I speak both languages. I can give you a conversation you can’t find elsewhere.
Creativity isn't measured by what we produce. It's a state of being. It's the way we think, the way we process the world, the way we move through rooms differently than those around us. Sometimes that's a gift. Sometimes it can feel isolating in ways that are difficult to explain to anyone who doesn't experience it the same way.
You already have the talent. You already know the tools. You're already creating, possibly at a high level. This work isn’t about production and output.
Many creatives already use plant medicine. Some recreationally, some intentionally, some fall somewhere in between. The experiences are real. But beyond beautiful imagery and spiritual connection, something can slip away over time, fading back into the abstract.
Psychedelics act as powerful stakes in the ground that remind us where we’ve been. Visceral markers of who we were before, and what we’ve become since the experience. The ongoing work through integration and microdosing can keep us moving in a forward direction.
I work with creatives because it’s the world I know. I know the connection we feel to the things we make. I know the feeling of channeling something from somewhere we can’t articulate, and I know all the struggles that come with the creative process.
Fear, self-doubt, jealousy, perfectionism, over-working, comparison, fleeting elation or lack of clarity. These are common underlying conflicts a creative person knows all too well. Psychedelic experiences bring perspective into crystal clear focus, amplify emotional connectivity and turn fear into curiosity. All nutrients for a hungry creative mind.
To put it plainly, you don’t need plant medicine to make you more creative. Your creative process isn’t disordered, and psychedelics aren’t a cure. They both, however, are unique languages that once you learn in conjunction with one another, the conversation can be fully understood.