Ketamine-Assisted Psychotherapy

Individual Sessions

When traditional therapy isn’t enough—you’re ready for more

See yourself clearly again—move past emotional barriers

Trauma can leave you feeling disconnected from yourself, your emotions, and even your sense of purpose. It can feel as if you're watching your life unfold from the outside rather than fully experiencing it.

With Ketamine-Assisted Psychotherapy (KAP), you have the opportunity to quiet the mental noise, lower your defenses, and access a deeper sense of clarity. Unlike traditional therapy, where emotional barriers may keep you from fully engaging, KAP creates a state of openness. Overall, it allows you to explore your inner world without fear or resistance.

Rather than just easing symptoms, KAP offers a shift in perspective. This helps you step outside of limiting thought patterns and see your experiences in a new way. Many people find relief from long-standing trauma responses, gaining insight into their emotions and relationships with greater clarity and self-compassion. Instead of feeling trapped in survival mode, KAP allows you to move toward a more grounded, peaceful, and connected way of being.

Ketamine Assisted Psychotherapy can help you with:

  • Depression

  • Anxiety

  • PTSD (Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder

  • OCD (Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder)

  • Bipolar Disorder

  • Chronic Pain

  • Relationship Issues

  • Gaining a deeper understanding

Couples Sessions

How Ketamine Therapy Helps Relationships

Ketamine works differently than traditional antidepressants. Rather than building up over weeks, it can produce changes within hours by promoting neuroplasticity, the brain's ability to form new connections and patterns. Researchers describe a window of several days after treatment when the brain may be more receptive to building different habits and responses.

You can read more about the ketamine science and how it differs from conventional medications.

For couples, that window matters. Much of relationship conflict runs on autopilot: the same triggers, the same defensive reactions, the same withdrawal. When one partner's brain is more flexible, those automatic patterns become easier to interrupt during integration therapy. Less defensive reactivity means more space to actually hear your partner. The withdrawal, irritability, and emotional numbness that strain relationships often ease as individual symptoms improve.

How this plays out specifically in relationships hasn't been tested in clinical trials, but the reasoning is sound. The individual evidence behind it is strong.

What the Couples-Specific Research Shows

No large randomized trials exist for ketamine-assisted couples therapy. The research is meaningful but early.

In one small study, 18 couples received low-dose ketamine as part of group therapy using a relational dose (50–125 mg sublingual). They reported improved satisfaction, more empathy, and less defensiveness, with effects holding at roughly six months. Without a control group, we can't separate ketamine's contribution from the therapy itself.

clinical framework by Khalifian and colleagues proposes sequential dosing for a first session when both partners participate. That structure aligns with how most couples can safely approach this, whether in-clinic or at home.

The individual evidence is much more established. Ketamine has strong clinical trial support for treatment-resistant depression, anxiety, and PTSD. When those symptoms improve, the relational strain they cause typically eases too.

Radical Change

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Humble Help

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Healing

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Radical Change · Humble Help · Healing ·

WHAT SETS US APART

Integrity, creativity, and empathy shape the way we work. These aren't just words—they’re the foundation of everything we build. We believe in doing great work, building real relationships, and making it easy for you to get the results you’re looking for.