Ain't Nobody's
Business If You Do
PART III:
A CLOSER LOOK AT THE CONSENSUAL CRIMES
RELIGIOUS
AND PSYCHOLOGICALLY THERAPEUTIC USE OF DRUGS
I have sworn upon the altar of God
eternal hostility
against every form of tyranny
over the mind of man.
|
THOMAS JEFFERSON |
- LONG, LONG BEFORE the white
man traveled on hempen sails to find religious
freedom in a New World, the natives on a land now
called North America used sacramental plants to
commune with nature, the universal brotherhood, and
the Great Spirit.
- The Incas chewed coca
leaves, but only for spiritual purposes and only with
the permission of their spiritual leader, the Inca.
The conquistadors from Spain turned what was once a
sacrament into a reward for work and, later, a
stimulant for the energy to do more work. Changing
the purpose and use of coca leaves was but one part
of the European destruction of a great civilization.
- Indigenous tribes
throughout North America ate the buds of the peyote
cactus as an expression of thanksgiving, a request
for guidance, or in support of a brother who wanted
to give thanks or seek direction. Peyote was always
used in a formal, ceremonial way, and "recreational"
use was considered a sacrilege. It took the white manwho
knew or cared so little about the Native American wayuntil
1899 to find out what was going on and, of course,
make it illegal. Oklahoma passed a law against peyote
in 1899; New Mexico outlawed it in 1929. Not until
the 1960s, when a sufficient number of white people
began seeking mystical experience, was peyote
considered "a menace" that had to be
controlled nationally.
We are not clear as to
the role in life of these chemicals;
nor are we clear as to
the role of the physician.
You know, of course,
that in ancient times there was
no clear distinction between
priest and physician.
|
Alan Watts |
- Humans have always sought
ways to alter everyday consciousness. This is usually
achieved either through changes in normal behavior,
or by ingesting a consciousness-altering substance.
- We "civilized"
typesdescendants of the primitive Native
Americans' conquerorshave a strong bias that
religious experiences should be obtained through
altered action rather than sacramental ingestion.
Prayer, fasting, penance, and personal sacrifice are
all acceptable forms of achieving greater connection
with God and Spirit. Ingesting chemicals, sacramental
plants, or other consciousness-altering substances is
not.
- What we are aware of and
that we are aware at all is due to a complex
biochemical-electrical process in the human nervous
system. A slight alteration creates a shift in
consciousness. Any number of stimuli can trigger the
chemical-electrical shift that leads to the change in
consciousness.
- All the "acceptable"
techniques for achieving religious experiences
involve chemical change. Prayer is changing one's
focusaltering what one is thinking. Fasting
causes a significant biochemical change. Even the
"born again" experience as practiced by
many churches is based on psychological pressure
("You are a sinner and you will spend all
eternity in hell") and release ("Accept
Jesus and you will spend all eternity in paradise"),
which produces profound biochemical change.
- When we have a shift in
consciousness, our belief determines whether or not
the shift is perceived as a religious experience. If
we connect a certain positive feeling with God, each
time we have that feeling we think of God. If we
attach that same pleasant feeling to our spouse, each
time we feel that feeling, we will think of our
spouse. If we attach the same feeling to our favorite
television program, each time we feel that feeling,
we will think of our favorite television program, and
so on.
It is well for people who think
to change their minds occasionally
in order to keep them clean.
For those who do not think,
it is best at least to rearrange
their prejudices once in a while.
|
LUTHER BURBANK |
- A change of consciousness
is an experience. If we choose to give that
experience religious meaning, it becomes a religious
experience. If we choose to associate it with someone
we are in love with, it becomes a romantic experience.
If we choose to associate it with our favorite
television show, it becomes a video experience. We
could even choose to associate it with something
wicked and evil ("This is the devil tempting me"
or "I'm having a psychotic episode"), and
the same experience becomes a negative one.
It takes very little chemical
change to bring about a profound shift in
consciousness. LSD, for example, is not measured in
milligrams, or thousandths of a gram, but in
microgramsmillionths of a gram. As few as 25
microgramsthat is, twenty-five millionths of a
gramcan bring about a profound change in
consciousness that lasts many hours. After Dr. Albert
Hofmann accidentally ingested LSD on April 16, 1943,
he described his experiences :
- I was seized with
a feeling of great restlessness and mild dizziness.
At home, I lay down and sank into a not unpleasant
delirium, which was characterized by extremely
excited fantasies. In a semiconscious state, with my
eyes closed (I felt the daylight to be unpleasantly
dazzling), fantastic visions of extraordinary
realness and with an intense kaleidoscopic play of
colors. After about two hours this condition
disappeared.
Every happening,
great and small,
is a parable
whereby God speaks to us,
and the art of life
is to get the message.
|
MALCOLM MUGGERIDGE
|
- Note that there's not much
talk about God in there. In fact, at first
psychiatrists thought the LSD experience closely
resembled the delirium of extreme schizophrenia and
explained, perhaps, the paintings of Vincent van Gogh.
He was not interpreting those swirling sunflowers and
"turbulent indigo" (Joni Mitchell's phrase)
skieshe was painting what he saw. LSD, it was
thought, should be taken by therapists to better
understand the working of the schizophrenic mind, or
by architects so that they might better design mental
institutions to be healing and comforting places from
an "insane" person's point of view.
- Others thought LSD would be
useful in therapy because it produced such a
pronounced shift from ordinary consciousness. If
insane people could be sufficiently jarred from their
insanityeven for a brief period of timeperhaps
their reality could be restructured, through therapy,
into a healthier pattern.
- Still otherssuch as
author Aldous Huxley and Harvard professors Timothy
Leary and Richard Alpertthought that LSD opened
the "doors of perception" (as Huxley called
it) through which human consciousness could glimpse
mystical visions. They maintain that LSD opened the
consciousness through which all the great spiritual
teachersMoses, Buddha, Zoroaster, Krishna,
Jesus, Mohammed, and othershad their insights
and revelations.
- Some thought LSD produced
psychoses; others thought it produced enlightenment.
How people approached the experience significantly
influenced the results of the experience.
- Those who took LSD thinking
it was going to simulate schizophrenia left the LSD
experience thinking, "Oh, that's what it's like
to be crazy." Many who took LSD expecting
mystical revelation got mystical revelation.
- In the 1960s and early 1970s,
hundreds of thousandsperhaps millionsaccepted
the Huxley-Leary-Alpert interpretation of LSD and,
for the most part, had experiences they would
describe as spiritual.
Not a shred of evidence exists
in favor of the idea
that life is serious.
|
BRENDAN GILL |
- The "set and setting"
was vitally important. The set was the mind-set: One
had to ask oneself, "Am I taking part in this
experience for kicks or for illumination?" The
latter was recommended. The setting was the
environment in which you took LSD, whom you were
taking it with, what physical activities were planned:
music, silence, readings aloud from the New Testament
or the Tibetan Book of the Dead. In properly planned
sessions one had a guide who had had the experience
before, to provide safety, support, and encouragement.
- Less than ten years later,
by the mid-1970s, people were "dropping acid"
on the way to the disco. "The Bee Gees! Jesus!"
the psychedelic old-timers would lament. "What
happened to the Beatles? And why are they going to a
disco? If they want to go out, why don't they go to a
real religious experiencelike seeing 2001: A
Space Odyssey in Cinerama?"
- Soon "acid"
became synonymous with any orally ingested
consciousness-altering substance: tranquilizers,
strychnine, it didn't matter. People were looking for
a "trip," not a journey; a "high,"
not a higher state of consciousness.
- Some of the original "mystical"
LSD takers went on to explore God in more traditional
ways: LSD was advertised as only one door to the
house of perception; how you moved in was up to you.
Richard Alpert took an ancient route, went to India,
and became Ram Dass. Timothy Leary took the techno
route and became fascinated with space travel,
computers, and cyberspace. Whatever the outcome, LSD
was a bright flash between the black and white '50s
and the technicolor '70s. What people did with that
flash was and is entirely up to them.
WOMAN:
Thank you for saving the world!
HENRY KISSINGER:
You're welcome.
|
- Throughout history, humans
have sought the tree of life. People have tried to
"return to the garden" by ingesting
substances from the plant, mineral, and animal
kingdoms. Some worked; most didn't.
- Alas, in our country today
sincere seekers cannot seek in this way. They are
entitled to use the traditional methods as much as
they pleasebut only those tried and accepted by
"our Judeo-Christian forefathers." People
can pray, fast, join a monastery or convent, become
missionaries, and that's okay. Changing consciousness
through external actions that produce internal
chemical reactions is acceptable. Ingesting chemicals
is not. If you do, you are not taking part in a
sacrament, but committing a sacrilege. You will be
punished for it not only in the hereafter, but here.
- We'll explore further the
absurdity of jailing people for religious beliefs in
the chapter, "Unconventional Religious Practices."
The point of this chapter is: although ingesting
chemicals may not be part of the Judeo-Christian
tradition, it certainly has a long and dignified
history in the human tradition. To deny Americansnative
or immigrantthe right to explore chemical
sacraments is not only an interference with our
religious freedom, but yet another example of
imposing Judeo-Christian religious beliefs on others
by force of law.
- An understandably quiet
movement of sincere, well-educated ("they have
more degrees than a protractor," comments the
Los Angeles Times) individuals is exploring anew the
value of psychedelics. Today the "mind expanding"
chemicals are often referred to as empathogens (empathy
producing) or entheogens (become one with theos, God).
Andshock and joythe FDA is giving
begrudging approval to limited research.
If you surveyed a hundred
typical middle-aged Americans,
I bet you'd find that
only two of them could tell you
their blood types,
but every last one of them
would know the theme song
from "The Beverly Hillbillies."
|
DAVE BARRY |
- "We're like early man
who says fire is too dangerous," says Rick
Doblin, Harvard-trained social scientist and
spokesperson for the Multidisciplinary Association
for Psychedelic Studies. "We're not even at the
stage where we've figured out that fire can keep you
warm in winter." MAPS is a nonprofit group that
tracks the handful of approved psychedelic research
projects throughout the United States.
- The preliminary research
has been encouraging, especially when empathetic
chemicals are used in conjunction with the
therapeutic process. "Psychotherapy is enhanced
by an altered-state experience," said Charles S.
Grob, M.D., one of the lead researchers of MDMA
("ecstasy") use in therapy. In other
studies, using chemicals such as MDMA, MDA, and LSD
has resulted in significant progress treating
recidivism, sexual dysfunction, depression, and
addiction, among many others.
- Of course, even these token
research programs are under fire and, by the time you
read this, may have been halted altogether by
ignorance and misplaced grief. One of the primary
organizations challenging any research is Drug Watch
International. This was formed by Dr. William Bennett
(not the former Drug Czar turned bestselling pontiff
on morality, but another onehow many can we
take?) and his wife, Sandra, after "losing our
son to cocaine in 1986."
They hated me without reason.
|
JESUS OF
NAZARETH
John 15:25 |
- This sort of kill-the-messenger
response was echoed by actor Carrol O'Connor, who, in
his grief following the suicide of his son, blamed it
all on his son's drug dealer, who was promptly
arrested. The fact that O'Connor's son killed himself
after being out of work for a year and after spending
his third wedding anniversary alone was not mentioned.
(The dealer was sentenced to a year in prison.)
- How does one explain to a
parent grieving for a lost child that putting other
parents' children in prison is not the solution? No
one, apparently, has found the way to communicate
this to the Bennetts. "Illicit drugs are illicit
because they're harmful," they claim in circular,
ignorance-perpetuating logic.
- In fact, research has shown
drugs in general and psychedelics in particular to be
far less harmful than formerly feared. In 1995, UCLA's
Ronald K. Siegel, one of the few researchers
permitted to perform scientific studies on LSD after
the blanket governmental ban in 1970, reported,
Dangers
[of psychedelics] are not as great as the
public was led to believe in the '60's. Risks
of brain damage and schizophrenia have been
discounted. Most psychedelics are stimulants,
and like any stimulant, they can be harmful
to those with high blood pressure and heart
conditions.
- Meanwhile, a much larger
group of individualistsjust as sincere but
lacking governmental sanctionexplore their
psyches, their world, their loved ones, their lives,
and their God with entheogens. For many, LSD, due to
its sometimes tedious "electric" qualities,
has been replaced with psilocybin ("mushrooms"),
MDMA, and MDA.
- MDMA was first synthesized
in 1912. In the early 1980s, it was rediscovered and
named ecstasy. "I wanted to call it empathy,"
its rediscoverer said, "but I thought ecstasy
would sell better." It didperhaps too much
better. It was banned in 1986, when after
enthusiastic articles in (among other publications)
The Wall Street Journal, Time, and Newsweeka
bureaucrat in Washington decided it should be banned.
- MDA, a naturally occurring
chemical with empathetic effects similar to MDMA, is
found in more than seventy plants as well the human
brain. When the chemicals the body produces to
suppress the effects of MDA are suppressed, small
doses of MDA can produce powerful results. "The
heart opens," one psychiatrist explained in
nonpsychiatric terms.
- While MDMA is still illegal,
the plants containing MDA are not. (Think they'll
ever get around to banning nutmeg, green tea, or the
kola nut?) These plants are sold by various companies
working entirely within the law.
- For the most part, these
enthogens are taken not as a high, but as a sacramenta
sacrament not to meant placate a vengeful God "out
there," but to celebrate the essence of God
within us all. From the standpoint of some Christians,
who believe this life is to be suffered through and
pleasure should only be found in paradise, it seems
the pagans have returned again, their "Devil's
Mass" in tow.
- For the Glory of God, they
must be forbidden to practice such hedonistic
sacrileges so. If they do, they must be punished.
Severely. Here on earth. Now.
The big thieves
hang the little ones.
|
CZECH
PROVERB |
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