Psilocybin mushrooms can spark intense emotional, visual, and physical shifts that unfold over several hours. While the experience can offer insight and relief, it may also bring discomfort or confusion. Understanding what to expect helps reduce risk and support lasting transformation.
- Shrooms alter perception and emotion: The experience often includes vivid visuals, emotional intensity, time distortion, and shifts in awareness. People may feel joy, fear, awe, or even revisit past trauma.
- The journey lasts 4 to 6 hours: Effects begin within the first hour and unfold in waves, typically peaking by hour two or three and tapering off gradually after.
- The body and mind feel different afterward: Many report feeling lighter, calmer, or emotionally clearer, though some experience fatigue, emotional flatness, or confusion that lasts days.
- Unpleasant experiences are possible but manageable: Panic, derealization, or fear can occur, especially without preparation. These effects usually pass but may linger if not integrated properly.
- Preparation and environment shape the outcome: A calm mindset, a trusted guide, and a safe space are critical to reduce the likelihood of a distressing trip.
Ready to explore the full experience? Let’s walk through it together.
What Are Psilocybin Mushrooms?
Psilocybin mushrooms, often called shrooms, are a type of fungi that contain the compound psilocybin. When consumed, psilocybin converts into psilocin in the body, which interacts with serotonin receptors in the brain. This temporarily shifts how we process thoughts, emotions, and sensory input. Many describe it as stepping outside of the usual patterns that shape their inner world.
We have witnessed how this shift creates space for healing, reflection, and insight. When approached with care and intention, psilocybin can support emotional breakthroughs that traditional methods often cannot reach.
How Psilocybin Affects the Brain
Psilocin primarily works on the brain’s serotonin system. It softens the activity of the Default Mode Network, the part of the brain linked to ego, self-referencing thoughts, and rumination. By loosening this network, many find it easier to explore thoughts and memories without judgment. Some feel lighter. Others feel as though they have connected to something far greater than themselves. All of it stems from changes in the brain’s connectivity during the experience.

Methods of Consuming Psilocybin
There are several ways to consume psilocybin, each with different timing and effects. Choosing the right method depends on your intention, body sensitivity, and previous experience.
Common methods include:
- Dried mushrooms: The most traditional form. Chewed slowly or swallowed, often paired with fruit juice or a small snack to ease the taste.
- Psilocybin tea: Brewing mushrooms into a tea can reduce nausea and may lead to a smoother onset. The warmth can also add a sense of comfort.
- Chocolate or gummies: Infused edibles are ideal for those who are sensitive to taste. They offer consistent dosing and are easy to portion.
- Capsules: Ground mushrooms in capsule form are often used for microdosing or when a more clinical approach is preferred.
Each method carries its own rhythm. We always encourage guests to listen closely to what feels safe, familiar, and aligned with their emotional state.

How Mushrooms Feel Mentally: The Psychedelic Experience
The mental and emotional experience of psilocybin is often what draws people in. This is where the transformation begins. Under the surface of the visuals and sensory shifts, psilocybin touches the most intimate parts of how we relate to ourselves and the world.
As the medicine begins to take effect, the first noticeable shift is often in perception. The world starts to move differently. Colors may become brighter. Patterns can ripple across the walls or dance behind closed eyes. These changes are not imagined. They are part of how the brain begins to rewire its ordinary connections.
Time may slow down. For some, an hour feels like a full day. For others, it speeds up or loops in strange and beautiful ways. What is consistent is the sense that time no longer follows a familiar structure.
Some describe the sensation of hearing colors or tasting light. This blending of the senses is known as synesthesia. While not everyone experiences it, it can feel magical, strange, and completely absorbing.
Emotional States During the Experience
Emotionally, the range is wide. The mind softens. The heart opens. Tears may come without warning. Laughter can erupt from nowhere. In our retreats, we have seen people reconnect with a lost part of themselves through one powerful wave of emotion. We have also seen those same individuals reach profound stillness just moments later.
At the heart of many experiences is a temporary dissolution of the ego. The boundaries that hold together a person’s sense of identity begin to loosen. This is not always comfortable. But when held in a safe space, it can offer release from lifelong patterns of fear, shame, or control.
Key Mental and Emotional Effects
- Visual shifts: Geometric patterns, color saturation, shimmering movement in everyday objects
- Synesthesia: Overlapping senses, such as “hearing” visuals or “feeling” music
- Time distortion: Minutes may feel like hours or collapse entirely
- Emotional sensitivity: Sudden joy, crying spells, or reflective silence
- Childlike wonder: Renewed awe toward nature, sound, or simple beauty
- Ego dissolution: A sense of merging with surroundings or becoming less separate
- Spiritual insight: A feeling of connection to something greater than oneself
- Emotional catharsis: Processing long-held grief, trauma, or forgotten memories
In the right setting, with preparation and care, these mental shifts become a powerful invitation. They ask us to release what we no longer need and invite in something new. For many, this is where change begins
How Mushrooms Feel Physically
While the mind opens in new directions, the body often follows its own rhythm. Psilocybin does not just shift perception. It brings a very real and sometimes surprising physical component. For some, this part of the experience is grounding. For others, it can be challenging to move through.
Many people feel physical sensations during the early phase of the journey. These may be subtle or overwhelming depending on the dose, the body’s sensitivity, and the emotional state going in. The body becomes a container for whatever is surfacing. At times it holds energy that has waited years to be felt.
Common Physical Sensations During a Trip
- Nausea: Often present in the first hour, especially with higher doses or on an empty stomach
- Tingling or vibrating energy: Felt in the hands, feet, spine, or chest
- Heaviness or pressure: A sense of being pulled into the ground or held in place
- Restlessness or surging energy: A need to move, stretch, or shake out intensity
- Weightlessness or floating: A loss of physical boundaries, sometimes felt as dissolving into space
- Disconnection from the body: Feeling like an observer rather than fully inside the body
These sensations are temporary. Most pass as the journey deepens and the emotional work takes over. Still, they can feel intense when paired with uncertainty or fear. In our work, we focus on helping guests stay present with the body rather than escaping it. That often means using breath, movement, or simply being held in silence.
What Happens After the Trip Ends?
When the journey winds down, something new begins. The immediate effects of psilocybin may fade, but the body and mind continue to process long after the visuals stop. This window is just as important as the trip itself.
Many describe an afterglow in the hours or even days that follow. Thoughts feel clearer. The heart feels open. There can be a deep sense of peace, as if something heavy has finally been set down. Gratitude often rises without effort. For some, this moment of stillness is more meaningful than anything seen or felt during the peak.
What You Might Feel After a Journey
- Clarity and emotional relief: A sense of lightness or being more connected to yourself and others
- Fatigue and brain fog: The body may feel tired, and the mind slower than usual
- Emotional openness: A sense of softness that can be beautiful but also leave you feeling raw
- Numbness or emotional flatness: A temporary lack of feeling that can be unsettling
- Derealization: The world may feel distant or unreal, like watching life through a glass wall
- Depersonalization: A sense of disconnection from identity, as if something familiar is missing
When Integration Begins
Not every after-effect is welcome. We sometimes hear things like, “I feel like I lost something in my mind,” or, “It’s been three days and everything feels pointless. Will I ever enjoy life again?” These experiences are more common than people realize. They are not signs of damage. They are signs that something meaningful has shifted and the system is recalibrating.
Derealization, when it happens, may last a few hours or stretch into days. In rare cases, especially after a difficult or traumatic trip, it may linger longer. This is when integration becomes essential. Journaling, rest, bodywork, and professional support can help the mind settle and reorient itself.
Feeling emotionally numb is another part of this spectrum. It can last for a few days as the nervous system returns to balance. During this time, we recommend gentle routines, nourishing meals, and time in nature. Often the feelings return gradually, and with them, a deeper understanding of what has shifted.
The end of the trip is not the end of the process. It is the beginning of how we live with what we saw, felt, and remembered. When given the right support, the aftereffects of a psilocybin experience can lead to real clarity and a renewed sense of meaning.
What Does a Bad Trip Feel Like?
No one seeks out a hard experience. But the truth is, not every journey is gentle. A challenging trip does not mean something went wrong. It often means something long-buried has surfaced, asking to be seen.
Mentally, a difficult trip can feel like losing grip. Thoughts may loop. Panic can rise quickly. Some feel trapped in their own mind or overwhelmed by emotion they cannot name. Confusion becomes disorienting. We have heard people say they feared they were going insane. In those moments, reassurance and grounding are everything.
Physically, the body may freeze or reject the intensity. Nausea is common. Some feel waves of heat or restlessness they cannot sit with. Others feel pinned in place, as if the body has stopped listening. This is not failure. It is the body’s way of releasing pressure it may have carried for years.
What Can Trigger a Bad Trip
- Overexposure to unfamiliar environments: Loud sounds, bright lights, or crowded spaces
- Internal tension: Repressed grief, fear, or trauma rising to the surface
- Unprepared mindset: Entering the space with resistance, fear, or confusion
- Lack of support: Being alone or with people who are not emotionally safe
These experiences can be intense. Some guests have asked, “Can shrooms cause PTSD?” The medicine itself does not cause trauma. But it can unearth memories or sensations that were stored long ago. Without the right setting or support, that release can feel overwhelming.
We have also heard, “Will I ever feel like myself again?” Yes. With time, grounding, and integration, people return. And more often than not, they return with greater self-awareness and strength. The self they feared they lost was often never the one they needed to keep.
At its worst, a hard trip can feel like too much. But when guided with care, even the darkest parts of the experience can become the beginning of something lasting and clear.
Factors That Influence the Experience
Every psilocybin journey is unique. That is part of what makes this work so powerful. At the same time, there are consistent patterns that shape how the experience unfolds. Some of these are physical. Others are emotional or relational. All of them matter.
How someone feels going in, what they carry with them, who is holding space, and how much medicine is used all come together to form the experience. This is why preparation is not optional. It is the foundation.
Key Factors That Shape a Psilocybin Experience
- Dosage: A microdose offers subtle shifts in mood or focus. A moderate dose brings gentle visuals and emotional opening. A heroic dose, usually five grams or more, can lead to ego dissolution and full visionary immersion. Each level serves a different purpose and should be chosen with intention.
- Set and setting: This refers to your emotional state and the environment around you. Fear, resistance, or chaos in the space can amplify discomfort. Calm, safe surroundings with clear intention support a much smoother experience.
- Who you’re with: Tripping alone can be unpredictable. Having a trained, sober guide changes everything. We often say the person holding the container matters as much as the medicine itself. Safety and trust are non-negotiable.
- Mental health history and medications: If someone has a history of psychosis, bipolar disorder, or is taking SSRIs or benzodiazepines, extra caution is needed. These factors affect how the medicine works and how the experience may unfold. We never recommend proceeding without professional guidance in these cases.
How to Reduce the Risk of a Bad Trip
A challenging journey can happen to anyone, but it is not random. The way we prepare has everything to do with how the experience unfolds. Over the years, we have seen how simple choices before the ceremony can create more safety, more ease, and more openness to what comes through.
Preparation is not about avoiding discomfort. It is about having the tools and support in place to meet it with clarity. The body and mind are more willing to explore when they feel held.
Steps That Lower the Risk of a Difficult Experience
- Start with a low dose: For most people, one to two grams is enough to feel the medicine without being overwhelmed. There is no need to rush into higher doses. Let the experience teach you before going deeper.
- Choose a safe, calm location: The setting should feel nourishing. Natural light, soft blankets, and a space that holds quiet all help the nervous system stay relaxed.
- Be with someone you trust: A guide or sober sitter can anchor the experience. Someone calm and experienced can help ground you if fear or confusion arises.
- Avoid overstimulation: Music or films in unknown languages can trigger disconnection. Stick to familiar, soothing inputs or silence. Let your awareness lead rather than trying to entertain it.
- Eat lightly and hydrate: A light, clean meal before the journey helps avoid nausea. Hydration supports the body in moving through intensity without added discomfort.
- Set intentions: Ask yourself what you are ready to see, feel, or understand. Clear, gentle intentions help frame the journey without forcing outcomes.
- Have a plan for grounding: This can include music, breathwork, touchstones, or even a blanket that brings comfort. In rare cases, a rescue medication like Xanax may be appropriate, but only under medical supervision.
We never promise that a trip will be easy. But we do believe it can be safe, even when it is intense. The more we respect the preparation, the more likely we are to come out the other side with something lasting.
Long-Term Mental Health Effects—Good and Bad
Psilocybin does not just create short-term insight. For many, it changes the way they relate to themselves and the world long after the journey ends. We have seen transformations that last for years. We have also seen confusion, doubt, and emotional disorientation when the process is not fully supported.
This medicine is not a shortcut. It is a powerful opening. The mind becomes more flexible. The heart becomes more available. But that openness needs structure. Without it, some people can feel lost in the weeks that follow.
Potential Long-Term Benefits
- Reduced depression and anxiety: Many report lasting relief from chronic sadness, worry, or mental heaviness. Some describe it as lifting a fog they did not know they were in.
- Increased mindfulness and neuroplasticity: The brain forms new patterns. People become more present, more curious, and more responsive to life.
- Breakthroughs in trauma healing: Long-held emotional wounds often begin to soften. Some people access memories or truths they were never able to reach before.

Potential Long-Term Risks
- Triggering underlying psychiatric conditions: Those with a history of psychosis, bipolar disorder, or schizophrenia are at higher risk. This work is not recommended without deep professional support in these cases.
- Extended depersonalization: A lingering sense of disconnect from the self or the world. This can be temporary but may feel frightening while it lasts.
- Emotional regression: If the experience brings up more than someone can process, they may retreat emotionally or feel stuck. Without proper integration, the opening can turn inward in ways that delay healing.
We believe in the power of this work. We also believe in being honest about its depth. When taken seriously, psilocybin can support lasting change. But like anything real, it asks something in return. Respect. Preparation. Integration. With those in place, the risk is lowered and the path forward becomes much clearer.
Is This Experience Right for You?
Psilocybin is not for everyone. There are times when it is simply not the right tool. In our work, we never push the medicine. We listen closely to what someone needs, and just as often, that means guiding them toward other resources.
If there is a history of psychosis or schizophrenia, we do not recommend working with psilocybin. The same applies to anyone currently taking high doses of SSRIs or benzodiazepines without medical guidance. These medications can dull the effects of the medicine or create unpredictable responses.
At the same time, this work can offer immense value for those who feel emotionally blocked, spiritually disconnected, or ready for meaningful change. The most important ingredient is willingness. Not just to take the medicine, but to sit with what it reveals.
What Shrooms Feel Like Is Personal
There is no single way to describe what shrooms feel like. For some, it is like floating. For others, it is like falling through themselves and landing somewhere honest. One person may feel they lost their identity. Another may feel they found it for the first time.
The truth is, this work mirrors who we are. Set and setting shape everything. The more we trust the process and prepare with care, the more likely we are to come out the other side with something real. The experience is not about chasing light or avoiding shadow. It is about being with what is. And in that space, so much becomes possible.
If you’re wondering whether this path is aligned with where you are in life, we’re here to help. Reach out to our team to explore whether this work fits into your healing journey. There’s no pressure. Just a conversation rooted in care, clarity, and honest guidance.