
A Supported Pathway into Psilocybin Experience
A guided process designed to help you approach the experience with clarity, safety, and intention.

A Space for Discovery
Psychedelic experiences are deeply personal and often unpredictable. The more prepared you are, the more fully you can engage with what unfolds.
Through thoughtful preparation, steady support, and intentional integration, this process is designed to help create the conditions for a meaningful experience—wherever your curiosity may be leading you.
This work isn't about promising outcomes or offering a cure. It's about approaching the experience with care, responsibility, and respect for both science and tradition.
The Process
Build clarity, safety, and trust before the experience
A guided psilocybin session in a calm, supportive environment
Explore what emerged and begin bringing it into your daily life

This May Be For You If…
- You feel a sense of curiosity about psilocybin, even if you're not sure why
- You're looking for insight, clarity, or a deeper connection to yourself
- You're navigating a transition, challenge, or period of reflection
- You've been doing the work and feel like you're ready to explore something deeper
- You want to explore this work in a safe, supported, and intentional way

Psilocybin in Context
Psilocybin has been used for generations by Indigenous cultures as a sacred tool for healing, ceremony, and self-inquiry. These traditions carry deep cultural and spiritual significance and continue to be honored today.
In recent years, research has expanded in the United States, and states like Oregon and Colorado have established regulated pathways for supervised use outside of traditional contexts.
This work is practiced within Colorado's regulated model under Proposition 122, with sessions held at licensed healing centers in the Denver area.
For a more detailed look at how this process operates within Colorado's legal and ethical framework, you can explore the page below.

Start by Learning More
You don't need to have everything figured out to take a next step.
For many people, this process begins with learning—getting a clearer sense of what the experience can feel like, how to prepare, and what supports a safe and meaningful environment.
If you're still exploring or simply want to become more familiar with this work, this is a good place to start.

About Me
My name is Alex. I'm a facilitator, a student of psychology and consciousness, a husband, and a father. Like many people, I've navigated periods of disconnection, overwhelm, and searching — and I've learned firsthand how important safety, pacing, comfort, agency, and support can be when doing inner work.
I don't approach this from a place of having all the answers. I approach it with presence, care, and respect for the complexity of being human.

