Editor’s Note: Readers coming to Points for the first time may be interested in some of our other posts treating psychedelic experience. They include (but are not limited to) Religious Studies Professor Gary Laderman’s meditations on the place of LSD in the late 20th-century US; a two-part series by Comparative Literature scholar Tace Hedrick, looking at the influence of Gordon Wasson on US psychedelic culture and of psychedelics on feminist theorist Gloria Anzaldua; and some by Brian Herrera of Performance Studies. Search under the Tag “psychedelics” for a complete inventory.
LSD is one of the most mythical drugs in history. As with regard to many other drugs, our culture is almost satiated with perceptions, sentiments and opinions about the substance. Most of them have a history that can be traced back to the Sixties, that strange and almost mythical period when the most fundamental certainties of western society seemed undermined – at least to those high on acid. But more than myths and vague associations are hardly discernible when looking at present-day perceptions and sentiments around LSD in popular culture. Sixties and hippies are one set of associations often encountered; adolescent users becoming psychotic and jumping out of windows and of balconies or eating the bark of trees another. Or, on a more positive side, people envision mystical enlightenment and heightened sensual perceptions. As a mythical drug LSD can be everything to everyone, a focal point of contestations about social, political and metaphysical realities.
Milan Hausner, Director of the Czech LSD Program
Whatever one thinks of this message, there are other interesting aspects of the history of LSD. Paul McCartney, himself in the 1960s a convinced user of LSD as a means of becoming a better and happier human being, once said that he thought it strange that the Sixties had already happened. In his experience the decade was so strange and avant-garde that it was still in the future. There is no sense in idealizing the Sixties but the footage in The Substance gives us some inkling of the experiences underlying the statement of the Beatle. Let’s do an exercise in virtual history and imagine an alternative historical development. In an alternative universe the dream has become true that is expressed in the movie by Harvard psychologist turned into drug apostle turned into criminal Timothy Leary. Somewhere, he says, and the footage has to date from between 1962 and 1965: we (he and his associates) expect that in the next 5 to 10 years twenty to thirty million Americans will use LSD on a regular basis, for their spiritual development and psychological growth. Instead of a materialist, conformist and warlike America, as the USA was in the perception of Leary and thousands of other Americans at the time, there would develop a hippy paradise in which people would surround themselves with sacred objects, be in harmony with nature and would be free of sexual jealousy.
Still Seeking Hippy Paradise
There are many reasons why this hippy paradise did not come to exist in our universe. Paradoxically, one of the most important is the same reason why LSD became so popular in the first place: the ‘democratization’ of the substance. Because the most extraordinary aspect of the history of LSD is not the subjective effects of the drug, such as the mystical experiences, the changed perceptions of physical reality, or the feeling that one has become God. Many other substances give similar effects, for instance the magic mushrooms used in the documentary by the Mazatek healer in Mexico Maria Sabina, or the peyote taken by Indians on the American reservations since the end of the 19th century. The use of a psychedelic substance to elicit mystical experiences was already in the 19th century available through post order if one wrote to occult teachers like Paschal Beverly Randolph. Mescaline had been synthesized in a German laboratory in 1919 and had been used since then by psychiatrists, psychiatric patients, artists, philosophers and others, a full quarter of a century before the discovery of LSD. But all these uses were limited to small and closed groups. With LSD something different happened, and Leary was to an important extent responsible (to the horror of more traditional intellectuals as Hofmann and Aldous Huxley). He and others ‘democratized’ LSD. The ‘sacrament’, as they perceived it, should not be in the hands of a cultural and social elite, but available to everyone, to the masses. And these masses were found in the baby boom generation that came to adolescence in the 1960s, and reacted against restrictions and conformities associated with their parents.
Lief Fielding Believed the Dream
The paradox here is that though LSD is a substance that can take you out of your ordinary life into something totally Other, in the Sixties at the same time the substance itself was taken into ordinary life, became a focus point of social struggles and ultimately went out of control. And as with most other drugs, the question became: who controls the use?
We can view The Substance as a historical documentary, but we can also view the movie in a different way: as a remake of the famous scenes of the Sorcerer’s Apprentice in Walt Disney’s Fantasia, an animated movie from 1940 that has been related to Disney’s own mescaline experiences. In the Sorcerer’s Apprentice, Mickey Mouse uses the sorcerer’s hat to do magic, going on a trip that turns out badly and ends up in a mess that has to be cleaned.
The Sorcerer's Apprentice Believed It Too
The Substance is filled with sorcerer’s apprentices who released the magical potion LSD into society, without really knowing what the consequences would be. Hofmann, Leary, the banker Gordon Wasson who made news about the magic mushrooms public so creating a stream of drug tourism to Mexico, the writer Ken Kesey touring the United States with LSD available for all– as Mickey Mouses they all worked with powers that they could not control. Neither could other people: doctors, politicians, police officers, or the military. The result was that the drug literally spilled over into the streets, a sacrament for grabs to all and sundry. With all kinds of unintended consequences.
These failed attempts at control might be what makes the history of LSD and the Sixties particularly fascinating: a time when people did not seem to hesitate to plunge into something new, despite all the risks. To a society in which risk control has become one of the major aims, the story of acid shows a mirror of an alternative universe.