Dr Hadeed sitting on the back of a chair in a field.

This is personal…

When I first told my mother that I was getting a divorce, she replied in a sarcastic tone,

“Well I guess I’m the only one who believes in happy endings”.

I put my hand gently on her shoulder and said,

“Mom I want you to consider that this is a happy ending”.

Dr Hadeed walking in a field with her two daughters.

Sabrina Hadeed, PhD

Facilitator, Coach, & CEO

The dialogue above really happened exactly as it’s written. I chose to highlight it not to give my mom a hard time (I love and appreciate her immensely) but instead to highlight a tendency that many of us have to make assumptions about other people’s stories. We often base these assumptions on existing paradigms (aka the most common narrative). Examples include “divorce equals an unhappy ending” or “the longer a marriage the happier the love story”. Although these are sometimes true, they are not ALWAYS true.

My story doesn’t fit the paradigm. I truly believe me and my ex had a happy ending when we lovingly dissolved our marriage. We also had a happy beginning into a new kind of partnership. And yes, we had two young children. And yes, there was heart ache and pain and all the things that come with the decision to end.

But we kept coming back to the question of ‘what do we want our ending to be like? For us and for our children…”

I believe that most people, no matter how resentful or hurt they are - if they really connect with a deep sense of what they want their ending to look like… they would answer that question similar to the way we did. The answer would be something akin to “honest, brave, and kind”.

Not only do I have personal experience as a conscious uncoupler, I have 20+ years on the front lines as a psychotherapist working with family systems and couples. Throughout my time sitting across from every imaginable relational dynamic, listening with curiosity and care…I found a common theme. There is a deficit of support when it comes to couples who are conflicted with whether or not to even stay together or how to navigate an ending if they so choose. There are too many stories of couples “trying everything” and still feeling stuck.

I am determined to support couples who want a better ending and those wanting to challenge the old narratives that are not aligned with their story.

Because I know that happy endings are possible with uncoupling or realigning - and that happier endings make for a happier life.

The Ripple Effect!

Impact Goes Beyond your Relationship

The current model for supporting couples often isn’t enough or doesn’t work. Psychedelics have the potential to revolutionize the way we move through conflict, reconnect with our internal wisdom, and reclaim a new path on our terms.

By improving the way we navigate conflict and emotional pain:

  • we improve the way we feel about ourselves and the world.

  • we improve the way others experience us.

  • we role model healthy repair and mindful navigation through life's storms.

Think about your friends, family, and/or children. This work has a ripple effect. It is systemic. Loneliness, isolation, and unhealed pain lead to physical and emotional illness. It is why the expression “hurt people, hurt people”rings true. But guess what? Healed people, heal people. The healing begins with yourself, followed by the RELATIONSHIPS you have with others.

I imagine a world where couples get to have the healthiest most amicable ending possible or find their way back to one another - and intergenerational wellness becomes a reality. This has the capacity to then impact communities and cultural wellness (the ripple effect). This is a prevention model of wellness. Treat the underlying problems, support couples to move through conflict and pain even and especially with endings and help support future generations as they navigate love and loss.

Increased wellness equals decreased sickness equals less strain (financial or otherwise) on community systems.

Dr Hadeed smiling at the camera and standing in the street with the sun shining on her hair and face

Expertise and Scope of Practice

The Oregon framework mandates only a 120-hour training program, a 40-hour practicum, and a high school diploma in order to become a Licensed Psilocybin Facilitator.

In addition to meeting the minimum training standards set forth by the Oregon Health Authority, Dr. Sabrina Hadeed has a Master’s degree in Existential Phenomenological Psychology and a PhD in Counseling with a major in Counselor Education & Supervision. She has been working with couples and individuals in the mental health field for over 20 years.

While as a facilitator Dr. Hadeed does not provide licensed therapy services during psilocybin sessions, her background and experience in mental health are fundamental to a harm reduction approach, as well as, the added expertise needed to navigate the complexities of the mind and emotions that can arise before, during, and following a psilocybin journey both individually and in relationships.

Dr. Hadeed brings her powerful intuition, spirited passion, and curiosity mindset to meet couples on the edge of their comfort zones. She cultivates a safe “container” with a disarming warmth and challenges participants to move through pain and shadow - into pleasure and light. “Every storm begins with stillness stirring and ends with breakthrough light” (a line borrowed from one of her poems).

empowered woman standing on a bridge in a green jumpsuit

Speaker

Speaker

Speaker Image Dr. Sabrina Hadeed at a microphone

Dr. Hadeed has spoken live hundreds of times at conferences, universities, and organizations, to small groups, as well as, in front of audiences numbering in the hundreds.

She has been interviewed on TV, as an expert source for articles, and on podcasts. Additionally she has served as a guest lecturer and professor for several universities over the span of her career.

Dr. Hadeed is a heart centered passionate speaker, inspiring and motivating audiences with her warmth, energy, and wisdom.

Speaking topics include but are not limited to:

  • Like A Girl: Empowering Women to Reclaim their Voice

  • Feminist Leadership Approaches: challenging the status quo of top down hierarchical culture

  • Coping with Collective Grief

  • Healing toxic culture one relationship at a time

  • Not broken, just Restructured: How to re-write the divorce narrative

  • People Pleasers in Recovery

  • Resilience

  • Psychedelics and creative thinking, getting unstuck, conflict resolution, intergenerational healing, marriage and mircodosing, and more!

Work with me!

Psychedelic-Assisted Couples Relationship Wellness Work

Let me help you find your way towards a different kind of happy ending

Deepen

Strengthen and restore your relationship because all good things can be better with supported intention and attention.

Decide

Strengthen your discernment muscles and examine what the directions mean to you, so you can increase the clarity and make a change.

Dissolve

Surrender can be empowering. Endings can be loving and amicable.