Preparing for Your Psilocybin Journey: What to Know Before You Begin
Published By: Walk With HartChoosing to work with psilocybin is not about chasing visions or having the “right” kind of trip. It’s about creating space — space to meet oneself with honesty, curiosity, and care. Every journey is unique, and while no guide can predict what will unfold, thoughtful preparation can help tend the conditions for something meaningful to arise.
This post outlines simple, grounded ways to prepare for a psilocybin session, based on somatic wisdom, trauma-informed care, and years of experience supporting journeyers across a range of intentions and life stages.
Setting Intention: Journey Before Destination
Intentions are not goals. They are quiet compasses — something to orient by, not something to strive toward. A clear intention helps set the tone for a session, without controlling its direction.
Good intentions are honest and simple. “I want to reconnect with what matters,” or “I’m ready to face what I’ve been avoiding,” can be more powerful than abstract or lofty statements. Let the body lead. A felt sense carries more weight than perfect words.
Importantly, intentions don’t guarantee outcomes. They provide a relational anchor, not a destination. A session may circle back to the intention or move in an entirely unexpected direction — both are welcome.
What May Arise: Approaching the Unknown
Each psilocybin session is different. The experience may involve vivid imagery, emotional release, symbolic insight, or quiet stillness. Sometimes it feels expansive. Sometimes it brings difficult or disorienting content. All of this is within the range of possibility.
Common themes or sensations may include:
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Emotions such as joy, grief, fear, or wonder
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Memories, archetypal images, or ancestral threads
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Physical shifts — warmth, pressure, movement, or spaciousness
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Temporary changes in time perception or sense of self
There is no right way to experience psilocybin. There is no performance required. The role of the journeyer is not to “figure it out,” but to be present. The role of the facilitator is to hold that presence with steadiness, respect, and care.
Managing Expectations: Letting Experience Lead
Hope is natural. Many people seek clarity, healing, or spiritual connection. And sometimes those things arrive. But psilocybin does not always deliver in the ways the ego expects. Insight may come later. Stillness may reveal more than fireworks.
The work is not linear.
Letting go of expectations — about what the session should feel like or how it should resolve — creates room for the deeper, quieter medicine. Being willing to be with what is, rather than what was imagined, is often where the transformation begins.
The Day Before: Quieting the Storm
Think of the day before a session as a time to soften the soil — clearing space without pressure. The goal is not control, but care.
Body & Food
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Eat clean, nourishing meals: whole, simple foods are best
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Avoid alcohol, cannabis, or recreational substances for at least 48 hours
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Hydrate during the day, but avoid excessive fluids in the evening
Rest & Environment
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Get a full night of sleep
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Step back from screens and overstimulating media
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Avoid heavy or emotionally intense conversations, if possible
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Spend time in nature or do something that brings a sense of ease
There’s no need to perform a ritual. Small acts of tending are enough.
What to Wear and Bring: Creating the Nest
Comfort and safety are foundational. Choose clothing that allows for movement, stillness, and warmth — soft, layered fabrics are ideal. Avoid anything tight or restrictive.
Optional items to bring may include:
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A blanket, wrap, or pillow that helps you feel at ease
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A grounding object such as a stone, photo, or keepsake
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A journal (to use before or after the session)
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A water bottle
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Any required medications (clearly labeled)
Phones and digital devices will be turned off. This is a day for internal listening — a rare opportunity to unplug from noise and return to presence.
After the Session: Finding Your Feet
The session doesn’t end when the effects wear off. In fact, the real unfolding often begins afterward. This is where integration starts.
Immediately after the session:
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Keep the rest of the day clear of obligations
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Eat something warm, nourishing, and grounding
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Avoid overstimulation — screens, noise, crowds
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Rest, without trying to make meaning too quickly
In the days following:
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Journal or speak about the experience, even if it feels unclear
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Spend time moving slowly — walking, stretching, simply breathing
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Notice what shifts — in the body, in relationships, in internal dialogue
Most importantly: Avoid making major life decisions (e.g., quitting a job, ending a relationship, making large purchases) for at least two weeks. Psychedelic states can create temporary surges of clarity or urgency. Let insight settle before acting.
Integration Support
A scheduled integration session is part of every process through Walk With Hart. This conversation is not about analyzing or fixing, but about witnessing — helping the experience speak more than once, in more than one way.
Integration is not a destination. It’s a slow, relational unfolding. Space is held for that process with reverence and care.
Final Note
There is no perfect way to prepare. No checklist guarantees readiness. What matters most is the willingness to meet the unknown with presence and humility. To listen inward. To soften control.
That, in itself, is enough.