Rooted in peer-reviewed science, Indigenous wisdom, and a genuine commitment to reciprocity — not extraction.
Many healthy participants described their psilocybin experience as one of the most meaningful events of their lives, with lasting positive changes
Griffiths et al. (2006). Psychopharmacology, 187(3), 268–283.
Psilocybin therapy worked as well as — and in some ways slightly better than — a common antidepressant for people with major depression
Carhart-Harris et al. (2021). New England Journal of Medicine, 384(15), 1402–1411.
Most people with major depression who received psilocybin therapy felt significantly better within a month
Davis et al. (2021). JAMA Psychiatry, 78(5), 481–489.
Most people treated with psilocybin for depression were still feeling significantly better one year later
Gukasyan et al. (2022). Journal of Psychopharmacology, 36(2), 151–158.
People facing life-threatening cancer experienced major relief from anxiety and depression after psilocybin treatment, and the benefits lasted for months
Griffiths et al. (2016). Journal of Psychopharmacology, 30(12), 1181–1197.
We work on Jamaican land, in partnership with Jamaican communities, within a country shaped by its own history, culture, and unique relationship to plant medicine. The setting is not scenery; it is context that entails responsibility, reciprocity, and stewardship.
Our retreats include education on the cultural context of sitting with medicine on this land. We collaborate with local Jamaican staff and professionals. As a nonprofit, we center BIPOC and lineage-informed facilitators, provide paid apprenticeships for historically marginalized practitioners-in-training, offer scholarships to those who could not otherwise access this work, and actively work to rebalance the inequities that have shaped the psychedelic space.
We are not here to extract from this land or its traditions. We are here to be in relationship with them and those who have carried them forward.
"Our intention is not extraction. It is right relationship."