Ayahuasca is a traditional psychoactive brew made from Amazonian plants. It has been used for centuries by indigenous cultures for spiritual and medicinal purposes. In recent years, ayahuasca has gained popularity outside of its original context. This article explores its plants, chemical composition, traditional use, modern retreats, therapeutic potential, and legal issues surrounding its use.
What exactly is ayahuasca?
Ayahuasca (also known as yagรฉ, hoasca, or simply โthe vineโ) is a psychoactive tea from the Western Amazon that has been used for centuries in ceremonial contexts. While recipes vary by region and lineage, two plants appear in most preparations:
- Banisteriopsis caapi (the vine): contains harmala alkaloidsโharmine, harmaline, tetrahydroharmine (THH)โwhich act as monoamine oxidase inhibitors (MAOIs).
- Psychotria viridis (or sometimes Diplopterys cabrerana): contains N,Nโdimethyltryptamine (DMT), a classic psychedelic.
The synergy matters. DMT alone, taken orally, is rapidly metabolized by the enzyme MAO. The vineโs MAOIs temporarily inhibit that enzyme, allowing DMT to reach the brain and produce effects.
Traditional names and context: The word โayahuascaโ is often translated as โvine of the soul.โ Indigenous traditions (e.g., Shipibo, Ashรกninka, and others) use the brew for divination, healing, diagnosis, and community bonding.
How ayahuasca works: DMT + MAOIs explained
Short version: The MAOIs in B. caapi lift the โmetabolic lock,โ letting DMT become orally active. In the brain, DMT primarily stimulates 5โHT2A receptors and modulates other systems (including 5โHT1A and sigmaโ1), which correlates with altered perception, sense of self, and meaning.
What you might feel:
- Altered visual and auditory perception (from subtle patterns to vivid imagery)
- Shifts in emotion and autobiographical memory
- Changes in sense of body and time
- Nausea, vomiting, sweating, or chills (the โpurgeโ)
Duration: 20โ60 minutes to onset; 2โ6 hours active; often followed by an โafterglowโ (hours to days).
A note on the purge: Physically uncomfortable, culturally framed as a cleansing process. Some people do not purge; others do so repeatedly. Hydration and skilled monitoring matter.
What happens in a ceremony (from setting to icaros)
A responsible ceremony is structured, not improvised. Expect some version of the following:
The setting
- Nightโtime setting in a maloka or temple; low light; clear pathways to restrooms.
- Facilitator(s) brief participants about the brew, dose, safety signals, and how to ask for help.
- Preparation: light diet, no alcohol or recreational drugs, and medication review days to weeks beforehand.
The arc of the night
- Opening: intentionโsetting and silence to orient attention.
- Dosing: the tea is bitter and thick; some people dose more than once, spaced apart.
- Icaros: ceremonial songs and instruments guide attention and help regulate emotional waves.
- Support: assistants watch for distress, disorientation, or medical red flags.
A firstโperson snapshot
I came to my first ceremony not chasing visions but answers to a heavy kind of fatigue. After drinking, my body rejected it and I vomitedโthe purgeโwhich I only understood once the discomfort softened into a calm, steady awareness. As the songs in Quechua rose and fell and the drum mirrored a heartbeat, my mind opened not to kaleidoscopes but to memories. What surfaced was simple and sharp: a fear of not being enough. I cried silently, and something inside finally loosened. By dawn, the jungle was the same, but I was breathing without weight.
I include this vignette to illustrate one possible arc, not to promise outcomes. Experiences vary widely.
Benefits people report vs. what evidence shows
People often report:
- Emotional processing of grief, shame, or fear
- Perspective shifts on relationships and life choices
- Reduced craving or behavior change following insight
- Sense of connection to nature, others, or a spiritual dimension
What emerging research and clinical observations suggest:
- Rapid mood shifts are sometimes observed after sessions, especially in people with depressive symptoms.
- Anxiolytic effects and increased psychological flexibility are reported in some studies and surveys.
- Substance use patterns may change for some, especially when ceremonies are coupled with integration and broader support.
What is not established:
- Ayahuasca is not a cureโall. Highโquality randomized trials remain limited. Outcomes depend on set and setting, dose, facilitator competence, and the participantโs history and supports.
My practical take: Any potential benefit is amplified by honest preparation (why am I going?), a safe container (competent team, clear protocols), and postโwork (therapy, journaling, community). The brew is not the work; it reveals the work.
Risks and side effects: whatโs common vs. red flags
Common but usually selfโlimiting:
- Nausea, vomiting, diarrhea
- Sweating, tremors, chills
- Headache, dizziness
- Transient anxiety or fear
Psychological risks:
- Panic, disorientation, or overwhelming content
- Reโtraumatization if poorly supported
- Confusion about insights vs. literal truths, leading to risky decisions
Medical red flags (seek qualified help):
- Chest pain, severe shortness of breath, fainting
- Dangerously high blood pressure, arrhythmias
- Serotonin syndrome signs when combined with contraindicated meds: agitation, clonus, high fever, confusion
Harmโreduction rule: Screen out when in doubt. Responsible facilitators turn people away when risks outweigh benefits.
Medications and contraindications you must know
Never mix ayahuasca with medications or supplements that raise serotonin or interact with MAOIs. This list is illustrative, not exhaustive. Always consult a clinician.
Doโnotโcombine (high risk)
- SSRIs/SNRIs (e.g., fluoxetine, sertraline, venlafaxine)
- MAOIs (e.g., phenelzine) outside the brew
- Tricyclics and atypical antidepressants with serotonergic action
- MDMA, other serotonergic psychedelics, stimulant medications
- Certain opioids (e.g., tramadol, meperidine)
- St. Johnโs wort and other serotonergic botanicals
Medical conditions that often contraindicate
- Cardiovascular disease, uncontrolled hypertension, arrhythmias
- Bipolar I, psychotic disorders, or strong family history of psychosis
- Pregnancy or trying to conceive; breastfeeding
- Significant liver disease or seizure disorders
Preโceremony diet and substance guidance (typical)
- Avoid alcohol and recreational drugs for days to weeks
- Caffeine and tyramineโheavy foods are often reduced or paused
- Eat simple, lowโfat meals 24โ48 hours beforehand
Integration of my experience: I was asked for silence, light diet, and a clear intention. The simple act of naming โfearโ ahead of time shaped the ceremony more than I expected.
Is ayahuasca legal? Country and U.S. overview
Important: Laws change. Always verify current rules where you live and where a retreat operates.
- United States: DMT is Schedule I federally. Some religious organizations have courtโgranted exemptions to use ayahuasca sacramentally under the Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA). Outside those contexts, possession or distribution can be illegal.
- South America: In countries like Peru and Brazil, ceremonial use is recognized in specific contexts and traditions. Regulations and enforcement vary by region and venue.
- Elsewhere: Laws range from tolerance within recognized religious groups to strict prohibition. Customs and import restrictions apply almost everywhere.
Traveler note: โRetreat legalโ is not the same as โyou importing it is legal.โ Read the fine print.
How to choose a safe retreat: a practical checklist
Use this like a preโflight safety list. If a provider fails multiple items, reconsider.
1) Screening and medical oversight
- Written medical intake reviewed by a clinician or experienced screener
- Clear contraindications and medication taper protocols (never DIY tapers)
- Onโsite or onโcall medical support; documented emergency plan
2) Facilitators and lineage
- Named lead facilitators with years of experience and verifiable references
- Transparent tradition or training (e.g., Shipibo lineage, Santo Daime, UDV, or vetted contemporary training)
- Assistantโtoโparticipant ratio that allows real supervision
3) Setting and logistics
- Safe, clean venue; clear paths to bathrooms; hydration readily available
- Lowโlight but adequate visibility for staff; vomit buckets and hygiene protocols
- Group size appropriate to staff count
4) Dosing and brew transparency
- Ingredients and approximate strength explained in advance
- Single vs. reโdosing policy and who decides
- No mixing with other substances on site
5) Integration support
- Daily debriefs or integration circles after ceremonies
- Options for 1:1 integration coaching or referrals to therapists
- Postโretreat resources (reading, journaling prompts, community)
From my night: The turning point wasnโt a vision; it was the icaros shifting. A different melody seemed to โcollectโ scattered emotions so I could finally face the belief that I had to control everything.
After the ceremony: integration that actually helps
Integration turns a powerful night into sustained change.
Foundations:
- Sleep, hydration, gentle food the next day
- No major life decisions for at least a week
- Journaling: note specific insights, not just vibes
- Therapeutic support: somatic therapy, EMDR, ACT, IFS, or a psychedelicโinformed counselor
- Body practices: walks in nature, yoga, breathwork
Make insights practical:
- Convert big realizations into one microโcommitment you can keep daily
- Share carefully; avoid overโexplaining to people who werenโt there
My afterglow: By sunrise, nothing โout thereโ had changed, yet my breathing felt unburdened. I protected that state with quiet time and a commitment to ask for help sooner.
Ingredients and traditional plants (the details)
Banisteriopsis caapi: Primary source of harmine, harmaline, and THH. The relative ratios influence toneโmore THH is often described as more โopenโ or โgentle,โ though effects are subjective.
Psychotria viridis: Leaf containing DMT alongside minor alkaloids. Some lineages substitute or blend with Diplopterys cabrerana (chagropanga), which also contains DMT.
Additives: Depending on tradition, small amounts of other plants may be included for aroma, grounding, or digestive support. Additives change pharmacology and should be disclosed.
Preparation basics: Long, slow boiling of vine and leaves; reduction to a concentrated tea. Skilled cooks taste and adjust through the day. Batches vary.
Timeline: onset, peak, and duration
- Tโ0: Drink the brew. Bitter, viscous, sometimes gritty.
- T+20โ60 min: Onsetโbody sensations, nausea, yawning, first visuals or memories.
- T+60โ180 min: Peakโstrongest physiological and psychological effects; icaros often intensify.
- T+3โ6 h: Descentโimagery fades; reflective mood.
- Next 24โ72 h: Afterglowโmood lift or emotional openness for some people.
Variability levers: dose size, reโdosing, stomach contents, individual metabolism, presence of THH, and the music/relational container.
Who should not take ayahuasca (highโrisk groups)
- People taking serotonergic meds or with recent tapers
- Those with heart disease, uncontrolled hypertension, or serious arrhythmias
- History of psychosis or bipolar I; recent manic episodes
- Pregnant or breastfeeding people
- Anyone unable to pause alcohol or other substances ahead of time
If any of these apply, do not rely on a retreatโs marketing. Get independent medical advice.
Myths vs. realities
Myth: Ayahuasca gives everyone visions.
Reality: Many people get memories and emotions, not cinematic scenes.
Myth: Purging means the medicine โworked.โ
Reality: Some gain deep insight without purging. Purge intensity โ outcome quality.
Myth: The brew replaces therapy.
Reality: It can catalyze therapy. Integration does the heavy lifting.
Myth: โNaturalโ means safe.
Reality: Plant + MAOI + DMT is pharmacologically potent. Safety depends on screening and care, not marketing.


