Your psychedelic journey doesn’t end when the experience does.
Working with ketamine or other psychedelics requires more than the medicine itself. I’m here to help you safely process and ground these powerful experiences into real change.
Ketamine, Cannabis, and Other Psychedelic Treatment Therapies
Transform Your
Toughest Moments

Combining Expertise to Ensure Your Journey
To offer you the most comprehensive path to healing, Angela proudly collaborates with licensed psychiatrists, a prescribing psychiatrist who medically administers Ketamine-Assisted Psychotherapy (KAP). Angela’s expertise is entirely focused on the psychotherapeutic support required to maximize these powerful experiences and ensure a peaceful and joyful integration process.


Frequently Asked Questions
Integration is the psychotherapeutic work that surrounds a psychedelic or ketamine experience - careful preparation beforehand, grounded presence during the experience (in collaboration with a licensed psychiatrist), and structured sessions afterward to translate insights into durable change in your life.
No. I am a Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist, not a prescriber. I collaborate with licensed psychiatrists who handle the medical prescribing and administration. My role is the psychotherapeutic preparation, in-session support, and integration.
Beyond my LMFT license, I hold a Certificate on Psychedelic Therapies and Research from the California Institute of Integral Studies (CIIS) and a Certificate on Drug and Alcohol Counseling from UCLA. I have logged more than 1,000 hours leading psychedelic treatments.
KAP can be a meaningful option for treatment-resistant depression, certain forms of PTSD, complex grief, and stuck existential or relational patterns. It is not appropriate for everyone - we evaluate fit carefully and only proceed in collaboration with a qualified psychiatrist.
Yes. I offer non-judgmental, curiosity-driven work with clients who use cannabis intentionally, helping them clarify what they are seeking and integrate insights from those experiences into the rest of their life.
Yes. Integration is especially important when an experience was disorienting or destabilizing. The work is to help your nervous system metabolize what happened, make meaning of the material, and translate it into lived change rather than leaving you stuck with raw, unprocessed content.




