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📌 Guest: Maria (Masha) Renoir, Dual-Certified Psychiatric and Family Nurse Practitioner 📍 Location: Currently serving clients in California and expanding into Colorado and Oregon 🔗 Connect with Masha Renoir: https://www.mindmorphcolorado.com/ In this episode of Private Practice Practically, Clinical Excellence Series, Rich sits down with Masha Renoir for a thoughtful conversation about integrative psychiatry, psychedelic-assisted therapy, and what it looks like to treat the whole person rather than just managing symptoms. Masha is a dual-certified psychiatric and family nurse practitioner who combines traditional psychiatric care with complementary approaches such as mindfulness, breathwork, expressive practices, and psychedelic-assisted therapy. Her work is rooted in a holistic philosophy that looks beyond diagnosis alone and explores the deeper emotional, relational, physical, and spiritual factors that shape a person’s mental health. A major focus of the conversation is how Masha understands depression and anxiety differently from a strictly symptom-based model. Rather than viewing them only as isolated disorders, she describes them as signals from the nervous system—often connected to deeper patterns formed in childhood, relationships, culture, and earlier life experiences. This broader lens allows her to personalize treatment in a way that can include medication, but is not limited to medication alone. We also explore ketamine-assisted psychotherapy and psychedelic-informed care. Masha explains that one of the biggest misunderstandings people have is thinking the treatment is just about the journey itself. Instead, she highlights the full process: psychiatric evaluation, preparation, the guided experience, and the integration work that follows. She emphasizes that preparation and integration are often just as important—if not more important—than the altered-state experience itself. Throughout the episode, Masha shares how clients often begin noticing progress in subtle but meaningful ways: becoming less reactive, more self-compassionate, less perfectionistic, and more able to pause, reflect, and respond differently in everyday life. Over time, these small changes can compound into profound transformation. We also discuss her clinical style, which blends curiosity, self-disclosure, non-judgment, and collaboration. Masha describes her role not as someone who “heals” clients for them, but as someone who helps them reconnect with what she calls their “inner healer” and supports them as they do that work themselves. Toward the end of the conversation, Masha shares what helps keep her grounded personally—including yoga, meditation, expressive arts, movement, and time outdoors—and talks about what’s ahead in her practice, including expansion into Colorado and Oregon as well as the development of a monthly integration circle for people exploring altered and expanded states of consciousness. This episode is a meaningful listen for anyone curious about integrative psychiatry, ketamine-assisted psychotherapy, psychedelic-informed care, and the growing movement toward more holistic, personalized mental health treatment. Key topics covered: -What integrative psychiatry actually looks like in practice -How Masha combines traditional psychiatry with holistic care -Depression and anxiety as nervous system signals, not just diagnoses -Why medication can help but may not address root causes -Ketamine-assisted psychotherapy and psychedelic-informed care -Common misconceptions about psychedelic treatment -Why preparation and integration matter so much -What the psychiatric evaluation process looks like -How subtle changes can lead to meaningful long-term growth -The role of self-compassion, reduced reactivity, and inner healing -Masha’s collaborative and non-judgmental clinical style -Grounding practices like yoga, mindfulness, expressive arts, and walking -Expansion into Colorado and Oregon -Upcoming integration circles for community and post-journey support