This is your brain. This is your brain on psilocybin.
Under psilocybin, the brain’s networks stop operating in isolation. Regions that rarely communicate begin talking to each other — producing more than three times the cross-network connectivity of a placebo state.
Placebo
Psilocybin
Psilocybin creates 3× more cross-network connectivity — unlocking the default mode network, quieting the ego, and restoring the brain’s capacity for genuine integration and insight.
Default Mode Network
The DMN governs self-reflection, daydreaming, and ego. Under psilocybin it quiets — releasing the brain from its habitual, self-referential loops and opening space for new patterns.
Global Integration
Brain regions that normally operate in silos — visual, emotional, analytical — begin communicating freely. This cross-network conversation is where insight, creativity, and healing live.
Neuroplasticity Window
Psilocybin promotes new synapse growth and dendritic complexity — restoring the brain’s capacity to learn, update, and release patterns that no longer serve. Integration captures that window.
Research & Education
Know what you’re stepping into.
The more you understand this medicine before you work with it, the more you’ll get out of it. These articles cover what the research actually shows — and what I think every person considering this work should understand first.
NeuroscienceNature Communications · May 2026
What Psilocybin Actually Does to Your Brain
A landmark study scanned people’s brains before, during, and a month after their first psilocybin experience. The brain didn’t just feel different. It changed — and those changes predicted lasting improvements in well-being.
Clinical ResearchJohns Hopkins Medicine · Ongoing
The Conditions Psilocybin Has Been Shown to Help
25 years of Johns Hopkins research. Depression, addiction, PTSD, anxiety, end-of-life distress. Here’s what the evidence actually shows — not the hype, not the fear, just the data.
MicrodosingPrimary Care Companion · 2024
What the Research Says About Microdosing
Microdosing is everywhere right now. Here’s an honest look at what 19 studies actually found — and what it means now that we offer microdosing coaching alongside our journey work.
SafetyDenver Psilocybin Sanctuary
Why Doing This on Your Own Is a Bad Idea
People try psilocybin alone all the time. Some have profound experiences. Some have very difficult ones with no support. This article is direct about what the risks actually are — and why they’re almost entirely avoidable with proper care.
Psilocybin and PTSD: What the Research Actually Shows
PTSD affects 13 million Americans and has had only two approved treatments in 20 years. New clinical trials are showing something different. Here’s what the science says about how psilocybin works on trauma — and why it reaches places other treatments don’t.
High performers don’t usually come to psilocybin work because they’re falling apart. They come because they’ve maxed out what discipline and drive can do — and they know something is missing. Here’s what the research says about why psilocybin helps.
Sources:
Carhart-Harris R. Curr Opin Psychiatry. 2019 ·
Carhart-Harris R & Friston K. Pharmacol Rev. 2019 ·
Vollenweider F & Preller K. Nat Rev Neurosci. 2020 ·
Wang M. UCSF TrPR. 2022 ·
Aleksandrova L & Phillips A. Trends Pharmacol Sci. 2021 ·
Lyons T et al. Nature Communications. 2026 ·
Modlin NL et al. Lancet eClinicalMedicine. 2025 ·
Lo DF et al. Prim Care Companion CNS Disord. 2024 ·
Mason NL et al. Translational Psychiatry. 2021
Neuroscience
Nature Communications · May 2026 · Carhart-Harris et al., Imperial College London
What Psilocybin Actually Does to Your Brain
This is one of the most important studies published on psilocybin in years. It answers a question researchers hadn’t fully answered before: does a single psilocybin experience actually change the brain — not just during the experience, but after?
The answer is yes. And the changes they found are the kind that matter.
The study
28 healthy adults — none of whom had ever taken a psychedelic — received a 25mg dose of psilocybin at Imperial College London. Brain activity was monitored in real time via EEG during the session, and MRI scans were taken before and one month after. 94% of participants called it the single most unusual experience of their entire lives.
During the session: your brain breaks out of its patterns
Your brain in ordinary life runs on habit. The same neural loops, the same emotional responses, the same ways of seeing yourself. This keeps you functioning — but it also keeps you stuck.
During a psilocybin session, those patterns loosen dramatically. Brain activity becomes more complex, more varied, more unpredictable. The brain’s mechanism for suppressing new information and maintaining habitual patterns dropped sharply. The brain opened. And the more it opened, the greater the improvements in well-being one month later.
One month later: the brain had physically changed
MRI scans a month after the session showed structural changes in the brain’s white matter — the wiring connecting the prefrontal cortex (judgment, self-reflection, breaking old patterns) to deeper emotional and motivational centers. These changes point to anatomical neuroplasticity. Similar changes have been documented after months of intensive meditation practice. Psilocybin appears to produce them from a single session.
The brain’s networks were also more integrated — communicating more fluidly across regions rather than staying siloed. This integration pattern has appeared in other studies where psilocybin relieved depression.
The next day: a window of insight
Here’s the piece that matters most practically. The brain opening during the session predicted a measurable spike in psychological insight the very next day. And that next-day insight was what drove the lasting improvements in well-being at one month.
The pathway: psilocybin opens the brain → insight arrives → lasting change follows. This is why what happens in the 24 hours after a session — and the weeks that follow — is not optional. Integration isn’t aftercare. It’s the work.
Cognitive flexibility improved too
A month later, participants were measurably better at noticing when rules had changed and adapting accordingly. Rigid, inflexible thinking is a core feature of depression, anxiety, addiction, and OCD. The ability to genuinely see things differently is one of the most important things healing can restore — and this study shows psilocybin helps do that at a neurological level.
Source: Lyons T, Spriggs M, et al. Human brain changes after first psilocybin use. Nature Communications. 2026;17:3977. doi:10.1038/s41467-026-71962-3
For educational purposes only. Not medical advice. Psilocybin services at Denver Psilocybin Sanctuary are provided under Colorado state licensure by licensed therapist-facilitators.
Clinical Research
Johns Hopkins Center for Psychedelic and Consciousness Research
The Conditions Psilocybin Has Been Shown to Help
Johns Hopkins has been the most rigorous institution in modern psilocybin research. Over 60 peer-reviewed studies. Here’s what their work actually shows — the conditions, the results, and the numbers that matter.
Context
In 2000, Johns Hopkins became the first American institution to receive government approval to study psychedelics since the 1970s. Their 2006 paper reignited an entire field worldwide. In 2021, they received the first NIH federal grant in over 50 years to directly study a classic psychedelic. That means the most cautious funding body in American science decided this was worth pursuing.
Depression
Two psilocybin sessions with supportive therapy produced fast, large reductions in depressive symptoms. Half the participants achieved full remission within four weeks. A one-year follow-up found most were still doing better. For treatment-resistant depression — people who’ve tried medication after medication — psilocybin produced substantial improvements that persisted for months.
For cancer patients facing depression and anxiety alongside a terminal diagnosis, 80% were still significantly improved six months later. The reductions in fear of death, loss of meaning, and existential grief were among the most consistent findings in the entire literature.
Addiction
The best pharmaceutical options for nicotine addiction achieve roughly 35% abstinence at six months. In a Hopkins study, 80% of participants were biologically verified smoke-free six months after psilocybin treatment. Not self-reported. Biologically verified.
For alcohol use disorder, a randomized clinical trial found significantly fewer heavy drinking days in the psilocybin group — effects that persisted over time. Research into opioid use disorder is ongoing, with strong early rationale.
PTSD, anxiety, and more
Research into PTSD is active and growing. Hopkins is running clinical trials for anorexia nervosa — highest mortality rate of any psychiatric disorder — with encouraging early results. And healthy people benefit too: 64% of Hopkins study volunteers with no diagnosis said a single session increased their well-being or life satisfaction, with effects lasting over a year.
Why it works
Hopkins researchers are consistent: the quality of the experience matters enormously. Greater depth of connection, openness, and meaning during the session consistently predicts better long-term outcomes. The structure around the experience isn’t a luxury — it’s the mechanism. And in over 25 years of carefully conducted Hopkins research, there have been zero serious adverse events attributable to psilocybin itself.
For educational purposes only. Not medical advice. All services at Denver Psilocybin Sanctuary are under Colorado Proposition 122 licensure.
Microdosing
Primary Care Companion for CNS Disorders · January 2024 · Lo et al.
What the Research Says About Microdosing
Microdosing is having a moment. There’s a lot of noise around it — some enthusiastic, some dismissive. This is what 19 peer-reviewed studies actually found.
What microdosing is
Microdosing is taking a very small amount of psilocybin — about one-tenth of a therapeutic dose — on a regular schedule, often every few days. The goal isn’t a psychedelic experience. It’s subtle: a bit more focus, a bit more emotional resilience, less of that underlying heaviness that makes days feel hard. A therapeutic session is a door you walk through. Microdosing is cracking a window. Different purpose, different effect, don’t conflate them.
What the research found
Better mood. The most consistently reported benefit across every type of study. One study of over 4,000 microdosers found significantly lower depression, anxiety, and stress compared to matched controls.
Sharper focus. People described engaging more fully at work and in relationships. A controlled study confirmed improvements in both analytical and creative thinking.
Reduced anxiety and depression symptoms. A month-long prospective study found real reductions alongside increased resilience, social connectedness, and emotional stability.
Better daily functioning. The recurring theme in interviews wasn’t transformation — it was function. People microdosing to show up more fully, where conventional treatments hadn’t gotten them there.
The honest caveat
Most studies are surveys — self-reported. One well-designed placebo-controlled study found both the microdose group and the placebo group improved equally over four weeks. The compound itself may not be solely responsible for the benefits. The science is promising, not definitive. More rigorous trials are underway.
What we offer
We now offer microdosing coaching. If you’re interested in a structured, professionally supported microdosing practice, our licensed therapist-facilitators can work with you 1:1 to design a protocol, track your progress, and provide integration support along the way. It’s available as a standalone service or alongside full-dose journey work. The evidence base for full-dose therapeutic sessions remains more developed and more consistent — but we recognize that microdosing is where many people start, and we’d rather hold that with you properly than leave you to figure it out alone.
Source: Lo DF, et al. Modern psychedelic microdosing research on mental health: a systematic review. Prim Care Companion CNS Disord. 2024;26(1):23r03581. doi:10.4088/PCC.23r03581
For educational purposes only. Not medical advice. Microdosing coaching at Denver Psilocybin Sanctuary is a standalone coaching service; it is distinct from licensed psilocybin administration sessions under Colorado Proposition 122.
Safety
Denver Psilocybin Sanctuary · Written by our clinical team
Why Doing This on Your Own Is a Bad Idea
I want to be direct with you. People experiment with psilocybin on their own all the time. Some have profound, life-changing experiences. Some have frightening ones with no one to help them through it. The difference between those two outcomes isn’t luck — it’s preparation, screening, and support.
The dose problem
Unregulated mushrooms have wildly inconsistent potency. The same dried gram from the same batch can produce very different effects depending on where in the mushroom it came from, how it was dried, and how long it’s been stored. You cannot reliably dose yourself with an uncontrolled substance.
In a Johns Hopkins survey of nearly 2,000 psilocybin users, close to 40% described their difficult experience as the most challenging of their lives. The two variables most strongly associated with those outcomes: taking too large a dose, and being in an environment that felt unsafe. Both of those are hard to control when you’re doing this alone.
The screening problem
Psilocybin is not appropriate for everyone. A personal or family history of psychosis or schizophrenia is a significant contraindication — psilocybin can trigger psychotic episodes in people with this vulnerability, and the consequences can be severe and lasting. Certain cardiac conditions, specific medications (particularly lithium), and some psychiatric diagnoses create real risk. Without proper medical and psychological screening, you have no way of knowing whether you’re in a category where this could cause genuine harm rather than healing.
The same Hopkins survey found that 8% of people who had difficult experiences went on to seek treatment for psychological symptoms that didn’t resolve on their own. 11% reported that they or someone else was put at risk during the experience. These are not small numbers.
The support problem
Psilocybin can surface material that is genuinely difficult — unresolved grief, trauma, fear, emotional content you weren’t expecting. In a properly held session, a trained facilitator is there to help you move through that material rather than against it. Alone, a challenging moment can become a crisis.
I’ve worked with people who came to us after a solo experience they couldn’t make sense of. The experiences themselves weren’t the problem — the lack of preparation, context, and integration support was. The medicine opened something and there was no one to help them work with what came through.
The integration problem
Even a profound, positive solo experience can fade or become confusing without integration. The brain enters a window of unusual plasticity after psilocybin — it’s more receptive to new patterns. Without structured integration designed to help you make meaning of what arose, insights often don’t stick. People describe experiences that felt transformative in the moment but drifted away within weeks because there was no framework for working with them afterward.
What good structure looks like
The research is consistent: psilocybin in a carefully screened, well-prepared, professionally supported setting produces outcomes that differ fundamentally from unsupported use. The substance is a catalyst. The structure — screening, preparation, the facilitated session, integration — is what determines whether that catalyst produces healing or harm.
That’s why we exist. Not to gatekeep this medicine, but to create the conditions where it can actually work. If you’re considering this and don’t know where to start, start with a free consultation. Ask every question you have. We’ll tell you honestly whether this is right for you right now — and if it isn’t, we’ll tell you that too.
Research referenced: Johns Hopkins Medicine psilocybin adverse effects survey (Griffiths et al.); Carhart-Harris et al. Nature Communications 2026; National Network of Depression Centers consensus statement on psilocybin safety, 2025.
For educational purposes only. Not medical advice. If you are in crisis, call or text 988. Denver Psilocybin Sanctuary operates under Colorado Proposition 122 licensure.
PTSD & Trauma
Compass Pathfinder (2025) · The Lancet eClinicalMedicine (2025) · SAGE Psychopharmacology (2025) · Choi et al. (2024)
Psilocybin and PTSD: What the Research Actually Shows
PTSD is one of the most treatment-resistant conditions in psychiatry. For the 13 million Americans living with it, existing options are limited, slow, and often only partially effective. A growing body of clinical research is showing that psilocybin may work through mechanisms that conventional treatments simply don’t reach.
The problem with current treatments
PTSD has had only two FDA-approved medications in the past two decades — both SSRIs originally developed for depression. They help some people. For many others, they don’t. Trauma-focused therapies like CPT and EMDR are more effective, but they require sustained engagement with painful material, have high dropout rates, and still leave a significant portion of people symptomatic after completing a full course of treatment.
The core problem is that PTSD isn’t just a mood disorder. It’s a disorder of memory, fear, and the nervous system’s inability to learn that a past threat is no longer present. Addressing it with a daily pill that modulates serotonin misses most of what the condition actually is.
What psilocybin does to the traumatized brain
Research published in 2024 in the SAGE Journal of Psychopharmacology outlines several mechanisms by which psilocybin may address the neurobiology of PTSD directly.
Fear extinction. One of the hallmarks of PTSD is impaired fear extinction — the brain’s inability to learn that something previously associated with threat is now safe. People with PTSD have a smaller hippocampus than healthy individuals, and reduced neuroplasticity in that region. A preclinical study found that a single dose of psilocybin promoted new neuron and synapse growth in the hippocampus, reversed the decline in neuroplasticity proteins, and produced rapid, sustained fear extinction that held six days later. In plain terms: psilocybin appears to restore the brain’s ability to unlearn fear.
Amygdala reactivity. The amygdala — the brain’s threat-detection center — is hyperactive in PTSD, responding to neutral stimuli as if they were dangerous. Research shows psilocybin decreases amygdala reactivity to negative emotional stimuli while enhancing connectivity between the amygdala and the prefrontal cortex. The prefrontal cortex is what allows us to regulate emotional responses — to recognize safety even when the body is screaming otherwise. Psilocybin appears to strengthen exactly the neural pathway that PTSD systematically weakens.
Memory reconsolidation. Every time a memory is recalled, it briefly becomes unstable before being re-stored. This reconsolidation window is theoretically an opportunity to update the emotional charge attached to a traumatic memory. Research suggests psilocybin may open this window more fully than other interventions, allowing traumatic memories to be revisited and reprocessed with reduced defensive reactivity.
Psychological defenses and stuck points. In Cognitive Processing Therapy, the maladaptive beliefs that maintain PTSD — "it was my fault," "I am permanently broken," "nowhere is safe" — are called stuck points. Research published in 2025 describes how psilocybin may help people access and revise these beliefs by temporarily lowering the psychological defenses that normally keep them locked in place. Participants in psilocybin PTSD trials consistently described being able to engage with traumatic material with more emotional distance and less reactivity than they’d ever managed in conventional therapy.
The clinical trial results
In 2025, Compass Pathfinder published Phase 2 results from a multicenter trial conducted across King’s College London, Mount Sinai Hospital, and Sunstone Therapies. A single 25mg dose of synthetic psilocybin was given to 22 patients with PTSD. The treatment was well tolerated with no serious adverse events, and demonstrated both rapid and durable improvement in PTSD symptoms — sustained out to 12 weeks after a single administration.
The same trial’s qualitative arm, published in The Lancet’s eClinicalMedicine in December 2025, captured what participants actually experienced. They described reductions in experiential avoidance — the tendency to suppress or avoid traumatic memories and the feelings attached to them. They described emerging somatic awareness, a reconnection with body sensations that had been numbed or severed. They described moments of emotional release that had been blocked for years. And consistently, they described the quality of the therapeutic relationship as central — the safety of being genuinely held by someone who knew their history and was fully present with them throughout.
Johns Hopkins is actively running a randomized controlled trial examining two doses of psilocybin for PTSD, including a comparison of psilocybin paired with trauma-focused psychotherapy versus standard psychological support. Results are forthcoming.
Why the container matters more in trauma than anywhere else
Trauma, by definition, happened in a context of threat, helplessness, or violated safety. Asking someone with PTSD to surrender into a psilocybin experience requires a level of felt safety that doesn’t happen automatically — it has to be built, deliberately and carefully, over time.
Research consistently shows that the therapeutic relationship is one of the strongest predictors of outcome in psilocybin PTSD treatment. Participants in the Lancet study described their interactions with the study team as “transparent and human” — and that quality of relationship predicted how fully they could engage with the experience itself. Psilocybin opens a door. But for someone with a trauma history, who is holding you at that door matters enormously.
At Denver Psilocybin Sanctuary, every facilitator is also a licensed trauma therapist. For clients with PTSD, that’s not a credential — it’s a clinical necessity. The preparation, the attunement during the session, the integration that follows — all of it requires someone who understands trauma not just conceptually but somatically and relationally. This work is not the same as depression work or existential work. It requires its own approach, its own pacing, and a therapeutic relationship built on genuine safety. That is what we provide.
Sources: Choi C, et al. Mechanisms of psilocybin on the treatment of PTSD. J Psychopharmacol. 2024. · McGowan NM, et al. Safety and tolerability of single-dose psilocybin for PTSD. J Psychopharmacol. 2025. · Modlin NL, et al. Psilocybin treatment for PTSD: qualitative study. Lancet eClinicalMedicine. 2025. · Modlin NL, et al. Clinical conceptualisation of PTSD in psilocybin treatment. Ther Adv Psychopharmacol. 2025. · Psilocybin facilitates fear extinction via hippocampal neuroplasticity. PMC. 2023.
For educational purposes only. Not medical advice. If you are in crisis, call or text 988. Psilocybin services at Denver Psilocybin Sanctuary are provided under Colorado state licensure by licensed therapist-facilitators following Proposition 122 guidelines.
Performance & Creativity
Denver Psilocybin Sanctuary · drawing from Nature Translational Psychiatry, Mason et al. (2021); Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience (2026); PMC default mode network research
Unlocking Your Full Potential
This isn’t an article for people who are falling apart. It’s for people who have built something real, who function at a high level, and who have started to notice that something has gone quiet inside them. The drive is still there. The results are still coming. But the spark — the genuine creative energy, the sense that what you’re doing actually matters — has dimmed. If that lands, keep reading.
What high performance actually costs
Executive function is, at a neurological level, the brain’s ability to plan, execute, filter, and suppress. It is spectacularly useful for building companies, leading teams, and hitting targets. It is also, when dominant for long enough, a creative killer.
The prefrontal cortex — the seat of executive control — excels at narrowing focus, suppressing irrelevant information, and holding the brain on task. But creative insight doesn’t come from narrowing. It comes from loosening. The same neural machinery that makes you a precise, disciplined operator actively inhibits the kind of wandering, associative, pattern-breaking thinking that generates genuinely new ideas.
The longer you operate in high-output mode — and for most executives, that’s years, sometimes decades — the more your brain optimizes for efficiency and the less tolerance it has for the unfamiliar, the uncertain, the not-yet-formed. You stop dreaming in the ways you used to. Problems that once felt alive start feeling like boxes to check. You are excellent at executing. You have lost the ability to genuinely wonder.
The default mode network and why you need it
There is a brain network called the default mode network (DMN). It activates when you’re not focused on a task — when you’re daydreaming, reflecting, making meaning, connecting disparate ideas. For a long time, neuroscientists thought it was just the brain idling. They were wrong. The DMN is where insight lives. It’s where you make sense of your life, generate novel associations, and connect things that don’t obviously belong together. It is, in a very real sense, the network responsible for who you are when you’re not being productive.
In high-performing, high-output people, the DMN is often chronically suppressed. You have trained your brain, over years, to stay in executive mode. The cost is exactly what you’ve been feeling: creative flatness, a sense of running on fumes, the inability to access something that used to come naturally.
Research published in Nature’s Translational Psychiatry found that psilocybin produces a time-specific differentiation of creative effects. Acutely, it increases spontaneous creative insights. One week later, the number of novel ideas participants generated had measurably increased. And critically, both effects were predicted by connectivity changes in the default mode network — the network that high performers have spent years suppressing.
What psilocybin actually does to an executive brain
Psilocybin temporarily desynchronizes the brain’s habitual network organization. The tight, efficient, well-worn pathways that run your operational mind loosen. Networks that are normally kept separate — including the default mode network and the executive control network — begin communicating in ways they ordinarily don’t. The brain becomes, for a window of time, more associative, more curious, more permeable to ideas that don’t fit the existing model.
This is not the same as impairment. It’s more like taking the governor off an engine that has been running too conservatively for too long. Research on flow states — the condition of total creative immersion that high performers often describe as their best work — consistently shows that they involve increased communication between the default mode and executive control networks, alongside a temporary reduction in self-critical frontal activity. Psilocybin appears to induce a related state, and to leave changes in network connectivity that persist for weeks afterward.
In plain terms: one well-held psilocybin session can restore access to parts of your mind that years of high performance have closed off.
It’s not just about creativity
Most of the executives I work with aren’t just creatively stuck. They’re also carrying something they’ve been too busy to look at. The grief from a relationship they poured themselves into building. The cost of decisions they had to make. The distance between the life they’ve constructed and the person they thought they were going to become. The quiet sense that all the achievement hasn’t produced the meaning they expected it to.
Psilocybin doesn’t just open the creative mind. It opens the whole mind. The same neurological loosening that restores creative access also makes it possible to see your life more clearly — the patterns you’ve been running, what you’ve been avoiding, what actually matters to you. For many high performers, that is the more profound outcome. The creative energy comes back as a byproduct of reconnecting with themselves.
What the session actually looks like for someone like you
The preparation work is different for executives. You are skilled at managing and directing experience. You will need support in learning how to surrender rather than optimize — how to follow rather than lead the experience. That is a genuinely different skill, and it takes time to build. Which is why the preparation sessions matter as much as the session itself.
The experience itself is not a productivity tool. It is not a biohack. It is a full encounter with your own mind, held in a carefully prepared environment, with a trained clinician present the entire time. Some of it will be beautiful. Some of it may be confronting. All of it will be yours.
Integration — the clinical sessions that follow — is where the insights from the session become changes in how you actually operate. Without it, the window closes and the old patterns reassert themselves. With it, what you accessed becomes something you can build from.
If you’re reading this and something in it is landing — start with a free consultation. You don’t need to be broken to benefit from this work. You need to be honest about what you’ve been missing.
Research referenced: Mason NL, et al. Spontaneous and deliberate creative cognition during and after psilocybin exposure. Translational Psychiatry. 2021. · Luchini SA, et al. Enhancing creativity with covert neurofeedback: causal evidence for default-executive network coupling. Cerebral Cortex. 2025. · Psilocybin desynchronizes brain networks. PMC. 2023. · Enhanced functional connectivity between the default mode network and executive control network during flow states. Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience. 2026.
For educational purposes only. Not medical advice. Psilocybin services at Denver Psilocybin Sanctuary are provided under Colorado state licensure by licensed therapist-facilitators. Start with a free consultation to determine whether this work is right for you.
Important disclosures for everyone considering our services.
We publish this in plain language because trust starts with transparency. Read it fully before booking a consultation or natural medicine session.
Last updated: May 2026Jurisdiction: Colorado, USAApplies to: All Denver Psilocybin Sanctuary services
01 Legal status & licensing
Denver Psilocybin Sanctuary operates as a licensed natural medicine healing center under the Colorado Natural Medicine Health Act of 2022 (C.R.S. Title 12, Article 170), enacted by voters as Proposition 122 and implemented by SB23-290. Services are delivered in accordance with rules promulgated by the Colorado Department of Revenue (DOR) Natural Medicine Division and the Department of Regulatory Agencies (DORA), codified at 1 CCR 212-3 and 4 CCR 755-1.
Our healing center is separately licensed by the City and County of Denver under the 2025 municipal natural medicine ordinance administered by Denver Excise & Licenses. Local zoning sign-off, fingerprint background checks, and site inspections are conditions of our continued operation.
We are not affiliated with, endorsed by, or operating on behalf of any federally recognized American Indian tribe. We do not represent that our services constitute traditional Indigenous ceremony or medicine, and we explicitly disclaim any such claim as required by C.R.S. § 12-170-105 and the Denver ordinance.
02 Federal law notice
⚠ Federal Schedule I substance
Psilocybin and psilocin remain Schedule I controlled substances under the federal Controlled Substances Act (21 U.S.C. § 812). Although Colorado has decriminalized and licensed certain natural medicine activities for adults 21 and older, federal law does not recognize this exception. Participation in our services may carry federal legal risk, particularly for individuals subject to federal employment, security clearance, immigration status, professional licensure, child custody, or travel restrictions.
You are solely responsible for evaluating whether participation is consistent with your federal obligations. We strongly recommend consultation with a qualified attorney before booking if you hold federal employment, possess a security clearance, are a non-citizen, work in a federally regulated industry, or are involved in any custody, divorce, or immigration proceeding.
Natural medicine and natural medicine products may not be transported across state lines. Possession outside Colorado, including in airports operating under federal jurisdiction, may constitute a federal offense.
03 Age & eligibility
Services are restricted to adults 21 years of age or older as required by C.R.S. § 12-170-103. Government-issued photo identification is required at intake. We do not provide services to minors under any circumstances.
All participants must complete our intake screening and informed-consent process. We reserve the absolute right to decline service to any prospective participant for whom our facilitators or medical advisor determine that the risks outweigh the potential benefits, or for whom our services are not clinically appropriate.
04 Medical disclaimer
Denver Psilocybin Sanctuary does not practice medicine and does not provide medical diagnosis, treatment, prescription, or cure. Information presented on this website, in marketing materials, in preparation sessions, and during integration is offered for general educational and harm-reduction purposes only.
Natural medicine services are not a substitute for evaluation, diagnosis, or treatment by a licensed physician, psychiatrist, psychologist, licensed therapist, or other qualified healthcare provider. Nothing we publish should be construed as a claim that psilocybin or any natural medicine cures, treats, mitigates, or prevents any condition.
If you have any medical or psychiatric condition, are pregnant or breastfeeding, or are currently taking prescription medication, obtain medical clearance from your prescribing physician before booking.
In a medical or psychiatric emergency
Call 911, go to the nearest emergency room, or call or text 988 (Suicide & Crisis Lifeline). Do not wait for a response from our team. This website is not monitored 24/7 and is not an emergency service.
05 Contraindications
Natural medicine services are not appropriate for everyone. We publish the full list below so you can assess fit before contacting us.
Absolute or strong contraindications
Personal history of psychosisIncluding schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, or prior psilocybin-precipitated psychosis.
Bipolar I disorderParticularly with a history of mania or hypomanic episodes.
Active suicidalityCurrent ideation with plan or intent; recent attempt within 12 months.
First-degree family historyOf schizophrenia or bipolar I disorder (parent, sibling, child).
Seizure disorderActive epilepsy or history of unprovoked seizures without neurology clearance.
Pregnancy or breastfeedingInsufficient safety data; services are deferred until after weaning.
Active substance use disorderUntreated alcohol, stimulant, or opioid use disorder requiring primary treatment first.
Conditions requiring medical clearance
Controlled hypertension, coronary artery disease, or any prior cardiac diagnosis.
Migraine with aura, history of stroke or TIA, or any cerebrovascular condition.
Diabetes (Type 1 or Type 2) requiring insulin or oral medication.
Autoimmune, thyroid, hepatic, or renal disease under active management.
History of complex trauma, dissociative disorders, eating disorders, or borderline personality disorder.
Any condition not listed above for which you take a daily prescription.
You must disclose all conditions truthfully at intake. Non-disclosure or misrepresentation of health information voids our duty of care and may result in immediate cessation of services with no refund, in accordance with C.R.S. § 12-170-105.
06 Medication interactions
Psilocybin interacts meaningfully with many prescription medications. We require disclosure of every prescription, over-the-counter medication, supplement, and recreational substance used in the prior 90 days.
Medications requiring discontinuation or specialist consultation
Lithium — strong relative contraindication; seizure risk reported. Discontinuation must be supervised by your prescriber.
Antipsychotics (typical and atypical) — blunt or block psilocybin effects; require psychiatric coordination.
SSRIs / SNRIs (sertraline, fluoxetine, escitalopram, venlafaxine, duloxetine, etc.) — typically attenuate the experience; tapering must be physician-directed.
Tricyclic antidepressants — may potentiate cardiovascular effects.
Tramadol, dextromethorphan, MDMA — serotonin-syndrome risk if combined.
Never adjust medication on your own
Do not stop, taper, or modify any prescribed medication without your prescribing physician's direct supervision. Abrupt discontinuation of psychiatric medication carries serious risk.
07 Psychological & therapy disclaimer
Our facilitators hold one of two license types issued by DORA: Facilitator (NMF) or Clinical Facilitator (NMCF). The distinction matters and is disclosed for every staff member.
A facilitator licensed solely under DORA's natural medicine program does not practice psychotherapy, counseling, or the practice of medicine as those terms are defined under Colorado law. Where a member of our staff additionally holds a Colorado mental-health license (LCSW, LPC, LMFT, LAC, PMHNP, or MD), psychotherapy services delivered are governed by the rules of their secondary license and are legally and operationally distinct from natural medicine services.
Natural medicine services are not psychotherapy, nor a substitute for ongoing mental-health treatment. We recommend that participants maintain a relationship with an outside therapist or psychiatrist for the period surrounding their journey and during integration.
Possible psychological effects
Participants may experience, during or following an administration session, transient or prolonged states including but not limited to: intense emotion (fear, grief, awe, joy), confronting autobiographical memory, perceptual distortion, visual and auditory phenomena, ego dissolution, depersonalization or derealization, altered time perception, somatic discomfort, fatigue, headache, transient anxiety or depression, vivid dreams, sleep disturbance, and rarely, protracted perceptual changes (HPPD), psychosis, or worsening of underlying psychiatric conditions.
08 Informed consent
Colorado law (C.R.S. § 12-170-105 and 4 CCR 755-1 Rule 6) requires written informed consent before any administration session. Our consent process covers, at minimum:
The participant's complete and accurate health-information disclosure.
Risk factors identified based on that disclosure and any drug contraindications.
Realistic expectations for the preparation, administration, and integration sessions.
Explicit parameters for physical contact during sessions and the right to withdraw consent at any time.
The right to discontinue services at any time, with refund terms disclosed in advance.
Any audio or video recording occurring during services, and the right to refuse.
Safety planning, including identification of a sober support person and post-session transportation.
Financial disclosures, including all fees and any third-party services used to collect payment.
You will receive the full informed-consent document before your preparation session and will have time to review it with the facilitator, your physician, or counsel of your choice before signing.
09 No outcomes or therapeutic guarantee
We make no representation, warranty, or guarantee — express or implied — of any specific therapeutic, psychological, spiritual, emotional, or medical outcome. Testimonials, case studies, research summaries, and personal accounts describe individual experiences only and should not be relied upon to predict your experience.
The body of clinical research on psilocybin is promising but preliminary. No natural medicine is FDA-approved for any indication as of the date above. Outcomes vary substantially across individuals. A meaningful percentage of participants report no measurable change; some report worsening of certain symptoms.
10 Assumption of risk
Participation in natural medicine services involves inherent risks that cannot be fully eliminated, including but not limited to: adverse physiological reactions; psychological distress; falls, accidents, or injury in altered states; emergent memory or affective material; impaired judgment for up to 24 hours after administration; and the federal legal risks identified above.
To the maximum extent permitted by Colorado law, participants and prospective participants waive claims against Denver Psilocybin Sanctuary, its facilitators, employees, contractors, owners, and the property owner for any outcome arising from participation, except in cases of gross negligence, willful misconduct, or violation of statute.
11 Confidentiality & reporting obligations
Records related to participants constitute medical data under C.R.S. § 24-72-204(3)(a)(I) and are held in confidence. We do not share personally identifying information without written authorization, except where required by law or where one of the following mandatory-reporting exceptions applies:
Imminent risk of serious harm to self or another identifiable person.
Suspected abuse or neglect of a child, dependent adult, or at-risk elder under Colorado mandatory-reporter statutes.
Court order, subpoena, or lawful regulatory investigation by DOR, DORA, or Denver Excise & Licenses.
Adverse event reporting required by C.R.S. § 12-170 and DOR rule.
12 Cultural & spiritual respect
We honor the centuries of Indigenous stewardship from which contemporary psychedelic practice descends. We are not a religious organization; we are not affiliated with any federally recognized tribe; and we do not represent our services as traditional ceremony. We do not use the word "shaman" to describe our staff and we do not appropriate closed cultural practices.
13 External resources, testimonials, & research links
This website may link to external research, news coverage, professional organizations, and personal accounts. We do not control or endorse third-party content and are not responsible for its accuracy. Research citations are illustrative; outcomes from clinical trials conducted in controlled academic settings may not generalize to our services.
Testimonials, when published, appear with the express written consent of the participant and are edited only for clarity, length, and the removal of identifying information. We do not pay for testimonials.
14 Contact, complaints, & regulatory bodies
Questions about this disclaimer may be directed to our compliance lead at Delossoulpsych@gmail.com.
To file a regulatory complaint independent of Denver Psilocybin Sanctuary, contact:
Healing center licensure & facility complaints — Colorado Department of Revenue, Natural Medicine Division: dnm.colorado.gov
Healthcare-provider conduct — DORA Division of Professions and Occupations.
Acknowledgment
By using this website, scheduling a consultation, or participating in any Denver Psilocybin Sanctuary service, you acknowledge that you have read, understood, and accept the terms of this disclaimer in full. This disclaimer is incorporated by reference into our Terms of Service, Privacy Policy, and Participant Agreement.
We may update this disclaimer as Colorado rules, Denver ordinances, federal law, or our clinical practice evolve. Material changes will be posted with a revised "Last updated" date at the top of this page.
This page is informational and does not constitute legal, medical, or psychological advice. It is not a substitute for individualized counsel from a licensed Colorado attorney, your prescribing physician, or your mental-health provider.