Your Ketamine session will take place in a private, comfortable room with a dedicated Ketamine therapist. The medicine is administered via an oral tablet which will dissolve under your tongue for about 10-15 minutes. The session typically lasts 90-120 minutes, and our therapist will be with you the whole time.
During the session:
You take the ketamine lozenge under supervision (dissolve in mouth 10-15min)
You remain sitting up in a quiet, supported setting with an eye mask
The focus is on tracking body sensations rather than analyzing thoughts
As the medicine takes effect, protective defenses may soften. You may notice:
Body sensations (tightness, shaking, pressure, heat)
Emotional waves
Urges to move, push, cry, or tremble
Periods of numbness or dissociation
Instead of distracting from these experiences, PSIP gently guides you to stay present with them — without trying to fix or escape them.
The therapist may:
Invite you to slow down and notice sensations
Track sensations
Support you in allowing incomplete survival responses to move through
There is often less talking than in traditional therapy. The work is experiential and somatic.
Your Ketamine session will take place in a private, comfortable room with a dedicated Ketamine therapist. The medicine is administered via an oral tablet which will dissolve under your tongue for about 10-15 minutes. The session typically lasts 90-120 minutes, and our therapist will be with you the whole time.
During the session:
You take the ketamine lozenge under supervision (dissolve in mouth 10-15min)
You remain sitting up in a quiet, supported setting with an eye mask
The focus is on tracking body sensations rather than analyzing thoughts
As the medicine takes effect, protective defenses may soften. You may notice:
Body sensations (tightness, shaking, pressure, heat)
Emotional waves
Urges to move, push, cry, or tremble
Periods of numbness or dissociation
Instead of distracting from these experiences, PSIP gently guides you to stay present with them — without trying to fix or escape them.
The therapist may:
Invite you to slow down and notice sensations
Track sensations
Support you in allowing incomplete survival responses to move through
There is often less talking than in traditional therapy. The work is experiential and somatic.