From Acute Altered States to Durable Change: A Social-Psychological Framework for Contextual Framing, Integration, and Post-Acute Stabilization
by Elias Rubenstein
Published: May 28, 2026 • DOI: 10.47772/IJRISS.2026.100500234
Abstract
Recent psychedelic research has shown that compounds such as psilocybin, DMT, ayahuasca, and 5-MeO-DMT can induce acute altered states involving self-dissolution, altered reality-status, and heightened meaning attribution. Historical and cross-cultural evidence likewise suggests that nonordinary states have often been embedded within ritual, initiation, contemplative discipline, and structured interpretive systems rather than treated as isolated pharmacological events. This article develops a theoretical framework for understanding how acute altered states may, or may not, become durable psychological, behavioral, and existential change. It argues that acute intensity alone is insufficient and that contextual framing, post-acute integration, and pre-existing integrative capacities jointly shape long-term outcomes. The framework compares DMT, ayahuasca, 5-MeO-DMT, psilocybin, LSD/lysergamides, contemplative practice, fasting, breathwork, and near-death experiences without claiming causal identity among them. It concludes with testable hypotheses concerning contextual framing, recall, integration, individual differences, and durable transformation.