“I was trying to save the world”: delusion-like ideation and associated impacts reported by Western practitioners of Buddhist meditation
Elizaveta Solomonova, Jared R. Lindahl, Ian Gold, David J. Cooper, Charlotte Little, Damian Arteca, Chenxi Cao, Willoughby B. Britton
Frontiers in Psychology October 24, 2025 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2025.1644684 via OpenAlex
Summary
Delusional-like ideation (DLI) can occur among meditation practitioners and is discussed in Buddhist literature. A study involving over 100 Buddhist meditation practitioners and experts established a typology of eight types of DLI, reporting their frequencies and impacts. While some DLI are normalized within meditation culture, experts caution about their potential severity, identifying them as 'red flags' that may require monitoring or intervention. The paper also explores explanatory models for DLI's presence and effects.
Study at a glance
| Design | mixed-methods study |
|---|---|
| Sample size | 100 |
| Population | Buddhist meditation practitioners and meditation experts in the West |
| Key finding | The study established a typology of eight types of delusional-like ideation associated with meditation and highlighted their varying impacts and treatment outcomes. |
Abstract
Delusional ideation is characteristic of psychopathology (e.g., psychosis, bipolar disorder) and is also found among the general population. Contemporary case studies have documented delusional ideation as a feature of meditation-induced psychosis, and Buddhist literature on the side effects and adverse effects of meditation also includes discussion of transient experiences that could be considered delusional or delusion-like ideation. Drawing upon interviews with more than 100 Buddhist meditation practitioners and meditation experts (teachers and clinicians) in the West, this paper presents a mixed-methods study of delusion-like ideation (DLI) associated with meditation. We establish a typology of eight types of DLI and report their relative frequencies among the sample; we identify impacts and treatment outcomes associated with DLI; and we provide four case studies that illustrate the risk factors, trajectories, outcomes, and appraisals associated with DLI. We show how responses to DLI are shaped not only by the type of DLI but also by their duration, severity, and impact, as well as the associated appraisals made both by meditators and by meditation teachers and psychiatrists. In some cases, the phenomenology of DLI suggests influences from the lived context of Buddhist meditation cultures. Furthermore, although DLI are normalized in Buddhist meditation culture under certain circumstances, meditation experts also noted the potential severity of meditation-related DLI, with some identifying it as a "red flag" meriting close monitoring if not immediate intervention. Finally, we discuss various explanatory models that could account for the presence, content, and impacts of DLI among meditators, drawing upon the environmental conditions and social contexts of meditation retreats, the role of attention and sensory attenuation in meditation practice, and the ways in which meditation-related DLI can function as a cultural and spiritual "idiom of distress."