Anthropologist Victor Turner explained the concept of communitas as coming from a shared experience of transience, or of a sense of intimacy that comes from having gone through a change together. Related to this is how anti-structural ritual comes from these experiences as a way to challenge and redefine social boundaries by exposing their arbitrariness, to keep a society adaptable. In recent years, there has been increasing research in the field of psychedelic drugs as potential treatments for a variety of mental health disorders. One of the issues some researchers have with approving and mainstreaming psychedelics as a psychiatric medicine is that the experience can be difficult without an appropriate cultural container for re-adjusting to everyday life with altered or expanded perception related to the formation of new neural connections. Therapists who specialize in this type of treatment have offices with headphones, comfortable cushions, and adjustable lighting to make it an inviting, stress-free space. In addition to psychedelics having a legitimate place in individual therapy, Emergency Entertainment champions the idea that institutions of learning can be appropriate cultural containers for psychedelic experiences, especially in group settings. Outside of a medical context, there's potential for such naturally-occurring substances to be cultivated on campus and used to promote creativity, problem solving, and a sense of social and ecological connectedness with guidance informed by traditional knowledge and modern medicine. Indigenous groups have the framework for this, and they're at the forefront of the re-integration of entheogenic medicine into a human culture that has lost its direct connection with the divine.