Ayahuasca Podcast
Explore Transformative Experiences

and ancestral Plant Medicine

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Founder & Host

Sam Believ

Sam had a life-changing experience with Ayahuasca with the medicine taking away his depression and helping him find his purpose. Now Sam is on a mission to spread the word about Ayahuasca with AyahuascaPodcast.com as well as provide affordable and accessible Ayahuasca experience at his retreat – LaWayra.

LaWayra has become the most reviewed Ayahuasca retreat in South America in 3 years of its existence and has changed lives of 1000s of people.

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Ayahuasca has gone from an obscure Amazonian tradition to one of the most discussed healing modalities in the world. Athletes, entrepreneurs, veterans, therapists, and everyday people are increasingly exploring this ancient plant medicine in search of healing, purpose, and connection.

In a conversation with podcast host Evan McDermod, Sam Believ, founder of LaWayra Ayahuasca Retreat in Colombia, shared his journey from offshore engineer to retreat founder and offered his perspective on why ayahuasca is becoming more relevant than ever.

For Sam, the growing popularity of ayahuasca is not a trend. It is a response to a deeper crisis affecting modern society.

When Success Doesn’t Bring Happiness

Before discovering ayahuasca, Sam’s life looked successful from the outside.

He worked in the offshore oil and gas industry, earned a high income, traveled, and had many of the things people are taught to pursue. Yet despite achieving these goals, he found himself increasingly dissatisfied.

The happiness he expected never arrived.

Eventually, he left his career behind and began traveling through South America. During that journey, he found himself repeatedly encountering references to ayahuasca. Friends mentioned it, podcasts discussed it, and stories about it seemed to appear everywhere.

What initially felt like coincidence eventually became impossible to ignore.

The Experience That Changed Everything

Sam’s first ayahuasca ceremony was not what he expected.

He anticipated an unusual experience and perhaps some interesting visions. Instead, something shifted at a much deeper level.

The biggest change was not what he saw during the ceremony but what happened afterward.

He found himself doubting himself less. His mindset shifted from asking “if” something would happen to believing “when” it would happen.

That subtle change in confidence gradually altered the direction of his entire life.

Looking back, he describes it as a one-degree shift in trajectory that eventually led to a completely different destination.

Building a Retreat Through Synchronicity

One of the most interesting aspects of Sam’s story is that he never consciously decided to start an ayahuasca retreat.

Instead, opportunities appeared one after another.

A property became available. Connections were made. New people entered his life. Each step seemed to lead naturally to the next.

Today, LaWayra has become one of the highest-rated ayahuasca retreats in South America, serving hundreds of participants each year.

Yet Sam still views the entire journey as a combination of hard work and synchronicity.

The opportunities appeared, but action was still required.

Why Connection Comes First

The philosophy at LaWayra is summarized in three words:

Connect. Heal. Grow.

According to Sam, healing begins with connection.

People reconnect with themselves, with nature, with other people, and for many, with a deeper spiritual dimension of life.

Only after that connection is restored can deeper healing begin.

In his view, much of modern suffering stems from disconnection.

People are disconnected from their emotions, from meaningful community, from nature, and often from their own sense of purpose.

Ayahuasca offers a powerful opportunity to bridge those gaps.

The Epidemic of Disconnection

Throughout the conversation, Sam returned repeatedly to the idea that modern society suffers from a profound disconnect.

Despite technological advancement, many people feel isolated, anxious, depressed, and unfulfilled.

Consumer culture constantly promises that happiness is just one purchase away.

A new car.

A bigger house.

A promotion.

A vacation.

Yet for many, satisfaction remains temporary.

The underlying discomfort persists.

Ayahuasca often brings people face-to-face with that reality and encourages them to look inward rather than outward for answers.

Ancient Medicine for Modern Problems

Ayahuasca has been used by indigenous cultures in the Amazon for thousands of years.

According to Sam, traditions throughout Colombia, Peru, Ecuador, and Brazil have preserved this medicine for generations.

For much of history, these traditions remained hidden from the outside world.

Only recently has ayahuasca begun reaching global audiences.

Sam believes this timing may not be accidental.

As mental health challenges continue rising worldwide, more people are searching for approaches that go beyond symptom management and address deeper causes of suffering.

Healing Beyond the Individual

One of the more ambitious ideas discussed during the interview was the possibility that ayahuasca could influence society on a collective level.

Sam believes that many of the conflicts, divisions, and problems people face today stem from forgetting a simple truth: human beings are deeply interconnected.

Participants frequently report experiencing this sense of connection directly during ceremonies.

Rather than feeling separate, they feel part of something larger.

According to Sam, this realization often leads to greater compassion, empathy, and understanding.

When people genuinely feel connected to others, harmful behavior becomes much harder to justify.

The Importance of Integration

While ayahuasca can create profound insights, Sam emphasizes that the ceremony itself is only the beginning.

The real work happens afterward.

Participants are encouraged to journal, reflect, and actively integrate what they learned into daily life.

Without integration, even the most powerful experience can fade over time.

Healing requires action.

The insights gained during ceremony must eventually be translated into healthier habits, better relationships, and more intentional choices.

Making Ayahuasca More Accessible

A major part of LaWayra’s mission is making ayahuasca accessible to ordinary people.

Sam believes many retreats unintentionally create barriers through high prices, intimidating language, or overly spiritual presentation.

His goal is different.

He wants people to understand that ayahuasca is not reserved for a special group of seekers.

Doctors, builders, entrepreneurs, teachers, veterans, parents, and retirees all participate.

You do not need to become a different person to benefit from the medicine.

You simply need to be open to the process.

A Different Vision for the Future

Ultimately, Sam sees ayahuasca as more than a personal healing tool.

He sees it as part of a larger movement toward reconnection.

Not necessarily through ayahuasca alone, but through any practice that helps people reconnect with themselves, with each other, and with the deeper meaning of life.

Whether through meditation, nature, community, or plant medicine, he believes humanity is searching for a more balanced way of living.

Ayahuasca may not be the answer for everyone.

But for many people, it has become a powerful reminder that healing begins when we stop running from ourselves and start paying attention to what truly matters.


Listen to the whole podcast episode here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=361vKnMxzSk

For many people, ayahuasca remains surrounded by mystery. Some see it as a psychedelic experience, others view it as a spiritual practice, and many are unsure what to believe. In a conversation with entrepreneur and podcast host Sam Tejada, Sam Believ, founder of LaWayra Ayahuasca Retreat in Colombia, shared his perspective on what ayahuasca really is, who it can help, and why he believes it has the potential to transform not only individual lives but also the way the world sees Colombia.

His message was clear: ayahuasca is neither a miracle cure nor a recreational drug. It is a powerful tool that must be approached with respect, preparation, and proper guidance.

From Depression to Plant Medicine

Sam’s own journey with ayahuasca began through what he describes as a combination of curiosity and quiet desperation.

Although he had a successful career and appeared to be doing well from the outside, he often felt less happy than the people around him. At the same time, he kept encountering references to ayahuasca everywhere he looked. Friends talked about it, podcasts discussed it, and stories about it seemed impossible to avoid.

Eventually, curiosity won.

His first ceremonies helped lift a long-standing depression, and over time he felt increasingly drawn toward the medicine. That journey eventually led him deep into the Colombian jungle, where a series of experiences convinced him to dedicate part of his life to helping others heal through plant medicine.

What Ayahuasca Actually Is

Ayahuasca is a traditional Amazonian brew made from two plants: the ayahuasca vine and a DMT-containing shrub.

The preparation itself is considered ceremonial. Indigenous communities spend days cooking the medicine over wood fires while incorporating prayer, intention, and traditional practices throughout the process.

Different tribes use different recipes and proportions. Some add additional plants, while others work with only the vine and leaves.

At LaWayra, the medicine comes from the Inga tradition and is prepared using only the two core ingredients.

Why Preparation Matters

One of the strongest points Sam makes is that ayahuasca should never be treated casually.

People often focus on the ceremony itself while overlooking the preparation process that comes beforehand.

Physical preparation includes dietary adjustments and avoiding substances that may interact negatively with the medicine. Alcohol, recreational drugs, certain medications, and many processed foods are typically removed before a retreat.

Mental preparation is equally important.

Participants are encouraged to reduce exposure to stressful media, avoid unnecessary negativity, and begin reflecting on what they hope to heal or understand.

According to Sam, many people report positive changes beginning before they even arrive at the retreat, simply because they have already committed themselves to the healing process.

More Than a Physical Experience

Although ayahuasca affects the body, Sam believes its impact extends far beyond physical sensations.

He describes the process as operating on three levels simultaneously: physical, mental, and spiritual.

Physically, people often experience cleansing and purging.

Mentally, they may gain insight into patterns, traumas, and emotions that have been influencing their lives.

Spiritually, many participants report feeling more connected to themselves, nature, or their understanding of a higher power.

Importantly, Sam does not view ayahuasca as a religion.

People from Christian, Jewish, Muslim, Buddhist, and many other backgrounds have attended ceremonies and often report feeling more connected to their own faith afterward.

In his view, ayahuasca is not a belief system but a tool that helps people deepen their relationship with whatever spiritual framework they already hold.

Why Purging Is Not a Side Effect

One of the biggest fears newcomers have is the possibility of vomiting.

Sam understands the concern because he once felt the same way.

However, he argues that purging is not an unfortunate side effect but one of the most important aspects of the healing process.

People frequently describe releasing old emotions, traumas, fears, and psychological burdens through physical purging.

Many participants report feeling dramatically lighter afterward, both emotionally and physically.

While vomiting receives most of the attention, purging can take many forms. Crying, shaking, laughing, sweating, or releasing deeply suppressed emotions are all considered part of the same process.

Who Comes to Ayahuasca Retreats?

Contrary to popular stereotypes, Sam says retreat participants come from every imaginable background.

Veterans, first responders, business owners, lawyers, doctors, tradespeople, parents, and retirees all attend ceremonies.

Many arrive during difficult periods in their lives.

Some struggle with depression, anxiety, trauma, addiction, or relationship problems. Others feel lost, disconnected, or emotionally exhausted despite outward success.

He often sees people arrive after exhausting every conventional option available to them.

For some, ayahuasca feels like a last resort.

Ayahuasca and Personal Transformation

One concern often raised by entrepreneurs and ambitious professionals is whether ayahuasca will remove their drive or ambition.

Sam believes the answer depends on what motivates that drive in the first place.

If success is being pursued to compensate for deep insecurity, trauma, or the need for external validation, ayahuasca may reveal those patterns and reduce the emotional force behind them.

But if someone’s work is aligned with purpose and genuine passion, he believes the medicine often strengthens their motivation rather than diminishing it.

Ayahuasca does not necessarily remove ambition. It tends to clarify where that ambition is coming from.

Safety and Responsible Use

Although Sam strongly believes in the healing potential of ayahuasca, he is equally clear that it carries risks.

People with schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, certain cardiovascular conditions, or those taking antidepressants may not be suitable candidates.

This is why proper screening, preparation, and experienced leadership are essential.

He compares drinking ayahuasca without proper guidance to attempting a complex medical procedure without a doctor.

The medicine itself is powerful, but the environment and expertise surrounding it are what help keep people safe.

Rebranding Colombia Through Healing

Beyond individual transformation, Sam has a larger vision.

For decades, Colombia has been associated internationally with cocaine, cartels, and violence.

Yet the same country is home to some of the world’s richest traditions of plant medicine and indigenous healing.

His dream is simple: to help shift Colombia’s reputation from cocaine to ayahuasca.

Not because ayahuasca is perfect or magical, but because it represents a very different story — one focused on healing rather than harm.

For Sam, that transformation is already beginning, one ceremony and one person at a time.


Listen to the whole podcast episode here: https://open.spotify.com/episode/4SiVgNXKVvXvxOZbdGUnUK

In this episode of the Ayahuasca Podcast, the host connects with Carlos Tanner. Carlos is the founder and director of the Ayahuasca Foundation, an organization he established in 2009 after moving to the Peruvian Amazon in 2004. Transitioning from his own personal healing journey to becoming a dedicated apprentice of indigenous curanderos, Carlos now bridges ancestral wisdom with modern scientific research. He is also a founding member of the Psychedelic Medicine Association, dedicating his life to helping individuals navigate trauma, healing, and deep personal transformation.

Carlos opens up about how his early life and philosophical studies uniquely prepared him for shamanism, how a severe opiate addiction catalyzed a life-saving leap of faith into the Amazon, and how his work bridging clinical science with the Shipibo tradition is sparking a global revival of ancestral plant relationships.

Key Discussion Points

  • 01:22 – Seeds of Shamanism & Overcoming Addiction: Carlos explains how playing with an Ewok shaman toy, experimenting with psychedelics in high school, and studying the philosophy of religion laid his spiritual groundwork. This foundation ultimately aligned with a life-saving synchronicity that brought him to Peru in 2003 to break free from a downward spiral of opiate addiction.

  • 05:26 – Shifting Western Paradigms: Exploring the dramatic evolution of the ayahuasca space over the last two decades, moving away from a purely materialist, chemical-to-biology framework toward a deep respect for shamanic ritual, intention, and complex traditional practices like plant dietas.

  • 09:23 – From Rugged Adventure to Modern Comfort: How the demographic of people seeking ayahuasca expanded exponentially as retreat environments evolved from rustic, off-grid jungle camps requiring multi-hour treks to fully accessible modern research and retreat centers powered by solar energy.

  • 13:56 – Synchronistic Infrastructure & The Foundation’s Birth: Carlos shares the wild logistical journey of committing to study under Shipibo healer Don Enrique Lopez, inheriting an unfinished community infrastructure project in the remote Mishana reserve, and using an inheritance from his late mother to launch the Ayahuasca Foundation in 2009.

  • 21:34 – Bridging Science and Spirit: Highlighting the “field of dreams” creation of their dedicated research facility, partnering with Onaya Science to publish academic papers on personality changes, anxiety, and depression, and collaborating with the Heroic Hearts Project to study veterans suffering from treatment-resistant PTSD.

  • 26:26 – Cellular Agency and the Earth’s Agenda: A deep philosophical look at human willpower, proposing that humans operate much like individual cells within the grander physical body and consciousness of the Earth, carrying out a vital cellular role dictated by a higher planetary intelligence.

  • 31:15 – Healing as an Art Form & Expanding Awareness: Breaking down the neurobiology of ayahuasca, explaining how it temporarily deactivates the brain’s sensory gating filters to expand conscious awareness, and how true healing occurs when a person uses that heightened sensitivity to correct false beliefs and traumatic misinterpretations.

  • 37:41 – The Challenge of Scientific Language: Discussing his role as a philosopher of healing and navigating the complex linguistic tightrope of translating deeply spiritual, non-material indigenous phenomena to a rigid Western scientific community without being seen as having “gone off the deep end”.

  • 45:59 – Noya Rao and Global Shamanic Revival: An exploration of Noya Rao, an enlightened tree consciousness central to their Shipibo lineage, and a profound story of a student who successfully utilized traditional Shipibo dieta protocols on the Blue Lotus plant to demonstrate how intact traditions can revive ancestral relationships with native flora globally.

  • 55:24 – The Future of the Psychedelic Space: Delving into the conflict between process-based plant medicine traditions and substance-focused Western psychedelic therapy, while proposing how modern medical protocols—like chemotherapy—could be radically improved if administered within an intentional, sacred retreat setting.

Connect with Carlos Tanner:

  • Website: ayahuascafoundation.org

  • Note: Messages sent via the website’s “Contact Us” form go directly to Carlos.

Experience Safe, Guided Consciousness Work:

To explore heart-opening, traditional plant medicine retreats in a deeply restorative setting designed for integration and profound clarity, explore our programs at: ayahuascaincolombia.com

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In each episode of Ayahuasca podcast we explore the history, cultural meaning, and personal journeys related to this special plant medicine. We talk with shamans, researchers, and people who share their own

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