Equity and Ethics

View, meditation, action: A Tibetan framework to inform psychedelic-assisted therapy

This paper explores integrating Tibetan Buddhist contemplative tradition with psychedelic-assisted therapy (PAT), highlighting the absence of contemplative traditions in current psychedelic therapy discourse. By comparing phenomenological similarities between Tibetan Buddhist meditation and psychedelic experiences, the paper suggests that incorporating the Tibetan framework of view, meditation, and action may enhance the efficacy of PAT.

Authors

  • Simonds, C. H.

Published

Journal of Psychedelic Studies
meta Study

Abstract

Whether occasioned through careful, consistent meditative practice or through quicker means like the ritual ingestion of psilocybin or ayahuasca, global contemplative practices have established effective systems of implementing, directing, and integrating the very kinds of non-ordinary experiences central to psychedelic use. However, contemplative traditions are largely absent from the present discourse on psychedelic therapy. This paper addresses this gap and offers a novel analysis of psychedelic-assisted therapy through the lens of the Tibetan Buddhist contemplative tradition. It first establishes a baseline for comparing the non-ordinary experience occasioned by Tibetan Buddhist meditation and the psychedelic experience by referencing the phenomenological literature of both. It then articulates the Tibetan contemplative framework of view, meditation, action (Tib. lta sgom spyod gsum) as the way Tibetan Buddhism directs its non-ordinary meditative experience towards its desired ends and suggests how this framework may be applied to psychedelic-assisted therapy. Finally, this paper uses this Tibetan Buddhist lens of analysis to compare and assess two protocols for psychedelic-assisted therapy and to make recommendations for future clinical protocols. Given the phenomenological similarity of Tibetan Buddhist meditative experience and the psychedelic experience, this article suggests that a more intensive preparatory session where maladaptive conceptual narratives are worked through and beneficial ones are introduced, repeated dosing sessions, and a more directed psychedelic experience may increase the efficacy of psychedelic-assisted therapy. It thus argues that the insights of the Tibetan framework of view, meditation, action can improve future protocols and allow for psychedelic-assisted therapy to be of even greater benefit.

Available with Blossom Pro

Research Summary of 'View, meditation, action: A Tibetan framework to inform psychedelic-assisted therapy'

Introduction

Simonds situates the paper within the recent resurgence of clinical and research interest in psychedelics and the varied protocols that have emerged to study them, noting that most follow the preparation–dosage–integration structure but differ in how they prepare and integrate participants. He argues that contemplative traditions, which have long managed non-ordinary experiences through established frameworks, are under‑engaged in contemporary psychedelic therapy discourse. Drawing on this gap, the paper proposes to bring a specific Tibetan Buddhist framework into conversation with psychedelic-assisted therapy to explore how it might inform protocol design and therapeutic efficacy. The paper sets out three linked aims. First, it compares the phenomenology of non-ordinary experiences occasioned by Tibetan Buddhist meditation and by psychedelics, using recent phenomenological literature as a baseline. Second, it explicates the Tibetan contemplative framework of view, meditation, action (Tib. lta sgom spyod gsum) as a directing mechanism for meditative experience. Third, it applies that framework to evaluate and suggest modifications to existing psychedelic-assisted therapy protocols, concluding with recommendations for future clinical protocols and reflections on ethical considerations and further research directions.

Expert Research Summaries

Go Pro to access AI-powered section-by-section summaries, editorial takes, and the full research toolkit.

Full Text PDF

Full Paper PDF

Create a free account to open full-text PDFs.

Study Details

  • Study Type
    meta
  • Journal
  • Topic
  • APA Citation

    Simonds, C. H. (2023). View, meditation, action: A Tibetan framework to inform psychedelic-assisted therapy. Journal of Psychedelic Studies, 7(1), 58-68. https://doi.org/10.1556/2054.2023.00255

References (6)

Papers cited by this study that are also in Blossom

Classic hallucinogens and mystical experiences: phenomenology and neural correlates

Barrett, F. S., Griffiths, R. R. · Current Topics in Behavioral Neurosciences (2017)

Psilocybin can occasion mystical-type experiences having substantial and sustained personal meaning and spiritual significance

Griffiths, R. R., Richards, W. A., Mccann, U. et al. · Journal of Psychopharmacology (2006)

Being no one, being One: The role of ego-dissolution and connectedness in the therapeutic effects of psychedelic experience

Kałużna, A., Schlosser, M., Gulliksen Craste, E. et al. · Journal of Psychedelic Studies (2022)

35 cited
Combining Psychedelic and Mindfulness Interventions: Synergies to Inform Clinical Practice

Payne, J. E., Chambers, R., Liknaitzky, P. · ACS Pharmacology and Translational Science (2021)

55 cited

Your Personal Research Library

Go Pro to save papers, add notes, rate studies, and organize your research into custom shelves.