
Psychedelic uses, and psychedelic users, are diverse. While ‘psychedelic culture’ can be characterised by environmentally conscious attitudes, many people who use psychedelics don’t seem to adjust their environmental attitudes and behaviours following their experiences. This can be for multiple reasons.
Firstly, not all psychedelic experiences feature ego dissolution, unity, and ecological themes. Secondly, even when experiences have these features, this doesn’t mean lasting changes to environmental attitudes will result. This can require integration of the experience into one’s worldview. Thirdly, people may report mystical experiences with psychedelics, but the way they incorporate these experiences into their worldview doesn’t translate into environmental concern (consider the fact that Jordan Peterson has had several high-dose psilocybin experiences, and yet he promotes climate change denial).
Fourthly, the setting in which the psychedelic experience seems to influence the manifestation, or degree, of connectedness to nature. When taking psychedelics in a natural setting, it’s easy to see how this – alongside ego-dissolving effects – can lead to greater feelings of connectedness to the natural world, both during and after the experience. Yet people take psychedelics in a variety of settings, including ones where natural features are minimal or absent. Understandably, these settings will be less likely to encourage nature relatedness.
David Dupuis, a social anthropologist, has challenged the notion that widespread psychedelic use will change the world, as has the writer Erica Avey. “Plenty of people take psychedelics and return to old patterns of behavior,” writers Avey. Dupuis stresses that “we must recognize what makes them [psychedelics] unique among the vast family of psychotropic drugs: their significant sensitivity to extrapharmacological factors.” These extrapharmacolgical factors include ‘set’ (one’s current mindset, beliefs, attitudes, and worldview) and ‘setting’ (the environment and culture in which the experience takes place, as well as who one trips with). Dupuis adds:
[W]e should not expect broader psychedelic use to automatically make people more environmentally conscious. As I have observed during ethnographic investigations in the Peruvian Amazon over the past ten years, the regular use of ayahuasca in no way prevents some indigenous shaman-entrepreneurs from exploiting the natural territories that they occupy in order to benefit their economic activities. The development of shamanic tourism involved the encouragement of overtourism in the Amazon region, and the activities of reception centers for international clients have often led to the destruction or overexploitation of natural habitats. And while the “shamanic tourists” claim to have developed a different relationship to nature thanks to participating in psychedelic rites, my observations tell a different story. In the long run, their participation only has a very weak impact on their consumption habits or the modes of production in which they are engaged, which sometimes directly, and always indirectly, contribute to the destruction of natural resources. For example, many of them continue to fly regularly in order to participate in the psychedelic rituals provided by the shamanic centers of the Peruvian Amazon. These observations show that while psychedelics can give rise to experiences of feeling more connected to nature, these experiences seem to be more likely to affect peoples’ self-reported connection to nature rather than leading to substantial pro-environmental behavior change.
Many psychonauts, no matter how profound their experiences, still don’t make major changes to their lifestyle in ways that benefit the environment. These behavioural or lifestyle changes might include recycling, opting for greener modes of travel, living car-free, reducing waste, buying eco-friendly products, adopting a vegan diet, having fewer children, volunteering for environmental projects, and donating to environmental charities.
On the other hand – and this is contrary to Dupuis’ observation that psychedelics don’t promote eco-friendly lifestyle choices – we know that psychedelic use predicts pro-environmental behaviour via increases in nature relatedness. Indeed, several studies have found nature relatedness predicts pro-environmental behaviour. Therefore, it may be rational to view psychedelic use as playing an effective role in our attempts to save the planet. (As we will see below, however, bias in studies on nature relatedness makes the picture more complicated.)
share your toughts
Join the Conversation.