Personality & Trait FactorsInterpersonal Functioning & Social ConnectednessAyahuasca

Effects of Ayahuasca on Gratitude and Relationships with Nature: A Prospective, Naturalistic Study

This longitudinal study (n=54) investigates the effects of ayahuasca retreat experiences on gratitude, nature relatedness, and nature appreciation. Findings reveal significant increases in these factors at one-week and one-month follow-ups compared to baseline. Ratings of mystical experiences and awe during ayahuasca sessions weakly-to-moderately correlate with these increases, highlighting their potential role in post-ayahuasca changes. Participant age negatively relates to the occurrence of mystical experiences and awe, indicating diminished effects with increased age. The study emphasizes the quality of experiences over quantity in influencing post-ayahuasca changes, suggesting potential mental health benefits associated with prosocial changes in gratitude and nature relationships.

Authors

  • Alan Davis
  • Joshua Woolley
  • Jordan Aday

Published

Journal of Psychoactive Drugs
individual Study

Abstract

Qualitative studies and anecdotal reports suggest that experiences with ayahuasca, a psychedelic brew found in Central and South America, may be followed by individuals enduringly feeling more grateful and connected to nature. Yet, to date, these changes have been understudied. Here, participants (N = 54) completed validated surveys related to gratitude, nature relatedness, and nature appreciation one-week before, one-week after, and one-month after attending an ayahuasca retreat center. Compared to baseline, there was a significant increase in gratitude, nature relatedness, and nature appreciation at the one-week and one-month follow-ups. Ratings of mystical-type experiences and awe, but not ego dissolution, during participants’ ayahuasca sessions were weakly-to-moderately correlated with these increases. The number of ayahuasca ceremonies attended at the retreat was not related to change in outcomes, underscoring the importance of the quality rather than the quantity of the experiences in post-acute change. Lastly, participant age was negatively related to the occurrence of mystical-type experiences and awe, supporting literature indicating blunted psychedelic effects with increased age. In the context of study limitations, the results suggest that mystical-type experiences and awe occasioned by ayahuasca may be linked to prosocial changes in gratitude and relationships with nature that may be beneficial to mental health.

Unlocked with Blossom Pro

Research Summary of 'Effects of Ayahuasca on Gratitude and Relationships with Nature: A Prospective, Naturalistic Study'

Editorial

βBlossom's Take

This prospective retreat study makes gratitude and nature relatedness measurable rather than leaving them as anecdotal after-effects of ayahuasca. The links with awe and mystical experience, but not ceremony count, are a neat way to separate the quality of the acute experience from simple exposure, although the sample is still selective and naturalistic.

Introduction

Aday and colleagues situate the study within renewed scientific and public interest in classic serotonergic psychedelics, noting that these compounds—including DMT, the principal psychoactive constituent of ayahuasca—have been linked to therapeutic benefits and prosocial changes such as increased openness and feelings of connection. The introduction highlights a gap in the literature: although qualitative reports and anecdotal evidence suggest that psychedelic experiences may foster enduring increases in gratitude and stronger relationships with nature, these domains have been relatively under-examined with validated, multidimensional measures and with specific focus on ayahuasca. The study therefore aimed to prospectively assess changes in gratitude, nature relatedness, and nature appreciation in people attending an ayahuasca retreat. Participants completed validated questionnaires one week before, one week after, and one month after their retreat; the researchers also measured acute subjective experiences during the retreat (mystical-type experiences, awe, and ego dissolution) and explored whether these acute states, plus baseline variables such as age and prior psychedelic use, related to post-acute change. The approach was naturalistic and within-subjects, designed to test whether previously reported post-acute prosocial shifts generalise to ayahuasca use in a retreat setting and to probe potential psychological correlates of those changes.

Methods

This was a prospective, naturalistic, open-label within-subjects study conducted at Soltara Healing Centre, an ayahuasca retreat in Costa Rica where participants received ceremonies led by indigenous Shipibo curanderos. Recruitment occurred via the retreat's website and email after retreat registration; participation required informed consent and Institutional Review Board approval. All retreat attendees meeting the centre's entry criteria (age ≥18, no contraindicated psychiatric disorders, medications, or medical conditions) were eligible. Participants were entered into a prize drawing as compensation. Participants stayed 5–12 nights and attended between 2 and 7 ayahuasca ceremonies (mean 3.67, SD 0.85). Surveys were administered online via Qualtrics at three timepoints: T1 (one week before retreat, baseline), T2 (one week after retreat), and T3 (one month after retreat). At T1 participants provided demographics and completed the Appreciation Scale (AS), the Nature Relatedness 6-item scale (NR-6), and the Appreciation of Nature (APR) scale. At T2 they completed the same measures plus the Mystical Experience Questionnaire (MEQ30), the Awe Experience Scale (AWE-S), and the Ego Dissolution Inventory (EDI), each answered with reference to the participant's most intense ayahuasca session. T3 repeated the baseline measures (except demographics). Analyses focused on within-subject change across time. The AS facets were analysed using a 3 × 8 repeated-measures analysis of variance (ANOVA) with Time (T1, T2, T3) and eight AS facets; planned pairwise comparisons tested temporal differences. NR-6 and APR total scores were each tested with one-way repeated-measures ANOVAs across the three timepoints. One-week and one-month change scores (∆1 = T2–T1; ∆2 = T3–T1) were computed for AS, NR-6, and APR. Two-way Pearson correlations assessed relationships between acute subjective measures (MEQ30, AWE-S, EDI) and change scores, and the number of ceremonies was correlated with changes to test dose/quantity effects. Baseline predictors (age, prior psychedelic use) were evaluated via Pearson correlations with acute measures.

Results

Participant flow began with 77 completing baseline; 65 completed T2 and 55 completed T3. One person who did not partake in ceremonies was excluded, yielding a final analytic sample of N = 54 (mean age 41.17, SD 11.24; 24 female). The sample was predominantly highly educated (88.9% college degree or higher), majority non-Hispanic white (74.1%), and had varied prior psychedelic experience (18.5% reporting never having used psychedelics). Participants attended an average of 3–4 ceremonies during their stay. Gratitude: The AS total exhibited a significant main effect of Time (F(1,53) = 34.97, p < .001, eta_p^2 = 0.40). Planned comparisons showed AS total scores at one week (T2) and one month (T3) post-retreat were each significantly higher than baseline (T1), while T2 and T3 did not differ from one another. All eight AS facets increased at both follow-ups versus baseline, and the Time × Facet interaction was significant (F(1,53) = 5.68, p < .001, eta_p^2 = 0.10), with the ritual and interpersonal facets showing significant differences at T2 and T3 but not at baseline. Correlations between change in gratitude and the number of ceremonies were negligible and non-significant (one-week r = .04, p = .80; one-month r = −.05, p = .70). Scores on the AWE-S and MEQ30—but not the EDI—were weakly to moderately correlated with one-week and one-month changes in AS total scores. Nature relatedness and appreciation: For the NR-6, Time had a significant effect (F(1,53) = 26.27, p < .001, eta_p^2 = 0.33); NR-6 scores at T2 and T3 were higher than baseline and did not differ from each other. The APR likewise increased over time (F(1,53) = 31.79, p < .001, eta_p^2 = 0.38) with T2 and T3 both exceeding T1 and no difference between follow-ups. Changes in NR-6 and APR were weakly correlated with AWE-S and MEQ30 scores, but not with EDI. Mystical-type experiences and baseline predictors: Applying a 60% threshold on MEQ30 subscales to define a "complete mystical-type experience," 37 of 54 participants (68.52%) met this criterion. Age was negatively correlated with acute intensity as measured by MEQ30 (r = −.34, p = .010) and AWE-S (r = −.39, p = .004), but not significantly correlated with EDI (r = −.18, p = .140). Prior lifetime psychedelic use did not correlate significantly with MEQ30 (r = .11, p = .424), AWE-S (r = .05, p = .703), or EDI (r = .11, p = .388).

Discussion

The investigators interpret the results as evidence that participation in ayahuasca ceremonies within a retreat setting was followed by sustained increases in self-reported gratitude, nature relatedness, and nature appreciation at one week and one month post-retreat. Acute mystical-type experiences and feelings of awe during the most intense ayahuasca session were weakly to moderately associated with these post-acute increases, whereas ego dissolution was not, suggesting that specific facets of the acute subjective experience may be more relevant to prosocial change than others. Authors situate these findings alongside prior work with psilocybin and observational studies of other psychedelics, noting similar links between mystical-type experiences/awe and increases in gratitude or nature relatedness. They propose a plausible mechanism in which awe-evoking experiences create meaningful memories that increase gratitude and buffer emotional distress, though they stop short of causal claims given the observational design. The discussion acknowledges that some observed changes may reflect non-pharmacological aspects of the retreat (for example, natural surroundings, activities such as yoga or hiking, and social interactions), but also points out that related pro-environmental and gratitude effects have been reported in laboratory studies of synthetically manufactured psychedelics, supporting the likelihood of at least a partial pharmacological contribution. Key limitations acknowledged by the authors include the open-label, uncontrolled design without a blinded placebo condition, the confounding influence of the retreat context, reliance on self-report measures, and a demographically homogenous sample that limits generalisability. They note ongoing debates about feasibility of double-blind placebo control in psychedelic research and suggest naturalistic mechanistic studies as complementary. The authors recommend future research incorporating behavioural and observer-rated measures, longer follow-up intervals to characterise durability of effects, more diverse samples to test potential moderators (including race), and examination of whether prosocial changes mediate clinical improvements. Strengths highlighted include good participant retention, multiple post-acute follow-ups, ecological validity, use of validated multi-faceted measures, and identification of acute-state correlates of post-acute change. The authors conclude that their results support anecdotal reports that ayahuasca-induced mystical experiences and awe are linked with sustained increases in gratitude and relationships with nature, and that these changes could have implications for mental health and broader societal outcomes, while emphasising the need for randomized controlled trials to address the study's limitations.

Study Details

References (28)

Papers cited by this study that are also in Blossom

Predicting Reactions to Psychedelic Drugs: A Systematic Review of States and Traits Related to Acute Drug Effects

Aday, J. S., Davis, A. K., Mitzkovitz, C. M. et al. · ACS Pharmacology and Translational Science (2021)

224 cited
Great Expectations: Recommendations for improving the methodological rigor of psychedelic clinical trials

Aday, J. S., Heifets, B. D., Pratscher, S. D. et al. · Psychopharmacology (2021)

20 cited
Long-term effects of psychedelic drugs: A systematic review

Aday, J. S., Mitzkovitz, C. M., Bloesch, E. K. et al. · Neuroscience and Biobehavioral Reviews (2020)

253 cited
Validation of the revised Mystical Experience Questionnaire in experimental sessions with psilocybin

Barrett, F. S., Johnson, M. W., Griffiths, R. R. · Journal of Psychopharmacology (2015)

623 cited
Adverse effects of ayahuasca: Results from the Global Ayahuasca Survey

Bouso, J. C., Andión, O., Sarris, J. et al. · PLOS Global Public Health (2022)

113 cited
Trial of Psilocybin versus Escitalopram for Depression

Carhart-Harris, R. L., Giribaldi, B., Watts, R. et al. · New England Journal of Medicine (2021)

1334 cited
Psychedelics and connectedness

Carhart-Harris, R. L., Erritzoe, D., Haijen, E. C. H. M. et al. · Psychopharmacology (2017)

266 cited
Show all 28 references
2144 cited
180 cited
Transpersonal Ecodelia: Surveying Psychedelically Induced Biophilia

Luke, D., Gandy, S., Irvine, A. et al. · Psychoactives (2023)

20 cited
From Egoism to Ecoism: Psychedelics Increase Nature Relatedness in a State-Mediated and Context-Dependent Manner

Kettner, H., Gandy, S., Haijen, E. C. H. M. et al. · International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health (2019)

157 cited
Factor analysis of the mystical experience questionnaire: A study of experiences occasioned by the hallucinogen psilocybin

MacLean, K. A., Leoutsakos, J. S., Johnson, M. W. et al. · Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion (2012)

411 cited
Psychedelic therapy for smoking cessation: Qualitative analysis of participant accounts

Noorani, T., Garcia-Romeu, A., Swift, T. C. et al. · Journal of Psychopharmacology (2018)

283 cited
Ego-dissolution and psychedelics: validation of the ego-dissolution inventory (EDI)

Nour, M. R., Evans, J., Nutt, D. J. et al. · Frontiers in Human Neuroscience (2016)

475 cited
Antidepressant effects of a single dose of ayahuasca in patients with recurrent depression: a preliminary report

Osório, F. L., Sanches, R. F., Macedo, L. et al. · brazilian Journal of Psychiatry (2015)

483 cited
814 cited
301 cited
Human pharmacology of ayahuasca: subjective and cardiovascular effects, monoamine metabolite excretion, and pharmacokinetics

Riba, J., Valle, M., Urbano, G. et al. · Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics (2003)

381 cited
Adverse effects of psychedelics: From anecdotes and misinformation to systematic science

Neil, J. C., Nutt, D. J. · Journal of Psychopharmacology (2022)

315 cited
Inhibition of alpha oscillations through serotonin-2A receptor activation underlies the visual effects of ayahuasca in humans

Valle, M., Maqueda, A. E., Rabella, M. et al. · European Neuropsychopharmacology (2016)

174 cited

Cited By (3)

Papers in Blossom that reference this study