WHO IS A GOOD FIT?

Many people can benefit from ketamine-assisted sessions. It depends on what you put into it, what you want to work on and your intention for shaping your experiences on the medicine.

There are a lot of reasons someone wants to try working with ketamine. Here are just a few examples:

  • If someone feels stuck or wants to try something new to go deeper in their process, ketamine offers access to a flexible, expansive mind that can generate new insights about old patterns and shifting out of them

  • If someone is dealing with depression or anxiety and hasn’t benefitted significantly from other antidepressants or can’t tolerate them, ketamine can help alleviate symptoms for a window of time that allows them to create changes to sustain feeling better.

  • If someone is curious and seeking psychospiritual experiences to explore their consciousness, ketamine can help open their imagination and hearts to new possibilities.

  • If someone wants to improve their relationships, ketamine can help soften defenses to more clearly see their triggers and withdraw projections. Ketamine work can help heal relational wounds.

  • If someone is going through a difficult time in life, including grief and loss, ketamine sessions might be able to help.

  • If someone is looking for a safe, legal and gentle introduction to psychedelic-assisted work, ketamine is currently the only option in the US outside of clinical trials.

Contact me and we can talk about your reasons for considering ketamine.

WHO ISN’T A GOOD FIT FOR KAP?

While most people can benefit, ketamine is not for everyone.

Generally speaking there are certain health and psychiatric contraindications to ketamine treatment. These include unstable blood pressure and cardiovascular disease, untreated hyperthyroidism, acute manic or hypomanic episode, history of psychosis or schizophrenia.

Since ketamine is a prescribed medication, the medical provider is ultimately the one to evaluate to see if someone is a good candidate for this work.

Go here for more information.

WHAT IF SOMEONE TRIES KETAMINE AND DECIDES IT ISN’T A GOOD FIT FOR THEM?

There could be reasons someone doesn’t want to continue with ketamine. Sometimes it takes trial and error to figure out if and how ketamine will work for eligible clients. But whatever the circumstances, clients are free to stop at anytime.

For more information:

What is Ketamine?

What is Ketamine-Assisted Psychotherapy (KAP)?

How Does KAP work?

Why Ketamine?

Ketamine Session Basics

History of Ketamine

Resources

FAQ