Ayahuasca has become one of the most talked-about plant medicines in the world, yet many people remain unsure about what an ayahuasca retreat is actually like. Stories range from profound healing and personal transformation to challenging emotional experiences and encounters that seem impossible to explain.
In a conversation on the Meta Mystics podcast, ayahuasca retreat founder Sam Believ shared his perspective after facilitating thousands of participants at his retreat center in Colombia. His insights provide a realistic look at what people can expect when approaching this powerful medicine.
Healing Comes First
One of the biggest misconceptions about ayahuasca is that it is primarily about visions, mystical experiences, or spiritual exploration.
According to Sam, healing should always come first.
While ayahuasca can produce extraordinary experiences, the primary goal is often much simpler: helping people address depression, anxiety, trauma, addiction, emotional pain, and unhealthy patterns that have been affecting their lives for years.
Many participants arrive seeking answers to specific problems, only to discover that the medicine focuses on something entirely different. In Sam’s experience, ayahuasca tends to reveal what a person needs rather than what they initially want.
This is why intentions are encouraged, but expectations are discouraged.
Every Experience Is Different
Unlike many other psychedelics, ayahuasca rarely produces the same experience twice.
One ceremony may be highly emotional, bringing buried memories and feelings to the surface. Another may be intensely physical, involving purging and bodily release. A different ceremony might involve vivid visions, spiritual insights, or a deep sense of connection.
Some participants report profound visual journeys, while others experience very little visually but still leave feeling transformed.
This unpredictability is part of what makes ayahuasca unique. There is no guaranteed script or sequence of events.
For this reason, experienced facilitators encourage participants to surrender to the process rather than trying to control it.
The Importance of Set and Setting
A recurring theme throughout the discussion was the importance of preparation and environment.
Sam believes many of the frightening stories associated with ayahuasca come from poor facilitation rather than the medicine itself.
A well-run retreat focuses heavily on creating a safe container. Participants spend time settling into the environment, meeting the group, learning about the process, and understanding how to navigate difficult moments before drinking the medicine.
The ceremony itself is supported by experienced facilitators, traditional music, and an experienced shaman who guides the process.
This sense of safety allows participants to let go more fully and engage with whatever arises.
Without proper support, even experienced psychedelic users can become overwhelmed.
Understanding Difficult Experiences
Many people worry about having a “bad trip.”
Sam prefers a different perspective.
A difficult experience is not necessarily a bad one.
Some of the most challenging ceremonies can also be the most healing. Confronting painful memories, fears, grief, or unresolved trauma may feel uncomfortable in the moment, but often leads to significant breakthroughs afterward.
The key difference lies in how a person responds.
Resisting the experience tends to increase suffering, while accepting and moving through it often transforms the challenge into something productive.
In this way, ayahuasca can resemble an intense form of emotional training, helping participants develop resilience and self-awareness.
Physical and Emotional Healing
While ayahuasca is often associated with mental health, Sam has also witnessed many participants report improvements in physical conditions.
People have arrived seeking help for depression and later noticed improvements in digestive issues, autoimmune symptoms, allergies, chronic pain, or other long-standing health concerns.
At the same time, he cautions against viewing ayahuasca as a miracle cure.
Rather than instantly fixing every problem, the medicine often opens a door. Real healing still requires effort, integration, and lifestyle changes after returning home.
The ceremony may begin the process, but the work continues afterward.
The Power of Community
An often-overlooked aspect of ayahuasca retreats is the group experience.
Participants arrive as strangers but frequently leave feeling deeply connected.
Through sharing circles, ceremonies, emotional vulnerability, and mutual support, people develop bonds that can feel surprisingly meaningful after only a few days together.
Many participants openly discuss personal experiences they may have never shared with friends, family members, or even therapists.
This sense of community can be healing in its own right.
In a world where loneliness and isolation are increasingly common, simply being seen and understood by others can have a profound impact.
Integration Is Where Real Change Happens
Perhaps the most important lesson is that the retreat is only the beginning.
Many people describe ayahuasca as feeling like years of therapy compressed into a short period of time. While this can create powerful breakthroughs, those insights must be integrated into daily life.
Returning home and immediately falling back into old habits often reduces the long-term benefits.
Instead, practices such as therapy, journaling, meditation, exercise, and conscious lifestyle changes help turn temporary insights into lasting transformation.
Ayahuasca may reveal what needs attention, but participants still need to do the work.
A Journey of Self-Discovery
For those considering an ayahuasca retreat, the experience can be difficult to fully understand beforehand.
It can be emotional, physical, spiritual, beautiful, uncomfortable, and deeply meaningful—all within the same ceremony.
What remains consistent is its potential to help people reconnect with themselves.
As Sam explains, the medicine rarely gives people exactly what they expect. Instead, it tends to provide what they need most at that moment in their journey.
And for many, that becomes the beginning of profound personal change.
Listen to the whole podcast episode here: https://open.spotify.com/episode/4x4CUCAntsdsw9nYyEkxoK