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Skinny Dipping in Reality: The Great Hippy LSD Enlightenment Search Party

By Joe Bageant, JoeBageant.com. Posted March 25, 2009.


I have to echo Hunter S. Thompson in his sentiment that, while I wouldn't recommend drugs and mayhem to anyone, it's always worked for me.
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 There's nothing better that 250 mics of good acid to kick start the cosmic coonhunt for Enlightenment. It takes juice. After all sonny boy, you don't knock down stars with a bee bee gun.
-- Mad Dog Howard, Hippie Doper/Philosopher

First LSD trip, 1965: Tumbling, tumbling, tumbling inward with eyes closed, I could hear the spider plant hanging in the basket overhead singing in its green subatomic plant language, a hymn to the sunlight charging my bedroom atmosphere. On the back of my eyelids spun a great wheel of existence, turning both ways simultaneously generating an unearthly mournful chant that seemed to be composed of every human voice on earth. It rose in some unknown universal tongue singing, "Wheel of life, wheel of death, Bangladesh, Bangladesh. Wheel of life, wheel of death, Bangaladesh, Bangaladesh." Millions of starving faces, young men, girls, old men, babies, crones, materialized in uncountable swarms, each face transfigured by some unnamable mutual understanding that I could not share. Then they atomized, leaving the room filled with the scent of wood smoke, shit and citrus blossoms (an odor I would instantly recognize decades later in poverty stricken Central American villages.)

No words can describe an LSD trip, but let me say that at the end of this one, I sat down and cried. For happiness. My deepest hope and suspicion, the one to which I dared not cling, had been confirmed. Life could indeed be significant, piercing and meaningful.

I first took LSD in Winchester, Virginia, thanks to my gay friend George, who was being "treated" for his homosexuality with lysergic acid and enjoying every minute of treatment. Ever since reading about LSD in a Life magazine article a year before, both of us had wanted some of the stuff. Then one day George walked into my basement apartment and threw a cellophane packet onto the kitchen table. "There it is Bageant," he said. Next day, after creating a small meditative space with plants, a Tibetan mandala, and classical music on the turntable, we took it. Five years later I was still taking it at least once a week, and to this day I consider LSD the promethean spark of whatever awakening I have managed to accomplish in the life.

Hard as it is to imagine today, LSD was perfectly legal at the time. Legal and apparently not dangerous. In fact, it never even interfered with my job at a microbiological laboratory in the local Shraft's frozen food plant, but seemed to improve work. Often I arrived there still under the influence of the previous night's psychotropics and still managed to impress the hell out of the lab boss, Ray Trotta, for my ability to note extremely subtle differences in cultured bacterial colonies. Of course, when we put our eye to the same lens of the dark field colony counter, we were by no means looking at the same colony, as I skimmed across and through the colorful landscapes and towers of teeming metropoli of bacterial civilizations.

For the first time in years, my life in that small town was very enjoyable. In fact Winchester soon spawned its own small psychedelic scene, one among thousands in heartland America at the time. We never hear about them today, the media having since trivialized the entire Sixties (which actually ran into the Seventies) into a handful of newsreel snippets of the Haight Ashbury, Kent State, long hair, Vietnam and the Beatles.

In Winchester, an assortment of perhaps fifty artists, gays, hillbilly hipsters, academics from a nearby college of music, passing beatniks, and psychedelic enthusiasts had accumulated around town, hanging out at a marvelous old "dinner and juke joint" in the poor section. Winchester's good Southern burghers couldn't help but notice all this "suspicious happiness," as the mayor once called it. But because the sons and daughters of local doctors, lawyers and authorities, including the daughter of the town's prosecuting attorney, were in the mix, and because the queer son of a state senator hung out there, a hands-off policy prevailed for the first couple of years. Finally, the good fundamentalist Christians and Republican business community just couldn't take it any more.

Meanwhile, I'd gained a profile for myself through openly espousing consciousness expansion and by working to racially integrate the all white Shraft's frozen food plant, which was later accomplished when the plant got a liberal New York manager named Hank. It was hairy for a while, but together we got it done.

As an aside, last year, some forty years later, I again saw the first Negro we hired (I use the non-PC word because it was the term of the day and feels right in this telling of the times), Ted, a religious man with a spark in his eye and built like a small tank. As we sat in his little house in Winchester's still-black section, Ted, now completely white haired and with one of those post cancer bowel bags attached, recalled that "Them was the days of Jim Crow, but they wasn't the worst thing to come along." "How's that?" I asked. "Crack," he answered. "Crack be destroyin' this generation. But if God took us through Jim Crow, he can take us through crack." We clasped our hands and closed our eyes in a short prayer.


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Joe Bageant is author of the book, Deer Hunting With Jesus: Dispatches from America's Class War. (Random House Crown), about working class America. A complete archive of his on-line work, along with the thoughts of many working Americans on the subject of class may be found on his website.

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X pat observer
Posted by: davy on Mar 25, 2009 2:58 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Now that was a good read. Nobody can paint a picture like Joe. I saw T Rinpoche speak, well actually not speak. He came on stage with two huge body guards sat there and smiled, after some time somebody yelled, "tell us something." He then asked, "What do you want to know". He then answered every question with, "You'll have to ask yourself." It was hilarious, but not for some.
Sooo well said about religion and current climes. I traveled back in time reading this and it was a good trip.

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I......
Posted by: type22003 on Mar 25, 2009 3:37 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I, for one, thank you

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Drugs are like sex
Posted by: terradea42 on Mar 25, 2009 4:57 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In that the government, religion and society wants to keep them away from you because of the risk of enlightenment. Why is "authority" so afraid of the masses getting their hands on drugs or sex? Because it can lead to real freedom, not the right-wing fake kind.

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thanks
Posted by: Cory.Goodman on Mar 25, 2009 5:43 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This article in the morning is like coffee for the third eye :) (@L@)

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Many thanks
Posted by: lightinmyhands on Mar 25, 2009 6:14 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This coming from a girl slowly becoming a woman, made in the 80's and raised on tv and consumerism- many, many thanks for this great read! The rainbows of my generation are better known as "drainbows" and this new counter culture revolution seems to stem only from hedonistic desires and a deep, deep depression shared by nearly all of my thinking peers. They talk the talk and drop the acid, but never really pay enough attention to lessons or insight along the way. And this is exactly the image the media has portrayed of the 60's and early 70's for us. Thanks for the illumination--- that somewhere a long the way, people were learning things, that they are still learning things-waking up to the dream.

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one
Posted by: Fat Man at the Buffet Line on Mar 25, 2009 6:23 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Does not need to use drugs for enlightenment, but if you think it works it does. Personally drugs are a waste of time for me.

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» RE: one Posted by: bornxeyed
» RE: one Posted by: Fat Man at the Buffet Line
» RE: one Posted by: aonghus36
» RE: one Posted by: J4761
Bout time...
Posted by: Cybershaman on Mar 25, 2009 6:35 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
One of the most satisfying aspects of the collective unconscious is it's ability to circumvent procrastination.

I've always hoped the reality of the movement would overtake the negative stereotypes used to demonize it. This is a good start.

When I met Leary it was the exact same phenomenon. He was quite discouraged by the crowds insistance on making him talk only about other sixties icons and the gossip surrounding them. His annoyance did an about face when we looked into each others eyes ... and laughed.

I long for the day when we can bring the 'gigglefest' out of it's coma and take the telephone pole out of this countries ass.

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Buddhism & intoxicants a little more complicated than that
Posted by: Gabba_Gabba_Hey on Mar 25, 2009 6:41 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Chogyam Trungpa was a great teacher but if he was anyone's sole connection to Buddhist concepts, one is inevitably going to end up with an offbeat view of Buddhist concepts.

Okay, Buddhism doesn't forbid alcohol and drugs, but it's generally considered to discourage their overuse. Precept #5 (out of only 5!) is "To avoid taking alcohol and other intoxicants."

Trungpa was generally considered to have been an alcoholic. True, he was from a sect that had concepts of "mindful drinking" and all that, but it's definitely questionable how "mindful" he was about it since it damaged his health and probably led to his early death.

On the other hand, my vague impression is that for some reason, a great many Westerners who are attracted to Buddhism are already 12-steppers when they arrive (I'm not one), and metaphorically speaking they tend to throw a 12-step wet blanket over everything and try to fit everything into AA concepts, rather than the other way around. Obviously this was not Joe Bageant's experience!

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» I really question Posted by: drfun
» RE: Crazy Wisdom Posted by: claude
Thank You, Joe.
Posted by: manray on Mar 25, 2009 7:08 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I wish I could write like this. Joe, you summed up much of my own personal experiences with LSD, Buddhism and the search for enlightenment in the 70's and 80's. And yes, Life gets harder with age. I'm not sure I could handle tripping now (at 51) although the craving is still there. Taking psychedelics was the greatest thing I ever did for my Self.

Regarding the Hippies: they (we) have been ridiculed and dismissed for decades. But vindication is near as we witness the planet decaying and resources being depleted at an alarming rate. The Hippies have always espoused the virtues of the small footprint and sustainability which are now being co-opted by the "Green" movement for marketing purposes. Mother Earth News has been on the newsstands for decades- has anyone even noticed?

Thanks again and keep 'em coming. This one made my week.

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I Took LSD and Found My Atheism Affirmed
Posted by: WomanRebel on Mar 25, 2009 7:31 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I took a lot of LSD during 1968 including some very high dose trips as well as some listen to the band and see the pretty colors.

I had a seriously abusive childhood and LSD let me explore the memory banks back to the point where I felt assured it was the fault of others and not of myself.

Others found Buddha, I found Tom Joad and Weatherman and dozens of causes where it was important to stand against injustice.

Acid was a valuable tool for finding in oneself what one needed. It was also a hell of a lot of fun in lower doses.

Most harm from drugs like pot and acid come from the war on drugs.

People who take LSD make lousy slaves.

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"mind is emptiness, the true world is empty"
Posted by: saa on Mar 25, 2009 7:33 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Yet people still believe there's a world to save. ;)

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thank you
Posted by: m/r on Mar 25, 2009 7:36 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Wonderful read.
Beautifully captured.
*_*

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What was the point of this?
Posted by: sausage on Mar 25, 2009 7:41 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Six Web pages to tell us he liked doing acid.

Yeah...and?

I did my fair share of acid back in the day, as the kids say, mostly for recreational purposes.

Sometimes the acids was so mild after dropping I'd smoke a few joints then head for the bar. Other times I was holding on for dear sanity until the audio hallucinations ceased then I'd sit back, relax, look at all the pretty, twinkling lights winking in and out in my darkened room, make "trails" with incense sticks or cigarettes and listen to tunes.

No big deal. Period.

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» How sad ... Posted by: chaztmac
» Wow Posted by: Aimleft
» get out what you put in Posted by: Tom Tele
» RE: get out what you put in Posted by: Pissed Off Woman
» RE: What was the point of this? Posted by: type22003
Thanks for the memories - we are not alone.
Posted by: stellabloo on Mar 25, 2009 7:51 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Hi Joe,

Thank you for sharing such a significant story. We have never met and I was a different generation, but I understand.

As a child I lived for a while on a hippie commune in the mountains of BC. It was the happiest period of my childhood. The people were fascinating from a child's point of view: they LOVED kids, loved to read, played all sorts of exotic musical instruments, had dogs and ponies, goats and chickens, and spearmint for homemade tea growing in every garden.

Suffice to say that when I was yanked to ultra-redneck-land, I literally dreamt of green forests and snowcapped mountains - only to awake still surrounded by the spawn of sledheads and moosehunters.

Long story short, I did indeed return to the mountains to seek a lost way of life. It has been a long, strange trip ever since. I would just like to add a couple of comments to your wonderful essay.

It's important to note Ken Kesey's final words in The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test - to paraphrase, "you can only go through the door so many times, sooner or later you have to choose which side of the door you're staying on". Once psychedelics ceased to reveal any new visions and only confirmed what I already knew, I stopped taking them. At some point in adult life you don't want to be high for 10 or 20 hours straight, it's a bit too much.

As well, by the time I became seriously steeped in psychedelics (as opposed to my earlier dabbling when I almost died taking strychnine-laced LSD) I had already detoxed for a couple of years and was deeply committed to a spiritual journey.

I read voraciously, anything I could get my hands on, but my LSD experience revealed an underlying pagan mysticism in my psyche, enough to help me discover my own truths ... I understood that the old buddhist monks had come very close but sometimes missed the radical western concept of Love and the idea that Love is neither blind nor stupid. The old yogic tradition teaches Ishvara-pranidhana, Self-Surrender, and this is perhaps the most important practice of all - one familiar to all who attend AA meetings. One Day at a Time. Thy will, not mine.

Crazy wisdom, indeed. I really like you Joe, although we have never met and probably never will. I know my life has a purpose and I know yours does too and little by little the answers keep coming. Getting old is another exercise in surrender but I am not afraid. I nearly died a couple of years ago and that experience was as profound as 500 mcg of LSD... When my time comes, I hope to walk out into the snow with nothing more than my little stash of pot to find my own way "home".

Keep on "keepin on" ;.)

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» I don't know you, man... Posted by: Pirate1
» Learned at MJ knees Posted by: jwg
A dangerous drug
Posted by: tulugaq on Mar 25, 2009 7:51 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I remember saying after my first acid trip that it was indeed a dangerous drug -- dangerous to the word-as-it-is and the governments that keep it that way.

We did make changes in the world.

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» RE: No "we" didn't Posted by: sausage
» RE: No "we" didn't Posted by: aonghus36
» RE: We are the establishment Posted by: sausage
» RE: We are the establishment Posted by: type22003
» RE: We are the establishment Posted by: aonghus36
» RE: No "we" didn't Posted by: yesman
Great read, Joe
Posted by: kattfish on Mar 25, 2009 7:57 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Memories... and lots of, "I can relate to that." I have always believed that my experiences with acid did more to shape my life than 15 yrs of school. Acid was the 1st drug I ever did, so much for marijuana being a gate-way drug :-)
Peace,
Katt

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» It was... Posted by: Pirate1
Rembering the 60's...kinda
Posted by: NamVeT on Mar 25, 2009 8:20 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Wonderful stuff acid. I took it almost daily finally discovering that one needs to wait a few days between doses. No problem, I just increased the dose. I've done enough acid at one sitting for at least 80 people. Definately got in touch with my inner self and I'd say the whole damn collective consciousness. I wish everyone would have at least tried acid once. If so, I believe that this world would be different today!
I took acid on my first night in VietNam. Very interesting trip. Totally different than my experience in the States. Still, even at the age of 62 I would take it again in a heartbeat. Only problem is the acid of today is so full of junk that I'm not sure it's even safe to take. The pureness of acid in the 60's and early 70's cannot be defined.'
Anyway, thanks for a great article. If you ever find a connection for some windowpane, orange wedge, purple osley, let me know, I'd love to trip with you Joe... .. ...

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» It's out there...... Posted by: gellero1
On acid, Trungpa, Boulder and brotherliness
Posted by: nodozejoze on Mar 25, 2009 9:19 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Beautiful Joe! Thanks...as ususal.
When I moved to Boulder in 1994, I´d already had about 100+ acid trips and almost 20 years Zen under my proverbial belt. But Boulder, by then quite gentrified, still retained the allure of acid and enlightenment (plus employing half of Trungpa Rinpoche´s students as teachers at Naropa and the occasional Rainbow gathering) I finished a BA and got an MA at Naropa and now am a writer and psychologisit and I´ll tell you this: my life is infinitely better, wiser and more luminous because of both the insights from acid and those gotten from Trungpa. And there are some of us (I´m just short of 50) who still feel as "brothers" and love those after talk bear hugs! (and maybe a beer or three) Take care, brother!

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I loved trippin'
Posted by: Dankhank on Mar 25, 2009 10:55 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
More than any other experience, 'cept BJs, acid is truly the gateway to the inner mind. Scary for some, I only had trouble when trippin' alone. In a group, others could see if things were getting heavy and help to distract you from the whirlpool in your consciousness. I, too, yearn for some windowpane, Orange sunshine, blue microdot or paper acid. I/we had some wondrous times while learning of ourselves and the world. My life has been a constant rebellion from the confining faux Judeo-Christian juggernaut, sharing insight. Politicians fear to see me. I make them explain themselves. Jimi said to fly our freak flag high. Aldo Nova said Life is just a fantasy. thanks Joe, for the memories.

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I hear Winchester is one of those few areas in the Northwestern part of VA that's growing huge much
Posted by: maxpayne on Mar 25, 2009 11:21 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
like Northern VA and even Hampton Roads. I think LSD will get some societal tolerance especially since that town went to Obama for the first time even though the rest of the Shenandoah region went Mccain. Hang in there Joe. The next time I get sent to Northern VA for another assignment, I'll be sure to visit Winchester and see what's happening there.

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Our unique attitude
Posted by: Perry Logan on Mar 25, 2009 11:39 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Born in 1948, I've always been puzzled by our unique attitude toward mind-expanding drugs. How could virtually an entire generation differ so strongly from the generations that preceded it and followed it?

It was just part of the Zeitgeist that LSD and pot were not just new ways to have risky fun, but something important that needed to be tried. It's hard to believe we were the spawn of the Greatest Generation, known, among thier many other virtues, for having their feet firmly on the ground.

Subsequent generations have by and large kept the drugs and jettisoned the spiritual quest stuff as being distinctly uncool, which I guess it was. The use of ecstasy has some parallels, but the goal with ecstasy seems more social than spiritual.

Not that every generation doesn't have its seekers. I'm just generalizing.

But it really seemed like the act of taking mind-altering substances suddenly had significance for many of us.

The question is why we were so different. Was it some regressive genetic fluke? Was it that they made us hide under our desks? Was it the Cold War? Was it the general view that chemicals could solve all problems? I really don't understand the gulf that separates us from everyone else.

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» RE: Our unique attitude Posted by: Cybershaman
» The current has not died. Posted by: Pissed Off Woman
» Love you... Posted by: Pirate1
LSD and the GOV'T
Posted by: jeffrey7 on Mar 25, 2009 12:06 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As much as Dr. Leary's assumption that information age did a lot to expand people's consciousenesses,which I do agree with to a point, I feel Shamanic journeys,Trips Festivals and getting out into nature are just as valid in the quest to know the essiential

nature of human consciousness and existance. But the latter is way down on the 'fear and control' spectrum than the influences of mass media. Having images of bombings and bloody massacres and folks being wrestled to the ground by transit cops only to be shot in the back do more to create psychological unrest,paranoia,depression and a sense of hopelessness in society then the release of those things that psychoactives bring us. A popular phrase in the old days was 'Reality is for people who can't handle drugs.' Truth is reality is far more dimensional,complex and transendant than we can observe without the aide of the wilderness,

the Sweatlodge or psychoactives. In this way cacti,mushrooms and LSD are, to paraphrase Don Juan " Necessary because they're quicker at breaking down the barriers to enlightenment.' To this day cacti ceremonies are held in Peru and the Native American Church still uses the Peyote Lodge. Not as a means of 'catching a buzz' but as a Healing and Cleansing of the Mind and Spirit.



God knows,if all the information about life came to you through the TV,movies and the daily news,you need to get 'outside'

yourself. You need to stare God right in the face,feel it's smiling contenance and hear that you are alright just as you are, from a Being far away from the dominate culture's fear based means of control,that only wants to share Life and Awareness with anyone who wants to venture out from what we're told is 'normal' So go ahead,expand your mind. The only thing you'll lose is the fear society has dumped on you and you'll gain a much larger view of the Creation and our place in it. Which is good.

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Gov't vs LSD
Posted by: jeffrey7 on Mar 25, 2009 12:08 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
" The information age has done more to expand human consciousness than LSD ever could"
I wish I'd have said that but it was really Dr. Timothy Leary, LSD Guru of the 1960's, and a 'tour-friend' of mine. If you're a Dead Head you know what I mean. But let's delve into that statement for a minute.

Our awareness expands in direct relation to how fast we recieve and process information. In the real old days you were lucky if the local shaman popped by once every ten years. He'd create a teaching and a painting to go along with it and then he would leave. You had your lesson and a picture that contained all the elements of the lesson so you could continue to learn from it until he or she showed back up again and made up a whole new lesson with a whole new study chart. This took decades to get fresh information and the slower learning process lent it's way to a more complete understanding of the information.

When print came on the scene, it didn't really speed up the time it took to print it,40 years per book, but the teachings could be had by more folks in book form,which was easier to pass around. This expanded to the newspaper which started out as a monthly,then a weekly and then daily. each with it's own rate of absorption,depending upon the reader. But information was coming faster to the minds of the people more than ever before. This shrank the country,as far as knowing what was happening on either coast at nearly any time. So started the controlling of the people's minds by those who wrote the papers and the often misinterpretations of those whom could read as they relayed the information to the illiterate. Which in the old days was quite a lot of us. That's how we got stuck with the Electoral College. Some folks actually thought it was a new school.

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» Tim, of course... Posted by: Pirate1
Gov't vs LSD
Posted by: jeffrey7 on Mar 25, 2009 12:10 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Radio sped things up greatly when it came to getting information out to a lot of people in almost 'real-time'.The advent of television added to expansion of human consciousness,but not in a positive way. Newspapers,radio and TV all worked the same angle on the population. Make people afraid of something,then show them an asprin ad,then go back to fear mongering. Radio and print was used extensively. You could always count on the newspaper to spread disinformation. The papers run by W.R. Hearst publishing was one of the first to stir up the 'marijuana scare tactics'. Prior to this slam job 'marijuana' was known by it's proper name Cannibas Hemp. Every farmer and customer of Eli Lilly knew about all the uses of hemp and knew it to be safer than alchohol. Marijuana was unknown to the public and therefore it was easy to scare the public with stories of drug crazed Mexicans crossing the border to steal our daughters or stories of white girls being raped by stoned blacks,complete with pictures. Films jumped on board with movies like 'Reefer Madness' and 'Marijuana the Devil Weed'. While government sponsored films like 'Hemp for America' got pulled and then denied that they ever existed.While the 1930's Scientific American was running articles about how hemp was a billion dollar crop for all the things it could be used for. Seems 'fair and balanced' has never been the way of the mass media.
Prior to WW2 marijuana was portrayed as 'the weed that makes folks violent and lawless'. During WW2 hemp was an important product but at the same time the media's storyline on hemp changed to 'It makes people too pacified for the war effort.' Radio kept folks rivited to war news and the papers ran front page pictures of auto accidents and more horror stories from the front. Then the new scurge became heroin after the war. They used the same language as they did with hemp but substituted heroin for weed. Films were little better than the government's propaganda machine running mostly wat stories and cop dramas.
These served to 'advance the fear' more than advance human thought beyond 'duck and run'. After the war,telev ision became the means to create a nonthinking mindless society that soaked up everything spewed out by the 'idiot box' as if it came straight from god's mouth. They don't call it 'programming' for nothing. Just look at the last elections and you'll see how good it still works.

Better than half the people polled thought Obama was a secret Muslim,had terrorist ties and maybe wasn't even a natural born American. Not to mention all the bullshit marijuana messages. Is it any wonder most Americans need a headshrinker? Their minds have been baffled by bullshit.

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Gov't vs LSD
Posted by: jeffrey7 on Mar 25, 2009 12:12 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Now let's flip this coin and see how the other side looks. After the war, more and more articles in medical journals talked about

the usage of mushroom,cacti,and a new chemical LSD and their benefits to folks that were needing psychological help. Even well known character actors like Cary Grant said publically his life was made better by taking LSD three times a week. I can agree with that.



Soon there were a great many folks looking for mushroom shamans and controlled settings run by psychologists with LSD to help get them through this brave new frontier. Dr. Leary, Dr. Richard Alpert and Carl Jung were at the forefront of this new movement.

The Don Juan series by Carlos Castenatta fueled the 'Seeker' in all of us post war 'Beats' and emerging 'Hippie' society to take a 'Vision Quest'.



The biggest difference between these new powerful psychoactives and the mass media was mass media pumped out fear on very regular cycles,with film at 11,while cacti and LSD helped one confront their 'inner fears' in a much better way. Usually with the aide of a 'Roadman'. Someone who had tripped hard and broke down those inner barriers and stayed straight during these 'discovery sessoins' to guide you through the 'meeting of Yourself' which psychoactives brought you too. Done correctly,

one could transend a lot of bullshit that runs through our thought processes. Some called it 'Seeing God'. They were'nt far off the mark.



Psychoactives brought one to the right conclusion that everything in our world had it's origins in thought first.Chew on this for a minute. Houses,cars,lightbulbs,fashions,in house plumbing ,electricity,the power grid,rockets to the moon,even the internet you're reading this on all started out as a thought. Newspapers,TV,radio and movies would never have advanced that kind of realization.

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Gov't vs. LSD
Posted by: jeffrey7 on Mar 25, 2009 12:16 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Now let's flip this coin and see how the other side looks. After the war, more and more articles in medical journals talked about

the usage of mushroom,cacti,and a new chemical LSD and their benefits to folks that were needing psychological help. Even well known character actors like Cary Grant said publically his life was made better by taking LSD three times a week. I can agree with that.



Soon there were a great many folks looking for mushroom shamans and controlled settings run by psychologists with LSD to help get them through this brave new frontier. Dr. Leary, Dr. Richard Alpert and Carl Jung were at the forefront of this new movement.

The Don Juan series by Carlos Castenatta fueled the 'Seeker' in all of us post war 'Beats' and emerging 'Hippie' society to take a 'Vision Quest'.



The biggest difference between these new powerful psychoactives and the mass media was mass media pumped out fear on very regular cycles,with film at 11,while cacti and LSD helped one confront their 'inner fears' in a much better way. Usually with the aide of a 'Roadman'. Someone who had tripped hard and broke down those inner barriers and stayed straight during these 'discovery sessoins' to guide you through the 'meeting of Yourself' which psychoactives brought you too. Done correctly,

one could transend a lot of bullshit that runs through our thought processes. Some called it 'Seeing God'. They were'nt far off the mark.



Psychoactives brought one to the right conclusion that everything in our world had it's origins in thought first.Chew on this for a minute. Houses,cars,lightbulbs,fashions,in house plumbing ,electricity,the power grid,rockets to the moon,even the internet you're reading this on all started out as a thought. Newspapers,TV,radio and movies would never have advanced that kind of realization.

It threatens their ideology of how to shape people's thinking. Their's has always been the support arm of the government's idea of

'command and control'. We were always fed the unreal lifestyles of 'Leave it to Beaver' or '90210'. Supported by the 'You'd better walk the line' programming of 'M Squad','Highway Patrol', 'Cops' and 'CSI everywhere'. All designed to make to you conform through 'Fear Programming'. Factor in useless ego tripping shows like 'My Super Sweet Sixteen' and 'Pimp my Ride' and we're left feeling like if you don't have the 'right' friends,schooling,job,auto or neighborhood you're a 'problem American'. LSD kicked the shit out of those notions.

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Gov't vs LSD
Posted by: jeffrey7 on Mar 25, 2009 12:18 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Watch any of those shows tripping and pretty soon you come to the rightful conclusion,'these shows and the people they portray are fucked!!' Knowing the awesome power of a 'freed mind' the System had to do a major mindfuck job on LSD,mushrooms, cacti and other psychoactives as a positive and make it out to be something that could make you think you're a bird and jump off a twenty story building,to a horrible death. 'Dragnet' even ran a totally bullshit story that a young person tripping out could trip themselves into dying without the aide of tall buildings,stuffing your head in an oven to be 'one' with the baking bread or looking down a gunbarrel to see the bullet coming, just sitting on the floor laughing you ass off until you died. Once again 'Fear Programming'.



They used celebrities like Art Linkletter,who had a daughter that committed suicide by jumping off a building,to proclaim they did it on acid. Knowing full well the inquest report didn't support that notion. Yet they put this understandably grief strickem man on the tube to rail against Ken Kesey for holding the 'Trips Festivals' and the 'Acid Tests' where kids took electric kool-aide and danced themselves silly to the sounds of Big Brother, The Grateful Dead, Quicksilver and The Jefferson Airplane. Ken,ever the gentelman, took it all in stride and simply told Art he was wrong.

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Gov't vs LSD
Posted by: jeffrey7 on Mar 25, 2009 12:19 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I saw most of this bullshit on my TV growing up in the sixties and we were inundated in schools with drug education films. They

did a pretty fair job making me believe herion and opium were bad products but when they got around to pot and acid it had the opposite effect on me. They showed folks stoned out sitting around talking,laughing and not being involved in the world's crap and that seemed pretty harmless,which it was. When they got around to showing us what an 'acid trip' could be like I said to myself,'Fucking A Man!! I've gotta try this stuff!!' How scary is dancing musical notes or floating words or walls that changed colors at random? Try not at all!!!! There's no way to truly guage the effect of being able to think of being on a moutaintop in Nepal or what living on Mars might be like and then INSTANTLY being there!! Having made the journey several thousand times I

can tell you it challenges your idea of what 'reality' is. Personally I'm glad modern science has proved it so with their Quantum Theroy. Of course they can't tell you they just justified the alternet realities we acid trippers had 'discovered' but that's exactly what Quantum did.

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Gov't vs. LSD
Posted by: jeffrey7 on Mar 25, 2009 12:20 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
With all that psychoactives can and did 'show' us there was still the question of 'was that for real?'. True Seekers didn't blink at

whether or not what you had experienced was 'real' or not,we knew it was,but we did look for ways of gaining the same knowlege

that didn't involve drugs. We found it to be true by absenting ourselves from cities for the vast open access public lands and through the Native American Traditions of the Sweatlodge. The 'Oneness of All Things' that cacti and LSD showed us could be realized,at a much slower pace, through being in 'the wild' for about a month. This same reality could be known through the Sweatlodge and a great deal more,if you could handle the heat.



As much as Dr. Leary's assumption that information age did a lot to expand people's consciousenesses,which I do agree with to a point, I feel Shamanic journeys,Trips Festivals and getting out into nature are just as valid in the quest to know the essiential

nature of human consciousness and existance. But the latter is way down on the 'fear and control' spectrum than the influences of mass media. Having images of bombings and bloody massacres and folks being wrestled to the ground by transit cops only to be shot in the back do more to create psychological unrest,paranoia,depression and a sense of hopelessness in society then the release of those things that psychoactives bring us. A popular phrase in the old days was 'Reality is for people who can't handle drugs.' Truth is reality is far more dimensional,complex and transendant than we can observe without the aide of the wilderness,

the Sweatlodge or psychoactives. In this way cacti,mushrooms and LSD are, to paraphrase Don Juan " Necessary because they're quicker at breaking down the barriers to enlightenment.' To this day cacti ceremonies are held in Peru and the Native American Church still uses the Peyote Lodge. Not as a means of 'catching a buzz' but as a Healing and Cleansing of the Mind and Spirit.



God knows,if all the information about life came to you through the TV,movies and the daily news,you need to get 'outside'

yourself. You need to stare God right in the face,feel it's smiling contenance and hear that you are alright just as you are, from a Being far away from the dominate culture's fear based means of control,that only wants to share Life and Awareness with anyone who wants to venture out from what we're told is 'normal' So go ahead,expand your mind. The only thing you'll lose is the fear society has dumped on you and you'll gain a much larger view of the Creation and our place in it. Which is good.

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This morning I managed to introduce my father to Deer Hunting with Jesus.
Posted by: and_abottleofrum on Mar 25, 2009 12:57 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Over the past year I've helped turn him from a mostly a-political moderate to a socialist or at least a social democrat.

I must say Deer Hunting with Jesus has been one of the ten most influential books I've read, ranking somewhere up there with Richard Heinberg's The Party's Over.

I've always been someone who likes to manipulate my own mental state, observe and analyze the streaming abstractions that flicker across my mind when I'm considering anything from a mundane, to a novel, to a bizarre, to a profound thought. Marijuana, LSD, and even hunger have sometimes helped these efforts along. In my view one's own mind is the ultimate entertainment; its mysteries never end and any experience, conversation, observation, or idea can become food for thought.

A revolution in consciousness would seem to fit the emerging zeitgeist of today.

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I Would Suggest That People Do Not Do LSD - Unless They Fully Appreciate The Risks
Posted by: tony_opmoc on Mar 25, 2009 2:34 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
And also have some expereince of doing risky things.

For example - if you are mad enough to risk your life - on a whim - for example by jumping out of an aeroplane at 10,000 feet - knowing you may not survive - but just want to do it - for the hell of it

Then I would still not suggest you take LSD

And definitely not at the same time as doing dangerous air sports

But if you have already done dangerous airsports - or other very dangerous things - and realise - that you can go physically splat

Well LSD is a bit like that - but you may go mentally splat.

But even smoking cannabis can make you go paranoid - or make you psychotic

But the thing with LSD - once you take that pill - there is no coming back to normal for at least 6 hours.

During that 6 hours - anything mentally can happen

I have not taken LSD since 1984 - and would not take it again.

But if you are going to do it - just realise that it is likely to massively amplify your current mood.

If you are feeling a bit down and depressed - it is an incredibly stupid idea to take LSD - because it will make you feel 100 times worse

If you are already incredibly happy - and with someone who really loves you - and in a secure place - such that they will be able to look after you as you mentally fly to the other side of the universe through a most incredible rainbow and flood of colourfull experiences - then don't blame me - if once you get to the end of the rainbow - that you stay there and never come back.

Some people never come back from an LSD Trip.

Try a new Triumph 950 motorcycle instead - far safer and you can also travel to Real places - and come back if you don't fall off and kill yourself.

Tony

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However I Would Recommend Skinny Dipping
Posted by: tony_opmoc on Mar 25, 2009 4:03 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Or just wandering round in a naked haze in the warm sunshine on the beach

And swimming naked in the sea

It just feels so nice

To be in a nice warm comfirtable place where no one gives a fuck what you wear or what yo do providing you conform to the natural unspoken rules of how to behave on a nudist beach

No erections - unless it is an exceedingly large nudist beach with very few people around

Then you can erect a little tent

And no sex on the beach

Well unless it is obviously socially acceptable

Most nudist beaches in the world are incredibly conservative in my experience

I couldn't possibly recommend any

Its a secret

You find such places through years of experience and word of mouth talking to nude people after they have left the nudist beach - and sometimes actually on the beach

Just because you have turned up and everyone is naked doesn't mean that you have to keep your clothes on

Democracy usually rules

So nearly all the formerly Brilliant nudist beaches have been invaded by Rich Beautiful TEXTILES and Chavs

Tony

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Psychedelics are for the Strong
Posted by: gellero1 on Mar 25, 2009 4:05 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Not everyone can appreciate the value of a pure LSD experience. Not a casual drug at all. The cognoscenti of the planet know what I mean.

The best is still out there for those who know where to get it.

It's for special people....not for the masses. And we will always be around...generation after generation.

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LSD= A BAD DRUG
Posted by: foxxx on Mar 25, 2009 4:10 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
BACK IN THE 70'S, PEOPLE TOOK LSD, ABOUT 3 MONTHS LATER THOSE SAME PEOPLE COULD'NT THINK LOGICALLY FOR THEMSELVES. RESEARCH FOUND THAT LSD IS SO BAD FOR HUMANS THAT IT FRIED THEIR BRAINS RIGHT IN THEIR HEADS. A VERY BAD SITUATION. HAVE A NICE DAY. MIKE

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» the MSM has gotten to you Posted by: gellero1
» Hey Mikey, Lighten up... Posted by: Pirate1
» RE: LSD= A BAD DRUG Posted by: type22003
Wrong
Posted by: gellero1 on Mar 25, 2009 4:21 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Some brains are not meant for LSD............most can handle it.

It's a spiritual experience.

Many friends who have achieved status in their areas of expertise and great wealth were trippers in their 20's.

But they had the brainpower to handle it.

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» RE: Wrong Posted by: lively56
HellO Earth!?
Posted by: johnnyfarout on Mar 25, 2009 5:58 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There was plenty of pixie dust in there to sprinkle up the boggy froggy parts. Abolutely fabulous! I vote alternative whenever I can. The earthmind calls to us each and everyone. Wonderful to read this.

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BJ's are a gateway to the inner mind?
Posted by: Pissed Off Woman on Mar 25, 2009 6:14 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As a female, am I missing something here? I've gotten it licked but I wouldn't call that experience a "gateway to the inner mind" lol.

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» My Bad Posted by: Pissed Off Woman
» RE: My Bad Posted by: Dankhank
» RE: My Bad Posted by: Dankhank
» S'cuse me, ma'm... Posted by: Pirate1
» RE: S'cuse me, ma'm... Posted by: Dankhank
thanks for the good read!
Posted by: agent229 on Mar 25, 2009 6:44 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I really enjoyed the article--I like trying to get a good perspective of what things were like "back then" since I didn't have the chance to experience it. Most of what I've heard is from my mom, who did experience some commune living but was on the tail end of the movement. I know there are people of similar mind even in my generation (early 20s). It may be harder to find, and it may not be expressed in the same way, but I think there are people with very similar ideals and even some similar rituals (like LSD of course :-).

Responding to what someone else said, I do think that drugs are definitely not necessary for a person to obtain insights or a state of mind you might call "enlightened". I firmly believe that anything that can ever happen in our brains due to chemicals could happen "naturally" or through other means... drugs are a shortcut. I think for many people, it's the only way they will ever try to seek something like "enlightenment" because they may not be versed in religions/doctrines that teach this and may not be exposed in any other way. Once someone has taken a drug that transports them almost immediately to that mindset, they know what is possible and are able to work back toward it in their everyday life if they desire to. Without the drug experience, I think many people wouldn't really know what they were trying to reach, even if they were taught to meditate or something like that.

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JOY TO READ
Posted by: teleomorph on Mar 25, 2009 7:25 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What a joy to read! Thank you sooo much, Alternet editors. And thanks for your honesty, Joe, concerning the pivotal role LSD played in your unfolding life's journey of discovery. A breath of fresh air considering how timid and apologetic most people tend to be concerning the real value of their psychedelic experiences.

-Evan

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STONEHENGE 1984
Posted by: tony_opmoc on Mar 25, 2009 8:04 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Fuck Me - I Didn't Remember The Tent Being So Big - But I do remember getting a lift back from the local village after swimming naked in the river with my Girlfriend

The Guy who Gave us a Lift Was Playing Robin Trower - Bridge of Sighs

We didn't do any acid there

All I remember is completely Brilliant Sex, Hawkwind and Hippies Kissing Big Stones

Stonehenge 1984

Tony

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TimS
Posted by: TimS on Mar 26, 2009 11:07 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Over a thousand rides. All good. Best thing that ever happened to me ,too.

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Shankara and the story of Trotaka
Posted by: sirios on Mar 29, 2009 9:58 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I once [in 1966] truly believed, that a substantial hit of acid could wake up even the most hopelessly ignorant. I was dead WRONG and foxxx- Mike is the ultimate case in point. No amount of research can prove or disprove the indescribable beauty that psychedelics and grace can reveal. A truly psychedelic or transcendental experience has absolutely nothing to do with mental capacity. Fear is the warrior defending the ego and personality from dissolving into it's ever present essence.
Any one or any study that tries to frighten us into avoiding the discovery of the freedom that we already are, is exposing their own addiction and attachment to the tiny confines of conceptualized existence, instead of the totally open reality of this moment.

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LSDeity
Posted by: tazdelaney on Mar 29, 2009 11:53 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
well and bravely said, mr bageant. btw... i grew up in covington, just down the road a piece from winchester.

as you say, the whole of the 60s-70s revolution has been minimized, ridiculed and squelched. tom hayden said, "whwen we failed to pull off our revolution in '68, we became a generation of might-have-beens." there's a lot of truth to that sad thought.

in the apartment downstairs, there's a 16 year old lad with hair to mid-back like mine was at his age; fights over drugs & lifestyle go on frequently there of late. it is readily observable that the biggest cultural trend in the 20th century west was the alt-youth-drug culture that came through the channel of bohemian-beat-hippie-punk & these are still heavily among us still.

but we've yet to have a hippie president, though we've had barbarian genocidal maniacs as usual. in 1968, the yippie party ran tim leary & huey p newton (the black panther founder), for the presidential campaign. nope, a dinosaur society under brainwashington went with a vicious crook named nixon, instead, the kind of guy kissinger could convince to back pol pot after killing another million vietnamese...

i haven't found any good acid in over a decade, though have done some shrooms since. i understand that these days a dosage is down to 100mics, which isn't even as powerful as today's marijuana. the first time i did LSD was at atlanta pop festival in 1970; when i ate way too much of it, 10+ hits as i didn't know any better. was naked for days and don't know how i got back to carolina afterwards, but will never forget being feet from hendrix, closest i ever was to the godhead, like the ancient eleusinian rites, my initiation into the realm of the spiritual in a degraded materialistic culture.

if i got started on the wonders of LSD, i'd never get finished with this and am never quite sure if anyone's gonna read it anyway... but suffice it to say that so far as i'm concerned, LSD pointed out the path of wisdom to those who listened. embraced, the world could now be a much better place.

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Great read
Posted by: beffie on Mar 29, 2009 6:47 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm just another gen-X kid who smoked some pot and took some pills in the 90s, who has no idea how is was "back in the day," other than what my dear friends in their mid 60s who lived it. I read things like this and part of me that has been processed by the big machine of post-Nixon thought want to have that whole "Whatev" reaction to diminish any significance of the 60s. Another part, being a kid who also lives in Oakland, CA and sees brief glimpses of the other side... I dunno. Great read. Thank you.

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keep posting articles like this
Posted by: caru on Apr 4, 2009 8:41 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
eveyone needs direction in this area.

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