The Microdose Movement Manifesto
The full Microdose Movement Manifesto by founder Kecho. Read the origin story, the worldview, the belief system, and the ask.
by Kecho, founder
Origin & Wound
I was deep in the nightlife industry. Festivals every weekend, numbing myself, no sense of purpose — just stuck in the loop of the material world.
At 21, I had my first mushroom experience with college friends. For a long time I called it a terrible trip. But looking back, it wasn’t terrible at all. It was the shadow work revealing itself; the dark side, the stuff I’d been carrying, showing up for the first time. I just didn’t have the tools or the setting to understand what it was trying to tell me. I wasn’t ready. So I shut the door and told myself I’d never touch them again.
At 26, I hit a wall. Something had to change. I took a leap of faith — Joe Dispenza, personal growth work, and eventually found my way to ceremony. Intentional. Emotional. A completely different setting. And for the first time, I was actually able to unpack the things I’d been processing: childhood trauma I didn’t even know was stopping me from feeling, from becoming who I was supposed to be.
That’s when I realized the first experience at 21 wasn’t a mistake. It was the lesson arriving before I had the language for it. The ceremony at 26 gave me the container to finally sit with what had surfaced years earlier. Both experiences were necessary. One showed me the root. The other gave me the tools to pull it up.
The healing compounded. The numbing stopped. Purpose emerged.
I built this because those tools didn’t exist in one place. Products that actually get to the root. Education that cuts through the stigma. A community where you can talk about this honestly — including the hard parts, especially the hard parts. The shadow work isn’t the bad trip. It’s the whole point.
What’s Broken
The system is rigged. The same institutions that gave us the food pyramid manipulated society toward pharmaceutical dependency, suppressed psychedelic research for decades, and created stigma through fake news and government lies. Psychedelics get to the actual root issue, and that threatened everything they built.
Most people are numb and don’t even know it. They’re managing symptoms — five coffees a day, SSRIs that blunt instead of heal, scrolling to avoid feeling, staying busy to avoid sitting with themselves. They know something is off but can’t access what’s underneath. Unprocessed trauma they don’t even know is there. And the system that’s supposed to help them was designed to keep them coming back, not to graduate them out.
That’s the problem nobody recognizes as a problem: most people have never felt their actual baseline. They think numb is normal.
The Belief
Chemically, microdosing supports neuroplasticity. It helps your brain form new connections, break old patterns, access more of itself. The research is real and it’s growing.
But what it actually does is bigger than chemistry. It’s a catalyst. It opens a door you didn’t know was closed. It helps you feel again — feel everything. It connects the neurons so that the practices you’re already doing (breathwork, meditation, journaling, movement, nature) actually land deeper. It surfaces the stuff that was buried — the trauma, the patterns, the stories you’ve been running on without knowing it.
What it makes possible: a real relationship with yourself. Not managed. Not medicated. Not numbed. The ability to process what’s underneath and become the best version of yourself — not through a capsule alone, but through the capsule as a catalyst paired with the work.
And then the part most brands won’t say: you outgrow it. You reach your new baseline and you don’t need the catalyst anymore. That’s the whole point.
Why Now
The stigma is cracking. Decades of suppression are finally giving way — Johns Hopkins, Imperial College London, the FDA granting breakthrough therapy designation. The research that was always there is finally being allowed to exist publicly.
At the same time, people are hitting a wall with the conventional playbook. SSRIs. Adderall. Five coffees. Therapy that talks in circles. An estimated 9.5 million US adults are already microdosing, most of them DIY — grinding their own, inconsistent dosing, no standardization, no guidance.
Culturally, there’s a hunger for something real. People are exhausted by wellness that’s performative and healing that’s surface-level. They want root cause, not symptom management. They want evidence, not vibes.
The science, the cultural readiness, and the personal desperation are all converging at the same moment. This isn’t early anymore. This is the window.
The Misunderstanding
The biggest misconception is that microdosing is just “taking a little bit of shrooms” — that there’s nothing behind it. No protocol, no practice, no purpose.
And look — I use mushrooms recreationally too. I’ll take them at a festival to dance, to be present, to enhance the experience. And part of that intention is what I’m not doing: I’m not drinking, I’m not consuming substances that harm me. That’s still intentional. Recreational and intentional aren’t opposites. You can enjoy the experience and still be choosing something better for yourself.
The real misunderstanding is that mushrooms are one thing — that they’re either medicine or party drugs. They’re neither and both. It depends on the person, the setting, and the intention. A ceremony is different from a festival is different from a Tuesday morning microdose. All of them can be intentional. None of them deserve judgment.
The other misconception is the stigma itself — that mushrooms are dangerous. The same government that told you they were dangerous suppressed the research proving they weren’t. The research was always in the people. We just made it easier to access.
And then there’s the fear that you’ll become dependent. We built the opposite. Our products are designed to be outgrown. Designed to be deleted. The goal is graduation, not subscription.
Who This Is For
A person stuck in a cycle. Pharmaceuticals, caffeine, numbing, addiction — or just a quiet sense of lost purpose. They’ve tried the conventional routes. They know something is off but can’t access what’s underneath.
They range from someone on SSRIs who wants to feel again, to a biohacker chasing neuroplasticity, to someone watching a parent face cognitive decline and feeling helpless, to someone who just wants to quit the five-coffees-a-day hamster wheel.
What they share: a sense that something is blocking them from being the best version of themselves, but they can’t see what it is. They’re not broken. They’re buried. There’s unprocessed stuff underneath that nobody taught them how to reach.
They’re searching for something that actually works. Not another app. Not another pill. Not another influencer telling them to meditate harder. Something that gets to the root.
What We Stand Against
We reject a system that suppresses root-cause healing to sell symptom management.
We reject the idea that science and spirituality have to be separate. The best breakthroughs happen when both are in the room. We’re evidence-based, but we’re not cold about it. Ceremony changed my life. Breathwork changed my life. The research validates what indigenous communities have known for centuries. What we reject is performative spirituality — the kind that uses big words with no substance behind them, that sells aesthetics instead of actual practice. If it sounds deep but doesn’t hold up to a single follow-up question, it’s not this.
We reject dramatic mushroom stories told for likes. People who portray mushrooms sensationally for clicks are actively hurting this movement. They feed the exact stigma we’re trying to dismantle.
We reject dependency as a business model. Any brand that needs you to stay sick to stay profitable is part of the problem. We built this to make ourselves unnecessary.
Read the full breakdown of what we reject →
The Practice
Taking a capsule doesn’t make you part of the movement. Living the practice does.
The capsule is the catalyst. The movement is what you do with the door it opens — breathwork, meditation, movement, journaling, nature, sleep, ceremony, self-development work. The catalyst connects the neurons. The practices rewire the patterns.
Someone who microdoses takes something. Someone in the movement is doing the work — processing what surfaces, sitting with discomfort instead of numbing it, building rituals that compound over time. They’re in the Telegram talking honestly about what came up. They’re not chasing a feeling. They’re building a baseline.
And the ultimate marker: they heal what needed healing. They reach their new baseline. Maybe they still microdose, maybe they don’t — but the point is they don’t need it anymore. The product served its purpose. What stays is the community, the practices, and the person they became through the work. That’s the movement. Not customers who depend on a capsule forever — people who got to the root, healed, and kept growing.
The Vision
In 10 to 20 years, the stigma is gone. Not just reduced — gone. Mushrooms are understood for what the research has always shown: one of the most effective tools for neuroplasticity, trauma processing, and mental health that nature ever produced.
People access root-cause healing instead of managing symptoms for life. Families have conversations about mental health that start with honesty instead of shame. The pharmaceutical treadmill is an option, not the default. Psychedelic-assisted protocols are integrated into how we actually heal — alongside therapy, practice, and community.
Kids grow up knowing that feeling numb isn’t normal. That there are tools to process what’s underneath. That asking for help isn’t weakness.
And the Movement? Ideally, we have made ourselves unnecessary for most of the people we have served. They reached their baseline. They graduated. That’s what winning looks like.
The Ask
Feel it. Sit with it. Don’t scroll past it.
If something in this resonated — if you recognized yourself in the numbness, the cycle, the quiet sense that something is off — that recognition is the first step. Don’t ignore it.
Take the quiz. Find out where to start. Join the community on Telegram. Start learning. Start the practices — breathwork, meditation, journaling, movement, nature. And when you’re ready, try the catalyst.
But commit to the work, not just the product. This isn’t a pill you take and forget. It’s a door you walk through. The ask is simple: start the practice, do the work, get to the root — and when you reach your baseline, graduate.
Limitless by nature.
— Kecho
The Microdose Movement is an educational community, not a medical provider. Nothing in this manifesto is medical advice. If you are in crisis, please contact your local emergency services or a crisis helpline.