The word “integration” appears in nearly every serious discussion of psychedelic use, but the meaning of the term often goes unexamined. People use it to mean very different things: a single conversation with a therapist, a months-long change of habits, a journaling practice, a passive process that happens on its own. The lack of a shared definition makes it difficult to discuss what good integration actually looks like.
This article tries to clarify what integration refers to, why the available evidence suggests it matters, and what practices have emerged from clinical and community settings as supporting it.
A Working Definition
Integration is the process by which a person makes sense of, and acts on, the experiences and insights generated by a psychedelic session. It is the bridge between what happens during the acute experience and what changes — if anything does — in the person’s ordinary life afterward.
Two parts of that definition deserve attention. The first is “makes sense of.” Psychedelic experiences often involve content that does not fit easily into the person’s ordinary frameworks — strong emotions, unusual perceptions, encounters that feel meaningful but that are hard to articulate. Working through what these experiences mean is part of integration.
The second is “acts on.” Insights that remain only intellectual tend not to produce change. The person who realizes during a session that they have been avoiding a difficult conversation has not actually integrated that insight until they have the conversation. The behavior that follows the experience is part of what integration is.
Why Integration Matters
The clinical evidence suggests that what happens after a session matters as much as what happens during it. In the major psilocybin trials for depression and end-of-life anxiety, integration sessions with the same therapists who supported the dosing experience were a standard part of the protocol. Most trials included two to four such sessions in the weeks after dosing.
Trials that have explicitly compared more vs. less integration support have generally found that more support produces better outcomes, though the comparisons are imperfect because integration is rarely the only variable that differs.
The mechanism is plausible and intuitive. A psychedelic experience can open up new perspectives or possibilities, but the patterns of thought and behavior that produced the original problem often reassert themselves quickly. Active work in the days and weeks after the experience helps consolidate the changes that the session made possible.
What Integration Practices Look Like
The practices that show up across clinical and community integration approaches share certain features.
Talking about the experience with a person who can listen without judgment is foundational. The conversation is not primarily diagnostic or interpretive. It is a way for the person to put words to what happened, which is itself part of how the experience becomes integrated into their understanding.
Writing about the experience serves a similar function. Many integration practices include journaling in the days after a session — not as therapy, but as a way of capturing material that may be difficult to recall later and of working with it slowly.
Identifying actionable insights is where integration moves from understanding to behavior. The person identifies one or two specific changes — relationships to attend to, habits to alter, conversations to have — that the experience suggested were important. These become commitments rather than abstractions.
Sustaining the work over time is the part that is most often neglected. The most useful integration is not a single session a few days after dosing but a process that continues for weeks or months, particularly during the period when old patterns are most likely to reassert themselves.
Common Pitfalls
Several patterns have emerged as failure modes for integration.
Inflation of meaning is perhaps the most common. The experience felt profound; the person concludes that it must have profound implications, and they overweight whatever they can recall of its content. Insights that would not survive ordinary scrutiny in everyday life get treated as revealed truth because they came from the session.
Avoidance of difficult content is the opposite pattern. The experience generated material that was difficult — old grief, awareness of harm done or received, recognition of patterns that the person does not want to change. Without active work, this material tends to fade rather than be addressed.
Isolation is common after intense experiences. The person feels they cannot explain what happened to people in their ordinary life and does not know who in their existing community could understand. Active effort to build or maintain connections that can support the integration work is often important.
Treating integration as discrete events rather than as a process. A single conversation with a therapist is helpful but is not, by itself, integration. The work continues into the everyday life that the person returns to.
Integration Without Clinical Support
Most psychedelic use today happens outside clinical settings, and most people who use psychedelics will not have access to the structured integration support that clinical trial participants receive. This does not mean integration is impossible without that support — but it does change what is required.
A person integrating without clinical support generally needs to construct their own structure: a journaling practice, a trusted person to talk with, perhaps a peer integration circle if one is available. Online integration communities have become more accessible in recent years and can provide some of what individual conversations would; these vary substantially in quality.
The question of whether to seek a therapist for integration is complicated. Many therapists are not equipped to talk about psychedelic experiences. A growing number of therapists, including some who practice within models specifically designed for psychedelic integration, are. The Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies and similar organizations maintain referral resources.
What Good Integration Looks Like
Good integration, as it appears in practice, is unspectacular. It looks like a person regularly attending to material from their experience over time. It looks like specific changes in behavior that the person can point to and trace back to insights from the session. It looks like the experience having altered the trajectory of the person’s life rather than having been a remarkable event that left no trace.
The honest description of integration is that it is hard work, that it takes time, and that it produces results that are often gradual rather than dramatic. The contrast with the experience itself — which is often dramatic and revelatory — is part of why integration is so easy to neglect. The work after the experience is where the experience becomes part of the person’s life.