What does it actually mean to make sense of something that broke you open?
In this episode, Pascal sits down with Guy Simon, a psychotherapist, trauma researcher, and PhD candidate at Bar-Ilan University, to explore what actually happens when people try to make meaning after a challenging psychedelic experience.
Drawing on 48 in-depth interviews with people who had difficult experiences outside clinical settings, Guy shares a map of five distinct patterns of meaning-making, and the specific conditions under which those patterns help, and when they don't.
This is one of the most honest and grounded conversations we've had on the show about what integration actually looks like, and what can go wrong when the story you come out with isn't really yours.
TIMESTAMPS
00:00 Introduction
02:49 About the research
11:16 Having your own internal framework for meaning making
16:21 Patterns 1-2: "The Mind Goes Looking" - Somatic Discovery and Embodied Re-Experiencing
29:37 Pattern 3: "The Experience as Instruction"
40:32 Pattern 4: "The Recursive Healing Project"
49:55 Pattern 5: "When the Framework Fails"
01:03:23 When a facilitator is going beyond holding space and imposing a framework on you
01:07:55 Pattern 6: "The Pressure to Have a Good Story" 01:14:57 Fetishizing the psychedelic insight, undervaluing the mundane
01:23:16 Advice for someone carrying a story that isn't yours into integration
01:27:05 Advice for someone preparing for a journey
WHAT WE COVER
NOTABLE QUOTES
ABOUT GUY SIMON
Guy Simon is a psychotherapist, trauma researcher, and PhD candidate at Bar-Ilan University, based in Amsterdam. His work focuses on how people make meaning after difficult psychedelic experiences outside clinical settings. He is clinical director of Impulse, an integrative mental health center, and a collaborator with the Challenging Psychedelic Experience Project.
🌐 guysimon.com
RESOURCES MENTIONED