material surfacing
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Confused by what was real, what was symbolic, and what to do with it
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Wanting grounded support that honors meaning and nervous system reality

This is a Fit If You’re…
In Person or Online
Charleston: Walk-and-talk sessions (outdoors, low-traffic locations)
South Carolina: online counseling/telehealth
Important Boundaries and Safety (please read)
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I do not provide psychedelics, facilitate psychedelic sessions, or advise on sourcing, dosing, or use.
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Therapy is for integration, support, meaning-making, regulation, and sustainable change over time.
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If you’re in crisis, experiencing mania/psychosis symptoms, or feel at risk of harming yourself, integration is not the right container; please seek urgent support from local emergency resources or a licensed clinician/medical provider at your closest emergency room.
Stephanie Dasher, LPC-A (South Carolina) — under the supervision of Dr. Maia Gill, PhD (SC#1202).
FAQ's
01.
Do I need to tell you everything that happened?
Not necessarily. No. We can work with what’s present now, such as body cues, emotions, beliefs, relationship shifts, and the parts of the experience that keep echoing for you.
03.
Is this the same as preparation or harm reduction?
Integration is different. It’s not guidance on use. It’s support after an experience to help you metabolize what surfaced and build grounded change.
05.
Can we do virtual sessions anywhere in SC?
Yes, as long as you’re physically located in South Carolina at the time of the session.
02.
What if the experience was scary or destabilizing?
That’s exactly what integration is for. We focus on stabilization first, supporting your nervous system, building orientation, and working in small steps to rebuild your window of tolerance.
04.
Can I do this if my experience was a long time ago?
Yes. Sometimes the psyche holds unfinished material for years. Integration can still be meaningful long after.







