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Psychedelics, rebirth experiences, and the limits of current research

Etienne Artru

Psychedelics July 1, 2026 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.1016/j.psyche.2026.100028 via OpenAlex

Summary

Birth or rebirth experiences during psychedelic sessions, a prominent theme in early research, have largely disappeared from contemporary study. This absence reflects limitations in current research paradigms. Drawing on memory science, clinical data, and phenomenological analysis, the article argues that such experiences may reflect the emergence of implicit, affective, and sensorimotor traces rather than implausible episodic recollections. These "body memories" are relived as present-moment experiences shaped by the therapeutic setting. Many somatic phenomena may thus remain unrecognized as memory-related, inviting a broader reconsideration of somatic experiences in psychedelic-assisted psychotherapy.

Study at a glance

Design theoretical or philosophical paper
Key finding Birth or rebirth experiences in psychedelic sessions may reflect implicit, affective, and sensorimotor memory traces rather than implausible episodic recollections, suggesting many somatic phenomena in psychedelic-assisted psychotherapy remain unrecognized as memory-related.

Abstract

The psychedelic renaissance has now lasted longer than the first wave of medical research in the 1950s and 60 s. Despite growing scientific and cultural interest, fundamental questions remain regarding the nature of subjective experience and its role in therapeutic outcomes. This article revisits a neglected yet significant aspect of psychedelic phenomenology: birth—or rebirth—experiences. While prominent in pre-prohibition literature, this theme has largely disappeared from contemporary discourse. We propose that this absence reflects deeper epistemological, methodological, and potentially therapeutic limitations within current research paradigms. Drawing on memory science, clinical data, and phenomenological analysis, we examine the hypothesis from early psychedelic research suggesting that some birth experiences reflect the emergence of perinatal memories. Although typically dismissed as implausible episodic recollections, we argue that such experiences may instead reflect the emergence of implicit, affective and sensorimotor traces. Lacking contextual features, these “body memories” are relived as present-moment experiences shaped by the therapeutic setting. As such, we suggest that many somatic phenomena may remain unrecognized as memory-related. This hypothesis invites a broader reconsideration of somatic experiences in psychedelic-assisted psychotherapy, which requires a phenomenological and interpretive framework largely absent from current research.

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