Mindful U at Naropa University
Thoughts and Instruction on Mindfulness in Higher Education
We found 3 episodes of Mindful U at Naropa University with the tag “psychedelics”.
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95. Valeria McCarroll, PhD: Somadelics, Pursuing Life with Psychedelic Support & Intentional Integration
February 27th, 2023 | 49 mins 5 secs
buddhist studies, integration, meditation, naropa, naropa university, phenomena, psychedelic assisted therapy, psychedelic medicine, psychedelics, somatic psychology, therapy, transpersonal psychology, trauma healing
Valeria McCarroll, PhD, joins us to discuss Somadelics, Pursuing Life with Psychedelic Support & Intentional Integration in this thought-provoking episode. Also discussed is being in 'right relationship' with the medicine, trauma responses, honoring the medicine's lineage, and transformational justice. After the episode, find more on ValeriaMcCarroll.com and Somadelics.com.
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87. Spring Washam: Ayahuasca's Accelerated Earth School
August 1st, 2022 | 54 mins 27 secs
entheogenic, pachamama, plant healing, plant medicine, psychedelics
Spring Washam "clocks in" at a job many of us here at Naropa day-dream about: Hosting entheogenic plant ceremonies at a retreat space in Costa Rica. This episode is a colorful glimpse into her world of combining meditation, detoxifying nutrition, integrative practices, and sacred plant medicine in what she calls "accelerated earth school".
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83.Travis Cox: Ecopsychology and Psychedelics
February 16th, 2022 | 58 mins 27 secs
ecopsychology, environmentalism, green living, psychedelic therapy, psychedelics, social change, sustainability, trauma healing
Ecopsychology is a field whose goal is to bridge our cultures' long-standing historical gulf between the psychological and the ecological to see the needs of the planet and the person as a continuum. Transpersonal ecopsychology is the evolving exploration expression and embodied practice of the inter-dependence of humans in the more than human world, which tends towards to the health balance and optimal well-being of all. A change in our internal landscapes might change our relationships with the land in a way that includes extending social ethics to the land and an examination of our loyalties, affections, and convictions.