Sharing a gift link for folks who want to read:
www.theatlantic.com
From the article:
No psychiatric treatment has attracted quite as much cash and hype as psychedelics have in the past decade. Articles about the drugs’ surprising results—including large improvements on depression scores and inducing smokers to quit after just a few doses—earned positive coverage from countless journalists (present company included). Organizations researching psychedelics raised millions of dollars, and clinicians promoted their potential to be a “new paradigm” in mental-health care. Michael Pollan’s 2018 psychedelics book, How to Change Your Mind, became a best seller and a Netflix documentary. Psychedelics were made out to be a safe solution for society’s most challenging mental-health problems.
But the bubble has started to burst: It’s been a bad year for fans of psychedelics.
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I feel that this article highlights an ongoing challenge facing the integration of psychedelics into our concepts and models of therapies. Amongst the criticisms highlighted is the indication that leaders in psychedelic science have embraced a cultic milleu in their persona...
Perhaps therapy isn't the discipline that should be embracing psychedelics. If they remain too rooted in the realm of spiritual healing, it may not be the right tool to integrate into therapy spaces as therapy has always been rooted in agnosticism to a degree. Pursuing psychedelic healing through ministry, ritual, and spiritual paths may be the better home for these therapies. Western society is notably bereft of these practices in this current epoch.

The Weak Science Behind Psychedelics
If vulnerable patients are going to take powerful hallucinogens, they deserve better evidence.
From the article:
No psychiatric treatment has attracted quite as much cash and hype as psychedelics have in the past decade. Articles about the drugs’ surprising results—including large improvements on depression scores and inducing smokers to quit after just a few doses—earned positive coverage from countless journalists (present company included). Organizations researching psychedelics raised millions of dollars, and clinicians promoted their potential to be a “new paradigm” in mental-health care. Michael Pollan’s 2018 psychedelics book, How to Change Your Mind, became a best seller and a Netflix documentary. Psychedelics were made out to be a safe solution for society’s most challenging mental-health problems.
But the bubble has started to burst: It’s been a bad year for fans of psychedelics.
--
I feel that this article highlights an ongoing challenge facing the integration of psychedelics into our concepts and models of therapies. Amongst the criticisms highlighted is the indication that leaders in psychedelic science have embraced a cultic milleu in their persona...
Perhaps therapy isn't the discipline that should be embracing psychedelics. If they remain too rooted in the realm of spiritual healing, it may not be the right tool to integrate into therapy spaces as therapy has always been rooted in agnosticism to a degree. Pursuing psychedelic healing through ministry, ritual, and spiritual paths may be the better home for these therapies. Western society is notably bereft of these practices in this current epoch.