Trauma is an epidemic. But most mental health treatments focus on symptoms, not root causes. Our approach combines research-backed healing practices with an integration framework for lasting transformation.

The current approach to mental health and healing is incomplete and lacking:

  • Affluent individuals often cycle through luxury rehabs without true healing.

  • Psychedelic medicine, despite growing research, remains inaccessible in most settings.

  • Traditional mental health models under-serve those seeking deep, integrative healing.

  • Lack of integration: Most individuals seeking treatment or psychedelic therapies don't have a structured, ongoing integration practice to ensure lasting results.

Mycelia exists to close the gaps that have made sustainable healing unlikely if not impossible.


"Addiction is neither a choice nor a disease, but originates in a human being's desperate attempt to solve a problem: the problem of emotional pain, of overwhelming stress, of lost connection, of loss of control, of a deep discomfort with the self. ... Hence my mantra: 'The question is not why the addiction, but why the pain.'" 

— Dr. Gabor Maté

Our Approach

At the foundation of our work is trauma-informed, evidence-based clinical care designed to reach beyond symptoms and address root causes. We integrate modalities such as Internal Family Systems (IFS), EMDR, somatic experiencing, neurofeedback, and functional medicine to support deep nervous system regulation and lasting change. Rather than pathologizing, we meet each individual with precision, compassion, and personalization—creating a structured container where safety, stabilization, and true healing can occur. This is clinical rigor without disconnection—science in service of wholeness.

Research-Backed:
Internal Family Systems Therapy for PTSD: A Pilot Study (Hodgdon et al., 2022)
Somatic Experiencing for Posttraumatic Stress Disorder: A Randomized Controlled Outcome Study (Brom et al., 2017)
A Systematic Review of Somatic Experiencing for Trauma (Payne et al., 2015)

Trauma-Informed Clinical Care


Our work is grounded in the ancient wisdom of the Himalayan yogic tradition—a living system of practices designed to stabilize the mind, regulate the body, and awaken deeper awareness. Through daily sādhanā—including meditation, kriya, breathwork, and āsana—clients develop a direct relationship with their inner world. These time-tested disciplines are not adjunct—they are essential. They provide the structure that allows insight to become embodiment, and transformation to become sustainable.

Himalayan Yogic Approach


Within a legal and highly structured framework, we offer psychedelic-supported therapies as a catalyst for profound insight and emotional breakthrough. Modalities such as psilocybin, ketamine-assisted psychotherapy, and, in the near future, Ibogaine are held within a carefully designed arc: preparation, experience, and integration. These are not isolated events, but part of a larger healing journey. When combined with clinical care and daily practice, these experiences can open pathways that traditional approaches often cannot—while ensuring those openings are meaningfully integrated into lasting change.

Is this legal?

Yes. In November 2022, Colorado voters approved Proposition 122, allowing adults to access natural psychedic medicines in the treatement of a variety of health conditions. Psychadelic therapy, under the use of trained facilitators at authorized locations (like licensed healin centers), is entirely within the scope of the law. You can familiarze yourself with the regulations here.

Research-Backed:
Psilocybin-Assisted Therapy for Treatment-Resistant Depression (Carhart-Harris et al., 2016)

Psilocybin-Assisted Therapy for Major Depressive Disorder (Davis et al., 2021)

Altering Perceptions: Psychedelic Therapy (Eck, 2022)

Single-Dose Psilocybin for Treatment-Resistant Depression (Carhart-Harris et al., 2022)

Long-Term Effects of Psychedelic Drugs: A Systematic Review (Aday et al., 2020)

Psychedelic-Supported Therapies


The 12-Step model offers a time-tested path of spiritual recovery grounded in honesty, accountability, and service. At Mycelia, we integrate these principles not as dogma, but as a living framework for connection—to self, to others, and to something greater. Beyond abstinence, this model emphasizes community, humility, and the act of helping others as a means of sustaining one’s own healing. It creates a ripple effect—where recovery extends beyond the individual into the collective.

The 12-Step Model