Monday, September 8th | 5:30 PM - 7:30 PM
Early Bird $20 through Sept. 6th
Full Price $35
Need-based Access Rate available
A three-part series that moves from understanding the science behind psychedelic healing, to exploring how these medicines reconnect us with nature and wonder, to discerning whether this path is right for your unique healing journey.
Check out this VIDEO INVITE FROM LINDSAY!
With Colorado's new psychedelic healing centers opening, you might be wondering: Could this help me? How do I know if I’m ready? What are the real risks and benefits?
In this session, you’ll be invited into a dynamic blend of embodied experience and practical education about psychedelics. Through guided meditation, gentle movement, and sound, you’ll explore altered states of awareness—without substances—as a way of touching into your own healing capacity. These practices will be interwoven with teaching and discussion, offering both direct experience and knowledge you can carry forward. Lindsay Branham will be joined by a special guest, meditation teacher Michael Collins.
We’ll explore:
Who benefits most from psychedelic therapy?
What should I consider if I am interested?
What key questions should I ask potential providers?
What are other alternative modalities that complement or substitute for psychedelic work?
Come with curiosity, and leave with clarity, confidence, and a felt sense of what it means to access healing from within.
Meet your Hosts
Lindsay Branham, MPhil, PhD, is an environmental psychologist exploring embodied and erotic ecology. She is the author of Heartwood: The Wisdom and Healing Kinship of Trees, coming in 2026. Lindsay teaches environmental psychology, ethics and ecological awareness for psychedelic care, and leads experiential retreats to explore entanglement with the living world. She is also an Emmy-nominated film director, and for two decades, led collaborative film-based interventions to address human rights and ecological crises. She is trained as a Buddhist eco-doula, is a certified psychedelic facilitator, and holds an MPhil and PhD in Psychology both from the University of Cambridge. She is also a columnist for The Aspen Times writing about environmental topics facing Pitkin County, Colorado.
Michael Collins is an Emmy-nominated filmmaker and Academy member committed to creating documentaries that galvanize change. He is a trained meditation and breathwork instructor working with a wide range of populations including veterans, business leaders, the LGBTQ+ community, and creative activists.