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  <title>Building Modern Spirituality with Timeless Entheogens</title>
  <description>After speaking at PsyCon in Denver, Teopixqui Dez brings that message back home and expands on a subject that sits at the heart of the Colorado Psychedelic Church… how do we build modern spirituality around timeless entheogens and sacred compounds in a way that is sincere, ethical, and healing? This talk explores the idea of perennialism… the belief that the world’s religions and spiritual traditions share recurring universal truths. From there, Teopixqui Dez walks through what many traditions already seem to agree on: that we are more than our bodies… that these medicines are not merely substances but kin… that intention and integration matter… that healing is communal… and that none of this can be approached responsibly without honoring those who paid the price before us. At the center of this message is a challenge: carry the history, not the culture. That means learning who suffered, who was displaced, who was criminalized, and who was pushed out of their own traditions… without stealing their ceremonies, aesthetics, or identities. It means building something honest where you are, with reverence, intention, and accountability. Teopixqui Dez also lays out practical foundations for creating sacred space… from acknowledgment and sacrifice to intention, setting, support, and integration. The result is both philosophical and deeply grounded: a reminder that sacred healing does not require spectacle… but it does require responsibility. And maybe most powerfully… this message insists that sacred space is not limited to temples, churches, or forests. It can be created in a basement. Around a fire. In a bathroom mirror before ceremony. In a living room where people are finally honest with one another. If healing is real, then the sacred can be made real too. This is a conversation about ethics, history, community, healing… and the possibility that you, too, can become a lighthouse for someone else. &amp;amp;nbsp;  Streamlined Timeline 00:00 – Opening and PsyCon reflection Teopixqui Dez shares what it meant to finally speak at PsyCon after once attending with the hope of doing exactly that. 02:00 – Why this topic matters A look at why building modern spirituality around entheogens deserves careful, honest reflection. 03:00 – Perennialism Introducing the idea that many religious and spiritual traditions point toward recurring universal truths. 05:00 – Universal truths across traditions How shared ideas like reverence, community, and provision show up again and again. 06:30 – Honor the people who came before us Why it is a responsibility to know who suffered, bled, and died for these medicines to be discussed openly today. 08:00 – Carry the history, not the culture A distinction between honoring lineage and appropriating ceremony. 10:00 – The “who” inside the “what” The idea that we are a soul or self inhabiting a body… and how that belief echoes across traditions. 12:00 – The medicines as kin Examples from different cultures that treat these plants and compounds not as objects, but as family. 15:00 – Intention and integration before they had names How sacrifice, preparation, and post-ceremony integration have always been part of meaningful healing. 18:00 – Why casual use and sacred use are not the same A look at how these medicines can be used casually… but are not inherently casual in nature. 20:00 – Community as a necessary part of healing Why so many traditions center healing in shared experience rather than isolation. 22:00 – Healing current pain and generational harm How entheogenic practice can support both personal healing and healing that ripples outward through community. 24:00 – Appropriation as poisoned medicine Why copying rituals, aesthetics, and cultural forms without permission damages what should be sacred. 27:00 – Can something sacred be created anywhere? Teopixqui Dez answers the challenge directly… yes, sacred space can be created in a basement, a home, or anywhere healing is made possible. 30:00 – Making your own space sacred Simple, personal examples of how intention, gratitude, and reverence can transform an ordinary place. 33:00 – How to build bigger, shared sacred space Moving from personal ritual to meaningful group healing. 35:00 – Five foundations for creating sacred practice Acknowledgment, sacrifice, intention, adaptable setting, and integration. 42:00 – Support matters Why people do not need to go through these experiences alone… even if they are physically by themselves. 45:00 – Integration as an ethical responsibility If someone offers sacrament without time, care, or support for integration… something essential is missing. 48:00 – A call to create healing where you are Teopixqui Dez offers encouragement to listeners who feel called to make healing more possible for the people around them. 51:00 – Closing: become the lighthouse A final reminder that shared time, shared intention, and shared courage can save lives. &amp;amp;nbsp;  Contact Us To learn more about the Colorado Psychedelic Church, upcoming gatherings, ceremonies, and community offerings, visit: ColoradoPsychedelicChurch.com You can also use the website to reach out directly, explore the church’s teachings, and find ways to connect with the community in Colorado Springs. </description>
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