Have you lost your sense of connection to yourself, the world, and what is good in your life?

Or, do you feel that therapy and medication have been insufficient to help you heal and reconnect? The combination of medicine (ketamine), mindfulness, and therapy can help you get unstuck, find relief and freedom, and change how you view yourself and the world.

Who is it for?

As a supplement to regular therapy, KAP works well for issues that come with a certain amount of internal rigidity and repetitiveness including rumination, phobias, flashbacks, repetitive behavior and thought patterns, and more. Ketamine helps to create new neural pathways and has been shown to be effective, in some cases after a few sessions, for major depression, postpartum depression, suicidality, anxiety, PTSD, and other mental health concerns. Ketamine helps redevelop neural pathways in your brain which are impacted by mental health conditions.

History

Since the early 2000s, ketamine has been used at low doses to treat depression, anxiety, obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), trauma-related conditions such as PTSD, chronic pain, addiction and more. It was first synthesized in 1962, and was introduced as an anesthetic for use on the battlefield by field medics. 

Psychedelics have been used by indigenous communities for centuries to access “the untapped brain” and deeper layers of our consciousness. Researchers, healthcare providers, and many others have found that KAP does what traditional therapy can do, but in a fraction of the time. It can also help people who don’t respond as well to traditional methods.

Collected reading