Ketamine-Assisted Therapy vs. Ketamine Infusions Alone: Why Therapy Matters
In recent years, Ketamine has gained significant attention as a treatment for depression, trauma, anxiety, and emotional suffering. Many people experience noticeable relief after ketamine treatments, sometimes after years of feeling stuck.
And for many individuals, ketamine on its own can absolutely be helpful.
People often report feeling:
Calmer
More emotionally open
Less weighed down by anxiety or depression
More connected to themselves and others
More hopeful
More comfortable in their own skin
These experiences can feel profound — especially for someone who has spent years feeling emotionally trapped, numb, overwhelmed, or consumed by self-criticism.
But an important question often gets overlooked:
What happens after the ketamine experience ends?
Ketamine Can Temporarily Shift the Internal System
From an Internal Family Systems Therapy perspective, ketamine appears to create a temporary shift in a person’s internal system.
Many people notice that during and after ketamine experiences, their usual protective patterns soften.
The inner critic may become quieter.
Anxiety may loosen its grip.
Defensiveness may relax.
Emotional walls may feel less rigid.
IFS would describe this as protective parts stepping back enough for more Self-energy to emerge.
In that state, people often feel:
More calm
More clear
More compassionate
More connected
More curious
More emotionally open
In other words, many people temporarily experience more access to their core Self.
Why Ketamine Infusions Alone Can Still Be Helpful
Receiving ketamine treatment at a clinic — even without therapy — can still provide meaningful relief.
For some people, simply experiencing a nervous system that feels quieter and less burdened can be life-changing.
Someone who has spent years trapped in depression, hypervigilance, shame, or emotional numbness may finally experience:
Relief
Hope
Perspective
Emotional openness
Reduced suicidal thinking
Increased motivation
That matters.
And for many people, ketamine alone can create an important interruption in long-standing suffering.
Why the Benefits Are Often Temporary
However, without deeper therapeutic work, the benefits can sometimes fade over time.
Why?
Because the protective system often returns to its familiar roles.
The same protective parts that carried anxiety, perfectionism, emotional shutdown, numbness, self-criticism, or avoidance may gradually step back into those jobs once the ketamine effects wear off.
The system often reverts to old patterns because those parts still believe they need to protect the person in the same ways they always have.
The underlying wounds and burdens carried by exiled parts may still remain unresolved.
So while ketamine may temporarily create openness, clarity, and relief, the internal system itself may not fundamentally reorganize without additional healing work.
What Makes Ketamine-Assisted Therapy Different?
Ketamine-assisted therapy combines the biological and psychological effects of ketamine with intentional therapeutic work.
Rather than simply having the ketamine experience and then returning to life unchanged, therapy helps clients engage with what emerges during that more open internal state.
This is where the combination of ketamine and IFS can become especially powerful.
When protective parts relax during ketamine sessions, clients often gain greater access to parts of themselves that are usually difficult to reach.
In this state, people may:
Understand their protective patterns more clearly
Feel compassion toward themselves instead of shame
Access vulnerable emotions safely
Connect with wounded younger parts
Experience less fear toward their internal world
Just as importantly, parts of the system may begin experiencing the client’s Self differently.
Protective parts that normally feel hypervigilant or controlling may begin realizing:
“Maybe I don’t have to work this hard anymore.”
The Healing Relationship Between Self and Parts
One of the goals of IFS-informed ketamine-assisted therapy is not simply symptom relief — although symptom relief certainly matters.
The deeper goal is helping parts build trust in the Self.
As clients repeatedly access states of calmness, clarity, compassion, and connection, protective parts can begin loosening their extreme roles.
Exiled parts carrying shame, fear, grief, or loneliness can begin experiencing the care and connection they may never have received before.
Over time, this can create more lasting internal change.
Instead of only temporarily feeling better, clients may begin developing:
Greater emotional flexibility
Increased self-compassion
Reduced internal conflict
Better nervous system regulation
More trust in themselves
More internal harmony
Ketamine as a Doorway, Not the Entire Process
Ketamine can be incredibly powerful.
But ketamine itself is often not the entire healing process.
In many ways, ketamine creates an opening — a temporary space where protective patterns soften and deeper healing becomes more accessible.
Therapy helps a person make use of that opening.
Without therapy, people may still receive short-term relief and meaningful benefits.
With therapy, especially therapy grounded in approaches like IFS, that temporary opening can become an opportunity for deeper and more enduring transformation.
The goal is not simply to feel different for a few days or weeks.
The goal is to help your internal system heal in a way that creates lasting change.