How to prepare for a psychedelic experience
- Mariya Garnet

- 10 hours ago
- 3 min read
Set and setting — the phrase is a standard in psychedelic culture for a reason. What you bring into a psychedelic experience, and the container in which it occurs, have significant effects on what happens. Preparation isn't about controlling the experience; it's about creating the best conditions for whatever arises to be workable.
Key takeaways
Set (mindset, intentions, psychological preparation) and setting (physical environment, guides, safety) are the primary determinants of experience quality
Preparation reduces the likelihood of difficult experiences and increases the likelihood that challenging material that does arise can be worked with
Psychological preparation — clarifying intentions, addressing contraindications, building safety — is as important as physical preparation
Integration preparation begins before the experience, not after
Working with a therapist before a planned experience is valuable regardless of whether they'll be present during it
Clarifying your intentions
Intentions aren't commands to the experience — psychedelics don't reliably produce specific outcomes. But intentions do orient attention and set a psychological direction. 'I want to understand why I keep repeating this pattern' is a useful intention. 'I want to resolve my grief about my father' is useful. 'I want to feel better' is less specific and less likely to provide orientation when things get difficult.
Intentions also matter in integration — what you were seeking provides context for interpreting what arose.
Addressing contraindications
Psychedelics are not appropriate for everyone in every context. Contraindications include personal or family history of psychosis or bipolar disorder with psychotic features; certain medications (particularly SSRIs and MAOIs in combination with some substances); acute mental health crisis; and situations where the psychological container is insufficient for what may arise.
A therapist who knows your history can help you assess whether a planned experience is appropriate and what additional preparation might be needed for your specific situation.
Setting and safety
Physical environment: safe, comfortable, controllable, with someone trusted present if needed
Guides: if using a guide, assess their experience, ethics, and the legal and safety context carefully
Timing: not during a period of acute life stress, mental health crisis, or significant destabilization
Post-experience: have space and time planned for the days after — not returning immediately to demanding work or major decisions
Frequently asked questions
Do I need a guide or can I use psychedelics alone?
This depends on the substance, the dose, your experience level, and your psychological state. High-dose experiences are generally safer with someone trustworthy present — not to direct the experience but to provide safety. Lower doses may not require a guide. The key factor is whether you'll be physically safe and whether you'll have support if the experience becomes difficult.
How do I know if I'm psychologically ready?
There's no absolute readiness — some uncertainty is inherent. Indicators of reasonable readiness include: a stable enough psychological foundation to tolerate discomfort, clarity about your intentions, a safe setting, and access to support after. Indicators of insufficient readiness include: active mental health crisis, significant recent destabilization, or using the experience as an avoidance of work that needs to happen first.
Should I stop my antidepressants before a psychedelic experience?
This is a medical question that requires consultation with your prescribing physician, not just a therapist. SSRIs can reduce psychedelic effects significantly; MAOIs have dangerous interactions with certain substances. Do not adjust medications without medical guidance.
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