The Lighthouse from ICEERS
The Lighthouse from ICEERS. Support and Integration

The Lighthouse from ICEERS Support and Integration

or people who have questions or difficulties integrating experiences related to traditional Indigenous medicines.

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How We Can Help You

We offer up to 5 integration sessions to each person.

This service is for you if:

You have had an experience with traditional Indigenous medicines that you want to better understand.

You need help processing a challenging experience that you can't properly integrate.

You haven't been feeling well since your last session.

This service is NOT suitable for you if:

You need immediate attention or are in an emergency. Typically, it takes us a little over a week for us to schedule a session.

You have a medical question. For that click here.

You are looking for a ceremony center or a facilitator. We do not conduct ceremonies or make recommendations about retreat centers or facilitators

You want information on other matters. Please check our FAQ section here.

Our services can complement medical, psychological, or psychiatric care but do not replace it.

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Team

  • David Londoño

    David Londoño

    Project Coordinator / Integrator

    David Londoño

    David Londoño is a Colombian psychologist, psychotherapist, and integration specialist with 20 years of experience in traditional Indigenous medicines. He lived in the Peruvian Amazon for six years as part of his training to deepen his knowledge of psychotherapy, traditional medicine, and the bridge between the two. He has worked in various contexts and cultures throughout his career in Colombia, Argentina, Peru, and Spain. He has coordinated therapeutic teams in treatment centers that work with master plants and has trained staff in integration practices. As part of the ICEERS team, he coordinates the Support Center that offers integration sessions to people from across the world who have challenging psychedelic experiences. He also teaches courses on integration, ethics, safety, and good practice in the therapeutic application of master plants in non-traditional contexts.

  • Mijal Schmidt

    Mijal Schmidt

    Integrative Psychologist

    Mijal Schmidt

    Mijal Schmidt has over 15 years of experience as a clinical psychologist specializing in psychoanalysis. She has a Master's degree in musicology from the University of Amsterdam, where her thesis focused on the therapeutic applications of ceremonial icaros chants. She works with individuals diagnosed with complex and mixed conditions, including psychotic disorders, autism spectrum disorders, PTSD, and affective disorders. Mijal is currently an integrative psychotherapist and has extensive experience with psychoactive plants. Her work is rooted in the foundations of tradition coupled with the clinical rigor necessary for deep exploration. Mijal founded and directed the Lazo y Voz organization that focused on clinical intervention. She also has coordinated diverse interdisciplinary teams involving patient and family treatment. She does consulting for organizations and mentors in training and develops courses on psychedelics in clinical practice.

  • Gerónimo Tejedor

    Gerónimo Tejedor

    Integrative Psychologist

    Gerónimo Tejedor

    Gerónimo Tejedor is a clinical psychologist and psychotherapist with 20 years of clinical experience and 15 years working in hospital settings. He specializes in family psychology in children and adolescents. He completed several postgraduate programs focusing on trauma and dissociation. His Master's degree looked at the connections between humans and ayahuasca from a decolonized perspective and explored interspecies relationships and integration methods. He also supervises therapists and psychedelic integrators. Gerónimo has been connected to ayahuasca since his first encounter with Traditional Indigenous Medicine as a child in northern Argentina 28 years ago. He has maintained a close relationship with Andean-Amazonian medicines in various capacities ever since. The regeneration and revaluation of South American Indigenous peoples' knowledge is central to his work. With this as the foundation, Gerónimo tries to create possibilities for transdisciplinary work and knowledge exchange incorporating other forms of wisdom.