Group Ketamine Therapy
Psychedelic Healing has Always Happened in Community
Group Ketamine Therapy G-KAP
Group Ketamine-Assisted Psychotherapy (KAP) combines the therapeutic benefits of ketamine with the power of shared healing in a supportive group setting. Participants receive ketamine under appropriate medical supervision and engage in a carefully structured therapeutic process that includes preparation, the medicine experience, and integration. During dosing sessions, individuals typically rest comfortably in reclining chairs, wear eye masks and headphones, and focus inward while therapists provide a safe and supportive environment. Although the journey itself is deeply personal, being surrounded by others engaged in similar healing work often creates a profound sense of connection, belonging, and reduced isolation.
The group format offers unique advantages beyond the medicine experience itself. Participants often discover that hearing others share their struggles, insights, and breakthroughs helps normalize their own experiences and fosters compassion for themselves and others. Integration discussions provide an opportunity to transform insights into meaningful life changes, strengthening new perspectives, behaviors, and relationships. Group KAP can be particularly beneficial for individuals struggling with depression, trauma, anxiety, grief, or patterns of disconnection, as it combines ketamine's ability to promote neuroplasticity with the healing power of authentic human connection and community.
Connect with others on a similar journey.
Explore insights and meaning.
Develop integration strategies.
Build a supportive network.
Get Notified When A Spot Opens Up
Human beings have always healed in community. Long before modern psychotherapy, people gathered in circles—around fires, in temples, in nature—to share stories, process grief, mark transitions, and make meaning of intense experiences. These communal practices weren’t just cultural rituals; they were essential to emotional regulation, identity formation, and resilience. Healing was never meant to happen in isolation—it happened through witnessing, being witnessed, and belonging.
Today, modern group therapy and psychotherapy continue this lineage in a structured, ethical, and evidence-informed way. In counselor-facilitated group therapy, individuals come together to explore their inner worlds while being supported by trained professionals who help maintain safety, boundaries, and depth. This approach is especially powerful for those integrating profound experiences, where insight alone is not enough—connection is what allows change to take root.
This is where ketamine integration circles play a vital role. As ketamine therapy and other psychedelic-assisted approaches grow in popularity, more people are seeking grounded, relational spaces to process what they’ve experienced. Integration is not just about understanding—it’s about embodying insights in real life. Harm reduction frameworks recognize that individuals will have these experiences, and emphasize the importance of safe, supportive environments to reduce risk and improve outcomes.
In counselor-facilitated psychedelic integration circles, participants engage in intentional group therapy that blends ancient communal healing with modern clinical wisdom. These spaces support emotional processing, meaning-making, and behavioral change, helping individuals translate altered-state insights into lasting transformation. Whether through ketamine integration circles, broader psychedelic integration circles, or traditional group psychotherapy, the core truth remains the same: healing deepens when it happens together.