Blossom’s read
Microdosing for Healing sits in the practitioner-facing, community-based end of the psychedelic education field rather than the academic end. It appears best suited to coaches, therapists, bodyworkers and other helping professionals who already feel called to this work and want a highly practical, mentorship-led route into microdosing support. The lineage is fairly eclectic and explicitly experiential: Kayse Gehret foregrounds decades in the healing arts, plus teaching links to Psychedelics Today’s VITAL, the Microdosing Institute, Entheonation, NJPTA and End of Life Psychedelic Care.
Who Microdosing Healing is for
Best for aspiring microdosing guides and working professionals who want to add microdosing support into an existing practice, or pivot into the field with a strong community and business-support element. It also seems aimed at people comfortable with a spiritually framed, earth-medicine approach rather than a purely clinical one.
Prerequisites
No formal licensure or degree requirement is stated in the sources reviewed. The site describes the programme as for aspiring microdosing guides and for professionals such as therapists, coaches, physicians, bodyworkers and wellness professionals, but does not present a hard entry gate.
Accreditation & recognition
The programme awards an official Microdosing for Healing Facilitator Certificate on completion. I found no evidence in the reviewed sources of third-party accreditation, CME or CE credit, or formal professional recognition beyond the provider’s own certificate.
Cost
Published tuition on the site is Guide Certification Only at $3,600, Practice Accelerator Only at $2,600, or Certification plus Accelerator at $4,400, with replays of live sessions available the next morning. The training also includes done-for-you intake forms and assets, plus continuing support through GATHER after graduation.
What you walk away with
Learners are promised a facilitator certificate, a practical microdosing guideship skillset, mentorship, business-building tools, and a peer network. The curriculum emphasises client intake, container-setting, integration support, ethics, boundaries, sourcing, and practice development so graduates can begin supporting clients with confidence.