Our Psilocybin Facilitators
Sarah McMinn
Sarah McMinn is a licensed psilocybin facilitator, spiritual mentor, and sacred ceremonialist committed to creating safe spaces for deep transformation. Since 2021, she has been guiding plant-medicine journeys. Her path as a healer began with immersive work in a shamanic church, and deepened through certification with InnerTrek. Along the way she has expanded her skills through training in spiritual life coaching, meditation, energy work, women’s work, and sound medicine, allowing her to blend Eastern and Western healing traditions with a trauma-informed, heart-centered approach.
In her work, Sarah holds a firm belief in the resilience and sacredness of the human spirit. She gently guides women through grief and loss, chronic illness, motherhood and parenting challenges, creative blocks, spiritual reconnection, and the often messy transitions of life, supporting clients in reclaiming wholeness, reawakening their inner wisdom, and reclaiming power over their narrative. Known for her grounded presence, deep compassion, and unwavering respect for each individual’s journey, she creates a container of trust, holding sacred space for healing, transformation, and growth. Her unique integrative approach is not about quick “fixes,” but about nurturing sustainable healing, self-discovery, and reclaiming one’s path with gentleness and courage.
Jordan Pedroso
Jordan is a licensed psilocybin facilitator and yin yoga practitioner who creates calm, supportive spaces for deep healing and self-connection. As a person of color, she brings a strong commitment to inclusivity, cultural awareness, and safety in healing work, understanding how important it is for people to feel seen and held in these spaces.
Her work is rooted in the principles of yin yoga—slowness, presence, and listening to the body. Jordan weaves these practices into preparation, journey support, and integration, helping clients soften, ground, and connect with their inner wisdom. She approaches each experience with care, respect, and curiosity, honoring that no two journeys are the same.
With a trauma-informed and embodied approach, Jordan offers steady guidance and thoughtful integration, supporting clients in making meaning of their experiences in a way that feels practical, nourishing, and authentic. She meets people where they are and walks alongside them with clarity, compassion, and trust in the process.
Navie Hollis
Navie is an expressive arts practitioner and psilocybin facilitator who supports healing through creativity, curiosity, and grounded presence. She began this work after recognizing that traditional therapeutic approaches were no longer creating the progress she needed in her own personal healing journey. Psilocybin played a key role in helping her reconnect with compassion, insight, and a steady sense of self, ultimately shaping her professional focus.
Navie holds a master’s degree in psychology and public health policy from New York University and has extensive clinical research experience in child development, trauma, neurodivergence, memory, and emotion. Through her research work, she developed a deep understanding of human development and the powerful processes that support healing and transformation. Navie incorporates expressive arts in preparation and integration as a gentle, intuitive tool, using creative practices to help clients access inner experiences, release emotion, and explore meaning in ways that feel safe, personal, and grounding. She believes art can hold feelings that are difficult to put into language, offering a way to process trauma and express truth without pressure to explain or analyze. Whether through drawing, color, or symbolic imagery, she uses art to create space for insight, emotional regulation, and connection to the self.
Navie honors the cultural traditions and lineages that have safeguarded sacred plant knowledge across generations, approaching this work with humility and respect. She welcomes clients of all identities and backgrounds, with a focus on supporting BIPOC and LGBTQ+ communities.