SHARED PATH – AMAZON HEALING IMMERSION (7 DAYS, PERU)
A private immersion (2–6 travelers) into indigenous Amazonian healing culture, centered on ayahuasca as a guided therapeutic practice.
Indigenous-led, lineage-guided, trauma-informed, medically supported.
DAY 1 — Arrival & Introduction to the Amazonian Healing Worldview
Morning / Afternoon
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Arrival in Iquitos
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Private transfer to the healing lodge
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Welcome & orientation
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Medical/psychological intake verification
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Settle into accommodations
Evening — Foundational Session: “What Healing Means Here”
An introduction to the indigenous framework for illness and healing:
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Illness as emotional or energetic imbalance
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The shaman’s social and healing responsibilities
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How ayahuasca functions as a diagnostic and corrective tool
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What “healing,” “clearing,” and “balance” mean in Amazonian worldview
Purpose:
Travelers enter the healing culture with clarity and respect — no mysticism, no romanticism.
DAY 2 — Ethnobotany & The Medicine of the Forest
Morning — Ethnobotany Field Walk
Guided by an indigenous plant specialist:
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introduction to foundational medicinal plants
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how healers classify plants (folk taxonomy)
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the concept of plant teachers (culturally defined)
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practical, non-psychoactive healing uses
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why dietas matter for learning
Afternoon — Workshop: “The Forest as Pharmacy & Teacher”
Topics include:
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how knowledge is transmitted
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how shamans learn to “listen” to plants
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dietas as training, not superstition
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emotional medicine vs physical medicine
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how ayahuasca fits into the broader medicinal system
Evening
Quiet reflection period.
Light dieta-compliant meal.
Purpose:
Establish intellectual and cultural grounding in Amazonian medical ecology.
DAY 3 — The Shamanic Path & Psychological Preparation
Morning — Session with the Maestro/Maestra: “Path of the Healer”
A deep dive into the shamanic role:
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training, discipline, and sacrifice
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how healers develop “vision”
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the purpose and function of icaros
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managing energies during ceremony
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protection, diagnosis, and correction
Travelers understand the shaman not as a mystical figure, but as a culturally trained healer.
Afternoon — Therapeutic & Somatic Preparation
Led by therapist + ceremonial guide:
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breathwork and grounding for emotional stability
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strategies for navigating fear, overwhelming imagery, or panic
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the brain under ayahuasca: how symbolic processing works
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intention-setting (non-spiritual framing)
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emotional boundaries within ceremony
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how to stay safe internally
Evening
Silence period, journaling, early rest.
Optional one-on-one sessions.
Purpose:
Prepare the nervous system and the psyche for a serious healing experience.
DAY 4 — Ayahuasca Healing Ceremony
Morning
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light breakfast (dieta-aligned)
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rest, solitude, quiet mental preparation
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optional check-in with therapist
Afternoon
Quiet period dedicated to stabilizing attention and calming the nervous system.
Evening / Night — Ayahuasca Ceremony
Under the guidance of the maestro/maestra, with medical personnel present:
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non-touristic, lineage-based ceremony
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small-group (2–6) format ensures focused attention
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icaros tailored to individual emotional states
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shaman maintains continuous awareness of each participant
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clinical oversight ensures safety throughout
Purpose:
A guided healing encounter with emotional material and unconscious patterns, aligned with indigenous healing tradition.
DAY 5 — Recovery & Initial Integration
Morning
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gentle dieta breakfast
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unstructured rest
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no cognitive or physical demands
Afternoon — Integration Session (Therapist-Led)
A structured processing period including:
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how to interpret symbolic or emotional material
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separating insight from narrative confusion
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stabilizing heightened emotions
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common post-ceremony psychological effects
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grounding strategies
Evening
Low-key optional conversation; early rest.
Purpose:
Support the nervous system during the most sensitive post-ceremony window.
DAY 6 — Dieta Closure, Deep Integration & Signature Shared Path Event
Morning — Deep Integration Session
Travelers explore:
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patterns revealed during ceremony
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emotional themes seeking resolution
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continued healing trajectory
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how healing unfolds over coming weeks
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how to avoid overwhelming themselves upon returning home
Afternoon — Final Guidance from the Maestro/Maestra
A closing dialogue with the healer:
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their interpretation of what shifted
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recommendations for maintaining balance
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culturally specific guidance for emotional care
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taboos and cautions for the post-dieta period
Evening — SIGNATURE SHARED PATH EVENT: “Closure of the Dieta”
1. Formal Dieta Closure Ritual (Non-Psychoactive)
Performed by the maestro/maestra:
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short sealing icaro
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protective blessing (soplada)
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explanation of the cultural meaning of dieta closure
This marks the true end of the healing container.
2. Dieta Closing Meal
A simple, intentional meal marking the transition from ceremony space back into ordinary life.
3. Personalized Post-Dieta Guidance Sheet
Prepared by the healer and therapist, including:
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emotional stabilization guidance
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dietary recommendations
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relationship boundaries
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early warning signs
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recommended practices (journaling, rest, solitude)
4. Integration Intent
Each participant may speak aloud (optionally) a single sentence:
“What healing I continue when I return home.”
No analysis. No group feedback.
A clear personal direction.
Purpose:
Close the ceremonial period within the cultural logic of Amazonian healing and give travelers ground to stand on as they return home.
DAY 7 — Departure
Morning
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final medical/psychological check
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instructions for next 30 days of emotional care
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private transfer to Iquitos airport
Conclusion
Travelers leave with:
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a grounded healing trajectory
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a culturally coherent understanding of the experience
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a safe plan for continued integration
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respect for the Amazonian healing system and the shaman’s role
