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     Introduction to     
    Psychedelic Somatic    
    Interactional Psychotherapy
 

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Learn more about Psychedelic Somatic
Interactional Psychotherapy (PSIP)

Love & Light and Trauma:
The Benefits and Complications of
Psychedelic Journeys for Mental Health

Mapping the Autonomic
Nervous System (ANS)
in a PSIP Session

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Back from the Abyss Podcast with Dr. Craig Heacock

Saj Razvi returns to BFTA to share and discuss a mind-blowing audio recording of a ketamine-facilitated somatic therapy session. This session was from a recent training workshop with experienced trauma therapists, and Saj uses a somatic exercise-- staring into the client/participant's eyes- as a way to elicit a rapid and powerful transference reaction, with the psycholytic catalysts of ketamine and oxytocin already on board.  We hear Saj handle the mounting fear and dread of the emerging traumatic transference, then work through this with the therapist in training to find nervous system resolution and safety on the other side.  In the latter part of the episode Saj and Craig explore the challenges of recognizing and working with transference.

 

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The Mind Bod Adventure Podcast with Jeff Warren and Tasha Schumann

You don’t want to miss this one! A deep dive into “the heart of healing,” as we explore how medicines like cannabis and ketamine can amplify trauma therapy. Our guest is Saj Razvi, Director of Education at the Psychedelic Somatic Institute, and one of the original MAPS researchers and clinicians responsible for bringing MDMA-assisted therapy into the world.

According to Saj, there’s a self-corrective homeostatic healing mechanism available in the body that gets amplified during altered states. The key intervention he uses with clients is called “selective inhibition.” Normally, when stressed, we calm ourselves with coping strategies like deep breathing, moving, rationalizing, dissociating, and more. These tools give us short-term relief, but the downside is they inhibit the long-term healing of trauma, which Saj says our biology “is organically trying to achieve.”

Dr. Hillary McBride discusses PSIP with psychiatrist Dr. Craig Heacock
00:00 / 11:12
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