Abstract
Today, practitioners of contemporary psychedelic medicine are faced with a unique challenge: supporting clients in integrating transpersonal and mystical experiences within a paradigm based on a materialistic, reductionist, and dualistic understanding of reality. Operating on assumptions of pathology and problem-solving, the Western medical model often lacks the theoretical basis to make sense of and integrate the full potentiality of psychedelic medicine. Nondualism can offer an alternative guide to engaging with and transmuting the beliefs and traumas that lie at the root of paradigms based on assumptions of separation. These frames can be deeply resourcing for both psychedelic guide and client. This article explores the challenges and limitations of the modern Western paradigm, as well as possibilities for how nondualism could be incorporated into future training of psychedelic guides.
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