MDMA and Intentions

Geral T. Blanchard • Dec 02, 2021

Researchers have noted that there is little need to enter psychotherapy assisted MDMA treatment with highly specific goals and intentions.

Patients are encouraged to trust the medicine, their preliminary psychotherapy, and even more importantly, their own brain and body’s innate self-corrective wisdom. Simply having the intention to do this growth work, wherever it may lead, is enough; it sets your psyche in motion. Surrender to it.

Nothing will come up that doesn’t already reside in you. There will be few big surprises. Your inner healing intelligence will alert you to what you need to look at and what you need to address for healing. Not much advance effort is needed from you. Truly. All of Nature, you included, wants to return to balance and homeostasis. Allow the process to take you home.


A new experience with old traumas will develop. And if unpleasant memories unfold, it is important to breathe thru them, ride on the waves of your smooth and deep breath. You may want to greet a sad memory by saying something like, “Welcome teacher. What do you want to reveal to me. I’m open to it all.” It is unlikely that you will feel overwhelmed by terror or shame from the past.


There is no need to fight anything; that may be an old and unsuccessful way of trying to evict memories rather than integrating them. Instead you will work with the memories from a position of enhanced insight, compassion (for yourself and others), and agape love – a pure and divine form of love that seeks nothing in return.

Let go of worrying about if, or how, you are going to heal

Instead of trying to direct or harness your thoughts, trust the medicine will untangle knots and healing direction will become clear. Let go of worrying about if, or how, you are going to heal. If you tighten up and resist what emotions or memories are surfacing, the bodyworker may ask you if some muscle relaxing touch would help you. Perhaps one of the attendants will ask you to hum or groan as a way to move energy. A change in the background music can get things moving in a new direction.


Sometimes talking is calming. Sometimes talking leads to intellectualizing and slows the release of emotions. We try to limit our talking but will, from time to time, remind you of our caring presence and briefly respond to your inquiries. We trust the process, more than ourselves, will take you where you need to go.  

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Additional reading: A Dose of Hope by Dr. Dan Engle and Alex Young


Geral Blanchard, LPC, is a psychotherapist who is university trained in psychology and anthropology. Formerly of Wyoming and currently residing in Iowa, Geral travels the world in search of ancient secrets that can augment the art and science of healing. From Western neuroscience to Amazonian shamanism, he has developed an understanding of how to combine old and new healing strategies to optimize recovery, whether from psychological or physical maladies.


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