Mar 14, 2026

Integration Practices

A psilocybin session can show you something profound in a few hours. Integration is how you live it out over the following months. These aren't abstract suggestions, they're the specific practices our clients find most effective, drawn from hundreds of post-journey experiences at Meadow.

Journaling: the cornerstone practice

If you do one integration practice, make it journaling. Writing externalizes the internal, makes the vague concrete, and prevents insights from evaporating.

The first journal entry

Write within 24 hours of your session, the evening of, or the next morning. Don't edit, don't organize, don't worry about grammar. Just get everything down: images, emotions, phrases, body sensations, moments that stood out. This raw record becomes invaluable during integration sessions.

Ongoing journaling

After your initial capture, shift to a more reflective practice. Three to four times per week, spend 10–15 minutes writing. You can use the guided prompts in your portal's journal section, or write freely. Some structures that work well:

Mindfulness and meditation

Psilocybin often produces a state of present-moment awareness, a direct experience of "being here now" that many people have never felt so clearly. Meditation maintains and deepens this capacity.

Starting a practice

If you've never meditated, the post-session period is the ideal time to start. Your brain has been primed for this kind of attention. Begin with 10 minutes a day:

Body scan meditation

Particularly useful after a psilocybin session, body scan meditation helps you reconnect with physical sensations and process emotions stored in the body. Lie down, close your eyes, and slowly move your attention from your feet to the crown of your head, noticing what you feel in each region without trying to change it.

Time in nature

Psilocybin frequently deepens people's connection to the natural world. Many clients describe feeling "part of something larger" when outdoors in the weeks after their session. This isn't just a feeling, research suggests that nature exposure supports mental health recovery and complements the neuroplasticity window opened by psilocybin.

What works:

Creative expression

The psilocybin experience often produces images, emotions, and sensations that resist verbal description. Creative expression gives them another way out.

Intentional conversations

Integration is not a solo project. Sharing your experience with trusted people deepens your understanding and makes commitments more real.

Guidelines for integration conversations:

Building a daily rhythm

Integration works best when it's woven into daily life, not treated as a separate activity. A simple daily structure:

You don't need to do everything. Pick two or three practices that resonate and commit to them for 30 days. Consistency matters more than variety.

Want to talk through whether this might be right for you?

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Section 5

More on Integration & Aftercare

Every journey startswith the firststep.