A 5-day immersive program (Wednesday to Sunday) designed for beginners interested in becoming facilitators or deepening their personal healing. It combines retreat-style experiences with practical training, including:
4 Plant medicine night sessions
3 Bufo Alvarius sessions
1 Wachuma session
3 Kambó sessions
Supervised opportunities to practice facilitation
Focus on psychotherapeutic integration, facilitation skills, and spiritual/shamanic teachings
NEW: Daily Primordial Movement workshop with Dai Ruibal to awaken embodied presence and release somatic blockages
Throughout the entire training, the personal inner evolution of the facilitator is considered a central pillar of the learning journey. Facilitating others authentically requires first engaging deeply with one’s own emotional landscapes, personal history, and spiritual awakening. This cycle is designed to guide each participant into an embodied experience of self-transformation, serving both their personal growth and their future role as conscious space holders.
Transcendent Psychology and the Conscious School approach form the foundation of this inner work, offering a structured yet expansive framework for exploring the self, understanding internal dynamics, and cultivating the presence, clarity, and integrity essential for holding space for others.
This training module introduces key concepts of integration and the embodied presence of the facilitator.
Supports the facilitator’s own inner evolution as a foundation for authentic leadership and conscious guidance.
Explores how integral medicine, psychology, mysticism, and shamanism intersect.
Focuses on therapeutic presence and how to engage participants fully in the here and now.
Each morning begins with a Primordial Movement session, a body-based practice rooted in ancient movement patterns, breath, and emotional expression. These sessions are designed to:
Activate the body’s natural intelligence and emotional memory
Deepen the connection between movement and awareness
Support trauma-informed somatic release and nervous system regulation
Prepare participants for medicine work and integration by grounding them in the present moment
This practice enhances the embodied aspects of facilitation and allows for the spontaneous emergence of unresolved patterns, which can be explored and transformed within the group or integration process.
Not at all. While this module offers essential foundations for those interested in facilitation or therapeutic work, it is equally designed for individuals on a deep personal journey—those seeking to better understand themselves, process past experiences, or explore the intersection between psychology and spirituality.
Whether your path leads toward guiding others or simply toward a more integrated version of yourself, this training invites you to step into a transformative space of self-inquiry, emotional depth, and embodied presence. It’s not about who you’ll become later—it’s about who you are ready to meet now.
This module is not a retreat with medicine sessions, but rather a training module focused on integration. It draws from real-life experiences with entheogens, but no substances are consumed during the module. Instead, we explore how to work with these experiences therapeutically and spiritually, through personal reflection, group processes, and facilitator tools.
Not necessarily. Prior experience can be helpful, but a deep curiosity and openness to learning are the main prerequisites. This module is also suitable for people who are supporting others (friends, clients, partners) in their entheogenic processes and want a solid foundation in therapeutic integration.
Integration refers to the process of making sense of expanded states of consciousness, such as those brought on by psychedelics, meditation, or peak experiences. It is about translating insight into meaningful change—emotionally, psychologically, and spiritually. We work with a combination of psychological models and ancestral wisdom traditions.
No. The module is non-dogmatic and draws from a variety of sources, including transpersonal psychology, shamanism, mysticism, and contemplative traditions, but it does not require adherence to any belief. The emphasis is on personal exploration and embodiment, rather than ideology.
Yes—but not in a clinical or diagnostic sense. The experience is therapeutic in nature: we work with inner parts, emotional patterns, trauma dynamics, and somatic awareness. It is both a space for self-exploration and a practice ground for those learning to accompany others.
This module is unique because it bridges inner exploration with facilitator training. It’s not just about healing yourself—it’s about learning how to hold space for others, with integrity, presence, and sensitivity to both psychological and spiritual dimensions.
Rather than promoting a single model, we offer an integrative approach, drawing from:
Humanistic and transpersonal psychology
Trauma-informed care
Somatic practices
Shamanic and mystical frameworks
This allows you to develop your own style of presence and choose the tools that resonate most with your path.
Yes. Much of the work is done in group dynamics, where you will observe, practice, and participate in group processes. This is essential for learning how to read the field, understand emotional resonance, and support collective transformation.
No. This is one part of a larger training journey. While you will gain valuable insights and tools, facilitation is a path that requires ongoing practice, supervision, and inner work. This module lays the foundation—not the final step.
If you feel a genuine pull toward self-discovery, are open to exploring deep emotional and spiritual themes, and feel called to eventually accompany others on their healing path, this is a good place to begin. You don’t need to have all the answers—just the willingness to show up with presence and honesty.
The inner evolution of the facilitator refers to the ongoing personal and spiritual development that allows someone to hold space with authenticity, humility, and presence. Rather than learning techniques alone, this training emphasizes working deeply on your own emotional wounds, behavioral patterns, and existential questions. We believe that only by meeting yourself fully can you truly accompany others on their path.
Transcendent Psychology is a core pillar of the training. It bridges modern psychological insight with spiritual and mystical experience, helping participants understand the full spectrum of human consciousness—from trauma and ego structures to expanded states of awareness. It offers practical tools for self-inquiry, inner healing, and integration, all grounded in a non-pathologizing, evolution-oriented framework.
The Conscious School is an approach that blends mystical traditions, spiritual presence, and embodied awareness with deep psychological work. It focuses not only on understanding emotions and behavior but on becoming radically conscious of the mechanisms of the mind and the illusions of the ego. It emphasizes silence, observation, and inner stillness as essential tools for awakening and integration. Unlike traditional therapy, it encourages a direct experiential understanding of the self in its deeper, more universal dimensions.
Because facilitation is not just a role—it is a state of being. A facilitator who has not done their own inner work risks unconsciously projecting, bypassing, or dominating the process of others. This training invites you to become a clearer, more grounded, and more compassionate human being before guiding others. The personal process is not separate from the training; it is the training.
Dr. Fara is a medical doctor with extensive training in holistic and integrative medicine, and she plays a vital role in this module. She leads the Integral Health workshops, bringing a grounded, multidisciplinary approach that bridges Western medicine, ancestral knowledge, somatic healing, nutrition, and energetic awareness. Her presence in the training is essential for those who wish to understand the biological, emotional, and spiritual dimensions of healing. Her guidance supports participants not only in caring for others but also in deepening their own self-awareness and embodiment of health as future facilitators.