With each passing year, new evidence of the immense healing potential psychedelics offer for anxiety, depression, addiction, PTSD, and more emerge from credible studies and research groups. As the excitement grows, so too does the often dangerous misinformation generated by profiteers and pseudo experts.
A fierce protector of those who are utilizing psychedelics as a way to heal their emotional wounds and trauma, Shannon Duncan knows firsthand the courage, determination, and vulnerability required to approach emotional healing in this specialized way.
Coming Full Circle is a detailed, informative guide on using psychedelics to heal that is intertwined with a deeply personal memoir of the authors own journey of healing. It will empower its readers with a greater understanding of the true potential, limitations, risks, and nuances to the process of using psychedelics to heal trauma.
Readers who shy away from accounts of trippy, inscrutable trips should rest assured that Duncan’s writing, anecdotes, and arguments are clear-eyed and resonant, especially passages addressing how controlled therapeutic psychedelic use helped overcome his own “deeply entrenched defenses” and into wounded areas of his psyche, such as his Jungian “shadow self.” Duncan makes clear throughout that this is work not to be taken lightly, urging the participation of “a good psychedelic guide will keep you breathing, relaxing, and anchored in your body.” Still, the book abounds with surprises, such as his discovery of a desire and talent to express himself in music.
“The interconnected webs of meaning that make up a person’s persona and define their sense of reality are far too complex for us to ever be able to predict the end results to any changes within that system,” Duncan writes. That’s both a promise and a warning. Coming Full Circle guides readers to practical, adaptable strategies—prepping for a journey, creating an atmosphere for healing, developing clear intentionality, finding a guide—for helping ensure that seekers manage any such changes arrived at during psychedelic therapy in a positive way, keeping their “gain”s. His story has power, and the hard-won advice is clear and courageous.
Takeaway: A clear-eyed account of and guide to healing through psychedelic therapy.
Great for fans of: Richard Louis Miller’s Psychedelic Medicine, Ayelet Waldman’s A Really Good Day.
Production grades
Cover: B+
Design and typography: A
Illustrations: N/A
Editing: A-
Marketing copy: A-