A cross-sectional internet survey of 701 people who had used classical psychedelics probed their metaphysical beliefs with a new 42-item questionnaire. Factor analysis revealed two main belief clusters: Idealism and Materialism. Idealism was linked to psychological insight from a past psychedelic experience and to average psychedelic use, and it predicted wellbeing. Mediation analyses showed an indirect path from past psychedelic use through Idealism to wellbeing, but not through non-physicalist beliefs generally or through Materialism. The findings suggest that Idealism specifically, rather than non-physicalist beliefs broadly, may mediate the association between psychedelic use and wellbeing, though causality remains unestablished.
Meditation practice may enhance the benefits of psychedelic experiences and can confound associations between psychedelic use and well-being. In two cross-sectional online surveys, when examined separately, both cumulative psychedelic use and meditation practice were associated with greater well-being and psychological flexibility. However, when considered jointly, the associations for psychedelics were reduced or became nonsignificant, while meditation remained consistently associated with outcomes. In a second study, participants who experienced a personally meaningful event through meditation alone or combined with psychedelics reported significantly greater improvements in well-being compared with those who used psychedelics alone, though all groups showed positive change on average. Weak evidence suggested a potential synergy between the two practices.