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- LSD - My Problem Child
- Albert Hofmann
-
-
- Translator's Preface
-
- Numerous accounts of the discovery of LSD have been published in English;
- none, unfortunately, have been completely accurate. Here, at last, the father
- of LSD details the history of his "problem child" and his long and fruitful
- career as a research chemist. In a real sense, this book is the inside story
- of the birth of the Psychedelic Age, and it cannot be denied that we have here
- a highly candid and personal insight into one of the most important scientific
- discoveries of our time, the signiflcance of which has yet to dawn on mankind.
-
- Surpassing its historical value is the immense philosophical import of this
- work. Never before has a chemist, an expert in the most materialistic of the
- sciences, advanced a Weltanschauung of such a mystical and transcendental
- nature. LSD, psilocybin, and the other hallucinogens do indeed, as Albert
- Hofmann asserts, constitute "cracks" in the edifice of materialistic
- rationality, cracks we would do well to explore and perhaps widen.
-
- As a writer, it gives me great satisfaction to know that by this book the
- American reader interested in hallucinogens will be introduced to the work of
- Rudolf Gelpke, Ernst Junger, and Walter Vogt, writers who are all but unknown
- here. With the notable exceptions of Huxley and Wasson, English and American
- writers on the hallucinogenic experience have been far less distinguished and
- eloquent than they.
-
- This translation has been carefully overseen by Albert Hofmann, which made my
- task both simpler and more enjoyable. I am beholden to R. Gordon Wasson for
- checking the chapters on LSD's "Mexican relatives" and on "Ska Maria Pastora"
- for accuracy and style.
-
- Two chapters of this book - "How LSD Originated" and "LSD Experience and
- Reality" - were presented by Albert Hofmann as apaperbefore the international
- conference "Hallucinogens, Shamanism and Modern Life" in San Francisco on the
- afternoon of Saturday, September 30, 1978. As a part of the conference
- proceedings, the first chapter has been published in the Journal of
- Psychedetic Drugs, Vol. 11 (1-2), 1979.
-
- JONATHAN OTT
- Vashon Island, Washington
-
-
- FOREWORD
-
- There are experiences that most of us are hesitant to speak about, because
- they do not conform to everyday reality and defy rational explanation. These
- are not particular external occurrences, but rather events of our inner lives,
- which are generally dismissed as figments of the imagination and barred from
- our memory. Suddenly, the familiar view of our surroundings is transformed in
- a strange, delightful, or alarming way: it appears to us in a new light, takes
- on a special meaning. Such an experience can be as light and fleeting as a
- breath of air, or it can imprint itself deeply upon our minds.
-
- One enchantment of that kind, which I experienced in childhood, has remained
- remarkably vivid in my memory ever since. It happened on a May morning - I
- have forgotten the year - but I can still point to the exact spot where it
- occurred, on a forest path on Martinsberg above Baden, Switzerland. As I
- strolled through the freshly greened woods filled with bird song and lit up by
- the morning sun, all at once everything appeared in an uncommonly clear light.
- Was this something I had simply failed to notice before? Was I suddenly
- discovering the spring forest as it actually looked? It shone with the most
- beautiful radiance, speaking to the heart, as though it wanted to encompass me
- in its majesty. I was filled with an indescribable sensation of joy, oneness,
- and blissful security.
-
- I have no idea how long I stood there spellbound. But I recall the anxious
- concern I felt as the radiance slowly dissolved and I hiked on: how could a
- vision that was so real and convincing, so directly and deeply felt - how
- could it end so soon? And how could I tell anyone about it, as my overflowing
- joy compelled me to do, since I knew there were no words to describe what I
- had seen? It seemed strange that I, as a child, had seen something so
- marvelous, something that adults obviously did not perceive - for I had never
- heard them mention it.
-
- While still a child, I experienced several more of these deeply euphoric
- moments on my rambles through forest and meadow. It was these experiences that
- shaped the main outlines of my world view and convinced me of the existence of
- a miraculous, powerful, unfathomable reality that was hidden from everyday
- sight.
-
- I was often troubled in those days, wondering if I would ever, as an adult, be
- able to communicate these experiences; whether I would have the chance to
- depict my visions in poetry or paintings. But knowing that I was not cut out
- to be a poet or artist, I assumed I would have to keep these experiences to
- myself, important as they were to me.
-
- Unexpectedly - though scarcely by chance - much later, in middle age, a link
- was established between my profession and these visionary experiences from
- childhood.
-
- Because I wanted to gain insight into the structure and essence of matter, I
- became a research chemist. Intrigued by the plant world since early childhood,
- I chose to specialize in research on the constituents of medicinal plants. In
- the course of this career I was led to the psychoactive, hallucination-causing
- substances, which under certain conditions can evoke visionary states similar
- to the spontaneous experiences just described. The most important of these
- hallucinogenic substances has come to be known as LSD. Hallucinogens, as
- active compounds of considerable scientific interest, have gained entry into
- medicinal research, biology, and psychiatry, and later - especially LSD also
- obtained wide diffusion in the drug culture.
-
- In studying the literature connected with my work, I became aware of the great
- universal significance of visionary experience. It plays a dominant role, not
- only in mysticism and the history of religion, but also in the creative
- process in art, literature, and science. More recent investigations have shown
- that many persons also have visionary experiences in daily life, though most
- of us fail to recognize their meaning and value. Mystical experiences, like
- those that marked my childhood, are apparently far from rare.
-
- There is today a widespread striving for mystical experience, for visionary
- breakthroughs to a deeper, more comprehensive reality than that perceived by
- our rational, everyday consciousness. Efforts to transcend our materialistic
- world view are being made in various ways, not only by the adherents to
- Eastern religious movements, but also by professional psychiatrists, who are
- adopting such profound spiritual experiences as a basic therapeutic principle.
-
- I share the belief of many of my contemporaries that the spiritual crisis
- pervading all spheres of Western industrial society can be remedied only by a
- change in our world view. We shall have to shift from the materialistic,
- dualistic belief that people and their environment are separate, toward a new
- consciousness of an all-encompassing reality, which embraces the experiencing
- ego, a reality in which people feel their oneness with animate nature and all
- of creation.
-
- Everything that can contribute to such a fundamental alteration in our
- perception of reality must therefore command earnest attention. Foremost among
- such approaches are the various methods of meditation, either in a religious
- or a secular context, which aim to deepen the consciousness of reality by way
- of a total mystical experience. Another important, but still controversial,
- path to the same goal is the use of the consciousness-altering properties of
- hallucinogenic psychopharmaceuticals. LSD finds such an application in
- medicine, by helping patients in psychoanalysis and psychotherapy to perceive
- their problems in their true significance.
-
- Deliberate provocation of mystical experience, particularly by LSD and related
- hallucinogens, in contrast to spontaneous visionary experiences, entails
- dangers that must not be underestimated. Practitioners must take into account
- the peculiar effects of these substances, namely their ability to influence
- our consciousness, the innermost essence of our being. The history of LSD to
- date amply demonstrates the catastrophic consequences that can ensue when its
- profound effect is misjudged and the substance is mistaken for a pleasure
- drug. Special internal and external advance preparations are required; with
- them, an LSD experiment can become a meaningful experience. Wrong and
- inappropriate use has caused LSD to become my problem child.
-
- It is my desire in this book to give a comprehensive picture of LSD, its
- origin, its effects, and its dangers, in order to guard against increasing
- abuse of this extraordinary drug. I hope thereby to emphasize possible uses of
- LSD that are compatible with its characteristic action. I believe that if
- people would learn to use LSD's vision-inducing capability more wisely, under
- suitable conditions, in medical practice and in conjunction with meditation,
- then in the future this problem child could become a wonder child.
-
-
-
- 1. How LSD Originated
-
- In the realm of scientific observation, luck
- is granted only to those who are prepared.
- Louis Pasteur
-
- Time and again I hear or read that LSD was discovered by accident. This is
- only partly true. LSD came into being within a systematic research program,
- and the "accident" did not occur until much later: when LSD was already five
- years old, I happened to experience its unforeseeable effects in my own body -
- or rather, in my own mind.
-
- Looking back over my professional career to trace the influential events and
- decisions that eventually steered my work toward the synthesis of LSD, I
- realize that the most decisive step was my choice of employment upon
- completion of my chemistry studies. If that decision had been different, then
- this substance, which has become known the world over, might never have been
- created. In order to tell the story of the origin of LSD, then, I must also
- touch briefly on my career as a chemist, since the two developments are
- inextricably interreleted.
-
- In the spring of 1929, on concluding my chemistry studies at the University of
- Zurich, I joined the Sandoz Company's pharmaceutical-chemical research
- laboratory in Basel, as a co-worker with Professor Arthur Stoll, founder and
- director of the pharmaceutical department. I chose this position because it
- afforded me the opportunity to work on natural products, whereas two other
- job offers from chemical firms in Basel had involved work in the field of
- synthetic chemistry.
-
-
- First Chemical Explorations
-
- My doctoral work at Zurich under Professor Paul Karrer had already given me
- one chance to pursue my intrest in plant and animal chemistry. Making use of
- the gastrointestinal juice of the vineyard snail, I accomplished the enzymatic
- degradation of chitin, the structural material of which the shells, wings, and
- claws of insects, crustaceans, and other lower animals are composed. I was
- able to derive the chemical structure of chitin from the cleavage product, a
- nitrogen-containing sugar, obtained by this degradation. Chitin turned out to
- be an analogue of cellulose, the structural material of plants. This important
- result, obtained after only three months of research, led to a doctoral thesis
- rated "with distiction."
-
- When I joined the Sandoz firm, the staff of the pharmaceutical-chemical
- department was still rather modest in number. Four chemists with doctoral
- degrees worked in research, three in production.
-
- In Stoll's laboratory I found employment that completely agreed with me as a
- research chemist. The objective that Professor Stoll had set for his
- pharmaceutical-chemical research laboratories was to isolate the active
- principles (i.e., the effective constituents) of known medicinal plants to
- produce pure speciments of these substances. This is particularly important
- in the case of medicinal plants whose active principles are unstable, or
- whose potency is subject to great variation, which makes an exact dosage
- difficult. But if the active principle is available in pure form, it becomes
- possible to manufacture a stable pharmaceutical preparation, exactly
- quantifiable by weight. With this in mind, Professor Stoll had elected to
- study plant substances of recognized value such as the substances from
- foxglove (Digitalis), Mediterranean squill (Scilla maritima), and ergot of
- rye (Claviceps purpurea or Secale cornutum), which, owning to their
- instability and uncertain dosage, nevertheless, had been little used in
- medicine.
-
- My first years in the Sandoz laboratories were devoted almost exclusively to
- studying the active principles of Mediterranean squill. Dr. Walter Kreis, one
- of Professor Stoll's earliest associates, lounched me in this field of
- research. The most important constituents of Mediterranean squill already
- existed in pure form. Their active agents, as well as those of woolly foxglove
- (Digitalis lanata), had been isolated and purified, chiefly by Dr. Kreis, with
- extraordinary skill.
-
- The active principles of Mediterranean squill belong to the group of
- cardioactive glycosides (glycoside = sugar-containing substance) and serve, as
- do those of foxglove, in the treatment of cardiac insufficiency. The cardiac
- glycosides are extremely active substances. Because the therapeutic and the
- toxic doses differ so little, it becomes especially important here to have an
- exact dosage, based on pure compounds.
-
- At the beginning of my investigations, a pharmaceutical preparation with
- Scilla glycosides had already been introduced into therapeutics by Sandoz;
- however, the chemical structure of these active compounds, with the exception
- of the sugar portion, remained largely unknown.
-
- My main contribution to the Scilla research, in which I participated with
- enthusiasm, was to elucidate the chemical structure of the common nucleus of
- Scilla glycosides, showing on the one hand their differences from the
- Digitalis glycosides, and on the other hand their close structural
- relationship with the toxic principles isolated from skin glands of toads. In
- 1935, these studies were temporarily concluded.
-
- Looking for a new field of research, I asked Professor Stoll to let me
- continue the investigations on the alkaloids of ergot, which he had begun in
- 1917 and which had led directly to the isolation of ergotamine in 1918.
- Ergotamine, discovered by Stoll, was the first ergot alkaloid obtained in pure
- chemical form. Although ergotamine quickly took a significant place in
- therapeutics (under the trade name Gynergen) as a hemostatic remedy in
- obstetrics and as a medicament in the treatment of migraine, chemical research
- on ergot in the Sandoz laboratories was abandoned after the isolation of
- ergotamine and the determination of its empirical formula. Meanwhile, at the
- beginning of the thirties, English and American laboratories had begun to
- determine the chemical structure of ergot alkaloids. They had also discovered
- a new, watersoluble ergot alkaloid, which could likewise be isolated from the
- mother liquor of ergotamine production. So I thought it was high time that
- Sandoz resumed chemical research on ergot alkaloids, unless we wanted to risk
- losing our leading role in a field of medicinal research, which was already
- becoming so important.
-
- Professor Stoll granted my request, with some misgivings: "I must warn you of
- the difficulties you face in working with ergot alkaloids. These
- are-exceedingly sensitive, easily decomposed substances, less stable than any
- of the compounds you have investigated in the cardiac glycoside field. But you
- are welcome to try."
-
- And so the switches were thrown, and I found myself engaged in a field of
- study that would become the main theme of my professional career. I have never
- forgotten the creative joy, the eager anticipation I felt in embarking on the
- study of ergot alkaloids, at that time a relatively uncharted field of
- research.
-
-
- Ergot
-
- It may be helpful here to give some background information about ergot
- itself.[For further information on ergot, readers should refer to the
- monographs of G. Barger, Ergot and Ergotism (Gurney and Jackson, London, 1931
- ) and A. Hofmann, Die Mutterkornalkaloide (F. Enke Verlag, Stuttgart, 1964).
- The former is a classical presentation of the history of the drug, while the
- latter emphasizes the chemical aspects.] It is produced by a lower fungus
- (Claviceps purpurea) that grows parasitically on rye and, to a lesser extent,
- on other species of grain and on wild grasses. Kernels infested with this
- fungus develop into light-brown to violet-brown curved pegs (sclerotia) that
- push forth from the husk in place of normal grains. Ergot is described
- botanically as a sclerotium, the form that the ergot fungus takes in winter.
- Ergot of rye (Secale cornutum) is the variety used medicinally.
-
- Ergot, more than any other drug, has a fascinating history, in the course of
- which its role and meaning have been reversed: once dreaded as a poison, in
- the course of time it has changed to a rich storehouse of valuable remedies.
- Ergot first appeared on the stage of history in the early Middle Ages, as the
- cause of outbreaks of mass poisonings affecting thousands of persons at a
- time. The illness, whose connection with ergot was for a long time obscure,
- appeared in two characteristic forms, one gangrenous (ergotismus gangraenosus)
- and the other convulsive (ergotismus convulsivus). Popular names for ergotism
- - such as "mal des ardents," "ignis sacer," "heiliges Feuer," or "St.
- Anthony's fire" - refer to the gangrenous form of the disease. The patron
- saint of ergotism victims was St. Anthony, and it was primarily the Order of
- St. Anthony that treated these patients.
-
- Until recent times, epidemic-like outbreaks of ergot poisoning have been
- recorded in most European countries including certain areas of Russia. With
- progress in agriculture, and since the realization, in the seventeenth
- century, that ergot-containing bread was the cause, the frequency and extent
- of ergotism epidemics diminished considerably. The last great epidemic
- occurred in certain areas of southern Russia in the years 1926-27. [The mass
- poisoning in the southern French city of Pont-St. Esprit in the year 1951,
- which many writers have attributed to ergot-containing bread, actually had
- nothing to do with ergotism. It rather involved poisoning by an organic
- mercury compound that was utilized for disinfecting seed.]
-
- The first mention of a medicinal use of ergot, namely as an ecbolic (a
- medicament to precipitate childbirth), is found in the herbal of the Frankfurt
- city physician Adam Lonitzer (Lonicerus) in the year 1582. Although ergot, as
- Lonitzer stated, had been used since olden times by midwives, it was not until
- 1808 that this drug gained entry into academic medicine, on the strength of a
- work by the American physician John Stearns entitled Account of the Putvis
- Parturiens, a Remedy for Quickening Childbirth. The use of ergot as an ecbolic
- did not, however, endure. Practitioners became aware quite early of the great
- danger to the child, owing primarily to the uncertainty of dosage, which when
- too high led to uterine spasms. From then on, the use of ergot in obstetrics
- was confined to stopping postpartum hemorrhage (bleeding after childbirth).
-
- It was not until ergot's recognition in various pharmacopoeias during the
- first half of the nineteenth century that the first steps were taken toward
- isolating the active principles of the drug. However, of all the researchers
- who assayed this problem during the first hundred years, not one succeeded in
- identifying the actual substances responsible for the therapeutic activity. In
- 1907, the Englishmen G. Barger and F. H. Carr were the first to isolate an
- active alkaloidal preparation, which they named ergotoxine because it produced
- more of the toxic than therapeutic properties of ergot. (This preparation was
- not homogeneous, but rather a mixture of several alkaloids, as I was able to
- show thirty-five years later.) Nevertheless, the pharmacologist H. H. Dale
- discovered that ergotoxine, besides the uterotonic effect, also had an
- antagonistic activity on adrenaline in the autonomic nervous system that could
- lead to the therapeutic use of ergot alkaloids. Only with the isolation of
- ergotamine by A. Stoll (as mentioned previously) did an ergot alkaloid find
- entry and widespread use in therapeutics.
-
- The early 1930s brought a new era in ergot research, beginning with the
- determination of the chemical structure of ergot alkaloids, as mentioned, in
- English and American laboratories. By chemical cleavage, W. A. Jacobs and L.
- C. Craig of the Rockefeller Institute of New York succeeded in isolating and
- characterizing the nucleus common to all ergot alkaloids. They named it
- lysergic acid. Then came a major development, both for chemistry and for
- medicine: the isolation of the specifically uterotonic, hemostatic principle
- of ergot, which was published simultaneously and quite independently by four
- institutions, including the Sandoz laboratories. The substance, an alkaloid of
- comparatively simple structure, was named ergobasine (syn. ergometrine,
- ergonovine) by A. Stoll and E. Burckhardt. By the chemical degradation of
- ergobasine, W. A. Jacobs and L. C. Craig obtained lysergic acid and the amino
- alcohol propanolamine as cleavage products.
-
- I set as my first goal the problem of preparing this alkaloid synthetically,
- through chemical linking of the two components of ergobasine, lysergic acid
- and propanolamine (see structural formulas in the appendix).
-
- The lysergic acid necessary for these studies had to be obtained by chemical
- cleavage of some other ergot alkaloid. Since only ergotamine was available as
- a pure alkaloid, and was already being produced in kilogram quantities in the
- pharmaceutical production department, I chose this alkaloid as the starting
- material for my work. I set about obtaining 0.5 gm of ergotamine from the
- ergot production people. When I sent the internal requisition form to
- Professor Stoll for his countersignature, he appeared in my laboratory and
- reproved me: "If you want to work with ergot alkaloids, you will have to
- familiarize yourself with the techniques of microchemistry. I can't have you
- consuming such a large amount of my expensive ergotamine for your
- experiments."
-
- The ergot production department, besides using ergot of Swiss origin to obtain
- ergotamine, also dealt with Portuguese ergot, which yielded an amorphous
- alkaloidal preparation that corresponded to the aforementioned ergotoxine
- first produced by Barger and Carr. I decided to use this less expensive
- material for the preparation of lysergic acid. The alkaloid obtained from the
- production department had to be purified further, before it would be suitable
- for cleavage to lysergic acid. Observations made during the purification
- process led me to think that ergotoxine could be a mixture of several
- alkaloids, rather than one homogeneous alkaloid. I will speak later of the
- far-reaching sequelae of these observations.
-
- Here I must digress briefly to describe the working conditions and techniques
- that prevailed in those days. These remarks may be of interest to the present
- generation of research chemists in industry, who are accustomed to far better
- conditions.
-
- We were very frugal. Individual laboratories were considered a rare
- extravagance. During the first six years of my employment with Sandoz, I
- shared a laboratory with two colleagues. We three chemists, plus an assistant
- each, worked in the same room on three different fields: Dr. Kreiss on cardiac
- glycosides; Dr. Wiedemann, who joined Sandoz around the same time as I, on the
- leaf pigment chlorophyll; and I ultimately on ergot alkaloids. The laboratory
- was equipped with two fume hoods (compartments supplied with outlets),
- providing less than effective ventilation by gas flames. When we requested
- that these hoods be equipped with ventilators, our chief refused on the gound
- that ventilation by gas flame had sufficed in Willstatter's laboratory.
-
- During the last years of World War I, Professor Stoll had been an assistant in
- Berlin and Munich to the world-famous chemist and Nobel laureate Professor
- Richard Willstatter, and with him had conducted the fundamental investigations
- on chlorophyll and the assimilation of carbon dioxide. There was scarcely a
- scientific discussion with Professor Stoll in which he did not mention his
- revered teacher Professor Willstatter and his work in Willstatter's
- laboratory.
-
- The working techniques available to chemists in the field of organic chemistry
- at that time (the beginning of the thirties) were essentially the same as
- those employed by Justus von Liebig a hundred years earlier. The most
- important development achieved since then was the introduction of
- microanalysis by B. Pregl, which made it possible to ascertain the elemental
- composition of a compound with only a few milligrams of specimen, whereas
- earlier a few centigrams were needed. Of the other physical-chemical
- techniques at the disposal of the chemist today - techniques which have
- changed his way of working, making it faster and more effective, and created
- entirely new possibilities, above all for the elucidation of structure - none
- yet existed in those days.
-
- For the investigations of Scilla glycosides and the first studies in the ergot
- field, I still used the old separation and purification techniques from
- Liebig's day: fractional extraction, fractional precipitation, fractional
- crystallization, and the like. The introduction of column chromatography, the
- first important step in modern laboratory technique, was of great value to me
- only in later investigations. For structure determination, which today can be
- conducted rapidly and elegantly with the help of spectroscopic methods (UV,
- IR, NMR) and X-ray crystallography, we had to rely, in the first fundamental
- ergot studies, entirely on the old laborious methods of chemical degradation
- and derivatization.
-
-
- Lysergic Acid and Its Derivatives
-
- Lysergic acid proved to be a rather unstable substance, and its rebonding with
- basic radicals posed difficulties. In the technique knon as Curtius'
- Synthesis, I ultimately found a process that proved useful for combining
- lysergic acid with amines. With this method I produced a great number of
- lysergic acid compounds. By combining lysergic acid with the amino alcohol
- propanolamine, I obtained a compound that was identical to the natural ergot
- alkaloid ergobasine. With that, the first synthesis - that is, artificial
- production - of an ergot alkaloid was accomplished. This was not only of
- scientific interest, as confirmation of the chemical structure of ergobasine,
- but also of practical significance, because ergobasine, the specifically
- uterotonic, hemostatic principle, is present in ergot only in very trifling
- quantities. With this synthesis, the other alkaloids existing abundantly in
- ergot could now be converted to ergobasine, which was valuable in obstetrics.
-
- After this first success in the ergot field, my investigations went forward on
- two fronts. First, I attempted to improve the pharmacological properties of
- ergobasine by variations of its amino alcohol radical. My colleague Dr. J.
- Peyer and I developed a process for the economical production of propanolamine
- and other amino alcohols. Indeed, by substitution of the propanolamine
- contained in ergobasine with the amino alcohol butanolamine, an active
- principle was obtained that even surpassed the natural alkaloid in its
- therapeutic properties. This improved ergobasine has found worldwide
- application as a dependable uterotonic, hemostatic remedy under the trade name
- Methergine, and is today the leading medicament for this indication in
- obstetrics.
-
- I further employed my synthetic procedure to produce new lysergic acid
- compounds for which uterotonic activity was not prominent, but from which, on
- the basis of their chemical structure, other types of interesting
- pharmacological properties could be expected. In 1938, I produced the
- twenty-fifth substance in this series of lysergic acid derivatives: lysergic
- acid diethylamide, abbreviated LSD-25 (Lyserg-saure-diathylamid) for
- laboratory usage.
-
- I had planned the synthesis of this compound with the intention of obtaining a
- circulatory and respiratory stimulant (an analeptic). Such stimulating
- properties could be expected for lysergic acid diethylamide, because it shows
- similarity in chemical structure to the analeptic already known at that time,
- namely nicotinic acid diethylamide (Coramine). During the testing of LSD-25 in
- the pharmacological department of Sandoz, whose director at the time was
- Professor Ernst Rothlin, a strong effect on the uterus was established. It
- amounted to some 70 percent of the activity of ergobasine. The research report
- also noted, in passing, that the experimental animals became restless during
- the narcosis. The new substance, however, aroused no special interest in our
- pharmacologists and physicians; testing was therefore discontinued.
-
- For the next five years, nothing more was heard of the substance LSD-25.
- Meanwhile, my work in the ergot field advanced further in other areas. Through
- the purification of ergotoxine, the starting material for lysergic acid, I
- obtained, as already mentioned, the impression that this alkaloidal
- preparation was not homogeneous, but was rather a mixture of different
- substances. This doubt as to the homogeneity of ergotoxine was reinforced when
- in its hydrogenation two distinctly different hydrogenation products were
- obtained, whereas the homogeneous alkaloid ergotamine under the same condition
- yielded only a single hydrogenation product (hydrogenation = introduction of
- hydrogen). Extended, systematic analytical investigations of the supposed
- ergotoxine mixture led ultimately to the separation of this alkaloidal
- preparation into three homogeneous components. One of the three chemically
- homogeneous ergotoxine alkaloids proved to be identical with an alkaloid
- isolated shortly before in the production department, which A. Stoll and E.
- Burckhardt had named ergocristine. The other two alkaloids were both new. The
- first I named ergocornine; and for the second, the last to be isolated, which
- had long remained hidden in the mother liquor, I chose the name ergokryptine
- (kryptos = hidden). Later it was found that ergokryptine occurs in two
- isomeric forms, which were differentiated as alfa- and beta-ergokryptine.
-
- The solution of the ergotoxine problem was not merely scientifically
- interesting, but also had great practical significance. A valuable remedy
- arose from it. The three hydrogenated ergotoxine alkaloids that I produced in
- the course of these investigations, dihydroergocristine, dihydroergokryptine,
- and dihydroergocornine, displayed medicinally useful properties during testing
- by Professor Rothlin in the pharmacological department. From these three
- substances, the pharmaceutical preparation Hydergine was developed, a
- medicament for improvement of peripheral circulation and cerebral function in
- the control of geriatric disorders. Hydergine has proven to be an effective
- remedy in geriatrics for these indications. Today it is Sandoz's most
- important pharmaceutical product.
-
- Dihydroergotamine, which I likewise produced in the course of these
- investigations, has also found application in therapeutics as a circulation-
- and bloodpressure-stabilizing medicament, under the trade name Dihydergot.
-
- While today research on important projects is almost exclusively carried out
- as teamwork, the investigations on ergot alkaloids described above were
- conducted by myself alone. Even the further chemical steps in the evolution of
- commercial preparations remained in my hands - that is, the preparation of
- larger specimens for the clinical trials, and finally the perfection of the
- first procedures for mass production of Methergine, Hydergine, and Dihydergot.
- This even included the analytical controls for the development of the first
- galenical forms of these three preparations: the ampules, liquid solutions,
- and tablets. My aides at that time included a laboratory assistant, a
- laboratory helper, and later in addition a second laboratory assistant and a
- chemical technician.
-
-
- Discovery of the Psyhic Effects of LSD
-
- The solution of the ergotoxine problem had led to fruitful results, described
- here only briefly, and had opened up further avenues of research. And yet I
- could not forget the relatively uninteresting LSD-25. A peculiar presentiment
- - the feeling that this substance could possess properties other than those
- established in the first investigations - induced me, five years after the
- first synthesis, to produce LSD-25 once again so that a sample could be given
- to the pharmacological department for further tests. This was quite unusual;
- experimental substances, as a rule, were definitely stricken from the research
- program if once found to be lacking in pharmacological interest.
-
- Nevertheless, in the spring of 1943, I repeated the synthesis of LSD-25. As in
- the first synthesis, this involved the production of only a few centigrams of
- the compound.
-
- In the final step of the synthesis, during the purification and
- crystallization of lysergic acid diethylamide in the form of a tartrate
- (tartaric acid salt), I was interrupted in my work by unusual sensations. The
- following description of this incident comes from the report that I sent at
- the time to Professor Stoll:
-
- Last Friday, April 16,1943, I was forced to interrupt my work in
- the laboratory in the middle of the afternoon and proceed home,
- being affected by a remarkable restlessness, combined with a slight
- dizziness. At home I lay down and sank into a not unpleasant
- intoxicated-like condition, characterized by an extremely stimulated
- imagination. In a dreamlike state, with eyes closed (I found the
- daylight to be unpleasantly glaring), I perceived an uninterrupted
- stream of fantastic pictures, extraordinary shapes with intense,
- kaleidoscopic play of colors. After some two hours this condition
- faded away.
-
- This was, altogether, a remarkable experience - both in its sudden onset and
- its extraordinary course. It seemed to have resulted from some external toxic
- influence; I surmised a connection with the substance I had been working with
- at the time, lysergic acid diethylamide tartrate. But this led to another
- question: how had I managed to absorb this material? Because of the known
- toxicity of ergot substances, I always maintained meticulously neat work
- habits. Possibly a bit of the LSD solution had contacted my fingertips during
- crystallization, and a trace of the substance was absorbed through the skin.
- If LSD-25 had indeed been the cause of this bizarre experience, then it must
- be a substance of extraordinary potency. There seemed to be only one way of
- getting to the bottom of this. I decided on a self-experiment.
-
- Exercising extreme caution, I began the planned series of experiments with the
- smallest quantity that could be expected to produce some effect, considering
- the activity of the ergot alkaloids known at the time: namely, 0.25 mg (mg =
- milligram = one thousandth of a gram) of lysergic acid diethylamide tartrate.
- Quoted below is the entry for this experiment in my laboratory journal of
- April 19, 1943.
-
-
- Self-Experiments
-
- 4/19/43 16:20: 0.5 cc of 1/2 promil aqueous solution of diethylamide
- tartrate orally = 0.25 mg tartrate. Taken diluted with about 10 cc
- water. Tasteless.
-
- 17:00: Beginning dizziness, feeling of anxiety, visual distortions,
- symptoms of paralysis, desire to laugh.
-
- Supplement of 4/21: Home by bicycle. From 18:00- ca.20:00 most severe
- crisis. (See special report.)
-
- Here the notes in my laboratory journal cease. I was able to write the last
- words only with great effort. By now it was already clear to me that LSD had
- been the cause of the remarkable experience of the previous Friday, for the
- altered perceptions were of the same type as before, only much more intense. I
- had to struggle to speak intelligibly. I asked my laboratory assistant, who
- was informed of the self-experiment, to escort me home. We went by bicycle, no
- automobile being available because of wartime restrictions on their use. On
- the way home, my condition began to assume threatening forms. Everything in my
- field of vision wavered and was distorted as if seen in a curved mirror. I
- also had the sensation of being unable to move from the spot. Nevertheless, my
- assistant later told me that we had traveled very rapidly. Finally, we arrived
- at home safe and sound, and I was just barely capable of asking my companion
- to summon our family doctor and request milk from the neighbors.
-
- In spite of my delirious, bewildered condition, I had brief periods of clear
- and effective thinking - and chose milk as a nonspecific antidote for
- poisoning.
-
- The dizziness and sensation of fainting became so strong at times that I could
- no longer hold myself erect, and had to lie down on a sofa. My surroundings
- had now transformed themselves in more terrifying ways. Everything in the room
- spun around, and the familiar objects and pieces of furniture assumed
- grotesque, threatening forrns. They were in continuous motion, animated, as if
- driven by an inner restlessness. The lady next door, whom I scarcely
- recognized, brought me milk - in the course of the evening I drank more than
- two liters. She was no longer Mrs. R., but rather a malevolent, insidious
- witch with a colored mask.
-
- Even worse than these demonic transformations of the outer world, were the
- alterations that I perceived in myself, in my inner being. Every exertion of
- my will, every attempt to put an end to the disintegration of the outer world
- and the dissolution of my ego, seemed to be wasted effort. A demon had invaded
- me, had taken possession of my body, mind, and soul. I jumped up and screamed,
- trying to free myself from him, but then sank down again and lay helpless on
- the sofa. The substance, with which I had wanted to experiment, had vanquished
- me. It was the demon that scornfully triumphed over my will. I was seized by
- the dreadful fear of going insane. I was taken to another world, another
- place, another time. My body seemed to be without sensation, lifeless,
- strange. Was I dying? Was this the transition? At times I believed myself to
- be outside my body, and then perceived clearly, as an outside observer, the
- complete tragedy of my situation. I had not even taken leave of my family (my
- wife, with our three children had traveled that day to visit her parents, in
- Lucerne). Would they ever understand that I had not experimented
- thoughtlessly, irresponsibly, but rather with the utmost caution, an-d that
- such a result was in no way foreseeable? My fear and despair intensified, not
- only because a young family should lose its father, but also because I dreaded
- leaving my chemical research work, which meant so much to me, unfinished in
- the midst of fruitful, promising development. Another reflection took shape,
- an idea full of bitter irony: if I was now forced to leave this world
- prematurely, it was because of this Iysergic acid diethylamide that I myself
- had brought forth into the world.
-
- By the time the doctor arrived, the climax of my despondent condition had
- already passed. My laboratory assistant informed him about my selfexperiment,
- as I myself was not yet able to formulate a coherent sentence. He shook his
- head in perplexity, after my attempts to describe the mortal danger that
- threatened my body. He could detect no abnormal symptoms other than extremely
- dilated pupils. Pulse, blood pressure, breathing were all normal. He saw no
- reason to prescribe any medication. Instead he conveyed me to my bed and stood
- watch over me. Slowly I came back from a weird, unfamiliar world to reassuring
- everyday reality. The horror softened and gave way to a feeling of good
- fortune and gratitude, the more normal perceptions and thoughts returned, and
- I became more confident that the danger of insanity was conclusively past.
-
- Now, little by little I could begin to enjoy the unprecedented colors and
- plays of shapes that persisted behind my closed eyes. Kaleidoscopic, fantastic
- images surged in on me, alternating, variegated, opening and then closing
- themselves in circles and spirals, exploding in colored fountains, rearranging
- and hybridizing themselves in constant flux. It was particularly remarkable
- how every acoustic perception, such as the sound of a door handle or a passing
- automobile, became transformed into optical perceptions. Every sound generated
- a vividly changing image, with its own consistent form and color.
-
- Late in the evening my wife returned from Lucerne. Someone had informed her by
- telephone that I was suffering a mysterious breakdown. She had returned home
- at once, leaving the children behind with her parents. By now, I had recovered
- myself sufficiently to tell her what had happened.
-
- Exhausted, I then slept, to awake next morning refreshed, with a clear head,
- though still somewhat tired physically. A sensation of well-being and renewed
- life flowed through me. Breakfast tasted delicious and gave me extraordinary
- pleasure. When I later walked out into the garden, in which the sun shone now
- after a spring rain, everything glistened and sparkled in a fresh light. The
- world was as if newly created. All my senses vibrated in a condition of
- highest sensitivity, which persisted for the entire day.
-
- This self-experiment showed that LSD-25 behaved as a psychoactive substance
- with extraordinary properties and potency. There was to my knowledge no other
- known substance that evoked such profound psychic effects in such extremely
- low doses, that caused such dramatic changes in human consciousness and our
- experience of the inner and outer world.
-
- What seemed even more significant was that I could remember the experience of
- LSD inebriation in every detail. This could only mean that the conscious
- recording function was not interrupted, even in the climax of the LSD
- experience, despite the profound breakdown of the normal world view. For the
- entire duration of the experiment, I had even been aware of participating in
- an experiment, but despite this recognition of my condition, I could not, with
- every exertion of my will, shake off the LSD world. Everything was experienced
- as completely real, as alarming reality; alarming, because the picture of the
- other, familiar everyday reality was still fully preserved in the memory for
- comparison.
-
- Another surprising aspect of LSD was its ability to produce such a
- far-reaching, powerful state of inebriation without leaving a hangover. Quite
- the contrary, on the day after the LSD experiment I felt myself to be, as
- already described, in excellent physical and mental condition.
-
- I was aware that LSD, a new active compound with such properties, would have
- to be of use in pharmacology, in neurology, and especially in psychiatry, and
- that it would attract the interest of concerned specialists. But at that time
- I had no inkling that the new substance would also come to be used beyond
- medical science, as an inebriant in the drug scene. Since my self-experiment
- had revealed LSD in its terrifying, demonic aspect, the last thing I could
- have expected was that this substance could ever find application as anything
- approaching a pleasure drug. I failed, moreover, to recognize the meaningful
- connection between LSD inebriation and spontaneous visionary experience until
- much later, after further experiments, which were carried out with far lower
- doses and under different conditions.
-
- The next day I wrote to Professor Stoll the abovementioned report about my
- extraordinary experience with LSD-25 and sent a copy to the director of the
- pharmacological department, Professor Rothlin.
-
- As expected, the first reaction was incredulous astonishment. Instantly a
- telephone call came from the management; Professor Stoll asked: "Are you
- certain you made no mistake in the weighing? Is the stated dose really
- correct?" Professor Rothlin also called, asking the same question. I was
- certain of this point, for I had executed the weighing and dosage with my own
- hands. Yet their doubts were justified to some extent, for until then no known
- substance had displayed even the slightest psychic effect in
- fractionof-a-milligram doses. An active compound of such potency seemed almost
- unbelievable.
-
- Professor Rothlin himself and two of his colleagues were the first to repeat
- my experiment, with only onethird of the dose I had utilized. But even at that
- level, the effects were still extremely impressive, and quite fantastic. All
- doubts about the statements in my report were eliminated.
-
-
-
- 2. LSD in Animal Experiments and Biological Research
-
- After the discovery of its extraordinary psychic effects, the substance
- LSD-25, which five years earlier had been excluded from further investigation
- after the first trials on animals, was again admitted into the series of
- experimental preparations. Most of the fundamental studies on animals were
- carried out by Dr. Aurelio Cerletti in the Sandoz pharmacological department,
- headed by Professor Rothlin.
-
- Before a new active substance can be investigated in systematic clinical
- trials with human subjects, extensive data on its effects and side effects
- must be determined in pharmacological tests on animals. These experiments must
- assay the assimilation and elimination of the particular substance in
- organisms, and above all its tolerance and relative toxicity. Only the most
- important reports on animal experiments with LSD, and those intelligible to
- the layperson, will be reviewed here. It would greatly exceed the scope of
- this book if I attempted to mention all the results of several hundred
- pharmacological investigations, which have been conducted all over the world
- in connection with the fundamental work on LSD in the Sandoz laboratories.
-
- Animal experiments reveal little about the mental alterations caused by LSD
- because psychic effects are scarcely determinable in lower animals, and even
- in the more highly developed, they can be established only to a limited
- extent. LSD produces its effects above all in the sphere of the higher and
- highest psychic and intellectual functions. It is therefore understandable
- that speciflc reactions to LSD can be expected only in higher animals. Subtle
- psychic changes cannot be established in animals because, even if they should
- be occurring, the animal could not give them expression. Thus, only relatively
- heavy psychic disturbances, expressing themselves in the altered behavior of
- research animals, become discernible. Quantities that are substantially higher
- than the effective dose of LSD in human beings are therefore necessary, even
- in higher animals like cats, dogs, and apes.
-
- While the mouse under LSD shows only motor disturbances and alterations in
- licking behavior, in the cat we see, besides vegetative symptoms like
- bristling of the hair (piloerection) and salivation, indications that point to
- the existence of hallucinations. The animals stare anxiously in the air, and
- instead of attacking the mouse, the cat leaves it alone or will even stand in
- fear before the mouse. One could also conclude that the behavior of dogs that
- are under the influence of LSD involves hallucinations. A caged community of
- chimpanzees reacts very sensitively if a member of the tribe has received LSD.
- Even though no changes appear in this single animal, the whole cage gets in an
- uproar because the LSD chimpanzee no longer observes the laws of its finely
- coordinated hierarchic tribal order.
-
- Of the remaining animal species on which LSD was tested, only aquarium fish
- and spiders need be mentioned here. In the fish, unusual swimming postures
- were observed, and in the spiders, alterations in web building were apparently
- produced by kSD. At very low optimum doses the webs were even better
- proportioned and more exactly built than normally: however, with higher doses,
- the webs were badly and rudimentarily made.
-
-
- How Toxic Is LSD?
-
- The toxicity of LSD has been determined in various animal species. A standard
- for the toxicity of a substance is the LDso, or the median lethal dose, that
- is, the dose with which 50 percent of the treated animals die. In general it
- fluctuates broadly, according to the animal species, and so it is with LSD.
- The LDso for the mouse amounts to 50-60 mgtkg i.v. (that is, 50 to 60
- thousandths of a gram of LSD per kilogram of animal weight upon injection of
- an LSD solution into the veins). In the rat the LDso drops to 16.5 mg/kg, and
- in rabbits to 0.3 mg/kg. One elephant given 0.297 g of LSD died after a few
- minutes. The weight of this animal was determined to be 5,000 kg, which
- corresponds to a lethal dose of 0.06 mg/kg (0.06 thousandths of a gram per
- kilogram of body weight). Because this involves only a single case, this value
- cannot be generalized, but we can at least deduce from it that the largest
- land animal reacts proportionally very sensitively to LSD, since the lethal
- dose in elephants must be some 1,000 times lower than in the mouse. Most
- animals die from a lethal dose of LSD by respiratory arrest.
-
- The minute doses that cause death in animal experiments may give the
- impression that LSD is a very toxic substance. However, if one compares the
- lethal dose in animals with the effective dose in human beings, which is
- 0.0003-0.001 mg/kg (0.0003 to 0.001 thousandths of a gram per kilogram of body
- weight), this shows an extraordinarily low toxicity for LSD. Only a 300- to
- 600-fold overdose of LSD, compared to the lethal dose in rabbits, or fully a
- 50,000- to 100,000fold overdose, in comparison to the toxicity in the mouse,
- would have fatal results in human beings. These comparisons of relative
- toxicity are, to be sure, only understandable as estimates of orders of
- magnitude, for the determination of the therapeutic index (that is, the ratio
- between the effective and the lethal dose) is only meaningful within a given
- species. Such a procedure is not possible in this case because the lethal doge
- of LSD for humans is not known. To my knowledge, there have not as yet
- occurred any casualties that are a direct consequence of LSD poisoning.
- Numerous episodes of fatal consequences attributed to LSD ingestion have
- indeed been recorded, but these were accidents, even suicides, that may be
- attributed to the mentally disoriented condition of LSD intoxication. The
- danger of LSD lies not in its toxicity, but rather in the unpredictability of
- its psychic effects.
-
- Some years ago reports appeared in the scientific literature and also in the
- lay press, alleging that damage to chromosomes or the genetic material had
- been caused by LSD. These effects, however, have been observed in only a few
- individual cases. Subsequent comprehensive investigations of a large,
- statistically significant number of cases, however, showed that there was no
- connection between chromosome anomalies and LSD medication. The same applies
- to reports about fetal deformities that had allegedly been produced by LSD. In
- animal experiments, it is indeed possible to induce fetal deformities through
- extremely high doses of LSD, which lie well above the doses used in human
- beings. But under these conditions, even harmless substances produce such
- damage. Examination of reported individual cases of human fetal deformities
- reveals, again, no connection between LSD use and such injury. If there had
- been any such connection, it would long since have attracted attention, for
- several million people by now have taken LSD.
-
-
- Pharmacological Properties of LSD
-
- LSD is absorbed easily and completely through the gastrointestinal tract. It
- is therefore unnecessary to inject LSD, except for special purposes.
- Experiments on mice with radioactively labeled LSD have established that
- intravenously injected LSD disappeared down to a small vestige, very rapidly
- from the bloodstream and was distributed throughout the organism.
- Unexpectedly, the lowest concentration is found in the brain. It is
- concentrated here in certain centers of the midbrain that play a role in the
- regulation of emotion. Such findings give indications as to the localization
- of certain psychic functions in the brain.
-
- The concentration of LSD in the various organs attains maximum values 10 to 15
- minutes after injection, then falls off again swiftly. The small intestine, in
- which the concentration attains the maximum within two hours, constitutes an
- exception. The elimination of LSD is conducted for the most part (up to some
- 80 percent) through the intestine via liver and bile. Only 1 to 10 percent of
- the elimination product exists as unaltered LSD; the remainder is made up of
- various transformation products.
-
- As the psychic effects of LSD persist even after it can no longer be detected
- in the organism, we must assume that LSD is not active as such, but that it
- rather triggers certain biochemical, neurophysiological, and psychic
- mechanisms that provoke the inebriated condition and continue in the absence
- of the active principle.
-
- LSD stimulates centers of the sympathetic nervous system in the midbrain,
- which leads to pupillary dilatation, increase in body temperature, and rise in
- the blood-sugar level. The uterine-constricting activity of LSD has already
- been mentioned.
-
- An especially interesting pharmacological property of LSD, discovered by J. H.
- Gaddum in England, is its serotonin-blocking effect. Serotonin is a
- hormone-like substance, occurring naturally in various organs of warm-blooded
- animals. Concentrated in the midbrain, it plays an important role in the
- propagation of impulses in certain nerves and therefore in the biochemistry of
- psychic functions. The disruption of natural functioning of serotonin by LSD
- was for some time regarded as an explanation of its psychic effects. However,
- it was soon shown that even certain derivatives of LSD (compounds in which the
- chemical structure of LSD is slightly modified) that exhibit no hallucinogenic
- properties, inhibit the effects of serotonin just as strongly, or yet more
- strongly, than unaltered LSD. The serotonin-blocking effect of LSD thus does
- not suffice to explain its hallucinogenic properties.
-
- LSD also influences neurophysiological functions that are connected with
- dopamine, which is, like serotonin, a naturally occurring hormone-like
- substance. Most of the brain centers receptive to dopamine become activated by
- LSD, while the others are depressed.
-
- As yet we do not know the biochemical mechanisms through which LSD exerts its
- psychic effects. Investigations of the interactions of LSD with brain factors
- like serotonin and dopamine, however, are examples of how LSD can serve as a
- tool in brain research, in the study of the biochemical processes that
- underlie the psychic functions.
-
-
-
- 3. Chemical Modifications of LSD
-
- When a new type of active compound is discovered in pharmaceutical-chemical
- research, whether by isolation from a plant drug or from animal organs, or
- through synthetic production as in the case of LSD, then the chemist attempts,
- through alterations in its molecular structure, to produce new compounds with
- similar, perhaps improved activity, or with other valuable active properties.
- We call this process achemical modification of this type of active substance.
- Of the approximately 20,000 new substances that are produced annually in the
- pharmaceutical-chemical research laboratories of the world, the overwhelming
- majority are modification products of proportionally few types of active
- compounds. The discovery of a really new type of active substance - new with
- regard to chemical structure and pharmacological effect - is a rare stroke of
- luck.
-
- Soon after the discovery of the psychic effects of LSD, two coworkers were
- assigned to join me in carrying out the chemical modification of LSD on a
- broader basis and in further investigations in the field of ergot alkaloids.
- The work on the chemical structure of ergot alkaloids of the peptide type, to
- which ergotamine and the alkaloids of the ergotoxine group belong, continued
- with Dr. Theodor Petrzilka. Working with Dr. Franz Troxler, I produced a great
- number of chemical modifications of LSD, and we attempted to gain further
- insights into the structure of lysergic acid, for which the American
- researchers had already proposed a structural formula. In 1949 we succeeded in
- correcting this formula and specifying the valid structure of this common
- nucleus of all ergot alkaloids, including of course LSD.
-
- The investigations of the peptide alkaloids of ergot led to the complete
- structural formulas of these substances, which we published in 1951. Their
- correctness was confirmed through the total synthesis of ergotamine, which was
- realized ten years later in collaboration with two younger coworkers, Dr.
- Albert J. Frey and Dr. Hans Ott. Another coworker, Dr. Paul A. Stadler, was
- largely responsible for the development of this synthesis into a process
- practicable on an industrial scale. The synthetic production of peptide ergot
- alkaloids using lysergic acid obtained from special cultures of the ergot
- fungus in tanks has great economic importance. This procedure is used to
- produce the starting material for the medicaments Hydergine and Dihydergot.
-
- Now we return to the chemical modifications of LSD. Many LSD derivatives were
- produced, since 1945, in collaboration with' Dr. Troxler, but none proved
- hallucinogenically more active than LSD. Indeed, the very closest relatives
- proved themselves essentially less active in this respect.
-
- There are four different possibilities of spatial arrangement of atoms in the
- LSD molecule. They are differentiated in technical language by the prefix
- isoand the letters D and L. Besides LSD, which is more precisely designated as
- D-lysergic acid diethylamide, I have also produced and likewise tested in
- selfexperiments the three other spatially different forms, namely
- D-isolysergic acid diethylamide (iso-LSD), L-lysergic acid diethylamide
- (L-LSD), and L-isolysergic acid diethylamide (L-iso-LSD). The last three forms
- of LSD showed no psychic effects up to a dose of 0.5 mg, which corresponds to
- a 20-fold quantity of a still distinctly active LSD dose.
-
- A substance very closely related to LSD, the monoethylamide of lysergic acid
- (LAE-23), in which an ethyl group is replaced by a hydrogen atom on the
- diethylamide residue of LSD, proved to be some ten times less psychoactive
- than LSD. The hallucinogenic effect of this substance is also qualitatively
- different: it is characterized by a narcotic component. This narcotic effect
- is yet more pronounced in lysergic acid amide (LA-111), in which both ethyl
- groups of LSD are displaced by hydrogen atoms. These effects, which I
- established in comparative self-experiments with LA-111 and LAE-32, were
- corroborated by subsequent clinical investigations.
-
- Fifteen years later we encountered lysergic acid amide, which had been
- produced synthetically for these investigations, as a naturally occurring
- active principle of the Mexican magic drug olotiuhqui. In a later chapter I
- shall deal more fully with this unexpected discovery.
-
- Certain results of the chemical modification of LSD proved valuable to
- medicinal research; LSD derivatives were found that were only weakly or not at
- all hallucinogenic, but instead exhibited other effects of LSD to an increased
- extent. Such an effect of LSD is its blocking effect on the neurotransmitter
- serotonin (referred to previously in the discussion of the pharmacological
- properties of LSD). As serotonin plays a role in allergic-inflammatory
- processes and also in the generation of migraine, a specific
- serotonin-blocking substance was of great significance to medicinal research.
- We therefore searched systematically for LSD derivatives without
- hallucinogenic effects, but with the highest possible activity as serotonin
- blockers. The first such active substance was found in bromo-LSD, which has
- become known in medicinal-biological research under the designation BOL-148.
- In the course of our investigations on serotonin antagonists, Dr. Troxler
- produced in the sequel yet stronger and more specifically active compounds.
- The most active entered the medicinal market as a medicament for the treatment
- of migraine, under the trademark "Deseril" or, in English-speaking countries,
- "Sansert."
-
-
-
- 4. Use of LSD in Psychiatry
-
- Soon after LSD was tried on animals, the first systematic investigation of the
- substance was carried out on human beings, at the psychiatric clinic of the
- University of Zurich. Werner A. Stoll, M.D. (a son of Professor Arthur Stoll),
- who led this research, published his results in 1947 in the Schweizer Archiv
- fur Neurologie und Psychiatrie, under the title "Lysergsaure-diathylamid, ein
- Phantastikum aus der Mutterkorngruppe" [Lysergic acid diethylamide, a
- phantasticum from the ergot group].
-
- The tests involved healthy research subjects as well as schizophrenic
- patients. The dosages - substantially lower than in my first self-experiment
- with 0.25 mg LSD tartrate - amounted to only 0.02 to 0.13 mg. The emotional
- state during the LSD inebriation was here predominantly euphoric, whereas in
- my experiment the mood was marked by grave side effects resulting from
- overdosage and, of course, fear of the uncertain outcome.
-
- This fundamental publication, which gave a scientific description of all the
- basic features of LSD inebriation, classified the new active principle as a
- phantas a phantasticum. However, the question of therapeutic application of
- LSD remained unanswered. On the other hand, the report emphasized the
- extraordinarily high activity of LSD, which corresponds to the activity of
- trace substances occurring in the organism that are considered to be
- responsible for certain mental disorders. Another subject discussed in this
- first publication was the possible application of LSD as a research tool in
- psychiatry, which follows from its tremendous psychic activity.
-
-
- First Self-Experiment by a Psychiatrist
-
- In his paper, W. A. Stoll also gave a detailed description of his own personal
- experiment with LSD. Since this was the first self-experiment published by a
- psychiatrist, and since it describes many characteristic features of LSD
- inebriation, it is interesting to quote extensively from the report. I warmly
- thank the author for kind permission to republish this extract.
-
- At 8 o'clock I took 60 mcg (0.06 milligrams) of LSD. Some 20 minutes
- later, the first symptoms appeared: heaviness in the limbs, slight atactic
- (i.e., confused, uncoordinated) symptoms. A subjectively very unpleasant
- phase of general malaise followed, in parallel with the drop in blood
- pressure registered by the examiners.
-
- A certain euphoria then set in, though it seemed weaker to me than
- experiences in an earlier experiment. The ataxia increased, and I went
- "sailing" around the room with large strides. I felt somewhat better, but
- was glad to lie down.
-
- Afterward the room was darkened (dark experiment); there followed an
- unprecedented experience of unimaginable intensity that kept increasing in
- strength. It w as characterized by an unbelievable profusion of optical
- hallucinations that appeared and vanished with great speed, to make way
- for countless new images. I saw a profusion of circles, vortices, sparks,
- showers, crosses, and spirals in constant, racing flux.
-
- The images appeared to stream in on me predominantly from the center of
- the visual field, or out of the lower left edge. When a picture appeared
- in the middle, the remaining field of vision was simultaneously filled up
- with a vast number of similar visions. All were colored: bright, luminous
- red, yellow, and green predominated.
-
- I never managed to linger on any picture. When the supervisor of the
- experiment emphasized my great fantasies, the richness of my statements, I
- could only react with a sympathetic smile. I knew, in fact, that I could
- not retain, much less describe, more than a fraction of the pictures. I
- had to force myself to give a description. Terms such as "fireworks" or
- "kaleidoscopic" were poor and inadequate. I felt that I had to immerse
- myself more and more deeply into this strange and fascinating world, in
- order to allow the exuberance, the unimaginable wealth, to work on me.
-
- At first, the hallucinations were elementary: rays, bundles of rays, rain,
- rings, vortices, loops, sprays, clouds, etc. Then more highly organized
- visions also appeared: arches, rows of arches, a sea of roofs, desert
- landscapes, terraces, flickering fire, starry skies of unbelievable
- splendor. The original, more simple images continued in the midst of these
- more highly organized hallucinations. I remember the following images in
- particular:
-
- A succession of towering, Gothic vaults, an endless choir, of which I
- could not see the lower portions.
-
- A landscape of skyscrapers, reminiscent of pictures of the entrance to
- New York harbor: house towers staggered behind and beside one another with
- innumerable rows of windows. Again the foundation was missing.
-
- A system of masts and ropes, which reminded me of a reproduction of a
- painting seen the previous day (the inside of a circus tent).
-
- An evening sky of an unimaginable pale blue over the dark roofs of a
- Spanish city. I had a peculiar feeling of anticipation, was full of joy
- and decidedly ready for adventure. All at once the stars flared up,
- amassed, and turned to a dense rain of stars and sparks that streamed
- toward me. City and sky had disappeared.
-
- I was in a garden, saw brilliant red, yellow, and green lights falling
- through a dark trelliswork, an indescribably joyous experience.
-
- It was significant that all the images consisted of countless repetitions
- of the same elements: many sparks, many circles, many arches, many
- windows, many fires, etc. I never saw isolated images, but always
- duplications of the same image, endlessly repeated.
-
- I felt myself one with all romanticists and dreamers, thought of E. T. A.
- Hoffmann, saw the maelstrom of Poe (even though, at the time I had read
- Poe, his description seemed exaggerated). Often I seemed to stand at the
- pinnacle of artistic experience; I luxuriated in the colors of the altar
- of Isenheim, and knew the euphoria and exultation of an artistic vision.
- I must also have spoken again and again of modern art; I thought of
- abstract pictures, which all at once I seemed to understand. Then again,
- there were impressions of an extreme trashiness, both in their shapes and
- their color combinations. The most garish, cheap modern lamp ornaments and
- sofa pillows came into my mind. The train of thought was quickened. But I
- had the feeling the supervisor of the experiment could still keep up with
- me. Of course I knew, intellectually, that I was rushing him. At first I
- had descriptions rapidly at hand. With the increasingly frenzied pace, it
- became impossible to think a thought through to the end. I must have only
- started many sentences.
-
- When I tried to restrict myself to specific subjects, the experiment
- proved most unsuccessful. My mind would even focus, in a certain sense, on
- contrary images: skyscrapers instead of a church, a broad desert instead
- of a mountain.
-
- I assumed that I had accurately estimated the elapsed time, but did not
- take the matter very seriously. Such questions did not interest me in the
- slightest.
-
- My state of mind was consciously euphoric. I enjoyed the condition, was
- serene, and took a most active interest in the experience. From time to
- time I opened my eyes. The weak red light seemed mysterious, much more
- than before. The busily writing research supervisor appeared to me to be
- very far away. Often I had peculiar bodily sensations: I believed my hands
- to be attached to some distant body, but was not certain whether it was my
- own.
-
- After termination of the first dark experiment, I strolled about in the
- room a bit, was unsure on my legs, and again felt less well. I became cold
- and was thankful that the research supervisor covered me with a blanket. I
- felt unkempt, unshaven, and unwashed. The room seemed strange and broad.
- Later I squatted on a high stool, thinking all the while that I sat there
- like a bird on the roost.
-
- The supervisor emphasized my own wretched appearance. He seemed remarkably
- graceful. I myself had small, finely formed hands. As I washed them, it
- was happening a long way from me, somewhere down below on the right. It
- was questionable, but utterly unimportant, whether they were my own hands.
-
- In the landscape outside, well known to me, many things appeared to have
- changed. Besides the hallucinations, I could now see the real as well.
- Later this was no longer possible, although I remained aware that reality
- was otherwise.
-
- A barracks, and the garage standing before it to the left, suddenly
- changed to a landscape of ruins, shattered to pieces. I saw wall wreckage
- and projecting beams, inspired undoubtedly by the memory of the war events
- in this region.
-
- In a uniform, extensive field, I kept seeing figures, which I tried to
- draw, but could get no farther than the crudest beginnings. I saw an
- extremely opulent sculptural ornamentation in constant metamorphosis, in
- continuous flux. I was reminded of every possible foreign culture, saw
- Mexican, Indian motifs. Between a grating of small beams and tendrils
- appeared little caricatures, idols, masks, strangely mixed all of a sudden
- with childish drawings of people. The tempo was slackened compared to the
- dark experiment.
-
- The euphoria had now vanished. I became depressed, especially during the
- second dark experiment, which followed. Whereas during the first dark
- experiment, the hallucinations had alternated with great rapidity in
- bright and luminous colors, now blue, violet, and dark green prevailed.
- The movement of larger images was slower milder, quieter, although even
- these were composed of finely raining "elemental dots," which streamed and
- whirled about quickly. During the first dark experiment, the commotion had
- frequently intruded upon me; now it often led distinctly away from me into
- the center of the picture, where a sucking mouth appeared. I saw grottoes
- with fantastic erosions and stalactites, reminding me of the child's book
- Im Wunderreiche des Bergkonigs [In the wondrous realm of the mountain
- king]. Serene systems of arches rose up. On the right-hand side, a row of
- shed roofs suddenly appeared; I thought of an evening ride homeward during
- military service. Significantly it involved a homeward ride: there was no
- longer anything like departure or love of adventure. I felt protected,
- enveloped by motherliness, was in peace. The hallucinations were no longer
- exciting, but instead mild and attenuated. Somewhat later I had the
- feeling of possessing the same motherly strength. I perceived an
- inclination, a desire to help, and behaved then in an exaggeratedly
- sentimental and trashy manner, where medical ethics are concerned. I
- realized this and was able to stop.
-
- But the depressed state of mind remained. I tried again and again to see
- bright and joyful images. But to no avail; only dark blue and green
- patterns emerged. I longed to imagine bright fire as in the first dark
- experiment. And I did see fires; however, they were sacrificial fires on
- the gloomy battlement of a citadel on a remote, autumnal heath. Once I
- managed to behold a bright ascending multitude of sparks, but at
- half-altitude it transformed itself into a group of silently moving spots
- from a peacock's tail. During the experiment I was very impressed that my
- state of mind and the type of hallucinations harmonized so consistently
- and uninterruptedly.
-
- During the second dark experiment I observed that random noises, and also
- noises intentionally produced by the supervisor of the experiment,
- provoked simultaneous changes in the optical impressions (synesthesia). In
- the same manner, pressure on the eyeball produced alterations of visual
- perceptions.
-
- Toward the end of the second dark experiment, I began to watch for sexual
- fantasies, which were, however, totally absent. In no way could I
- experience sexual desire. I wanted to imagine a picture of a woman; only a
- crude modern-primitive sculpture appeared. It seemed completely unerotic,
- and its forms were immediately replaced by agitated circles and loops.
-
- After the second dark experiment I felt benumbed and physically unwell. I
- perspired, was exhausted. I was thankful not to have to go to the
- cafeteria for lunch. The laboratory assistant who brought us the food
- appeared to me small and distant, of the same remarkable daintiness as the
- supervisor of the experiment.
-
- Sometime around 3:00 P.M. I felt better, so that the supervisor could
- pursue his work. With some effort I managed to take notes myself. I sat at
- the table, wanted to read, but could not concentrate. Once I seemed to
- myself like a shape from a surrealistic picture, whose limbs were not
- connected with the body, but were rather painted somewhere close by....
-
- I was depressed and thought with interest of the possibility of suicide.
- With some terror I apprehended that such thoughts were remarkably familiar
- to me. It seemed singularly self-evident that a depressed person commits
- suicide....
-
- On the way home and in the evening I was again euphoric, brimming with the
- experiences of the morning. I had experienced unexpected, impressive
- things. It seemed to me that a great epoch of my life had been crowded
- into a few hours. I was tempted to repeat the experiment.
-
- The next day I was careless in my thinking and conduct, had great trouble
- concentrating, was apathetic. . . . The casual, slightly dream-like
- condition persisted into the afternoon. I had great trouble reporting in
- any organized way on a simple problem. I felt a growing general weariness,
- an increasing awareness that I had now returned to everyday reality.
-
- The second day after the experiment brought an irresolute state.... Mild,
- but distinct depression was experienced during the following week, a
- feeling which of course could be related only indirectly to LSD.
-
-
- The Psychic Effects of LSD
-
- The picture of the activity of LSD obtained from these first investigations
- was not new to science. It largely matched the commonly held view of
- mescaline, an alkaloid that had been investigated as early as the turn of the
- century. Mescaline is the psychoactive constituent of a Mexican cactus
- Lophophora williamsii (syn. Anhalonium lewinii). This cactus has been eaten by
- American Indians ever since pre-Columbian times, and is still used today as a
- sacred drug in religious ceremonies. In his monograph Phantastica (Verlag
- Georg Stilke, Berlin, 1924), L. Lewin has amply described the history of this
- drug, called peyotl by the Aztecs. The alkaloid mescaline was isolated from
- the cactus by A. Heffter in 1896, and in 1919 its chemical structure was
- elucidated and it was produced synthetically by E. Spath. It was the first
- hallucinogen or phantasticum (as this type of active compound was described by
- Lewin) to become available as a pure substance, permitting the study of
- chemically induced changes of sensory perceptions, mental illusions
- (hallucinations), and alterations of consciousness. In the 1920s extended
- experiments with mescaline were carried out on animal and human subjects and
- described comprehensively by K. Beringer in his book Der Meskalinrausch
- (Verlag Julius Springer, Berlin, 1927). Because these investigations failed to
- indicate any applications of mescaline in medicine, interest in this active
- substance waned.
-
- With the discovery of LSD, hallucinogen research received a new impetus. The
- novelty of LSD as opposed to mescaline was its high activity, lying in a
- different order of magnitude. The active dose of mescaline, 0.2 to 0.5 g, is
- comparable to 0.00002 to 0.0001 g of LSD; in other words, LSD is some 5,000 to
- 10,000 times more active than mescaline.
-
- LSD's unique position among the psychopharmaceuticals is not only due to its
- high activity, in a quantitative sense. The substance also has qualitative
- significance: it manifests a high specificity, that is, an activity aimed
- specifically at the human psyche. It can be assumed, therefore, that LSD
- affects the highest control centers of the psychic and intellectual functions.
-
- The psychic effects of LSD, which are produced by such minimal quantities of
- material, are too meaningful and too multiform to be explained by toxic
- alterations of brain function. If LSD acted only through a toxic effect on the
- brain, then LSD experiences would be entirely psychopathological in meaning,
- without any psychological or psychiatric interest. On the contrary, it is
- likely that alterations of nerve conductivity and influence on the activity of
- nerve connections (synapses), which have been experimentally demonstrated,
- play an important role. This could mean that an influence is being exerted on
- the extremely complex system of cross-connections and synapses between the
- many billions of brain cells, the system on which the higher psychic and
- intellectual functions depend. This would be a promising area to explore in
- the search for an explanation of LSD's radical efficacy.
-
- The nature of LSD's activity could lead to numerous possibilities of
- medicinal-psychiatric uses, as W. A. Stoll's ground-breaking studies had
- already shown. Sandoz therefore made the new active substance available to
- research institutes and physicians as an experimental drug, giving it the
- trade name Delysid (D-Lysergsaure-diathylamid) which I had proposed. The
- printed prospectus below describes possible applications of this kind and
- voices the necessary precautions.
-
- Delysid (LSD 25)
- D-lysergic acid diethylamide tartrate
-
-
- Sugar-coated tablets containing 0.025 mg. (25 mircog.)
- Ampoules of 1 ml. containing 0.1 mg. (100 microg.) for
- oral administration
-
- The solution may also be injected s.c. or i.v. The
- effect is identical with that of oral administration
- but sets in more rapidly.
-
-
- PROPERTIES
-
- The administration of very small doses of Delysid
- (1/2-2 microg./kg. body weight) results in transitory
- disturbances of affect, hallucinations, depersonalization,
- reliving of repressed memories, and mild neurovegetative
- symptoms. The effect sets in after 30 to 90 minutes and
- generally lasts 5 to 12 hours. However, intermittent
- disturbances of affect may occasionally persist for several
- days.
-
-
- METHOD OF ADMINISTRATION
-
- For oral administration the contents of 1 ampoule of Delysid
- are diluted with distilled water, a 1% solution of tartaric acid
- or halogen-free tap water.
-
- The absorption of the solution is somewhat more rapid and more
- constant than that of the tablets.
-
- Ampoules which have not been opened, which have been protected
- against light and stored in a cool place are stable for an unlimited
- period. Ampoules which have been opened or diluted solutions retain
- their effectiveness for 1 to 2 days, if stored in a refrigerator.
-
-
- INDICATIONS AND DOSAGE
-
- a) Analytical psychotherapy, to elicit release of repressed material
- and provide mental relaxation, particularly in anxiety states and
- obsessional neuroses.
-
- The initial dose is 25 microg. (1/4 of an ampoule or 1 tablet).
- This dose is increased at each treatment by 25 microg. until the
- optimum dose (usually between 50 and 200 microg.) is found. The
- individual treatments are best given at intervals of one week.
-
- b) Experimental studies on the nature of psychoses: By taking Delysid
- himself, the psychiatrist is able to gain an insight into the world
- of ideas and sensations of mental patients. Delysid can also be
- used to induce model psychoses of short duration in normal subjects,
- thus facilitating studies on the pathogenesis of mental disease.
-
- In normal subjects, doses of 25 to 75 microg. are generally
- sufficient to produce a hallucinatory psychosis (on an average
- 1 microg./kg. body weight). In certain forms of psychosis and in
- chronic alcoholism, higher doses are necessary (2 to 4 microg./kg.
- body weight).
-
-
- PRECAUTIONS
-
- Pathological mental conditions may be intensified by Delysid. Particular
- caution is necessary in subjects with a suicidal tendency and in those
- cases where a psychotic development appears imminent. The psycho-affective
- liability and the tendency to commit impulsive acts may occasionally last
- for some days.
-
- Delysid should only be administered under strict medical supervision. The
- supervision should not be discontinued until the effects of the drug have
- completely orn off.
-
-
- ANTIDOTE
-
- The mental effects of Delysid can be rapidly reversed by the i.m.
- administration of 50 mg. chlorpromazine.
-
- Literature available on request.
-
- SANDOZ LTD., BASLE, SWITZERLAND
-
-
- The use of LSD in analytical psychotherapy is based mainly on the following
- psychic effects.
-
- In LSD inebriation the accustomed world view undergoes a deep-seated
- transformation and disintegration. Connected with this is a loosening or even
- suspension of the I-you barrier. Patients who are bogged down in an egocentric
- problem cycle can thereby be helped to release themselves from their fixation
- and isolation. The result can be an improved rapport with the doctor and a
- greater susceptibility to psychotherapeutic influence. The enhanced
- suggestibility under the influence of LSD works toward the same goal.
-
- Another significant, psychotherapeutically valuable characteristic of LSD
- inebriation is the tendency of long forgotten or suppressed contents of
- experience to appear again in consciousness. Traumatic events, which are
- sought in psychoanalysis, may then become accessible to psychotherapeutic
- treatment. Numerous case histories tell of experiences from even the earliest
- childhood that were vividly recalled during psychoanalysis under the influence
- of LSD. This does not involve an ordinary recollection, but rather a true
- reliving; not a reminiscence, but rather a reviviscence, as the French
- psychiatrist Jean Delay has formulated it.
-
- LSD does not act as a true medicament; rather it plays the role of a drug aid
- in the context of psychoanalytic and psychotherapeutic treatment and serves to
- channel the treatment more effectively and to shorten its duration. It can
- fulfill this function in two particular ways.
-
- In one procedure, which was developed in European clinics and given the name
- psychotytic therapy, moderately strong doses of LSD are administered in
- several successive sessions at regular intervals. Subsequently the LSD
- experiences are worked out in group discussions, and in expression therapy by
- drawing and painting. The term psycholytic therapy was coined by Ronald A.
- Sandison, an English therapist of Jungian orientation and a pioneerof clinical
- LSD research. The root -lysis or -lytic signifies the dissolution of tension
- or conflicts in the human psyche.
-
- In a second procedure, which is the favored treatment in the United States, a
- single, very high LSD dose (0.3 to 0.6 mg) is administered after
- correspondingly intensive psychological preparation of the patients. This
- method, described as psychedelic therapy, attempts to induce a
- mystical-religious experience through the shock effects of LSD. This
- experience can then serve as a starting point for a restructuring and curing
- of the patient's personality in the accompanying psychotherapeutic treatment.
- The term psychedelic, which can be translated as "mind-manifesting" or
- "mind-expanding," was introduced by Humphry Osmond, a pioneer of LSD research
- in the United States.
-
- LSD's apparent benefits as a drug auxiliary in psychoanalysis and
- psychotherapy are derived from properties diametrically opposed to the effects
- of tranquilizer-type psychopharmaceuticals. Whereas tranquilizers tend to
- cover up the patient's problems and conflicts, reducing their apparent gravity
- and importance: LSD, on the contrary, makes them more exposed and more
- intensely experienced. This clearer recognition of problems and conflicts
- makes them, in turn, more susceptible to psychotherapeutic treatment.
-
- The suitability and success of LSD in psychoanalysis and psychotherapy are
- still a subject of controversy in professional circles. The same could be
- said, however, of other procedures employed in psychiatry such as
- electroshock, insulin therapy, or psychosurgery, procedures that entail,
- moreover, a far greater risk than the use of LSD, which under suitable
- conditions can be considered practically safe.
-
- Because forgotten or repressed experiences, under the influence of LSD, may
- become conscious with considerable speed, the treatment can be correspondingly
- shortened. To some psychiatrists, however, this reduction of the therapy's
- duration is a disadvantage. They are of the opinion that this precipitation
- leaves the patient insufficient time for psychotherapeutic working-through.
- The therapeutic effect they believe, persists for a shorter time than when
- there is a gradual treatment, including a slow process of becoming conscious
- of the traumatic experiences.
-
- Psycholytic and especially psychedelic therapy require thorough preparation of
- the patient for the LSD experience, to avoid his or her being frightened by
- the unusual and the unfamiliar. Only then is a positive interpretation of the
- experience possible. The selection of patients is also important, since not
- all types of psychic disturbance respond equally well to these msthods of
- treatment. Successful use of LSD-assisted psychoanalysis and psychotherapy
- presupposes speclflc knowledge and experience.
-
- In this respect self-examination by psychiatrists, as W. A. Stoll has pointed
- out, can be most useful. They provide the doctors with direct insight, based
- on firsthand experience into the strange world of LSD inebriation, and make it
- possible for them truly to understand these phenomena in their patients, to
- interpret them properly, and to take full advantage of them.
-
- The following pioneers in use of LSD as a drug aid in psychoanalysis and
- psychotherapy deserve to be named in the front rank: A. K. Busch and W. C.
- Johnson, S. Cohen and B. Eisner, H. A. Abramson, H. Osmond, and A. Hoffer in
- the United States; R. A. Sandison in England; W. Frederking and H. Leuner in
- Germany; and G. Roubicek and S. Grof in Czechoslovakia.
-
- The second indication for LSD cited in the Sandoz prospectus on Delysid
- concerns its use in experimental investigations on the nature of psychoses.
- This arises from the fact that extraordinary psychic states experimentally
- produced by LSD in healthy research subjects are similar to many
- manifestations of certain mental disturbances. In the early days of LSD
- research, it was often claimed that LSD inebriation has something to do with a
- type of "model psychosis." This idea was dismissed, however, because extended
- comparative investigations showed that there were essential differences
- between the manifestations of psychosis and the LSD experience. With the LSD
- model, nevertheless, it is possible to study deviations from the normal
- psychic and mental condition, and to observe the biochemical and
- electrophysiological alterations associated with them. Perhaps we shall
- thereby gain new insights into the nature of psychoses. According to certain
- theories, various mental disturbances could be produced by psychotoxic
- metabolic products that have the power, even in minimal quantities, to alter
- the functions of brain cells. LSD represents a substance that certainly does
- not occur in the human organism, but whose existence and activity let it seem
- possible that abnormal metabolic products could exist, that even in trace
- quantities could produce mental disturbances. As a result, the conception of a
- biochemical origin of certain mental disturbances has received broader
- support, and research in this direction has been stimulated.
-
- One medicinal use of LSD that touches on fundamental ethical questions is its
- administration to the dying. This practice arose from observations in American
- clinics that especially severe painful conditions of cancer patients, which no
- longer respond to conventional pain-relieving medication, could be alleviated
- or completely abolished by LSD. Of course, this does not involve an analgesic
- effect in the true sense. The diminution of pain sensitivity may rather occur
- because patients under the influence of LSD are psychologically so dissociated
- from their bodies that physical pain no longer penetrates their consciousness.
- In order for LSD to be effective in such cases, it is especially crucial that
- patients be prepared and instructed about the kind of experiences and
- transformations that await them. In many cases it has proved beneficial for
- either a member of the clergy or a psychotherapist to guide the patient's
- thoughts in a religious direction. Numerous case histories tell of patients
- who gained meaningful insights about life and death on their deathbeds as,
- freed from pain in LSD ecstasy and reconciled to their fate, they faced their
- earthly demise fearlessly and in peace.
-
- The hitherto existing knowledge about the administration of LSD to the
- terminally ill has been summarized and published by S. Grof and J. Halifax in
- their book The Human Encounter with Death (E. P. Dutton, New York, 1977). The
- authors, together with E. Kast, S. Cohen, and W. A. Pahnke, are among the
- pioneers of this application of LSD.
-
- The most recent comprehensive publication on the use of LSD in psychiatry,
- Realms of the Human Unconscious: Observations from LSD Research (The Viking
- Press, New York, 1975), likewise comes from S. Grof, the Czech psychiatrist
- who has emigrated to the United States. This book offers a critical evaluation
- of the LSD experience from the viewpoint of Freud and Jung, as well as of
- existential analysis.
-
-
-
- 5. From Remedy to Inebriant
-
- During the first years after its discovery, LSD brought me the same happiness
- and gratification that any pharmaceutical chemist would feel on learning that
- a substance he or she produced might possibly develop into a valuable
- medicament. For the creation of new remedies is the goal of a pharmaceutical
- chemist's research activity; therein lies the meaning of his or her work.
-
-
- Nonmedical Use of LSD
-
- This joy at having fathered LSD was tarnished after more than ten years of
- uninterrupted scientific research and medicinal use when LSD was swept up in
- the huge wave of an inebriant mania that began to spread over the Western
- world, above all the United States, at the end of the 1950s. It was strange
- how rapidly LSD adopted its new role as inebriant and, for a time, became the
- number-one inebriating drug, at least as far as publicity was concerned. The
- more its use as an inebriant was disseminated, bringing an upsurge in the
- number of untoward incidents caused by careless, medically unsupervised use,
- the more LSD became a problem child for me and for the Sandoz firm.
-
- It was obvious that a substance with such fantastic effects on mental
- perception and on the experience of the outer and inner world would also
- arouse interest outside medical science, but I had not expected that LSD, with
- its unfathomably uncanny, profound effects, so unlike the character of a
- recreational drug, would ever find worldwide use as an inebriant. I had
- expected curiosity and interest on the part of artists outside of medicine -
- performers, painters, and writers - but not among people in general. After the
- scientific publications around the turn of the century on mescaline - which,
- as already mentioned, evokes psychic effects quite like those of LSD - the use
- of this compound remained confined to medicine and to experiments within
- artistic and literary circles. I had expected the same fate for LSD. And
- indeed, the first non-medicinal self-experiments with LSD were carried out by
- writers, painters, musicians, and other intellectuals.
-
- LSD sessions had reportedly provoked extraordinary aesthetic experiences and
- granted new insights into the essence of the creative process. Artists were
- influenced in their creative work in unconventional ways. A particular type of
- art developed that has become known as psychedelic art. It comprises creations
- produced under the influenced of LSD and other psychedelic drugs, whereby the
- drugs acted as stimulus and source of inspiration. The standard publication in
- this field is the book by Robert E. L. Masters and Jean Houston, Psychedelic
- Art (Balance House, 1968). Works of psychedelic art are not created while the
- drug is in effect, but only afterward, the artist being inspired by these
- experiences. As long as the inebriated condition lasts, creative activity is
- impeded, if not completely halted. The influx of images is too great and is
- increasing too rapidly to be portrayed and fashioned. An overwhelming vision
- paralyzes activity. Artistic productions arising directly from LSD
- inebriation, therefore, are mostly rudimentary in character and deserve
- consideration not because of their artistic merit, but because they are a type
- of psychoprogram, which offers insight into the deepest mental structures of
- the artist, activated and made conscious by LSD. This was demonstrated later
- in a large-scale experiment by the Munich psychiatrist Richard P. Hartmann, in
- which thirty famous painters took part. He published the results in his book
- Mlerei aus Bereichen des Unbewussten: Kunstler Experimentieren unter LSD
- [Painting from spheres of the unconscious: artists experiment with LSD],
- Verlag M. Du Mont Schauberg, Cologne, 1974).
-
- LSD experiments also gave new impetus to exploration into the essence of
- religious and mystical experience. Religious scholars and philosophers
- discussed the question whether the religious and mystical experiences often
- discovered in LSD sessions were genuine, that is, comparable to spontaneous
- mysticoreligious enlightenment.
-
- This nonmedicinal yet earnest phase of LSD research, at times in parallel with
- medicinal research, at times following it, was increasingly overshadowed at
- the beginning of the 1960s, as LSD use spread with epidemic-like speed through
- all social classes, as a sensational inebriating drug, in the course of the
- inebriant mania in the United States. The rapid rise of drug use, which had
- its beginning in this country about twenty years ago, was not, however, a
- consequence of the discovery of LSD, as superficial observers often declared.
- Eather it had deep-seated sociological causes: materialism, alienation from
- nature through industrialization and increasing urbanization, lack of
- satisfaction in professional employment in a mechanized, lifeless working
- world, ennui and purposelessness in a wealthy, saturated society, and lack of
- a religious, nurturing, and meaningful philosophical foundation of life.
-
- The existence of LSD was even regarded by the drug enthusiasts as a
- predestined coincidence - it had to be discovered precisely at this time in
- order to bring help to people suffering under the modern conditions. It is not
- surprising that LSD first came into circulation as an inebriating drug in the
- United States, the country in which industrialization, urbanization, and
- mechanization, even of agriculture, are most broadly advanced. These are the
- same factors that have led to the origin and growth of the hippie movement
- that developed simultaneously with the LSD wave. The two cannot be
- dissociated. It would be worth investigating to what extent the consumption of
- psychedelic drugs furthered the hippie movement and conversely.
-
- The spread of LSD from medicine and psychiatry into the drug scene was
- introduced and expedited by publications on sensational LSD experiments that,
- although they were carried out in psychiatric clinics and universities, were
- not then reported in scientific journals, but rather in magazines and daily
- papers, greatly elaborated. Reporters made themselves available as guinea
- pigs. Sidney Katz, for example, participated in an LSD experiment in the
- Saskatchewan Hospital in Canada under the supervision of noted psychiatrists;
- his experiences, however, were not published in a medical journal. Instead, he
- described them in an article entitled "My Twelve Hours as a Madman" in his
- magazine MacLean's Canada National Magazine, colorfully illustrated in
- fanciful fullness of detail. The widely distributed German magazine Quick, in
- its issue number 12 of 21 March 1954, reported a sensational eyewitness
- account on "Ein kuhnes wissenschaftliches Experiment" [a daring scientific
- experiment] by the painter Wilfried Zeller, who took "a few drops of lysergic
- acid" in the Viennese University Psychiatric Clinic. Of the numerous
- publications of this type that have made effective lay propaganda for LSD, it
- is sufficient to cite just one more example: a large-scale, illustrated
- article in Look magazine of September 1959. Entitled "The Curious Story Behind
- the New Cary Grant," it must have contributed enormously to the diffusion of
- LSD consumption. The famous movie star had received LSD in a respected clinic
- in California, in the course of a psychotherapeutic treatment. He informed the
- Look reporter that he had sought inner peace his whole life long, but yoga,
- hypnosis, and mysticism had not helped him. Only the treatment with LSD had
- made a new, selfstrengthened man out of him, so that after three frustrating
- marriages he now believed himself really able to love and make a woman happy.
-
- The evolution of LSD from remedy to inebriating drug was, however, primarily
- promoted by the activities of Dr. Timothy Leary and Dr. Richard Alpert of
- Harvard University. In a later section I will come to speak in more detail
- about Dr. Leary and my meetings with this personage who has become known
- worldwide as an apostle of LSD.
-
- Books also appeared on the U.S. market in which the fantastic effects of LSD
- were reported more fully. Here only two of the most important will be
- mentioned: Exploring I nner Space by Jane Dunlap (Harcourt Brace and World,
- New York, 1961) and My Self and I by Constance A. Newland (N A.L. Signet
- Books, New York, 1963). Although in both cases LSD was used within the scope
- of a psychiatric treatment, the authors addressed their books, which became
- bestsellers, to the broad public. In her book, subtitled "The Intimate and
- Completely Frank Record of One Woman's Courageous Experiment with Psychiatry's
- Newest Drug, LSD 25," Constance A. Newland described in intimate detail how
- she had been cured of frigidity. After such avowals, one can easily imagine
- that many people would want to try the wondrous medicine for themselves. The
- mistaken opinion created by such reports - that it would be sufficient simply
- to take LSD in order to accomplish such miraculous effects and transformations
- in oneself - soon led to broad diffusion of self-experimentation with the new
- drug.
-
- Objective, informative books about LSD and its problems also appeared, such as
- the excellent work by the psychiatrist Dr. Sidney Cohen, The Beyond Within
- (Atheneum, New York, 1967), in which the dangers of careless use are clearly
- exposed. This had, however, no power to put a stop to the LSD epidemic.
-
- As LSD experiments were often carried out in ignorance of the uncanny,
- unforeseeable, profound effects, and without medical supervision, they
- frequently came to a bad end. With increasing LSD consumption in the drug
- scene, there came an increase in "horror trips" - LSD experiments that led to
- disoriented conditions and panic, often resulting in accidents and even crime.
-
- The rapid rise of nonmedicinal LSD consumption at the beginning of the 1960s
- was also partly attributable to the fact that the drug laws then current in
- most countries did not include LSD. For this reason, drug habitues changed
- from the legally proscribed narcotics to the still-legal substance LSD.
- Moreover, the last of the Sandoz patents for the production of LSD expired in
- 1963, removing a further hindrance to illegal manufacture of the drug.
-
- The rise of LSD in the drug scene caused our firm a nonproductive, laborious
- burden. National control laboratories and health authorities requested
- statements from us about chemical and pharmacological properties, stability
- and toxicity of LSD, and analytical methods for its detection in confiscated
- drug samples, as well as in the human body, in blood and urine. This brought a
- voluminous correspondence, which expanded in connection with inquiries from
- all over the world about accidents, poisonings, criminal acts, and so forth,
- resulting from misuse of LSD. All this meant enormous, unprofitable
- difficulties, which the business management of Sandoz regarded with
- disapproval. Thus it happened one day that Professor Stoll, managing director
- of the firm at the time, said to me reproachfully: "I would rather you had not
- discovered LSD."
-
- At that time, I was now and again assailed by doubts whether the valuable
- pharmacological and psychic effects of LSD might be outweighed by its dangers
- and by possible injuries due to misuse. Would LSD become a blessing for
- humanity, or a curse? This I often asked myself when I thought about my
- problem child. My other preparations, Methergine, Dihydroergotamine, and
- Hydergine, caused me no such problems and difficulties. They were not problem
- children; lacking extravagant properties leading to misuse, they have
- developed in a satisfying manner into therapeutically valuable medicines.
-
- The publicity about LSD attained its high point in the years 1964 to 1966, not
- only with regard to enthusiastic claims about the wondrous effects of LSD by
- drug fanatics and hippies, but also to reports of accidents, mental
- breakdowns, criminal acts, murders, and suicide under the influence of LSD. A
- veritable LSD hysteria reigned.
-
-
- Sandoz Stops LSD Distribution
-
- In view of this situation, the management of Sandoz was forced to make a
- public statement on the LSD problem and to publish accounts of the
- corresponding measures that had been taken. The pertinent letter, dated 23
- August 1965, by Dr. A. Cerletti, at the time director of the Pharmaceutical
- Department of Sandoz, is reproduced below:
-
-
- Decision Regarding LSD 25 and
- Other Hallucinogenic Substances
-
- More than twenty years have elapsed since the discovey by Albert Hofmann
- of LSD 25 in the SANDOZ Laboratories. Whereas the . fundamental importance
- of this discovery may be assessed by its impact on the development of
- modern psychiatric research, it must be recognized that it placed a heavy
- burden of responsibility on SANDOZ, the owner of this product.
-
- The finding of a new chemical with outstanding biological properties,
- apart from the scientific success implied by its synthesis, is usually the
- first decisive step toward profitable development of a new drug. In the
- case of LSD, however, it soon became clear that, despite the outstanding
- properties of this compound, or rather because of the very nature of these
- qualities, even though LSD was fully protected by SANDOZ-owned patents
- since the time of its first synthesis in 1938, the usual means of
- practical exploitation could not be envisaged.
-
- On the other hand, all the evidence obtained following the initial studies
- in animals and humans carried out in the SANDOZ research laboratories
- pointed to the important role that this substance could play as an
- investigational tool in neurological research and in psychiatry.
-
- It was therefore decided to make LSD available free of charge to qualified
- experimental and clinical investigators all over the world. This broad
- research approach was assisted by the provision of any necessary technical
- aid and in many instances also by financial support.
-
- An enormous amount of scientific documents, published mainly in the
- international biochemical and medical literature and systematically listed
- in the "SANDOZ Bibliography on LSD" as well as in the "Catalogue of
- Literature on Delysid" periodically edited by SANDOZ, gives vivid proof of
- what has been achieved by following this line of policy over nearly two
- decades. By exercising this kind of "nobile offlcium" in accordance with
- the highest standards of medical ethics with all kinds of self-imposed
- precautions and restrictions, it was possible for many years to avoid the
- danger of abuse (i.e., use by people neither competent nor qualifled),
- which is always inherent in a compound with exceptional CNS activity.
-
- In spite of all our precautions, cases of LSD abuse have occurred from
- time to time in varying circumstances completely beyond the control of
- SANDOZ. Very recently this danger has increased considerably and in some
- parts of the world has reached the scale of a serious threat to public
- health. This state of affairs has now reached a critical point for the
- following reasons: (1) A worldwide spread of misconceptions of LSD has
- been caused by an increasing amount of publicity aimed at provoking an
- active interest in laypeople by means of sensational stories and
- statements; (2) In most countries no adequate legislation exists to
- control and regulate the production and distribution of substances like
- LSD; (3) The problem of availability of LSD, once limited on technical
- grounds, has fundamentally changed with the advent of mass production of
- lysergic acid by fermentation procedures. Since the last patent on LSD
- expired in 1963, it is not surprising to find that an increasing number
- of dealers in fine chemicals are offering LSD from unknown sources at the
- high price known to be paid by LSD fanatics.
-
- Taking into consideration all the above-mentioned circumstances and the
- flood of requests for LSD which has now become uncontrollable, the
- pharmaceutical management of SANDOZ has decided to stop immediately all
- further production and distribution of LSD. The same policy will apply to
- all derivatives or analogues of LSD with hallucinogenic properties as well
- as to Psilocybin, Psilocin, and their hallucinogenic congeners.
-
- For a while the distribution of LSD and psilocybin was stopped completely by
- Sandoz. Most countries had subsequently proclaimed strict regulations
- concerning possession, distribution, and use of hallucinogens, so that
- physicians, psychiatric clinics, and research institutes, if they could
- produce a special permit to work with these substances from the respective
- national health authorities, could again be supplied with LSD and psilocybin.
- In the United States the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) undertook
- the distribution of these agents to licensed research institutes.
-
- All these legislative and official precautions, however, had little influence
- on LSD consumption in the drug scene, yet on the other hand hindered and
- continue to hinder medicinal-psychiatric use and LSD research in biology and
- neurology, because many researchers dread the red tape that is connected with
- the procurement of a license for the use of LSD. The bad reputation of LSD -
- its depiction as an "insanity drug" and a "satanic invention" - constitutes a
- further reason why many doctors shunned use of LSD in their psychiatric
- practice.
-
- In the course of recent years the uproar of publicity about LSD has quieted,
- and the consumption of LSD as an inebriant has also diminished, as far as that
- can be concluded from the rare reports about accidents and other regrettable
- occurrences following LSD ingestion. It may be that the decrease of LSD
- accidents, however, is not simply due to a decline in LSD consumption.
- Possibly the recreational users, with time, have become more aware of the
- particular effects and dangers of LSD and more cautious in their use of this
- drug. Certainly LSD, which was for a time considered in the Western world,
- above all in the United States, to be the number-one inebriant, has
- relinquished this leading role to other inebriants such as hashish and the
- habituating, even physically destructive drugs like heroin and amphetamine.
- The last-mentioned drugs represent an alarrning sociological and public health
- problem today.
-
-
- Dangers of Nomnedicinal LSD Experiments
-
- While professional use of LSD in psychiatry entails hardly any risk, the
- ingestion of this substance outside of medical practice, without medical
- supervision, is subject to multifarious dangers. These dangers reside, on the
- one hand, in external circumstances connected with illegal drug use and, on
- the other hand, in the peculiarity of LSD's psychic effects.
-
- The advocates of uncontrolled, free use of LSD and other hallucinogens base
- their attitude on two claims: (l) this type of drug produces no addiction, and
- (2) until now no danger to health from moderate use of hallucinogens has been
- demonstrated. Both are true. Genuine addiction, characterized by the fact that
- psychic and often severe physical disturbances appear on withdrawal of the
- drug, has not been observed, even in cases in which LSD was taken often and
- over a long period of time. No organic injury or death as a direct consequence
- of an LSD intoxication has yet been reported. As discussed in greater detail
- in the chapter "LSD in Animal Experiments and Biological Research," LSD is
- actually a relatively nontoxic substance in proportion to its extraordinarily
- high psychic activity.
-
-
- Psychotic Reactions
-
- Like the other hallucinogens, however, LSD is dangerous in an entirely
- different sense. While the psychic and physical dangers of the addicting
- narcotics, the opiates, amphetamines, and so forth, appear only with chronic
- use, the possible danger of LSD exists in every single experiment. This is
- because severe disoriented states can appear during any LSD inebriation. It is
- true that through careful preparation of the experiment and the experimenter
- such episodes can largely be avoided, but they cannot be excluded with
- certainty. LSD crises resemble psychotic attacks with a manic or depressive
- character.
-
- In the manic, hyperactive condition, the feeling of omnipotence or
- invulnerability can lead to serious casualties. Such accidents have occurred
- when inebriated persons confused in this way - believing themselves to be
- invulnerable - walked in front of a moving automobile or jumped out a window
- in the belief that they were able to fly. This type of LSD casualty, however,
- is not so common as one might be led to think on the basis of reports that
- were sensationally exaggerated by the mass media. Nevertheless, such reports
- must serve as serious warnings.
-
- On the other hand, a report that made the rounds worldwide, in 1966, about an
- alleged murder committed under the influence on LSD, cannot be true. The
- suspect, a young man in New York accused of having killed his mother-in-law,
- explained at his arrest, immediately after the fact, that he knew nothing of
- the crime and that he had been on an LSD trip for three days. But an LSD
- inebriation, even with the highest doses, lasts no longer than twelve hours,
- and repeated ingestion leads to tolerance, which means that extra doses are
- ineffective. Besides, LSD inebriation is characterized by the fact that the
- person remembers exactly what he or she has experienced. Presumably the
- defendant in this case expected leniency for extenuating circumstances, owing
- to unsoundness of mind.
-
- The danger of a psychotic reaction is especially great if LSD is given to
- someone without his or her knowledge. This was demonstrated in an episode that
- took place soon after the discovery of LSD, during the first investigations
- with the new substance in the Zurich University Psychiatric Clinic, when
- people were not yet aware of the danger of such jokes. A young doctor, whose
- colleagues had slipped LSD into his coffee as a lark, wanted to swim across
- Lake Zurich during the winter at -20!C (-4!F) and had to be prevented by
- force.
-
- There is a different danger when the LSD-induced disorientation exhibits a
- depressive rather than manic character. In the course of such an LSD
- experiment, frightening visions, death agony, or the fear of becoming insane
- can lead to a threatening psychic breakdown or even to suicide. Here the LSD
- trip becomes a "horror trip."
-
- The demise of a Dr. Olson, who had been given LSD without his knowledge in the
- course of U.S. Army drug experiments, and who then committed suicide by
- jumping from a window, caused a particular sensation. His family could not
- understand how this quiet, well-adjusted man could have been driven to this
- deed. Not until fifteen years later, when the secret documents about the
- experiments were published, did they learn the true circumstances, whereupon
- the president of the United States publicly apologized to the dependents.
-
- The conditions for the positive outcome of an LSD experiment, with little
- possibility of a psychotic derailment, reside on the one hand in the
- individual and on the other hand in the external milieu of the experiment. The
- internal, personal factors are called set, the external conditions setting.
-
- The beauty of a living room or of an outdoor location is perceived with
- particular force because of the highly stimulated sense organs during LSD
- inebriation, and such an amenity has a substantial influence on the course of
- the experiment. The persons present, their appearance, their traits, are also
- part of the setting that determines the experience. The acoustic milieu
- isequally significant. Even harmless noises can turn to torment, and
- conversely lovely music can develop into a euphoric experience. With LSD
- experiments in ugly or noisy surroundings, however, there is greater danger of
- a negative outcome, including psychotic crises. The machine- and
- appliance-world of today offers much scenery and all types of noise that could
- very well trigger panic during enhanced sensibility.
-
- Just as meaningful as the external milieu of the LSD experience, if not even
- more important, is the mental condition of the experimenters, their current
- state of mind, their attitude to the drug experience, and their expectations
- associated with it. Even unconscious feelings of happiness or fear can have an
- effect. LSD tends to intensify the actual psychic state. A feeling of
- happiness can be heightened to bliss, a depression can deepen to despair. LSD
- is thus the most inappropriate means imaginable for curing a depressive state.
- It is dangerous to take LSD in a disturbed, unhappy frame of mind, or in a
- state of fear. The probability that the experiment will end in a psychic
- breakdown is then quite high.
-
- Among persons with unstable personality structures, tending to psychotic
- reactions, LSD experimentation ought to be completely avoided. Here an LSD
- shock, by releasing a latent psychosis, can produce a lasting mental injury.
-
- The psyche of very young persons should also be considered as unstable, in the
- sense of not yet having matured. In any case, the shock of such a powerful
- stream of new and strange perceptions and feelings, such as is engendered by
- LSD, endangers the sensitive, still-developing psycho-organism. Even the
- medicinal use of LSD in youths under eighteen years of age, in the scope of
- psychoanalytic or psychotherapeutic treatment, is discouraged in professional
- circles, correctly so in my opinion. Juveniles for the most part still lack a
- secure, solid relationship to reality. Such a relationship is needed before
- the dramatic experience of new dimensions of reality can be meaningfully
- integrated into the world view. Instead of leading to a broadening and
- deepening of reality consciousness, such an experience in adolescents will
- lead to insecurity and a feeling of being lost. Because of the freshness of
- sensory perception in youth and the still-unlimited capacity for experience,
- spontaneous visionary experiences occur much more frequently than in later
- life. For this reason as well, psychostimulating agents should not be used by
- juveniles.
-
- Even in healthy, adult persons, even with adherence to all of the preparatory
- and protective measures discussed, an LSD experiment can fail, causing
- psychotic reactions. Medical supervision is therefore earnestly to be
- recommended, even for nonmedicinal LSD experiments. This should include an
- examination of the state of health before the experiment. The doctor need not
- be present at the session; however, medical help should at all times be
- readily available.
-
- Acute LSD psychoses can be cut short and brought under control quickly and
- reliably by injection of chlorpromazine or another sedative of this type.
-
- The presence of a familiar person, who can request medical help in the event
- of an emergenCy, is also an indispensable psychological assurance. Although
- the LSD inebriation is characterized mostly by an immersion in the individual
- inner world, a deep need for human contact sometimes arises, especially in
- depressive phases.
-
-
- LSD from the Black Market
-
- Nonmedicinal LSD consumption can bring dangers of an entirely different type
- than hitherto discussed: for most of the LSD offered in the drug scene is of
- unknown origin. LSD preparations from the black market are unreliable when it
- comes to both quality and dosage. They rarely contain the declared quantity,
- but mostly have less LSD, often none at all, and sometimes even too much. In
- many cases other drugs or even poisonous substances are sold as LSD. These
- observations were made in our laboratory upon analysis of a great number of
- LSD samples from the black market. They coincide with the experiences of
- national drug control departments.
-
- The unreliability in the strength of LSD preparations on the illicit drug
- market can lead to dangerous overdosage. Overdoses have often proved to be the
- cause of failed LSD experiments that led to severe psychic and physical
- breakdowns. Reports of alleged fatal LSD poisoning, however, have yet to be
- confirmed. Close scrutiny of such cases invariably established other causative
- factors.
-
- The following case, which took place in 1970, is cited as an example of the
- possible dangers of black market LSD. We received for investigation from the
- police a drug powder distributed as LSD. It came from a young man who was
- admitted to the hospital in critical condition and whose friend had also
- ingested this preparation and died as a result. Analysis showed that the
- powder contained no LSD, but rather the very poisonous alkaloid strychnine.
-
- If most black market LSD preparations contained less than the stated quantity
- and often no LSD at all, the reason is either deliberate falsification or the
- great instability of this substance. LSD is very sensitive to air and light.
- It is oxidatively destroyed by the oxygen in the air and is transformed into
- an inactive substance under the influence of light. This must be taken into
- account during the synthesis and especially during the production of stable,
- storable forms of LSD. Claims that LSD may easily be prepared, or that every
- chemistry student in a half-decent laboratory is capable of producing it, are
- untrue. Procedures for synthesis of LSD have indeed been published and are
- accessible to everyone. With these detailed procedures in hand, chemists would
- be able to carry out the synthesis, provided they had pure lysergic acid at
- their disposal; its possession today, however, is subject to the same strict
- regulations as LSD. In order to isolate LSD in pure crystalline form from the
- reaction solution and in order to produce stable preparations, however,
- special equipment and not easily acquired specific experience are required,
- owing (as stated previously) to the great instability of this substance.
-
- Only in completely oxygen-free ampules protected from light is LSD absolutely
- stable. Such ampules, containing 100 ,Lg (= 0.1 mg) LSD-tartrate (tartaric
- acid salt of LSD) in 1 cc of aqueous solution, were produced for biological
- research and medicinal use by the Sandoz firm. LSD in tablets prepared with
- additives that inhibit oxidation, while not absolutely stable, at least keeps
- for a longer time. But LSD preparations often found on the black market - LSD
- that has been applied in solution onto sugar cubes or blotting paper -
- decompose in the course of weeks or a few months.
-
- With such a highly potent substance as LSD, the correct dosage is of paramount
- importance. Here the tenet of Paracelsus holds good: the dose determines
- whether a substance acts as a remedy or as a poison. A controlled dosage,
- however, is not possible with preparations from the black market, whose active
- strength is in no way guaranteed. One of the greatest dangers of non-medicinal
- LSD experiments lies, therefore, in the use of such preparations of unknown
- provenience.
-
-
- The Case of Dr. Leary
-
- Dr. Timothy Leary, who has become known worldwide in his role of drug apostle,
- had an extraordinarily strong influence on the diffusion of illegal LSD
- consumption in the United States. On the occasion of a vacation in Mexico in
- the year 1960, Leary had eaten the legendary "sacred mushrooms," which he had
- purchased from a shaman. During the mushroom inebriation he entered into a
- state of mystico-religious ecstasy, which he described as the deepest
- religious experience of his life. From then on, Dr. Leary, who at the time was
- a lecturer in psychology at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts,
- dedicated himself totally to research on the effects and possibilities of the
- use of psychedelic drugs. Together with his colleague Dr. Richard Alpert, he
- started various research projects at the university, in which LSD and
- psilocybin, isolated by us in the meantime, were employed.
-
- The reintegration of convicts into society, the production of
- mystico-religious experiences in theologians and members of the clergy, and
- the furtherance of creativity in artists and writers with the help of LSD and
- psilocybin were tested with scientific methodology. Even persons like Aldous
- Huxley, Arthur Koestler, and Allen Ginsberg participated in these
- investigations. Particular consideration was given to the question, to what
- degree mental preparation and expectation of the subjects, along with the
- external milieu of the experiment, are able to influence the course and
- character of states of psychedelic inebriation.
-
- In January 1963, Dr. Leary sent me a detailed report of these studies, in
- which he enthusiastically imparted the positive results obtained and gave
- expression to his beliefs in the advantages and very promising possibilities
- of such use of these active compounds. At the same time, the Sandoz firm
- received an inquiry about the supply of lOOg LSD and 25 kg psilocybin, signed
- by Dr. Timothy Leary, from the Harvard University Department of Social
- Relations. The requirement for such an enormous quantity (the stated amounts
- correspond to 1 million doses of LSD and 2.5 million doses of psilocybin) was
- based on the planned extension of investigations to tissue, organ, and animal
- studies. We made the supply of these substances contingent upon the production
- of an import license on behalf of the U.S. health authorities. Immediately we
- received the order for the stated quantities of LSD and psilocybin, along with
- a check for $10,000 as deposit but without the required import license. Dr.
- Leary signed for this order, but no longer as lecturer at Harvard University,
- rather as president of an organization he had recently founded, the
- International Federation for Internal Freedom (IFIF). Because, in addition,
- our inquiry to the appropriate dean of Harvard University had shown that the
- university authorities did not approve of the continuation of the research
- project by Leary and Alpert, we canceled our offer upon return of the deposit.
-
- Shortly thereafter, Leary and Alpert were discharged from the teaching staff
- of Harvard- University because the investigations, at first conducted in an
- academic milieu, had lost their scientific character. The experiments had
- turned into LSD parties.
-
- The LSD trip - LSD as a ticket to an adventurous journey into new worlds of
- mental and physical experience - became the latest exciting fashion among
- academic youth, spreading rapidly from Harvard to other universities. Leary's
- doctrine - that LSD not only served to find the divine and to discover the
- self, but indeed was the most potent aphrodisiac yet discovered - surely
- contributed quite decisively to the rapid propagation of LSD consumption among
- the younger generation. Later, in an interview with the monthly magazine
- Playboy, Leary said that the intensification of sexual experience and the
- potentiation of sexual ecstasy by LSD was one of the chief reasons for the LSD
- boom.
-
- After his expulsion from Harvard University, Leary was completely transformed
- from a psychology lecturer pursuing research, into the messiah of the
- psychedelic movement. He and his friends of the IFIF founded a psychedelic
- research center in lovely, scenic surroundings in Zihuatanejo, Mexico. I
- received a personal invitation from Dr. Leary to participate in a top-level
- planning session on psychedelic drugs, scheduled to take place there in August
- 1963. I would gladly have accepted this grand invitation, in which I was
- offered reimbursement for travel expenses and free lodging, in order to learn
- from personal observation the methods, operation, and the entire atmosphere of
- such a psychedelic research center, about which contradictory, to some extent
- very remarkable, reports were then circulating. Unfortunately, professional
- obligations kept me at that moment from flying to Mexico to get a picture at
- first hand of the controversial enterprise. The Zihuatanejo Research Center
- did not last long. Leary and his adherents were expelled from the country by
- the Mexican government. Leary, however, who had now become not only the
- messiah but also the martyr of the psychedelic movement, soon received help
- from the young New York millionaire William Hitchcock, who made a manorial
- house on his large estate in Millbrook, New York, available to Leary as new
- home and headquarters. Millbrook was also the home of another foundation for
- the psychedelic, transcendental way of life, the Castalia Foundation.
-
- On a trip to India in 1965 Leary was converted to Hinduism. In the following
- year he founded a religious community, the League for Spiritual Discovery,
- whose initials give the abbreviation "LSD."
-
- Leary's proclamation to youth, condensed in his famous slogan "Turn on, tune
- in, drop out !", became a central dogma of the hippie movement. Leary is one
- of the founding fathers of the hippie cult. The last of these three precepts,
- "drop out," was the challenge to escape from bourgeois life, to turn one's
- back on society, to give up school, studies, and employment, and to dedicate
- oneself wholly to the true inner universe, the study of one's own nervous
- system, after one has turned on with LSD. This challenge above all went beyond
- the psychological and religious domain to assume social and political
- significance. It is therefore understandable that Leary not only became the
- enfant terrible of the university and among his academic colleagues in
- psychology and psychiatry, but also earned the wrath of the political
- authorities. He was, therefore, placed under surveillance, followed, and
- ultimately locked in prison. The high sentences - ten years' imprisonment each
- for convictions in Texas and California concerning possession of LSD and
- marijuana, and conviction (later overturned) with a sentence of thirty years'
- imprisonment for marijuana smuggling - show that the punishment of these
- offenses was only a pretext: the real aim was to put under lock and key the
- seducer and instigator of youth, who could not otherwise be prosecuted. On the
- night of 13-14 September 1970, Leary managed to escape from the California
- prison in San Luis Obispo. On a detour from Algeria, where he made contact
- with Eldridge Cleaver, a leader of the Black Panther movement living there in
- exile, Leary came to Switzerland and there petitioned for political asylum.
-
-
- Meeting with Timothy Leay
-
- Dr. Leary lived with his wife, Rosemary, in the resort town Villars-sur-Ollon
- in western Switzerland. Through the intercession of Dr. Mastronardi, Dr.
- Leary's lawyer, contact was established between us. On 3 September 1971, I met
- Dr. Leary in the railway station snack bar in Lausanne. The greeting was
- cordial, a symbol of our fateful relationship through LSD. Leary was
- medium-sized, slender, resiliently active, his brown face surrounded with
- slightly curly hair mixed with gray, youthful, with bright, laughing eyes.
- This gave Leary somewhat the mark of a tennis champion rather than that of a
- former Harvard lecturer. We traveled by automobile to Buchillons, where in the
- arbor of the restaurant A la Grande Foret, over a meal of fish and a glass of
- white wine, the dialogue between the father and the apostle of LSD finally
- began.
-
- I voiced my regret that the investigations with LSD and psilocybin at Harvard
- University, which had begun promisingly, had degenerated to such an extent
- that their continuance in an academic milieu became impossible.
-
- My most serious remonstrance to Leary, however, concerned the propagation of
- LSD use among juveniles. Leary did not attempt to refute my opinions about the
- particular dangers of LSD for youth. He maintained, however, that I was
- unjustified in reproaching him for the seduction of immature persons to drug
- consumption, because teenagers in the United States, with regard to
- information and life experience, were comparable to adult Europeans. Maturity,
- with satiation and intellectual stagnation, would be reached very early in the
- United States. For that reason, he deemed the LSD experience significant,
- useful, and enriching, even for people still very young in years.
-
- In this conversation, I further objected to the great publicity that Leary
- sought for his LSD and psilocybin investigations, since he had invited
- reporters from daily papers and magazines to his experiments and had mobilized
- radio and television. Emphasis was thereby placed on publicity rather than on
- objective information. Leary defended this publicity program because he felt
- it had been his fateful historic role to make LSD known worldwide. The
- overwhelmingly positive effects of such dissemination, above all among
- America's younger generation, would make any trifling injuries, any
- regrettable accidents as a result of improper use of LSD, unimportant in
- comparison, a small price to pay.
-
- During this conversation, I ascertained that one did Leary an injustice by
- indiscriminately describing him as a drug apostle. He made a sharp distinction
- between psychedelic drugs - LSD, psilocybin, mescaline, hashish - of whose
- salutary effects he was persuaded, and the addicting narcotics morphine,
- heroin, etc., against whose use he repeatedly cautioned.
-
- My impression of Dr. Leary in this personal meeting was that of a charming
- personage, convinced of his mission, who defended his opinions with humor yet
- uncompromisingly; a man who truly soared high in the clouds pervaded by
- beliefs in the wondrous effects of psychedelic drugs and the optimism
- resulting therefrom, and thus a man who tended to underrate or completely
- overlook practical difficulties, unpleasant facts, and dangers. Leary also
- showed carelessness regarding charges and dangers that concerned his own
- person, as his further path in life emphatically showed.
-
- During his Swiss sojourn, I met Leary by chance once more, in February 1972,
- in Basel, on the occasion of a visit by Michael Horowitz, curator of the Fitz
- Hugh Ludlow Memorial Library in San Francisco, a library specializing in drug
- literature. We traveled together to my house in the country near Burg, where
- we resumed our conversation of the previous September. Leary appeared fidgety
- and detached, probably owing to a momentary indisposition, so that our
- discussions were less productive this time. That was my last meeting with Dr.
- Leary.
-
- He left Switzerland at the end of the year, having separated from his wife,
- Rosemary, now accompanied by his new friend Joanna Harcourt-Smith. After a
- short stay in Austria, where he assisted in a documentary film about heroin,
- Leary and friend traveled to Afghanistan. At the airport in Kabul he was
- apprehended by agents of the American secret service and brought back to the
- San Luis Obispo prison in California.
-
- After nothing had been heard from Leary for a long time, his name again
- appeared in the daily papers in summer 1975 with the announcement of a parole
- and early release from prison. But he was not set free until early in 1976. I
- learned from his friends that he was now occupied with psychological problems
- of space travel and with the exploration of cosmic relationships between the
- human nervous system and interstellar space - that is, with problems whose
- study would bring him no further difficulties on the part of governmental
- authorities.
-
-
- Travels in the Universe of the Soul
-
- Thus the Islamic scholar Dr. Rudolf Gelpke entitled his accounts of
- self-experiments with LSD and psilocybin, which appeared in the publication
- Antaios, for January 1962, and this title could also be used for the following
- descriptions of LSD experiments. LSD trips and the space flights of the
- astronauts are comparable in many respects. Both enterprises require very
- careful preparations, as far as measures for safety as well as objectives are
- concerned, in order to minimize dangers and to derive the most valuable
- results possible. The astronauts cannot remain in space nor the LSD
- experimenters in transcendental spheres, they have to return to earth and
- everyday reality, where the newly acquired experiences must be evaluated.
-
- The following reports were selected in order to demonstrate how varied the
- experiences of LSD inebriation can be. The particular motivation for
- undertaking the experiments was also decisive in their selection. Without
- exception, this selection involves only reports by persons who have tried LSD
- not simply out of curiosity or as a sophisticated pleasure drug, but who
- rather experimented with it in the quest for expanded possibilities of
- experience of the inner and outer world; who attempted, with the help of this
- drug key, to unlock new "doors of perception" (William Blake); or, to continue
- with the comparison chosen by Rudolf Gelpke, who employed LSD to surmount the
- force of gravity of space and time in the accustomed world view, in order to
- arrive thereby at new outlooks and understandings in the "universe of the
- soul."
-
- The first two of the following research records are taken from the previously
- cited report by Rudolf Gelpke in Antaios.
-
-
- Dance of the Spirits in the Wind
-
- (0.075 mg LSD on 23 June 1961, 13:00 hours)
-
- After I had ingested this dose, which could be considered average, I
- conversed very animatedly with a professional colleague until
- approximately 14:00 hours. Following this, I proceeded alone to the
- Werthmuller bookstore where the drug now began to act most unmistakably. I
- discerned, above all, that the subjects of the books in which I rummaged
- peacefully in the back of the shop were indifferent to me, whereas random
- details of my surroundings suddenly stood out strongly, and somehow
- appeared to be "meaningful." . . . Then, after some ten minutes, I was
- discovered by a married couple known to me, and had to let myself become
- involved in a conversation with them that, I admit, was by no means
- pleasant to me, though not really painful either. I listened to the
- conversation (even to myself) " as from far away. " The things that were
- discussed (the conversation dealt with Persian stories that I had
- translated) "belonged to another world": a world about which I could
- indeed express myself (I had, after all, recently still inhabited it
- myself and remembered the "rules of the game"!), but to which I no longer
- possessed any emotional connection. My interest in it was obliterated -
- only I did not dare to let myself observe that.
-
- After I managed to dismiss myself, I strolled farther through the city to
- the marketplace. I had no "visions," saw and heard everything as usual,
- and yet everything was also altered in an indescribable way;
- "imperceptible glassy walls" everywhere. With every step that I took, I
- became more and more like an automaton. It especially struck me that I
- seemed to lose control over my facial musculature - I was convinced that
- my face was grown stiff, completely expressionless, empty, slack and
- masklike. The only reason I could still walk and put myself in motion, was
- because I remembered that, and how I had "earlier" gone and moved myself.
- But the farther back the recollection went, the more uncertain I became. I
- remember that my own hands somehow were in my way: I put them in my
- pockets, let them dangle, entwined them behind my back . . . as some
- burdensome objects, which must be dragged around with us and which no one
- knows quite how to stow away. I had the same reaction concerning my whole
- body. I no longer knew why it was there, and where I should go with it.
- All sense for decisions of that kind had been lost . They could only be
- reconstructed laboriously, taking a detour through memories from the past.
- It took a struggle of this kind to enable me to cover the short distance
- from the marketplace to my home, which I reached at about 15:10.
-
- In no way had I had the feeling of being inebriated. What I experienced
- was rather a gradual mental extinction. It was not at all frightening; but
- I can imagine that in the transition to certain mental disturbances -
- naturally dispersed over a greater interval - a very similarprocess
- happens: as long as the recollection of the former individual existence in
- the human world is still present, the patient who has become unconnected
- can still (to some extent) find his way about in the world: later,
- however, when the memories fade and ultimately die out, he completely
- loses this ability.
-
- Shortly after I had entered my room, the "glassy stupor" gave way. I sat
- down, with a view out of a window, and was at once enraptured: the window
- was opened wide, the diaphanous gossamer curtains, on the other hand, were
- drawn, and now a mild wind from the outside played with these veils and
- with the silhouettes of potted plants and leafy tendrils on the sill
- behind, which the sunlight delineated on the curtains breathing in the
- breeze. This spectacle captivated me completely. I "sank" into it, saw
- only this gentle and incessant waving and rocking of the plant shadows in
- the sun and the wind. I knew what "it" was, but I sought after the name
- for it, after the formula, after the "magic word" that I knew and already
- I had it: Totentanz, the dance of the dead.... This was what the wind and
- the light were showing me on the screen of gossamer. Was it frightening?
- Was I afraid? Perhaps - at first. But then a great cheerfulness
- infiltrated me, and I heard the music of silence, and even my soul danced
- with the redeemed shadows to the whistle of the wind. Yes, I understood:
- this is the curtain, and this curtain itself IS the secret, the "ultimate"
- that it concealed. Why, therefore, tear it up? He who does that only tears
- up himself. Because "there behind," behind the curtain, is "nothing.". . .
-
-
- Polyp from the Deep
-
- (0.150 mg LSD on 15 April 1961, 9:15 hours)
-
- Beginning of the effect already after about 30 minutes with strong inner
- agitation, trembling hands, skin chills, taste of metal on the palate.
-
- 10:00: The environment of the room transforms itself into phosphorescent
- waves, running hither from the feet even through my body. The skin - and
- above all the toes - is as electrically charged; a still constantly
- growing excitement hinders all clear thoughts....
-
- 10:20: I lack the words to describe my current condition. It is as if an
- "other" complete stranger were seizing possession of me bit by bit. Have
- greatest trouble writing ("inhibited" or"uninhibited"? - I don't know!).
-
- This sinister process of an advancing self-estrangement aroused in me the
- feeling of powerlessness, of being helplessly delivered up. Around 10:30,
- through closed eyes I saw innumerable, self-intertwining threads on a red
- background. A sky as heavy as lead appeared to press down on everything; I
- felt my ego compressed in itself, and I felt like a withered dwarf....
- Shortly before 13:00 I escaped the more and more oppressing atmosphere of
- the company in the studio, in which we only hindered one another
- reciprocally from unfolding completely into the inebriation. I sat down in
- a small, empty room, on the floor, with my back to the wall, and saw
- through the only window on the narrow frontage opposite me a bit of gray-
- white cloudy sky. This, like the whole environment in general, appeared to
- be hopelessly normal at this moment. I was dejected, and my self seemed so
- repulsive and hateful to me that I had not dared (and on this day even had
- actually repeatedly desperately avoided) to look in a mirror or in the
- face of another person. I very much wished this inebriation were finally
- finished, but it still had my body totally in its possession. I imagined
- that I perceived, deep within its stubborn oppressive weight, how it held
- my limbs surrounded with a hundred polyp arms - yes, I actually
- experienced this in a mysterious rhythm; electrified contacts, as of a
- real, indeed imperceptible, but sinister omn sent being, which I
- addressed with a loud voice, reviled, bid, and challenged to open combat.
- "It is only the projection of evil in your self," another voice assured
- me. "It is your soul monster!" This perception was like a flashing sword.
- It passed through me with redeeming sharpness. The polyp arms fell away
- from me - as if cut through - and simultaneously the hitherto dull and
- gloomy gray-white of the sky behind the open window suddenly scintillated
- like sunlit water. As I stared at it so enchanted, it changed (for me!) to
- real water: a subterranean spring overran me, which had ruptured there all
- at once and now boiled up toward me, wanted to become a storm, a lake, an
- ocean, with millions and millions of drops - and on all of these drops, on
- every single one of them, the light danced.... As the room, window, and
- sky came back into my consciousness (it was 13:25 hours), the inebriation
- was certainly not at an end - not yet - but its rearguard, which passed by
- me during the ensuing two hours, very much resembled the rainbow that
- follows the storm.
-
- Both the estrangement from the environment and the estrangement from the
- individual body, experienced in both of the preceding experiments described by
- Gelpke - as well as the feeling of an alien being, a demon, seizing possession
- of oneself - are features of LSD inebriation that, in spite of all the other
- diversity and variability of the experience, are cited in most research
- reports. I have already described the possession by the LSD demon as an
- uncanny experience in my first planned self-experiment. Anxiety and terror
- then affected me especially strongly, because at that time I had no way of
- knowing that the demon would again release his victim.
-
- The adventures described in the following report, by a painter, belong to a
- completely different type of LSD experience. This artist visited me in order
- to obtain my opinion about how the experience under LSD should be understood
- and interpreted. He feared that the profound transformation of his personal
- life, which had resulted from his experiment with LSD, could rest on a mere
- delusion. My explanation - that LSD, as a biochemical agent, only triggered
- his visions but had not created them and that these visions rather originated
- from his own soul - gave him confidence in the meaning of his transformation.
-
-
- LSD Experience of a Painter
-
- . . . Therefore I traveled with Eva to a solitary mountain valley. Up
- there in nature, I thought it would be particularly beautiful with Eva.
- Eva was young and attractive. Twenty years older than she, I was already
- in the middle of life. Despite the sorrowful consequences that I had
- experienced previously, as a result of erotic escapades, despite the pain
- and the disappointments that I inflicted on those who loved me and had
- believed in me, I was drawn again with irresistible power to this
- adventure, to Eva, to her youth. I was under the spell of this girl. Our
- affair indeed was only beginning, but I felt this seductive power more
- strongly than ever before. I knew that I could no longer resist. For the
- second time in my life I was again ready to desert my family, to give up
- my position, to break all bridges. I wanted to hurl myself uninhibitedly
- into this lustful inebriation with Eva. She was life, youth. Over again it
- cried out in me, again and again to drain the cup of lust and life until
- the last drop, until death and perdition. Let the Devil fetch me later on!
- I had indeed long ago done away with God and the Devil. They were for me
- only human inventions, which came to be utilized by a skeptical,
- unscrupulous minority, in order to suppress and exploit a believing, naive
- majority. I wanted to have nothing to do with this mendacious social
- moral. To enjoy, at all costs, I wished to enjoy et apres nous te deluge.
- "What is wife to me, what is child to me - let them go begging, if they
- are hungry." I also perceived the institution of marriage as a social lie.
- The marriage of my parents and marriages of my acquaintances seemed to
- confirm that sufficiently for me. Couples remained together because it was
- more convenient; they were accustomed to it, and "yes, if it weren't for
- the children . . ." Under the pretense of a good marriage, each tormented
- the other emotionally, to the point of rashes and stomach ulcers, or each
- went his own way. Everything in me rebelled against the thought of having
- to love only one and the same woman a life long. I frankly perceived that
- as repugnant and unnatural. Thus stood my inner disposition on that
- portentous summer evening at the mountain lake.
-
- At seven o'clock in the evening both of us took a moderately strong dose
- of LSD, some 0.1 milligrams. Then we strolled along about the lake and
- then sat on the bank. We threw stones in the water and watched the forming
- wave circles. We felt a slight inner restlessness. Around eight o'clock we
- entered the hotel lounge and ordered tea and sandwiches. Some guests still
- sat there, telling jokes and laughing loudly. They winked at us. Their
- eyes sparkled strangely. We felt strange and distant and had the feeling
- that they would notice something in us. Outside it slowly became dark. We
- decided only reluctantly to go to our hotel room. A street without lights
- led along the black lake to the distant guest house. As I switched on the
- light, the granite staircase, leading from the shore road to the house,
- appeared to flame up from step to step. Eva quivered all at once,
- frightened. "Hellish" went through my mind, and all of a sudden horror
- passed through my limbs, and I knew: now it's going to turn out badly.
- From afar, from the village, a clock struck nine.
-
- Scarcely were we in our room, when Eva threw herself on the bed and looked
- at me with wide eyes. It was not in the least possible to think of love. I
- sat down on the edge of the bed and held both of Eva's hands. Then came
- the terror. We sank into a deep, indescribable horror, which neither of us
- understood.
-
- "Look in my eyes, look at me," I implored Eva, yet again and again her
- gaze was averted from me, and then she cried out loud in terror and
- trembled all over her body. There was no way out. Outside was only gloomy
- night and the deep, black lake. In the public house all the lights were
- extinguished; the people had probably gone to sleep. What would they have
- said if they could see us now? Possibly they would summon the police, and
- then everything would become still much worse. A drug scandal -
- intolerable agonizing thoughts.
-
- We could no longer move from the spot. We sat there surrounded by four
- wooden walls whose board joints shone infernally. It became more
- unbearable all the time. Suddenly the door was opened and "something
- dreadful" entered. Eva cried out wildly and hid herself under the bed
- covers. Once again a cry. The horror under the covers was yet worse.
- "Look straight in my eyes!" I called to her, but she rolled her eyes back
- and forth as though out of her mind. She is becoming insane, I realized.
- In desperation I seized her by the hair so that she could no longer turn
- her face away from me. I saw dreadful fear in her eyes. Everything around
- us was hostile and threatening, as if everything wanted to attack us in
- the next moment. You must protect Eva, you must bring her through until
- morning, then the effects will discontinue, I said to myself. Then again,
- however, I plunged into nameless horror. There was no more time or reason;
- it seemed as if this condition would never end.
-
- The objects in the room were animated to caricatures; everything on all
- sides sneered scornfully. I saw Eva's yellow-black striped shoes, which I
- had found so stimulating, appearing as two large, evil wasps crawling on
- the floor. The water piping above the washbasin changed to a dragon head,
- whose eyes, the two water taps, observed me malevolently. My first name,
- George, came into my mind, and all at once I felt like Knight George, who
- must fight for Eva.
-
- Eva's cries tore me from these thoughts. Bathed in perspiration and
- trembling, she fastened herself to me. "I am thirsty," she moaned. With
- great effort, without releasing Eva's hand, I succeeded in getting a glass
- of water for her. But the water seemed slimy and viscous, was poisonous,
- and we could not quench our thirst with it. The two night-table lamps
- glowed with a strange brightness, in an infernal light. The clock struck
- twelve.
-
- This is hell, I thought. There is indeed no Devil and no demons, and yet
- they were perceptible in us, filled up the room, and tormented us with
- unimaginable terror. Imagination, or not? Hallucinations, projections? -
- insignificant questions when confronted with the reality of fear that was
- fixed in our bodies and shook us: the fear alone, it existed. Some
- passages from Huxley's book The Doors of Perception came to me and brought
- me brief comfort. I looked at Eva, at this whimpering, horrified being in
- her torment, and felt great remorse and pity. She had become strange to
- me; I scarcely recognized her any longer. She wore a fine golden chain
- around her neck with the medallion of the Virgin Mary. It was a gift from
- her younger brother. I noticed how a benevolent, comforting radiation,
- which was connected with pure love, emanated from this necklace. But then
- the terror broke loose again, as if to our final destruction. I needed my
- whole strength to constrain Eva. Loudly I heard the electrical meter
- ticking weirdly outside of the door, as if it wanted to make a most
- important, evil, devastating announcement to me in the next moment.
- Disdain, derision, and malignity again whispered out of all nooks and
- crevices. There, in the midst of this agony, I perceived the ringing of
- cowbells from afar as a wonderful, promising music. Yet soon it became
- silent again, and renewed fear and dread once again set in. As a drowning
- man hopes for a rescuing plank, so I wished that the cows would yet again
- want to draw near the house.\But everything remained quiet, and only the
- threatening tick and hum of the current meter buzzed round us like an
- invisible, malevolent insect.
-
- Morning finally dawned. With great relief I noticed how the chinks in the
- window shutters lit up. Now I could leave Eva to herself; she had quieted
- down. Exhausted, she closed her eyes and fell asleep. Shocked and deeply
- sad, I still sat on the edge of the bed. Gone was my pride and self-
- assurance; all that remained of me was a small heap of misery. I examined
- myself in the mirror and started: I had become ten years older in the
- course of the night. Downcast, I stared at the light of the night-table
- lamp with the hideous shade of intertwined plastic cords. All at once the
- light seemed to become brighter, and in the plastic cords it began to
- sparkle and to twinkle; it glowed like diamonds and gems of all colors,
- and an overwhelming feeling of happiness welled up in me. All at once,
- lamp, room, and Eva disappeared, and I found myself in a wonderful,
- fantastic landscape. It was comparable to the interior of an immense
- Gothic church nave, with infinitely many columns and Gothic arches. These
- consisted, however, not of stone, but rather of crystal. Bluish,
- yellowish, milky, and clearly transparent crystal columns surrounded me
- like trees in an open forest. Their points and arches became lost in
- dizzying heights. A bright light appeared before my inner eye, and a
- wonderful, gentle voice spoke to me out of the light. I did not hear it
- with my external ear, but rather perceived it, as if it were clear
- thoughts that arise in one.
-
- I realized that in the horror of the passing night I had experienced my
- own individual condition: selfishness. My egotism had kept me separated
- from mankind and had led me to inner isolation. I had loved only myself,
- not my neighbor; loved only the gratification that the other offered me.
- The world had existed only for the satisfaction of my greed. I had become
- tough, cold, and cynical. Hell, therefore, had signified that: egotism and
- lovelessness. Therefore everything had seemed strange and unconnected to
- me, so scornful and threatening. Amid flowing tears, I was enlightened
- with the knowledge that true love means surrenderof selfishness and that
- it is not desires but rather selfless love that forms the bridge to the
- heart of our fellow man. Waves of ineffable happiness flowed through my
- body. I had experienced the grace of God. But how could it be possible
- that it was radiating toward me, particularly out of this cheap lampshade?
- Then the inner voice answered: God is in everything.
-
- The experience at the mountain lake has given me the certainty that beyond
- the ephemeral, material world there also exists an imperishable, spiritual
- reality, which is our true home. I am now on my way home.
-
- For Eva everything remained just a bad dream. We broke up a short time
- thereafter.
-
- The following notes kept by a twenty-five-year-old advertising agent are
- contained in The LSD Story by John Cashman (Fawcett Publications, Greenwich,
- Conn., 1966). They were included in this selection of LSD reports, along with
- the preceding example, because the progression that they describe - from
- terrifying visions to extreme euphoria, a kind of deathrebirth cycle - is
- characteristic of many LSD experiments.
-
-
- A Joyous Song of Being
-
- My first experience with LSD came at the home of a close friend who served
- as my guide. The surroundings were comfortably familiar and relaxing. I
- took two ampuls (200 micrograms) of LSD mixed in half a glass of distilled
- water. The experience lasted for close to eleven hours, from 8 o'clock on
- a Saturday evening until very nearly 7 o'clock the next morning. I have no
- firm point of comparison, but I am positive that no saint ever saw more
- glorious or joyously beautiful visions or experienced a more blissful
- state of transcendence. My powers to convey the miracles are shabby and
- far too inadequate to the task at hand. A sketch, and an artless one at
- that, must suffice where only the hand of a great master working from a
- complete palette could do justice to the subject. I must apologize for my
- own limitations in this feeble attempt to reduce the most remarkable
- experience of my life to mere words. My superior smile at the fumbling,
- halting attempts of others in their attempts to explain the heavenly
- visions to me has been transformed into a knowing smile of a conspirator -
- the common experience requires no words.
-
- My first thought after drinking the LSD was that it was having absolutely
- no effect. They had told me thirty minutes would produce the first
- sensation, a tingling of the skin. There was no tingling. I commented on
- this and was told to relax and wait. For the lack of anything else to do
- I stared at the dial light of the table radio, nodding my head to a jazz
- piece I did not recognize. I think it was several minutes before I
- realized that the light was changing color kaleidoscopically with the
- different pitch of the musical sounds, bright reds and yellows in the high
- register, deep purple in the low. I laughed. I had no idea when it had
- started. I simply knew it had. I closed my eyes, but the colored notes
- were still there. I was overcome by the remarkable brilliance of the
- colors. I tried to talk, to explain what I was seeing, the vibrant and
- luminous colors. Somehow it didn't seem important. With my eyes open, the
- radiant colors flooded the room, folding over on top of one another in
- rhythm with the music. Suddenly I was aware that the colors were the
- music. The discovery did not seem startling. Values, so cherished and
- guarded, were becoming unimportant. I wanted to talk about the colored
- music, but I couldn't. I was reduced to uttering one-syllable words while
- polysyllabic impressions tumbled through my mind with the speed of light.
-
- The dimensions of the room were changing, now sliding into a fluttering
- diamond shape, then straining into an oval shape as if someone were
- pumping air into the room, expanding it to the bursting point. I was
- having trouble focusing on objects. They would melt into fuzzy masses of
- nothing or sail off into space, self-propelled, slow-motion trips that
- were of acute interest to me. I tried to check the time on my watch, but I
- was unable to focus on the hands. I thought of asking for the time, but
- the thought passed. I was too busy seeing and listening. The sounds were
- exhilarating, the sights remarkable. I was completely entranced. I have no
- idea how long this lasted. I do know the egg came next.
-
- The egg, large, pulsating, and a luminous green, was there before I
- actually saw it. I sensed it was there. It hung suspended about halfway
- between where I sat and the far wall. I was intrigued by the beauty of the
- egg. At the same time I was afraid it would drop to the floor and break. I
- didn't want the egg to break. It seemed most important that the egg should
- not break. But even as I thought of this, the egg slowly dissolved and
- revealed a great multihued flower that was like no flowerI have ever seen.
- Its incredibly exquisite petals opened on the room, spraying indescribable
- colors in every direction. I felt the colors and heard them as they played
- across my body, cool and warm, reedlike and tinkling.
-
- The first tinge of apprehension came later when I saw the center of the
- flower slowly eating away at the petals, a black, shiny center that
- appeared to be formed by the backs of a thousand ants. It ate away the
- petals at an agonizingly slow pace. I wanted to scream for it to stop or
- to hurry up. I was pained by the gradual disappearance of the beautiful
- petals as if being swallowed by an insidious disease. Then in a flash of
- insight I realized to my horror that the black thing was actually
- devouring me. I was the flower and this foreign, creeping thing was
- eating me!
-
- I shouted or screamed, I really don't remember. I was too full of fear and
- loathing. I heard my guide say: "Easy now. Just go with it. Don't fight
- it. Go with it." I tried, but the hideous blackness caused such repulsion
- that I screamed: "I can't! For God's sake help me! Help me!" The voice was
- soothing, reassuring: "Let it come. Everything is all right. Don't worry.
- Go with it. Don't fight."
-
- I felt myself dissolving into the terrifying apparition, my body melting
- in waves into the core of blackness, my mind stripped of ego and life and,
- yes even death. In one great crystal instant I realized that I was
- immortal. I asked the question: "Am I dead?" But the question had no
- meaning. Meaning was meaningless. Suddenly there was white light and the
- shimmering beauty of unity. There was light everywhere, white light with a
- clarity beyond description. I was dead and I was born and the exultation
- was pure and holy. My lungs were bursting with the joyful song of being.
- There was unity and life and the exquisite love that filled my being was
- unbounded. My awareness was acute and complete. I saw God and the devil
- and all the saints and I knew the truth. I felt myself flowing into the
- cosmos, levitated beyond all restraint, liberated to swim in the blissful
- radiance of the heavenly visions.
-
- I wanted to shout and sing of miraculous new life and sense and form, of
- the joyous beauty and the whole mad ecstasy of loveliness. I knew and
- understood all there is to know and understand. I was immortal, wise
- beyond wisdom, and capable of love, of all loves. Every atom of my body
- and soul had seen and felt God. The world was warmth and goodness. There
- was no time, no place, no me. There was only cosmic harmony. It was all
- there in the white light. With every fiberof my being I knew it was so.
-
- I embraced the enlightenment with complete abandonment. As the experience
- receded I longed to hold onto it and tenaciously fought against the
- encroachment of the realities of time and place. For me, the realities of
- our limited existence were no longer valid. I had seen the ultimate
- realities and there would be no others. As I was slowly transported back
- to the tyranny of clocks and schedules and petty hatreds, I tried to talk
- of my trip, my enlightenment, the horrors, the beauty, all of it. I must
- have been babbling like an idiot. My thoughts swirled at a fantastic rate,
- but the words couldn't keep pace. My guide smiled and told me he
- understood.
-
- The preceding collection of reports on "travels in the universe of the soul,"
- even though they encompass such dissimilar experiences, are still not able to
- establish a complete picture of the broad spectrum of all possible reactions
- to LSD, which extends from the most sublime spiritual, religious, and mystical
- experiences, down to gross psychosomatic disturbances. Cases of LSD sessions
- have been described in which the stimulation of fantasy and of visionary
- experience, as expressed in the LSD reports assembled here, is completely
- absent, and the experimenter was for the whole time in a state of ghastly
- physical and mental discomfort, or even felt severely ill.
-
- Reports about the modification of sexual experience under the influence of LSD
- are also contradictory. Since stimulation of all sensory perception is an
- essential feature of LSD effects, the sensual orgy of sexual intercourse can
- undergo unimaginable enhancements. Cases have also been described, however, in
- which LSD led not to the anticipated erotic paradise, but rather to a
- purgatory or even to the hell of frightful extinction of every perception and
- to a lifeless vacuum.
-
- Such a variety and contradiction of reactions to a drug is found only in LSD
- and the related hallucinogens. The explanation for this lies in the complexity
- and variability of the conscious and subconscious minds of people, which LSD
- is able to penetrate and to bring to life as experienced reality.
-
-
-
- 6. The Mexican Relatives of LSD
-
-
- The Sacred Mushroom Teonanacatl
-
- Late in 1956 a notice in the daily paper caught my interest. Among some
- Indians in southern Mexico, American researchers had discovered mushrooms that
- were eaten in religious ceremonies and that produced an inebriated condition
- accompanied by hallucinations.
-
- Since, outside of the mescaline cactus found also in Mexico, no other drug was
- known at the time that, like LSD, produced hallucinations, I would have liked
- to establish contact with these researchers, in order to learn details about
- these hallucinogenic mushrooms. But there were no names and addresses in the
- short newspaper article, so that it was impossible to get further information.
- Nevertheless, the mysterious mushrooms, whose chemical investigation would be
- a tempting problem, stayed in my thoughts from then on.
-
- As it later turned out, LSD was the reason that these mushrooms found their
- way into my laboratory, with out my assistance, at the beginning of the
- following year.
-
- Through the mediation of Dr. Yves Dunant, at the time director of the Paris
- branch of Sandoz, an inquiry came to the pharmaceutical research management in
- Basel from Professor Roger Heim, director of the Laboratoire de Cryptogamie of
- the Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle in Paris, asking whether we were
- interested in carrying out the chemical investigation of the Mexican
- hallucinogenic mushrooms. With great joy I declared myself ready to begin this
- work in my department, in the laboratories for natural product research. That
- was to be my link to the exciting investigations of the Mexican sacred
- mushrooms, which were already broadly advanced in the ethnomycological and
- botanical aspects.
-
- For a long time the existence of these magic mushrooms had remained an enigma.
- The history of their rediscovery is presented at first hand in the magnificent
- two-volume standard work of ethnomycology, Mushrooms, Russia and History
- (Pantheon Books, New York, 1957), for the authors, the American researchers
- Valentina Pavlovna Wasson and her husband, R. Gordon Wasson, played a decisive
- role in this rediscovery. The following descriptions of the fascinating
- history of these mushrooms are taken from the Wassons' book.
-
- The first written evidence of the use of inebriating mushrooms on festival
- occasions, or in the course of religious ceremonies and magically oriented
- healing practices, is found among the Spanish chroniclers and naturalists of
- the sixteenth century, who entered the country soon after the conquest of
- Mexico by Hernan Cortes. The most important of these witnesses is the
- Franciscan friar Bernardino de Sahagun, who mentions the magic mushrooms and
- describes their effects and their use in several passages of his famous
- historical work, Historia General de tas Cosas de Nueva Espana, written
- between the years 1529 and 1590. Thus he describes, for example, how merchants
- celebrated the return home from a successful business trip with a mushroom
- party:
-
- Coming at the very first, at the time of feasting, they ate mushrooms
- when, as they said, it was the hour of the blowing of the flutes. Not yet
- did they partake of food; they drank only chocolate during the night.
- And they ate mushrooms with honey. When already the mushrooms were taking
- effect, there was dancing, there was weeping.... Some saw in a vision that
- they would die in war. Some saw in a vision that they would be devoured by
- wild beasts.... Some saw in a vision that they would become rich, wealthy.
- Some saw in a vision that they would buy slaves, would become slave
- owners. Some saw in a vision that they would commit adultery [and so]
- would have their heads bashed in, would be stoned to death.... Some saw in
- a vision that they would perish in the water. Some saw in a vision that
- they would pass to tranquility in death. Some saw in avision that they
- would fall from the housetop, tumble to their death. . . . All such things
- they saw.... And when [the effects of] the mushroom ceased, they conversed
- with one another, spoke of what they had seen in the vision.
-
- In a publication from the same period, Diego Duran, a Dominican friar,
- reported that inebriating mushrooms were eaten at the great festivity on the
- occasion of the accession to the throne of Moctezuma II, the famed emperor of
- the Aztecs, in the year 1502. A passage in the seventeenth-century chronicle
- of Don Jacinto de la Serna refers to the use of these mushrooms in a religious
- framework:
-
- And what happened was that there had come to [the village] an Indian . . .
- and his name was Juan Chichiton . . . and he had brought the red-colored
- mushrooms that are gathered in the uplands, and with them he had committed
- a great idolatry.... In the house where everyone had gathered on the
- occasion of a saint's feast . . . the teponastli [an Aztec percussion
- instrument] was playing and singing was going on the whole night through.
- After most of the night had passed, Juan Chichiton, who was the priest for
- that solumn rite, to all of those present at the flesta gave the mushrooms
- to eat, after the manner of Communion, and gave them pulque to drink. . .
- so that they all went out of their heads, a shame it was to see.
-
- In Nahuatl, the language of the Aztecs, these mushrooms were described as
- teonanactl, which can be translated as "sacred mushroom."
-
- There are indications that ceremonial use of such mushrooms reaches far back
- into pre-Columbian times. So-called mushroom stones have been found in El
- Salvador, Guatemala, and the contiguous mountainous districts of Mexico. These
- are stone sculptures in the form of pileate mushroom, on whose stem the face
- or the form of a god or an animallike demon is carved. Most are about 30 cm
- high. The oldest examples, according to archaeologists, date back to before
- 500 B.C.
-
- R. G. Wasson argues, quite convincingly, that there is a connection between
- these mushroom stones and teonanacatl. If true, this means that the mushroom
- cult, the magico-medicinal and religious-ceremonial use of the magic
- mushrooms, is more than two thousand years old.
-
- To the Christian missionaries, the inebriating, vision- and
- hallucination-producing effects of these mushrooms seemed to be Devil's work.
- They therefore tried, with all the means in their power, to extirpate their
- use. But they succeeded only partially, for the Indians have continued
- secretly down to our time to utilize the mushroom teonanacatl, which was
- sacred to them.
-
- Strange to say, the reports in the old chronicles about the use of magic
- mushrooms remained unnoticed during the following centuries, probably because
- they were considered products of the imagination of a superstitious age.
-
- All traces of the existence of "sacred mushrooms" were in danger of becoming
- obliterated once and for all, when, in 1915, an Americanbotanist of repute,
- Dr. W. E. Safford, in an address before the Botanical Society in Washington
- and in a scientific publication, advanced the thesis that no such thing as
- magic mushrooms had ever existed at all: the Spanish chroniclers had taken the
- mescaline cactus for a mushroom! Even if false, this proposition of Safford's
- served nevertheless to direct the attention of the scientific world to the
- riddle of the mysterious mushrooms.
-
- It was the Mexican physician Dr. Blas Pablo Reko who first openly disagreed
- with Safford's interpretation and who found evidence that mushrooms were still
- employed in medicinal-religious ceremonies even in our time, in remote
- districts of the southern mountains of Mexico. But not until the years 19338
- did the anthropologist Robert J. Weitlaner and Dr. Richard Evans Schultes, a
- botanist from Harvard University, find actual mushrooms in that region, which
- were used there for this ceremonial purpose; and only in 1938 could a group of
- young American anthropologists, under the direction of Jean Bassett Johnson,
- attend a secret nocturnal mushroom ceremony for the first time. This was in
- Huautla de Jimenez, the capital of the Mazatec country, in the State of
- Oaxaca. But these researchers were only spectators, they were not permitted to
- partake of the mushrooms. Johnson reported on the experience in a Swedish
- journal (Ethnotogical Studies 9, 1939).
-
- Then exploration of the magic mushrooms was interrupted. World War II broke
- out. Schultes, at the behest of the American government, had to occupy himself
- with rubber production in the Amazon territory, and Johnson was killed after
- the Allied landing in North Africa.
-
- It was the American researchers, the married couple Dr. Valentina Pavlovna
- Wasson and her husband, R. Gordon Wasson, who again took up the problem from
- the ethnographic aspect. R. G. Wasson was a banker, vice-president of the J.
- P. Morgan Co. in New York. His wife, who died in 1958, was a pediatrician. The
- Wassons began their work in 1953, in the Mazatec village Huautla de Jimenez,
- where fifteen years earlier J. B. Johnson and others had established the
- continued existence of the ancient Indian mushroom cult. They received
- especially valuable information from an American missionary who had been
- active there for many years, Eunice V. Pike, member of the Wycliffe Bible
- Translators. Thanks to her knowledge of the native language and her
- ministerial association with the inhabitants, Pike had information about the
- significance of the magic mushrooms that nobody else possessed. During several
- lengthy sojourns in Huautla and environs, the Wassons were able to study the
- present use of the mushrooms in detail and compare it with the descriptions in
- the old chronicles. This showed that the belief in the "sacred mushrooms" was
- still prevalent in that region. However, the Indians kept their beliefs a
- secret from strangers. It took great tact and skill, therefore, to gain the
- confidence of the indigenous population and to receive insight into this
- secret domain.
-
- In the modern form of the mushroom cult, the old religious ideas and customs
- are mingled with Christian ideas and Christian terminology. Thus the mushrooms
- are often spoken of as the blood of Christ, because they will grow only where
- a drop of Christ's blood has fallen on the earth. According to another notion,
- the mushrooms sprout where a drop of saliva from Christ's mouth has moistened
- the ground, and it is thcrefore Jesus Christ himself who speaks through the
- mushrooms.
-
- The mushroom ceremony follows the form of a consultation. The seeker of advice
- or a sick person or his or her family questions a "wise man" or a "wise
- woman," asabio orsabia, also named curandero orcurandera, in return for a
- modest payment. Curandero can best be translated into English as "healing
- priest," for his function is that of a physician as well as that of a priest,
- both being found only rarely in these remote regions. In the Mazatec language
- the healing priest is called co-ta-ci-ne, which means "one who knows." He eats
- the mushroom in the framework of a ceremony that always takes place at night.
- The other persons present at the ceremony may sometimes receive mushrooms as
- well, yet a much greater dose always goes to the curandero. The performance is
- executed with the accompaniment of prayers and entreaties, while the mushrooms
- are incensed briefly over a basin, in which copal (an incense-like resin) is
- burned. In complete darkness, at times by candlelight, while the others
- present lie quietly on their straw mats, the curandero, kneeling or sitting,
- prays and sings before a type of altar bearing a crucifix, an image of a
- saint, or some other object of worship. Under the influence of the sacred
- mushrooms, the curandero counsels in a visionary state, in which even the
- inactive observers more or less participate. In the monotonous song of the
- curandero, the mushroom teonanacatl gives its answers to the questions posed.
- It says whether the diseased person will live or die, which herbs will effect
- the cure; it reveals who has killed a specific person, or who has stolen the
- horse; or it makes known how a distant relative fares, and so forth.
-
- The mushroom ceremony not only has the function of a consulation of the type
- described, for the Indians it also has a meaning in many respects similar to
- the Holy Communion for the believing Christian. From many utterances of the
- natives it could be inferred that they believe that God has given the Indians
- the sacred mushroom because they are poor and possess no doctors and
- medicines; and also, because they cannot read, in particular the Bible, God
- can therefore speak directly to them through the mushroom. The missionary
- Eunice V. Pike even alluded to the difficulties that result from explaining
- the Christian message, the written word, to a people who believe they possess
- a means - the sacred mushrooms of course - to make God's will known to them in
- a direct, clear manner: yes, the mushrooms permit them to see into heaven and
- to establish communication with God himself.
-
- The Indians' reverence for the sacred mushrooms is also evident in their
- belief that they can be eaten only by a "clean" person. "Clean" here means
- ceremonially clean, and that term among other things includes sexual
- abstinence at least four days before and after ingestion of the mushrooms.
- Certain rules must also be observed in gathering the mushrooms. With
- nonobservance of these commandments, the mushrooms can make the person who
- eats it insane, or can even kill.
-
- The Wassons had undertaken their first expedition to the Mazatec country in
- 1953, but not until 1955 did they succeed in overcoming the shyness and
- reserve of the Mazatec friends they had managed to make, to the point of being
- admitted as active participants in a mushroom ceremony. R. Gordon Wasson and
- his companion, the photographer Allan Richardson, were given sacred mushrooms
- to eat at the end of June 1955, on the occasion of a nocturnal mushroom
- ceremony. They thereby became in all likelihood the first outsiders, the first
- whites, ever permitted to take teonanacatl.
-
- In the second volume of Mushrooms, Russia and History, in enraptured words,
- Wasson describes how the mushroom seized possession of him completely,
- although he had tried to struggle against its effects, in order to be able to
- remain an objective observer. First he saw geometric, colored patterns, which
- then took on architectural characteristics. Next followed visions of splendid
- colonnades, palaces of supernatural harmony and magnificence embellished with
- precious gems, triumphal cars drawn by fabulous creatures as they are known
- only from mythology, and landscapes of fabulous luster. Detached from the
- body, the spirit soared timelessly in a realm of fantasy among images of a
- higher reality and deeper meaning than those of the ordinary, everyday world.
- The essence of life, the ineffable, seemed to be on the verge of being
- unlocked, but the ultimate door failed to open.
-
- This experience was the final proof, for Wasson, that the magical powers
- attributed to the mushrooms actually existed and were not merely superstition.
-
- In order to introduce the mushrooms to scientific research, Wasson had earlier
- established an association with mycologist Professor Roger Heim of Paris.
- Accompanying the Wassons on further expeditions into the Mazatec country, Heim
- conducted the botanical identification of the sacred mushrooms. He showed that
- they were gilled mushrooms from the family Strophariaceae, about a dozen
- different species not previously described scientifically, the greatest part
- belonging to the genus Psilocybe. Professor Heim also succeeded in cultivating
- some of the species in the laboratory. The mushroom Psilocybe mexicana turned
- out to be especially suitable for artificial cultivation.
-
- Chemical investigations ran parallel with these botanical studies on the magic
- mushrooms, with the goal of extracting the hallucinogenically active principle
- from the mushroom material and preparing it in chemically pure form. Such
- investigations were carried out at Professor Heim's instigation in the
- chemicaI laboratory of the Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle in Paris, and
- work teams were occupied with this problem in the United States in the
- research laboratories of two large pharmaceutical companies: Merck, and Smith,
- Kline and French. The American laboratories had obtained some of the mushrooms
- from R. G. Wasson and had gathered others themselves in the Sierra Mazateca.
-
- As the chemical investigations in Paris and in the United States turned out to
- be ineffectual, Professor Heim addressed this matter to our firm, as mentioned
- at the beginning of this chapter, because he felt that our experimental
- experience with LSD, related to the magic mushrooms by similar activity, could
- be of use in the isolation attempts. Thus it was LSD that showed teonanacatl
- the way into our laboratory.
-
- As director of the department of natural products of the Sandoz
- pharmaceutical-chemical research laboratories at that time, I wanted to
- assign-the investigation of the magic mushrooms to one of my coworkers.
- However, nobody showed much eagerness to take on this problem because it was
- known that LSD and everything connected with it were scarcely popular subjects
- to the top management. Because the enthusiasm necessary for successful
- endeavors cannot be commanded, and because the enthusiasm was already present
- in me as far as this problem was concerned, I decided to conduct the
- investigation myself.
-
- Some 100 g of dried mushrooms of the species Psilocybe mexicana, cultivated by
- Professor Heim in the laboratory, were available for the beginning of the
- chemical analysis. My laboratory assistant, Hans Tscherter, who during our
- decade-long collaboration, had developed into a very capable helper,
- completely familiar with my manner of work, aided me in the extraction and
- isolation attempts. Since there were no clues at all concerning the chemical
- properties of the active principle we sought, the isolation attempts had to be
- conducted on the basis of the effects of the extract fractions. But none of
- the various extracts showed an unequivocal effect, either in the mouse or the
- dog, which could have pointed to the presence of hallucinogenic principles. It
- therefore became doubtful whether the mushrooms cultivated and dried in Paris
- were still active at all. That could only be determined by experimenting with
- this mushroom material on a human being. As in the case of LSD, I made this
- fundamental experiment myself, since it is not appropriate for researchers to
- ask anyone else to perform self-experiments that they require for their own
- investigations, especially if they entail, as in this case, a certain risk.
-
- In this experiment I ate 32 dried specimens of Psilocybe mexicana, which
- together weighed 2.4 g. This amount corresponded to an average dose, according
- to the reports of Wasson and Heim, as it is used by the curanderos. The
- mushrooms displayed a strong psychic effect, as the following extract from the
- report on that experiment shows:
-
- Thirty minutes after my taking the mushrooms, the exterior world began to
- undergo a strange transformation. Everything assumed a Mexican character.
- As I was perfectly well aware that my knowledge of the Mexican origin of
- the mushroom would lead me to imagine only Mexican scenery, I tried
- deliberately to look on my environment as I knew it normally. But all
- voluntary efforts to look at things in their customary forms and colors
- proved ineffective. Whether my eyes were closed or open, I saw only
- Mexican motifs and colors. When the doctor supervising the experiment bent
- over me to check my blood pressure, he was transformed into an Aztec
- priest and I would not have been astonished if he had drawn an obsidian
- knife. In spite of the seriousness of the situation, it amused me to see
- how the Germanic face of my colleague had acquired a purely Indian
- expression. At the peak of the intoxication, about 1 1/2 hours after
- ingestion of the mushrooms, the rush of interior pictures, mostly
- abstract motifs rapidly changing in shape and color, reached such an
- alarming degree that I feared that I would be torn into this whirlpool of
- form and color and would dissolve. After about six hours the dream came to
- an end. Subjectively, I had no idea how long this condition had lasted. I
- felt my return to everyday reality to be a happy return from a strange,
- fantastic but quite real world to an old and familiar home.
-
- This self-experiment showed once again that human beings react much more
- sensitively than animals to psychoactive substances. We had already reached
- the same conclusion in experimenting with LSD on animals, as described in an
- earlier chapter of this book. It was not inactivity of the mushroom material,
- but rather the deficient reaction capability of the research animals vis-a-vis
- such a type of active principle, that explained why our extracts had appeared
- inactive in the mouse and dog.
-
- Because the assay on human subjects was the only test at our disposal for the
- detection of the active extract fractions, we had no other choice than to
- perform the testing on ourselves if we wanted to carry on the work and bring
- it to a successful conclusion. In the self-experiment just described, a strong
- reaction lasting several hours was produced by 2.4 g dried mushrooms.
- Therefore, in the sequel we used samples corresponding to only one-third of
- this amount, namely 0.8 g dried mushrooms. If these samples contained the
- active principle, they would only provoke a mild effect that impaired the
- ability to work for a short time, but this effect would still be so distinct
- that the inactive fractions and those containing the active principle could
- unequivocally be differentiated from one another. Several coworkers and
- colleagues volunteered as guinea pigs for this series of tests.
-
-
- Psilocybin and Psilocin
-
- With the help of this reliable test on human subjects, the active principle
- could be isolated, concentrated, and transformed into a chemically pure state
- by means of the newest separation methods. Two new substances, which I named
- psilocybin and psilocin, were thereby obtained in the form of colorless
- crystals .
-
- These results were published in March 1958 in the journal Experientia, in
- collaboration with Professor Heim and with my colleagues Dr. A. Brack and Dr.
- H. Kobel, who had provided greater quantities of mushroom material for these
- investigations after they had essentially improved the laboratory cultivation
- of the mushrooms.
-
- Some of my coworkers at the time - Drs. A. J. Frey, H. Ott, T. Petrzilka, and
- F. Troxler - then participated in the next steps of these investigations, the
- determination of the chemical structure of psilocybin and psilocin and the
- subsequent synthesis of these compounds, the results of which were published
- in the November 1958 issue of Experientia. The chemical structures of these
- mushroom factors deserve special attention in several respects. Psilocybin and
- psilocin belong, like LSD, to the indole compounds, the biologically important
- class of substances found in the plant and animal kingdoms. Particular
- chemical features common to both the mushroom substances and LSD show that
- psilocybin and psilocin are closely related to LSD, not only with regard to
- psychic effects but also to their chemical structures. Psilocybin is the
- phosphoric acid ester of psilocin and, as such, is the first and hitherto only
- phosphoric-acid-containing indole compound discovered in nature. The
- phosphoric acid residue does not contribute to the activity, for the
- phosphoric-acid-free psilocin is just as active as psilocybin, but it makes
- the molecule more stable. While psilocin is readily decomposed by the oxygen
- in air, psilocybin is a stable substance.
-
- Psilocybin and psilocin possess a chemical structure very similar to the brain
- factor serotonin. As was already mentioned in the chapter on animal
- experiments and biological research, serotonin plays an important role in the
- chemistry of brain functions. The two mushroom factors, like LSD, block the
- effects of serotonin in pharmacological experiments on different organs. Other
- pharmacological properties of psilocybin and psilocin are also similar to
- those of LSD. The main difference consists in the quantitative activity, in
- animal as well as human experimentation. The average active dose of psilocybin
- or psilocin in human beings amounts to 10 mg (0.01 g); accordingly, these two
- substances are more than 100 times less active than LSD, of which 0.1 mg
- constitutes a strong dose. Moreover, the effects of the mushroom factors last
- only four to six hours, much shorter than the effects of LSD (eight to twelve
- hours).
-
- The total synthesis of psilocybin and psilocin, without the aid of the
- mushrooms, could be developed into a technical process, which would allow
- these substances to be produced on a large scale. Synthetic production is more
- rational and cheaper than extraction from the mushrooms.
-
- Thus with the isolation and synthesis of the active principles, the
- demystification of the magic mushrooms was accomplished. The compounds whose
- wondrous effects led the Indians to believe for millennia that a god was
- residing in the mushrooms had their chemical structures elucidated and could
- be produced synthetically in flasks.
-
- Just what progress in scientific knowledge was accomplished by natural
- products research in this case? Essentially, when all is said and done, we can
- only say that the mystery of the wondrous effects of teonanacatl was reduced
- to the mystery of the effects of two crystalline substances - since these
- effects cannot be explained by science either, but can only be describe.
-
-
- A Voyage into the Universe of the Soul with Psilocybin
-
- The relationship between the psychic effects of psilocybin and those of LSD,
- their visionaryhallucinatory character, is evident in the following report
- from Antaios, of a psilocybin experiment by Dr. Rudolf Gelpke. He has
- characterized his experiences with LSD and psilocybin, as already mentioned in
- a previous chapter, as "travels in the universe of the soul."
-
-
- Where Time Stands Still
-
- (10 mg psilocybin, 6 April 1961, 10:20)
-
- After ca. 20 minutes, beginning effects:
- serenity, speechlessness, mild but pleasant dizzy sensation, and
- "pleasureful deep breathing."
-
- 10:50 Strong! dizziness, can no longer concentrate .
-
- 10:55 Excited, intensity of colors: everything pink to red.
-
- 11:05 The world concentrates itself there on the center of the table.
- Colors very intense.
-
- 11:10 A divided being, unprecedented - how can I describe this sensation
- of life? Waves, different selves, must control me.
-
- Immediately after this note I went outdoors, leaving the breakfast table,
- where I had eaten with Dr. H. and ourwives, and lay down on the lawn. The
- inebriation pushed rapidly to its climax. Although I had firmly resolved
- to make constant notes, it now seemed to me a complete waste of time, the
- motion of writing infinitely slow, the possibilities of verbal expression
- unspeakably paltry - measured by the flood of inner experience that
- inundated me and threatened to burst me. It seemed to me that 100 years
- would not be sufficient to describe the fullness of experience of a single
- minute. At the beginning, optical impressions predominated: I saw with
- delight the boundless succession of rows of trees in the nearby forest.
- Then the tattered clouds in the sunny sky rapidly piled up with silent and
- breathtaking majesty to a superimposition of thousands of layers - heaven
- on heaven - and I waited then expecting that up there in the next moment
- something completely powerful, unheard of, not yet existing, would appear
- or happen - would I behold a god? But only the expectation remained, the
- presentiment, this hovering, "on the threshold of the ultimate feeling."
- . . . Then I moved farther away (the proximity of others disturbed me) and
- lay down in a nook of the garden on a sun-warmed wood pile - my fingers
- stroked this wood with overflowing, animal-like sensual affection. At the
- same time I was submerged within myself; it was an absolute climax: a
- sensation of bliss pervaded me, a contented happiness - I found myself
- behind my closed eyes in a cavity full of brick-red ornaments, and at the
- same time in the "center of the universe of consummate calm." I knew
- everything was good - the cause and origins of everything was good. But at
- the same moment I also understood the suffering and the loathing, the
- depression and misunderstanding of ordinary life: there one is never
- "total," but instead divided, cut in pieces, and split up into the tiny
- fragments of seconds, minutes, hours, days, weeks, and years: there one is
- a slave of Moloch time, which devoured one piecemeal; one is condemned to
- stammering, bungling, and patchwork; one must drag about with oneself the
- perfection and absolute, the togetherness of all things; the eternal
- moment of the golden age, this original ground of being - that indeed
- nevertheless has always endured and will endure forever - there in the
- weekday of human existence, as a tormenting thorn buried deeply in the
- soul, as a memorial of a claim never fulfilled, as a fata morgana of a
- lost and promised paradise; through this feverish dream "present" to a
- condemned "past" in a clouded "future." I understood. This inebriation was
- a spaceflight, not of the outer but rather of the inner man, and for a
- moment I experienced reality from a location that lies somewhere beyond
- the force of gravity of time.
-
- As I began again to feel this force of gravity, I was childish enough to
- want to postpone the return by taking a new dose of 6 mg psilocybin at
- 11:45, and once again 4 mg at 14:30. The effect was trifling, and in any
- case not worth mentioning.
-
- Mrs. Li Gelpke, an artist, also participated in this series of investigations,
- taking three self-experiments with LSD and psilocybin. The artist wrote of the
- drawing she made during the experiment:
-
- Nothing on this page is consciously fashioned. While I worked on it, the
- memory (of the experience under psilocybin) was again reality, and led me
- at every stroke. For that reason the picture is as many-layered as this
- memory, and the figure at the lower right is really the captive of its
- dream.... When books about Mexican art came into my hands three weeks
- later, I again found the motifs of my visions there with a sudden
- start....
-
- I have also mentioned the occurrence of Mexican motifs in psilocybin
- inebriation during my first selfexperiment with dried Psilocybe mexicana
- mushrooms, as was described in the section on the chemical investigation of
- these mushrooms. The same phenomenon has also struck R. Gordon Wasson.
- Proceeding from such observations, he has advanced the conjecture that ancient
- Mexican art could have been influenced by visionary images, as they appear in
- mushroom inebriation.
-
-
- The "Magic Morning Glory" Ololiuhqui
-
- After we had managed to solve the riddle of the sacred mushroom teonanacatt in
- a relatively short time, I also became interested in the problem of another
- Mexican magic drug not yet chemically elucidated, olotiuhqui. Ololiuhqui is
- the Aztec name for the seeds of certain climbing plants (Convolvulaceae) that,
- like the mescaline cactus peyotl and the teonanacatl mushrooms, were used in
- pre-Columbian times by the Aztecs and neighboring people in religious
- ceremonies and magical healing practices. Ololiuhqui is still used even today
- by certain Indian tribes like the Zapotec, Chinantec, Mazatec, and Mixtec, who
- until a short time ago still led a geniunely isolated existence, little
- influenced by Christianity, in the remote mountains of southern Mexico.
-
- An excellent study of the historical, ethnological, and botanical aspects of
- ololiuhqui was published in 1941 by Richard Evans Schultes, director of the
- Harvard Botanical Museum in Cambridge, Massachusetts. It is entitled "A
- Contribution to Our Knowledge of Rivea corymbosa, the Narcotic Ololiuqui of
- the Aztecs." The following statements about the history of ololiuhqui derive
- chiefly from Schultes's monograph. [Translator's note: As R. Gordon Wasson has
- pointed out, "ololiuhqui" is a more precise orthography than the more popular
- spelling used by Schultes. See Botanical Museum Leaflets Harvard University
- 20: 161-212, 1963.]
-
- The earliest records about this drug were written by Spanish chroniclers of
- the sixteenth century, who also mentioned peyotl and teonanacatl. Thus the
- Franciscan friar Bernardino de Sahagun, in his already cited famous chronicle
- Historia General de las Cosas de Nueva Espana, writes about the wondrous
- effects of olotiuhqui: "There is an herb, called coatl xoxouhqui (green
- snake), which produces seeds that are called ololiuhqui. These seeds stupefy
- and deprive one of reason: they are taken as a potion."
-
- We obtain further information about these seeds from the physician Francisco
- Hernandez, whom Philip II sent to Mexico from Spain, from 1570 to 1575, in
- order to study the medicaments of the natives. In the chapter "On Ololiuhqui"
- of his monumental work entitled Rerum Medicarum Novae Hispaniae Thesaurus seu
- Plantarum, Animalium Mineralium Mexicanorum Historia, published in Rome in
- 1651, he gives a detailed description and the first illustration of
- ololiuhqui. An extract from the Latin text accompanying the illustration reads
- in translation: "Ololiuhqui, which others call coaxihuitl or snake plant, is a
- climber with thin, green, heart-shaped leaves.... The flowers are white,
- fairly large.... The seeds are roundish. . . . When the priests of the Indians
- wanted to visit with the gods and obtain information from them, they ate of
- this plant in order to become inebriated. Thousands of fantastic images and
- demons then appeared to them...." Despite this comparatively good description,
- the botanical identification of ololiuhqui as seeds of Rivea corymbosa (L.)
- Hall. f. occasioned many discussions in specialist circles. Recently
- preference has been given to the synonym Turbina corymbosa (L.) Raf.
-
- When I decided in 1959 to attempt the isolation o the active principles of
- ololiuhqui, only a single report on chemical work with the seeds of Turbina
- cormbosa was available. It was the work of the pharmacologist C. G. Santesson
- of Stockholm, from the year 1937. Santesson, however, was not successful in
- isolating an active substance in pure form.
-
- Contradictory findings had been published about the activity of theololiuhqui
- seeds. The psychiatrist H. Osmond conducted a self-experiment with the seeds
- of Turbina corymbosa in 1955. After the ingestion of 60 to 100 seeds, he
- entered into a state of apathy and emptiness, accompanied by enhanced visual
- sensitivity. After four hours, there followed a period of relaxation and
- well-being, lasting for a longer time. The results of V. J. Kinross-Wright,
- published in England in 1958, in which eight voluntary research subjects, who
- had taken up to 125 seeds, perceived no effects at all, contradicted this
- report.
-
- Through the mediation of R. Gordon Wasson, I obtained two samples of
- ololiuhgui seeds. In his accompanying letter of 6 August 1959 from Mexico
- City, he wrote of them:
-
- . . . The parcels that I am sending you are the following: . . .
-
- A small parcel of seeds that I take to be Rivea corymbosa, otherwise known
- as ololiuqui well-known narcotic of the Aztecs, called in Huautla "la
- semilla de la Virgen." This parcel, you will find, consists of two little
- bottles, which represent two deliveries of seeds made to us in Huautla,
- and a larger batch of seeds delivered to us by Francisco Ortega "Chico,"
- the Zapotec guide, who himself gathered the seeds from the plants at the
- Zapotec town of San Bartolo Yautepec....
-
- The first-named, round, light brown seeds from Huautla proved in the botanical
- determination to have been correctly identified as Rivea (Turbina) corymbosa,
- while the black, angular seeds from San Bartolo Yautepec were identified as
- Ipomoea violacea L.
-
- While Turbina corymbosa thrives only in tropical or subtropical climates, one
- also finds Ipomoea violacea as an ornamental plant dispersed over the whole
- earth in the temperate zones. It is the morning glory that delights the eye in
- our gardens in diverse varieties with blue or blue-red striped caiyxes.
-
- The Zapotec, besides the original ololiuhqui (that is, the seeds of Turbina
- corymbosa, which they call badoh), also utilize badoh negro, the seeds of
- Ipomoea violacea. T. MacDougall, who furnished us with a second larger
- consignment of the last-named seeds, made this observation.
-
- My capable laboratory assistant Hans Tscherter, with whom I had already
- carried out the isolation of the active principles of the mushrooms,
- participated in the chemical investigation of the ololiuhqui drug. We advanced
- the working hypothesis that the active principles of the ololiuhqui seeds
- could be representatives of the same class of chemical substances, the indole
- compounds, to which LSD, psilocybin, and psilocin belong. Considering the very
- great number of other groups of substances that, like the indoles, were under
- consideration as active principles of ololiuhqui, it was indeed extremely
- improbable that this assumption would prove true. It could, however, very
- easily be tested. The presence of indole compounds, of course, may simply and
- rapidly be determined by colorimetric reactions. Thus even traces of indole
- substances, with a certain reagent, give an intense blue-colored solution.
-
- We had luck with our hypothesis. Extracts of ololiuhqui seeds with the
- appropriate reagent gave the blue coloration characteristic of indole
- compounds. With the help of this colorimetric test, we succeeded in a short
- time in isolating the indole substances from the seeds and in obtaining them
- in chemically pure form. Their identification led to an astonishing result.
- What we found appeared at first scarcely believable. Only after repetition and
- the most careful scrutiny of the operations was our suspicion concerning the
- peculiar findings eliminated: the active principles from the ancient Mexican
- magic drug ololiuhqui proved to be identical with substances that were already
- present in my laboratory. They were identical with alkaloids that had been
- obtained in the course of the decadeslong investigations of ergot; partly
- isolated as such from ergot, partly obtained through chemical modification of
- ergot substances.
-
- Lysergic acid amide, lysergic acid hydroxyethylamide, and alkaloids closely
- related to them chemically were established as the main active principles of
- olotiuhqui. (See formulae in the appendix.) Also present was the alkaloid
- ergobasine, whose synthesis had constituted the starting point of my
- investigations on ergot alkaloids. Lysergic acid amide and lysergic acid
- hydroxyethylamide, active principles of ololiuhqui, are chemically very
- closely related to lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD), which even for the
- nonchemist follows from the names.
-
- Lysergic acid amide was described for the first time by the English chemists
- S. Smith and G. M. Timmis as a cleavage product of ergot alkaloids, and I had
- also produced this substance synthetically in the course of the investigations
- in which LSD originated. Certainly, nobody at the time could have suspected
- that this cornpound synthesized in the flask would be discovered twenty years
- later as a naturally occurring active principle of an ancient Mexican magic
- drug.
-
- After the discovery of the psychic effects of LSD, I had also tested lysergic
- acid amide in a selfexperiment and established that it likewise evoked a
- dreamlike condition, but only with about a tenfold to twentyfold greater dose
- than LSD. This effect was characterized by a sensation of mental emptiness and
- the unreality and meaninglessness of the outer world, by enhanced sensitivity
- of hearing, and by a not unpleasant physical lassitude, which ultimately led
- to sleep. This picture of the effects of LA-l 1 1, as lysergic acid amide was
- called as a research preparation, was confirmed in a systematic investigation
- by the psychiatrist Dr. H. Solms.
-
- When I presented the findings of our investigations on ololiuhqui at the
- Natural Products Congress of the International Union for Pure and Applied
- Chemistry (IUPAC) in Sydney, Australia, in the fall of 1960, my colleagues
- received my talk with skepticism. In the discussions following my lecture,
- some persons voiced the suspicion that the ololiuhqui extracts could well have
- been contaminated with traces of lysergic acid derivatives, with which so much
- work had been done in my laboratory.
-
- There was another reason for the doubt in specialist circles concerning our
- findings. The occurrence in higher plants (i.e., in the morning glory family)
- of ergot alkaloids that hitherto had been known only as constituents of lower
- fungi, contradicted the experience that certain substances are typical of and
- restricted to respective plant families. It is indeed a very rare exception to
- find a characteristic group of substances, in this case the ergot alkaloids,
- occurring in two divisions of the plant kingdom broadly separated in
- evolutionary history.
-
- Our results were confirmed, however, when different laboratories in the United
- States, Germany, and Holland subsequently verified our investigations on the
- ololiuhqui seeds. Nevertheless, the skepticism went so far that some persons
- even considered the possibility that the seeds could have been infected with
- alkaloid-producing fungi. That suspicion, however, was ruled out
- experimentally.
-
- These studies on the active principles of ololiuhqui seeds, although they were
- published only in professional journals, had an unexpected sequel. We were
- apprised by two Dutch wholesale seed companies that their sale of seeds of
- Ipomoea violacea, the ornamental blue morning glory, had reached unusual
- proportions in recent times. They had heard that the great demand was
- connected with investigations of these seeds in our laboratory, about which
- they were eager to learn the details. It turned out that the new demand
- derived from hippie circles and other groups interested in hallucinogenic
- drugs. They believed they had found in the ololiuhqui seeds a substitute for
- LSD, which was becoming less and less accessible.
-
- The morning glory seed boom, however, lasted only a comparatively short time,
- evidently because of the undesirable experiences that those in the drug world
- had with this "new" ancient inebriant. The ololiuhqui seeds, which are taken
- crushed with water or another mild beverage, taste very bad and are difficult
- for the stomach to digest. Moreover, the psychic effects of ololiuhqui, in
- fact, differ from those of LSD in that the euphoric and the hallucinogenic
- components are less pronounced, while a sensation of mental emptiness, often
- anxiety and depression, predominates. Furthermore, weariness and lassitude are
- hardly desirable effects as traits in an inebriant. These could all be reasons
- why the drug culture's interest in the morning glory seeds has diminished.
-
- Only a few investigations have considered the question whether the active
- principles of ololiuhqui could find a useful application in medicine. In my
- opinion, it would be worthwhile to clarify above all whether the strong
- narcotic, sedative effect of certain ololiuhqui constituents, or of chemical
- modifications of these, is medicinally useful.
-
- My studies in the field of hallucinogenic drugs reached a kind of logical
- conclusion with the investigations of ololiuhqui. They now formed a circle,
- one could almost say a magic circle: the starting point had been the synthesis
- of lysergic acid amides, among them the naturally occurring ergot alkaloid
- ergobasin. This led to the synthesis of lysergic acid diethylamide, LSD. The
- hallucinogenic properties of LSD were the reason why the hallucinogenic magic
- mushroom teonanacatl found its way into my laboratory. The work with
- teonanacatt, from which psilocybin and psilocin were isolated, proceeded to
- the investigation of another Mexican magic drug, olotiuhqui, in which
- hallucinogenic principles in the form of lysergic acid amides were again
- encountered, including ergobasin-with which the magic circle closed.
-
-
- In Search of the Magic Plant "Ska Maria Pastora"
- in the Mazatec Country
-
- R. Gordon Wasson, with whom I had maintained friendly relations since the
- investigations of the Mexican magic mushrooms, invited my wife and me to take
- part in an expedition to Mexico in the fall of 1962. The purpose of the
- journey was to search for another Mexican magic plant. Wasson had learned on
- his travels in the mountains of southern Mexico that the expressed juice of
- the leaves of a plant, which were called hojas de la Pastora or hojas de Maria
- Pastora, in Mazatec ska Pastora or ska Maria Pastora (leaves of the
- shepherdess or leaves of Mary the shepherdess), were used among the Mazatec in
- medico-religious practices, like the teonanacatl mushrooms and the ololiuhqui
- seeds.
-
- The question now was to ascertain from what sort of plant the "leaves of Mary
- the shepherdess" derived, and then to identify this plant botanically. We also
- hoped, if at all possible, to gather sufficient plant material to conduct a
- chemical investigation on the hallucinogenic principles it contained.
-
-
- Ride through the Sierra Mazateca
-
- On 26 September 1962, my wife and I accordingly flew to Mexico City, where we
- met Gordon Wasson. He had made all the necessary preparations for the
- expedition, so that in two days we had already set out on the next leg of the
- journey to the south. Mrs. Irmgard Weitlaner Johnson, (widow of Jean B.
- Johnson, a pioneer of the ethnographic study of the Mexican magic mushrooms,
- killed in the Allied landing in North Africa) had joined us. Her father,
- Robert J. Weitlaner, had emigrated to Mexico from Austria and had likewise
- contributed toward the rediscovery of the mushroom cult. Mrs. Johnson worked
- at the National Museum of Anthropology in Mexico City, as an expert on Indian
- textiles.
-
- After a two-day journey in a spacious Land Rover, which took us over the
- plateau, along the snow-capped Popocatepetl, passing Puebla, down into the
- Valley of Orizaba with its magnificent tropical vegetation, then by ferry
- across the Popoloapan (Butterfly River), on through the former Aztec garrison
- Tuxtepec, we arrived at the starting point of our expedition, the Mazatec
- village of Jalapa de Diaz, lying on a hillside.
-
- There we were in the midst of the environment and among the people that we
- would come to know in the succeeding 2 1/2 weeks.
-
- There was an uproar upon our arrival in the marketplace, center of this
- village widely dispersed in the jungle. Old and young men, who had been
- squatting and standing around in the half-opened bars and shops, pressed
- suspiciously yet curiously about our Land Rover; they were mostly barefoot but
- all wore a sombrero. Women and girls were nowhere to be seen. One of the men
- gave us to understand that we should follow. him. He led us to the local
- president, a fat mestizo who had his office in a one-story house with a
- corrugated iron roof. Gordon showed him our credentials from the civil
- authorities and from the military governor of Oaxaca, which explained that we
- had come here to carry out scientific investigations. The president, who
- probably could not read at all, was visibly impressed by the large-sized
- documents equipped with official seals. He had lodgings assigned to us in a
- spacious shed, in which we could place our air mattresses and sleeping bags.
-
- I looked around the region somewhat. The ruins of a large church from colonial
- times, which must have once been very beautiful, rose almost ghostlike in the
- direction of an ascending slope at the side of the village square. Now I could
- also see women looking out of their huts, venturing to examine the strangers.
- In their long, white dresses, adorned with red borders, and with their long
- braids of blue-black hair, they offered a picturesque sight.
-
- We-were fed by an old Mazatec woman, who directed a young cook and two
- helpers. She lived in one of the typical Mazatec huts. These are simply
- rectangular structures with thatched gabled roofs and walls of wooden poles
- joined together, windowless, the chinks between the wooden poles offering
- sufficient opportunity to look out. In the middle of the hut, on the stamped
- clay floor, was an elevated, open fireplace, built up out of dried clay or
- made of stones. The smoke escaped through large openings in the walls under
- the two ends of the roof. Bast mats that lay in a corner or along the walls
- served as beds. The huts were shared with the domestic animals, as well as
- black swine, turkeys, and chickens. There was roasted chicken to eat, black
- beans, and also, in place of bread, tortittas, a type of cornmeal pancake that
- is baked on the hot stone slab of the hearth. Beer and tequila, an Agave
- liquor, were served.
-
- Next morning our troop formed for the ride through the Sierra Mazateca. Mules
- and guides were engaged from the horsekeeper of the village. Guadelupe, the
- Mazatec familiar with the route, took charge of guiding the lead animal.
- Gordon, Irmgard, my wife, and I were stationed on our mules in the middle.
- Teodosio and Pedro, called Chico, two young fellows who trotted along barefoot
- beside the two mules laden with our baggage, brought up the rear.
-
- It took some time to get accustomed to the hard wooden saddles. Then, however,
- this mode of locomotion proved to be the most ideal type of travel that I know
- of. The mules followed the leader, single file, at a steady pace. They
- required no direction at all by the rider. With surprising dexterity, they
- sought out the best spots along the almost impassable, partly rocky, partly
- marshy paths, which led through thickets and streams or onto precipitous
- slopes. Relieved of all travel cares, we could devote all our attention to the
- beauty of the landscape and the tropical vegetation. There were tropical
- forests with gigantic trees overgrown with twining plants, then again
- clearings with banana groves or coffee plantations, between light stands of
- trees, flowers at the edge of the path, over which wondrous butterflies
- bustled about.... We made our way upstream along the broad riverbed of Rio
- Santo Domingo, with brooding heat and steamy air, now steeply ascending, then
- again falling. During a short, violent tropical downpour, the long broad
- ponchos of oilcloth, with which Gordon had equipped us, proved quite useful.
- Our Indian guides had protected themselves from the cloudburst with gigantic,
- heart-shaped leaves that they nimbly chopped off at the edge of the path.
- Teodosio and Chico gave the impression of great, green hay ricks as they ran,
- covered with these leaves, beside their mules.
-
- Shortly before nightfall we arrived at the first settlement, La Providencia
- ranch. The patron, Don Joaquin Garcia, the head of a large family, welcomed us
- hospitably and full of dignity. It was impossible to determine how many
- children, in addition to the grown-ups and the domestic animals, were present
- in the large living room, feebly illuminated by the hearth fire alone.
-
- Gordon and I placed our sleeping bags outdoors under the projecting roof. I
- awoke in the morning to find a pig grunting over my face.
-
- After another day's journey on the backs of our worthy mules, we arrived at
- Ayautla, a Mazatec settlement spread across a hillside. En route, among the
- shrubbery, I had delighted in the blue calyxes of the magic morning glory
- Ipomoea violacea, the mother plant of the ololiuhqui seeds. It grew wild
- there, whereas among us it is only found in the Garden as an ornamental plant.
-
- We remained in Ayautla for several days. We had lodging in the house of Dona
- Donata Sosa de Garcia. Dona Donata was in charge of a large family, which
- included her ailing husband. In addition, she presided over the coffee
- cultivation of the region. The collection center for the freshly picked coffee
- beans was in an adjacent building. It was a lovely picture, the young Indian
- woman and girls returning home from the harvest toward evening, in their
- bright garments adorned with colored borders, the coffee sacks carried on
- their backs by headbands. Dona Donata also managed a type of grocery store, in
- which her husband, Don Eduardo, stood behind the counter.
-
- In the evening by candlelight, Dona Donata, who besides Mazatec also spoke
- Spanish, told us about life in the village; one tragedy or another had already
- struck nearly every one of the seemingly peaceful huts that lay surrounded by
- this paradisiacal scenery. A man who had murdered his wife, and who now sits
- in prison for life, had lived in the house next door, which now stood empty.
- The husband of a daughter of Dona Donata, after an affair with another woman,
- was murdered out of jealousy. The president of Ayautla, a young bull of a
- mestizo, to whom we had made our formal visit in the afternoon, never made the
- short walk from his hut to his "office" in the village hall (with the
- corrugated iron roof) unless accompanied by two heavily armed men. Because he
- exacted illegal taxes, he was afraid of being shot to death. Since no higher
- authority sees to justice in this remote region, people have recourse to
- self-defense of this type.
-
- Thanks to Dona Donata's good connections, we received the first sample of the
- sought-after plant, some leaves of hojas de la Pastora, from an old woman.
- Since the flowers and roots were missing, however, this plant material was not
- suitable for botanical identification. Our efforts to obtain more precise
- information about the habitat of the plant and its use were also fruitless.
-
- The continuation of our journey from Ayautla was delayed, as we had to wait
- until our boys could again bring back the mules that they had taken to pasture
- on the other side of Rio Santo Domingo, over the river swollen by intense
- downpours.
-
- After a two-day ride, on which we had passed the night in the high mountain
- village of San MiguelHuautla, we arrived at Rio Santiago. Here we were joined
- by Dona Herlinda Martinez Cid, a teacher from Huautla de Jimenez. She had
- ridden over on the invitation of Gordon Wasson, who had known her since his
- mushroom expeditions, and was to serve as our Mazatec and Spanish-speaking
- interpreter. Moreover, she could help us, through her numerous relatives
- scattered in the region, to pave the way to contacts with curanderos and
- curanderas who used the hojas de 1a Pastora in their practice. Because of our
- delayed arrival in Rio Santiago, Dona Herlinda, who was acquainted with the
- dangers of the region, had been apprehensive about us, fearing we might have
- plunged down a rocky path or been attacked by robbers.
-
- Our next stop was in San Jose Tenango, a settlement lying deep in a valley, in
- the midst of tropical vegetation with orange and lemon trees and banana
- plantations. Here again was the typical village picture: in the center, a
- marketplace with a half-ruined church from the colonial period, with two or
- three stands, a general store, and shelters for horses and mules. We found
- lodging in a corrugated iron barracks, with the special luxury of a cement
- floor, on which we could spread out our sleeping bags.
-
- In the thick jungle on the mountainside we discovered a s-pring, whose
- magnificent fresh water in a natural rocky basin invited us to bathe. That was
- an unforgettable pleasure after days without opportunities to wash properly.
- In this grotto I saw a hummingbird for the first time in nature, a blue-green,
- metallic, iridescent gem, which whirred over great liana blossoms.
-
- The desired contact with persons skilled in medicine came about thanks to the
- kindred connections of Dona Herlinda, beginning with the curandero Don Sabino.
- But he refused, for some reason, to receive us in a consultation and to
- question the leaves. From an old curandera, a venerable woman in a strikingly
- magnificent Mazatec garment, with the lovely name Natividad Rosa, we received
- a whole bundle of flowering specimens of the sought-after plant, but even she
- could not be prevailed upon to perform a ceremony with the leaves for us. Her
- excuse was that she was too old for the hardship of the magical trip; she
- could never cover the long distance to certain places: a spring where the wise
- women gather their powers, a lake on which the sparrows sing, and where
- objects get their names. Nor would Natividad Rosa tell us where she had
- gathered the leaves. They grew in a very, very distant forest valley. Wherever
- she dug up a plant, she put a coffee bean in the earth as thanks to the gods.
-
- We now possessed ample plants with flowers and roots, which were suitable for
- botanical identification. It was apparently a representative of the genus
- Salvia, a relative of the well-known meadow sage. The plants had blue flowers
- crowned with a white dome, which are arranged on a panicle 20 to 30 cm long,
- whose stem leaked blue.
-
- Several days later, Natividad Rosa brought us a whole basket of leaves, for
- which she was paid fifty pesos. The business seemed to have been discussed,
- for two other women brought us further quantities of leaves. As it was known
- that the expressed juice of the leaves is drunk in the ceremony, and this must
- therefore contain the active principle, the fresh leaves were crushed on a
- stone plate, squeezed out in a cloth, the juice diluted with alcohol as a
- preservative, and decanted into flasks in order to be studied later in the
- laboratory in Basel. I was assisted in this work by an Indian girl, who was
- accustomed to dealing with the stone plate, the metate, on which the Indians
- since ancient times have ground their corn by hand.
-
- On the day before the journey was to continue, having given up all hope of
- being able to attend a ceremony, we suddenly made another contact with a
- curandera, one who was ready " to serve us ." A confidante of Herlinda's, who
- had produced this contact, led us after nightfall along a secret path to the
- hut of the curandera, lying solitary on the mountainside above the settlement.
- No one from the village was to see us or discover that we were received there.
- It was obviously considered a betrayal of sacred customs, worthy of
- punishment, to allow strangers, whites, to take part in this. That indeed had
- also been the real reason why the other healers whom we asked had refused to
- admit us to a leaf ceremony. Strange birdcalls from the darkness accompanied
- us on the ascent, and the barking of dogs was heard on all sides. The dogs had
- detected the strangers. The curandera Consuela Garcia, a woman of some forty
- years, barefoot like all Indian women in this region, timidly admitted us to
- her hut and immediately closed up the doorway with a heavy bar. She bid us lie
- down on the bast mats on the stamped mud floor. As Consuela spoke only
- Mazatec, Herlinda translated her instructions into Spanish for us. The
- curandera lit a candle on a table covered with some images of saints, along
- with a variety of rubbish. Then she began to bustle about busily, but in
- silence. All at once we heard peculiar noises and a rummaging in the room-did
- the hut harbor some hidden person whose shape and proportions could not be
- made out in the candlelight? Visibly disturbed, Consuela searched the room
- with the burning candle. It appeared to be merely rats, however, who were
- working their mischief. In a bowl the curandera now kindled copal, an
- incense-like resin, which soon filled the whole hut with its aroma. Then the
- magic potion was ceremoniously prepared. Consuela inquired which of us wished
- to drink of it with her. Gordon announced himself. Since I was suffering from
- a severe stomach upset at the time, I could not join in. My wife substituted
- for me. The curandera laid out six pairs of leaves for herself. She
- apportioned the same number to Gordon. Anita received three pairs. Like the
- mushrooms, the leaves are always dosed in pairs, a practice that, of course,
- has a magical significance. The leaves were crushed with the metate, then
- squeezed out through a fine sieve into a cup, and the metate and the contents
- of the sieve were rinsed with water. Finally, the filled cups were incensed
- over the copal vessel with much ceremony. Consuela asked Anita and Gordon,
- before she handed them their cups, whether they believed in the truth and the
- holiness of the ceremony. After they answered in the affirmative and the very
- bitter-tasting potion was solemnly imbibed, the candles were extinguished and,
- lying in darkness on the bast masts, we awaited the effects.
-
- After some twenty minutes Anita whispered to me that she saw striking,
- brightly bordered images. Gordon also perceived the effect of the drug. The
- voice of the curandera sounded from the darkness, half speaking, half singing.
- Herlinda translated: Did we believe in Christ's blood and the holiness of the
- rites? After our "creemos" ("We believe"), the ceremonial performance
- continued. The curandera lit the candles, moved them from the "altar table"
- onto the floor, sang and spoke prayers or magic formulas, placed the candles
- again under the images of the saints-then again silence and darkness.
- Thereupon the true consultation began. Consuela asked for our request. Gordon
- inquired after the health of his daughter, who immediately before his
- departure from New York had to be admitted prematurely to the hospital in
- expectation of a baby. He received the comforting information that mother and
- child were well. Then again came singing and prayer and manipulations with the
- candles on the "altar table" and on the floor, over the smoking basin.
-
- When the ceremony was at an end, the curandera asked us to rest yet a while
- longer in prayer on our bast mats. Suddenly a thunderstorm burst out. Through
- the cracks of the beam walls, lightning flashed into the darkness of the hut,
- accompanied by violent thunderbolts, while a tropical downpour raged, beating
- on the roof. Consuela voiced apprehension that we would not be able to leave
- her house unseen in the darkness. But the thunderstorm let up before daybreak,
- and we went down the mountainside to our corrugated iron barracks, as
- noiselessly as possible by the light of flashlights, unnoticed by the
- villagers, but dogs again barked from all sides.
-
- Participation in this ceremony was the climax of our expedition. It brought
- confirmation that the hojas de la Pastora were used by the Indians for the
- same purpose and in the same ceremonial milieu as teonanacatl, the sacred
- mushrooms. Now we also had authentic plant material, not only sufficient for
- botanical identification, but also for the planned chemical analysis. The
- inebriated state that Gordon Wasson and my wife had experienced with the hojas
- had been shallow and only of short duration, yet it had exhibited a distinctly
- hallucinogenic character.
-
- On the morning after this eventful night we took leave of San Jose Tenango.
- The guide, Guadelupe, and the two fellows Teodosio and Pedro appeared before
- our barracks with the mules at the appointed time. Soon packed up and mounted,
- our little troop then moved uphill again, through the fertile landscape
- glittering in the sunlight from the night's thunderstorm. Returning by way of
- Santiago, toward evening we reached our last stop in Mazatec country, the
- capital Huautla de Jimenez.
-
- >From here on, the return trip to Mexico City was made by automobile. With a
- final supper in the Posada Rosaura, at the time the only inn in Huautla, we
- took leave of our Indian guides and of the worthy mules that had carried us so
- surefootedly and in such a pleasant way through the Sierra Mazatec. The
- Indians were paid of, and Teodosio, who also accepted payment for his chief in
- Jalapa de Diaz (where the animals were to be returned afterward), gave a
- receipt with his thumbprint colored by a ballpoint pen. We took up quarters in
- Dona Herlinda's house.
-
- A day later we made our formal visit to the curandera Maria Sabina, a woman
- made famous by the Wassons' publications. It had been in her hut that Gordon
- Wasson became the first white man to taste of the sacred mushrooms, in the
- course of a nocturnal ceremony in the summer of 1955. Gordon and Maria Sabina
- greeted each other cordially, as old friends. The curandera lived out of the
- way, on the mountainside above Huautla. The house in which the historic
- session with Gordon Wasson had taken place had been burned, presumably by
- angered residents or an envious colleague, because she had divulged the secret
- of teonanacatl to strangers. In the new hut in which we found ourselves, an
- incredible disorder prevailed, as had probably also prevailed in the old hut,
- in which half-naked children, hens, and pigs bustled about. The old curandera
- had an intelligent face, exceptionally changeable in expression. She was
- obviously impressed when it was explained that we had managed to confine the
- spirit of the mushrooms in pills, and she at once declared herself ready to "
- serve us" with these, that is, to grant us a consultation. It was agreed that
- this should take place the coming night in the house of Dona Herlinda.
-
- In the course of the day I took a stroll through Huautla de Jimenez, which led
- along a main street on the mountainside. Then I accompanied Gordon on his
- visit to the Instituto Nacional Indigenista. This governmental organization
- had the duty of studying and helping to solve the problems of the indigenous
- population, that is, the Indians. Its leader told us of the difficulties that
- the "coffee policy" had caused in the area at that time. The president of
- Huautla, in collaboration with the Instituto Nacional Indigenista had tried to
- eliminate middlemen in order to shape the coffee prices favorably for the
- producing Indians. His body was found, mutilated, the previous June.
-
- Our stroll also took us past the cathedral, from which Gregorian chants
- resounded. Old Father Aragon, whom Gordon knew well from his earlier stays,
- invited us into the vestry for a glass of tequila.
-
-
- A Mushroom Ceremony
-
- As we returned home to Herlinda's house toward evening, Maria Sabina had
- already arrived there with a large company, her two lovely daughters, Apolonia
- and Aurora (two prospective curanderas), and a niece, all of whom brought
- children along with them. Whenever her child began to cry, Apolonia would
- offer her breast to it. The old curandero Don Aurelio also appeared, a mighty
- man, one-eyed, in a black-andwhite patternedserape (cloak). Cacao and sweet
- pastry were served on the veranda. I was reminded of the report from an
- ancient chronicle which described how chocotatl was drunk before the ingestion
- of teonanacatl.
-
- After the fall of darkness, we all proceeded into the room in which the
- ceremony would take place. It was then locked up-that is, the door was
- obstructed with the only bed available. Only an emergency exit into the back
- garden remained unlatched for absolute necessity. It was nearly midnight when
- the ceremony began. Until that time the whole party lay, in darkness sleeping
- or awaiting the night's events, on the bast mats spread on the floor. Maria
- Sabina threw a piece of copal on the embers of a brazier from time to time,
- whereby the stuffy air in the crowded room became somewhat bearable. I had
- explained to the curandera through Herlinda, who was again with the party as
- interpreter, that one pill contained the spirit of two pairs of mushrooms.
- (The pills contained 5.0 mg synthetic psilocybin apiece.)
-
- When all was ready, Maria Sabina apportioned the pills in pairs among the
- grown-ups present. After solemn smoking, she herself took two pairs
- (corresponding to 20 mg psilocybin). She gave the same dose to Don Aurelio and
- her daughter Apolonia, who would also serve as curandera. Aurora received one
- pair, as did Gordon, while my wife and Irmgard got only one pill each.
-
- One of the children, a girl of about ten, under the guidance of Maria Sabina,
- had prepared for me the juice of five pairs of fresh leaves of hojas de la
- Pastora. I wanted to experience this drug that I had been unable to try in San
- Jose Tenango. The potion was said to be especially active when prepared by an
- innocent child. The cup with the expressed juice was likewise incensed and
- conjured by Maria Sabina and Don Aurelio, before it was delivered to me.
-
- All of these preparations and the following ceremony progressed in much the
- same way as the consultation with the curandera Consuela Garcia in San Jose
- Tenango.
-
- After the drug was apportioned and the candle on the " altar" was
- extinguished, we awaited the effects in the darkness.
-
- Before a half hour had elapsed, the curandera murmured something; her daughter
- and Don Aurelio also became restless. Herlinda translated and explained to us
- what was wrong. Maria Sabina had said that the pills lacked the spirit of the
- mushrooms. I discussed the situation with Gordon, who lay beside me. For us it
- was clear that absorption of the active principle from the pills, which must
- first dissolve in the stomach, occurs more slowly than from the mushrooms, in
- which some of the active principle already becomes absorbed through the mucous
- membranes during chewing. But how could we give a scientific explanation under
- such conditions? Rather than try to explain, we decided to act. We distributed
- more pills. Both curanderas and the curandero each received another pair. They
- had now each taken a total dosage of 30 mg psilocybin.
-
- After about another quarter of an hour, the spirit of the pills did begin to
- yield its effects, which lasted until the crack of dawn. The daughters, and
- Don Aurelio with his deep bass voice, fervently answered the prayers and
- singing of the curandera. Blissful, yearning moans of Apolonia and Aurora,
- between singing and prayer, gave the impression that the religious experience
- of the young women in the drug inebriation was combined with sensual-sexual
- feelings.
-
- In the middle of the ceremony Maria Sabina asked for our request. Gordon
- inquired again after the health of his daughter and grandchild. He received
- the same good information as from the curandera Consuela. Mother and child
- were in fact well when he returned home to New York. Obviously, however, this
- still represents no proof of the prophetic abilities of both curanderas.
-
- Evidently as an effect of the hojas, I found myself for some time in a state
- of mental sensitivity and intense experience, which, however, was not
- accompanied by hallucinations. Anita, Irmgard, and Gordon experienced a
- euphoric condition of inebriation that was influenced by tke strange, mystical
- atmosphere. My wife was impressed by the vision of very distinct strange line
- patterns.
-
- She was astonished and perplexed, later, on discovering precisely the same
- images in the rich ornamentation over the altar in an old church near Puebla.
- That was on the return trip to Mexico City, when we visited churches from
- colonial times. These admirable churches offer great cultural and historical
- interest because the Indian artists and workmen who assisted in their
- construction smuggled in elements of Indian style. Klaus Thomas, in his book
- Die kunstlich gesteuerte Seele [The artificially steered mind] (Ferdinand Enke
- Verlag, Stuttgart, 1970), writes about the possible influence of visions from
- psilocybin inebriation on Meso-American Indian art: "Surely a
- culturalhistorical comparison of the old and new creations of Indian art . . .
- must convince the unbiased spectator of the harmony with the images, forms and
- colors of a psilocybin inebriation." The Mexican character of the visions seen
- in my first experience with dried Psilocybe mexicana mushrooms and the drawing
- of Li Gelpke after a psilocybin inebriation could also point to such an
- association.
-
- As we took leave of Maria Sabina and her clan at the crack of dawn, the
- curandera said that the pills had the same power as the mushrooms, that there
- was no difference. This was a confirmation from the most competent authority,
- that the synthetic psilocybin is identical with the natural product. As a
- parting gift I let Maria Sabina have a vial of psilocybin pills. She radiantly
- explained to our interpreter Herlinda that she could now give consultations
- even in the season when no mushrooms grow.
-
- How should we judge the conduct of Maria Sabina, the fact that she allowed
- strangers, white people, access to the secret ceremony, and let them try the
- sacred mushroom?
-
- To her credit it can be said that she had thereby opened the door to the
- exploration of the Mexican mushroom cult in its present form, and to the
- scientific, botanical, and chemical investigation of the sacred mushrooms.
- Valuable active substances, psilocybin and psilocin, resulted. Without this
- assistance, the ancient knowledge and experience that was concealed in these
- secret practices would possibly, even probably, have disappeared without a
- trace, without having borne fruit, in the advancement of Western civilization.
-
- >From another standpoint, the conduct of this curandera can be regarded as a
- profanation of a sacred custom-even as a betrayal. Some of her countrymen were
- of this opinion, which was expressed in acts of revenge, including the burning
- of her house.
-
- The profanation of the mushroom cult did not stop with the scientific
- investigations. The publication about the magic mushrooms unleashed an
- invasion of hippies and drug seekers into the Mazatec country, many of whom
- behaved badly, some even criminally. Another undesirable consequence was the
- beginning of true tourism in Huautla de Jimenez, whereby the originality of
- the place was eradicated.
-
- Such statements and considerations are, for the most part, the concern of
- ethnographical research. Wherever researchers and scientists trace and
- elucidate the remains of ancient customs that are becoming rarer, their
- primitiveness is lost. This loss is only more or less counterbalanced when the
- outcome of the research represents a lasting cultural gain.
-
- >From Huautla de Jimenez we proceeded first to Teotitlan, in a breakneck truck
- ride along a half-paved road, and from there went on a comfortable car trip
- back to Mexico City, the starting point of our expedition. I had lost several
- kilograms in body weight, but was overwhelmingly compensated in enchanting
- experiences.
-
- The herbarium samples of hojas de la Pastora, which we had brought with us,
- were subjected to botanical indentification by Carl Epling and Carlos D.
- Jativa at the Botanical Institute of Harvard University in Cambridge,
- Massachusetts. They found that this plant was a hitherto undescribed species
- of Satvia, which was named Salvia divinorum by these authors. The chemical
- investigation of the juice of the magic sage in the laboratory in Basel was
- unsuccessful. The psychoactive principle of this drug seems to be a rather
- unstable substance, since the juice prepared in Mexico and preserved with
- alcohol proved in selfexperiments to be no longer active. Where the chemical
- nature of the active principle is concerned, the problem of the magic plant
- ska Maria Pastora still awaits solution.
-
-
-
- So far in this book I have mainly described my scientific work and matters
- relating to my professional activity. But this work, by its very nature, had
- repercussions on my own life and personality, not least because it brought me
- into contact with interesting and important contemporaries. I have already
- mentioned some of them-Timothy Leary, Rudolf Gelpke, Gordon Wasson. Now, in
- the pages that follow, I would like to emerge from the natural scientist's
- reserve, in order to portray encounters which were personally meaningful to me
- and which helped me solve questions posed by the substances I had discovered.
-
-
-
- 7. Radiance from Ernst Junger
-
- Radiance is the perfect term to express the influence that Ernst Junger's
- literary work and personality have had on me. In the light of his perspective,
- which stereoscopically comprises the surfaces and depths of things, the world
- I knew took on a new, translucent splendor. That happened a long time before
- the discovery of LSD and before I came into personal contact with this author
- in connection with hallucinogenic drugs.
-
- My enchantment with Ernst Junger began with his book Das Abenteuerliche Herz
- [The adventurous heart]. Again and again in the last forty years I have taken
- up this book. Here more than ever, in themes that weigh more lightly and lie
- closer to me than war and a new type of human being (subjects of Junger's
- earlier books), the beauty and magic of Junger's prose was opened to
- me-descriptions of flowers, of dreams, of solitary walks; thoughts about
- chance, the future, colors, and about other themes that have direct relation
- to our personal lives. Everywhere in his prose the miracle of creation became
- evident, in the precise description of the surfaces and, in translucence, of
- the depths; and the uniqueness and the imperishable in every human being was
- touched upon. No other writer has thus opened my eyes.
-
- Drugs were also mentioned in Das Abenteuerliche Herz. Many years passed,
- however, before I myself began to be especially interested in this subject,
- after the discovery of the psychic effects of LSD.
-
- My first correspondence with Ernst Junger had nothing to do with the context
- of drugs; rather I once wrote to him on his birthday, as a thankful reader.
-
-
- Bottmingen, 29 March 1947
- Dear Mr. Junger,
-
- As one richly endowed by you for years, I wished to send a jar of honey to
- you for your birthday. But I did not have this pleasure, because my export
- license has been refused in Bern.
-
- The gift was intended less as a greeting from a country in which milk and
- honey still flow, than as a reminiscence of the enchanting sentences in
- your book Auf den Marmorklippen (On the Marble Cliffs), where you speak of
- the "golden bees."
-
-
- The book mentioned here had appeared in 1939, just shortly before the outbreak
- of World War II. Auf den Marmorklippen is not only a masterpiece of German
- prose, but also a work of great significance because in this book the
- characteristics of tyrants and the horror of war and nocturnal bombardment are
- described prophetically, in poetic vision.
-
- In the course of our correspondence, Ernst Junger also inquired about my LSD
- studies, of which he had learned through a friend. Thereupon I sent him the
- pertinent publications, which he acknowledged with the following comments:
-
-
- Kirchhorst, 3/3/1948
-
- . . . together with both enclosures concerning your new phantasticum. It
- seems indeed that you have entered a field that contains so many tempting
- mysteries.
-
- Your consignment came together with the Confessions of an English Opium
- Eater, that has just been published in a new translation. The translator
- writes me that his reading of Das Abenteuerliche Herz stimulated him to do
- his work.
-
- As far as I am concerned, my practical studies in this field are far
- behind me. These are experiments in which one sooner or later embarks on
- truly dangerous paths, and may be considered lucky to escape with only a
- black eye.
-
- What interested me above all was the relationship of these substances to
- productivity. It has been my experience, however, that creative
- achievement requires an alert consciousness, and that it diminishes under
- the spell of drugs. On the other hand, conceptualization is important, and
- one gains insights under the influence of drugs that indeed are not
- possible otherwise. I consider the beautiful essay that Maupassant has
- written about ether to be such an insight. Moreover, I had the impression
- that in fever one also discovers new landscapes, new archipelagos, and a
- new music, that becomes completely distinct when the "customs station"
- ["An der Zollstation" [At the custom station], the title heading of a
- section in Das Abenteuerliche Herz (2d ed.) that concerns the transition
- from life to death.] appears. For geographic description, on the other
- hand, one must be fully conscious. What productivity means to the artist,
- healing means to the physician. Accordingly, it also may suffice for him
- that he sometimes enters the regions through the tapestries that our
- senses have woven. Moreover, I seem to perceive in our time less of a
- taste for the phantastica than for the energetica-amphetamine, which has
- even been furnished to fliers and other soldiers by the armies, belongs to
- this group. Tea is in my opinion a phantasticum, coffee an energeticum-tea
- therefore possesses a disproportionately higher artistic rank. I notice
- that coffee disrupts the delicate lattice of light and shadows, the
- fruitful doubts that emerge during the writing of a sentence. One exceeds
- his inhibitions. With tea, on the other hand, the thoughts climb genuinely
- upward.
-
- So far as my "studies" are concerned, I had a manuscript on that topic,
- but have since burned it. My excursions terminated with hashish, that led
- to very pleasant, but also to manic states, to oriental tyranny....
-
- Soon afterward, in a letter from Ernst Junger I learned that he had inserted a
- discourse about drugs in the novel Heliopolis, on which he was then working.
- He wrote to me about the drug researcher who figures in the novel:
-
- Among the trips in the geographical and metaphysical worlds, which I am
- attempting to describe there, are those of a purely sedentary man, who
- explores the archipelagos beyond the navigable seas, for which he uses
- drugs as a vehicle. I give extracts from his log book. Certainly, I cannot
- allow this Columbus of the inner globe to end well-he dies of a poisoning.
- Avis au lecteur.
-
- The book that appeared the following year bore the subtitle Ruckblick auf eine
- Stadt [Retrospective on a city], a retrospective on a city of the future, in
- which technical apparatus and the weapons of the present time were developed
- still further in magic, and in which power struggles between a demonic
- technocracy and a conservative force took place. In the figure of Antonio
- Peri, Junger depicted the mentioned drug researcher, who resided in the
- ancient city of Heliopolis.
-
- He captured dreams, just like others appear to chase after butterflies
- with nets. He did not travel to the islands on Sundays and holidays and
- did not frequent the taverns on Pagos beach. He locked himself up in his
- studio for trips into the dreamy regions. He said that all countries and
- unknown islands were woven into the tapestry. The drugs served him as keys
- to entry into the chambers and caves of this world. In the course of the
- years he had gained great knowledge, and he kept a log book of his
- excursions. A small library adjoined this studio, consisting partly of
- herbals and medicinal reports, partly of works by poets and magicians.
- Antonio tended to read there while the effect of the drug itself
- developed. . . . He went on voyages of discovery in the universe of his
- brain....
-
- In the center of this library, which was pillaged by mercenaries of the
- provincial governor during the arrest of Antonio Peri, stood
-
- The great inspirers of the nineteenth century: De Quincey, E.T.A.
- Hoffmann, Poe, and Baudelaire. Yet there were also books from the ancient
- past: herbals, necromancy texts, and demonology of the middle-aged world.
- They included the names Albertus Magnus, Raimundus Lullus, and Agrippa of
- Nettesheym.... Moreover, there was the great folioDe Praestigiis Daemonum
- by Wierus, and the very unique compilations of Medicus Weckerus, published
- in Basel in 1582....
-
- In another part of his collection, Antonio Peri seemed to have cast his
- attention principally "on ancient pharmacology books, formularies and
- pharmacopoeias, and to have hunted for reprints of journals and annals. Among
- others was found a heavy old volume by the Heidelberg psychologists on the
- extract of mescal buttons, and a paper on the phantastica of ergot by
- Hofmann-Bottmingen...."
-
- In the same year in which Hetiopolis came out, I made the personal
- acquaintance of the author. I went to meet Ernst Junger in Ravensburg, for a
- Swiss sojourn. On a wonderful fall journey in southern Switzerland, together
- with mutual friends, I experienced the radiant power of his personality.
-
- Two years later, at the beginning of February 1951, came the great adventure,
- an LSD trip with Ernst Junger. Since, up until that moment, there were only
- reports of LSD experiments in connection with psychiatric inquiries, this
- experiment especially interested me, because this was an opportunity to
- observe the effects of LSD on the artistic person, in a nonmedical milieu.
- That was still somewhat before Aldous Huxley, from the same perspective, began
- to experiment with mescaline, about which he then reported in his two books
- The Doors of Perception and Heaven and Hett.
-
- In order to have medical aid on hand if necessary, I invited my friend, the
- physician and pharmacologist Professor Heribert Konzett, to participate. The
- trip took place at 10:00 in the morning, in the living room of our house in
- Bottmingen. Since the reaction of such a highly sensitive man as Ernst Junger
- was not foreseeable, a low dose was chosen for this first experiment as a
- precaution, only 0.05 mg. The experiment then, did not lead into great depths.
-
- The beginning phase was characterized by the intensification of aesthetic
- experience. Red-violet roses were of unknown luminosity and radiated in
- portentous brightness. The concerto for flute and harp by Mozart was perceived
- in its celestial beauty as heavenly music. In mutual astonishment we
- contemplated the haze of smoke that ascended with the ease of thought from a
- Japanese incense stick. As the inebriation became deeper and the conversation
- ended, we came to fantastic reveries while we lay in our easy chairs with
- closed eyes. Ernst Junger enjoyed the color display of oriental images: I was
- on a trip among Berber tribes in North Africa, saw colored caravans and lush
- oases. Heribert Konzett, whose features seemed to me to be transfigured,
- Buddha-like, experienced a breath of timelessness, liberation from the past
- and the future, blessedness through being completely here and now.
-
- The return from the altered state of consciousness was associated with strong
- sensitivity to cold. Like freezing travelers, we enveloped ourselves in covers
- for the landing. The return to everyday reality was celebrated with a good
- dinner, in which Burgundy flowed copiously.
-
- This trip was characterized by the mutuality and parallelism of our
- experiences, which were perceived as profoundly joyful. All three of us had
- drawn near the gate to an experience of mystical being; however, it did not
- open. The dose we had chosen was too low. In misunderstanding this reason,
- Ernst Junger, who had earlier been thrust into deeper realms by a high dose of
- mescaline, remarked: "Compared with the tiger mescaline, your LSD, is, after
- all, only a house cat." After later experiments with higher doses of LSD, he
- revised this estimation.
-
- Junger has assimilated the mentioned spectacle of the incense stick into
- literature, in his storyBesuch auf Gotenhotm [Visit to Godenholm], in which
- deeper experiences of drug inebriation also play a part:
-
- Schwarzenberg burned an incense stick, as he sometimes did, to clear the
- air. A blue plume ascended from the tip of the stick. Moltner looked at it
- first with astonishment, then with delight, as if a new power of the eyes
- had come to him. It revealed itself in the play of this fragrant smoke,
- which ascended from the slender stick and then branched out into a
- delicate crown. It was as if his imagination had created it-a pallid web
- of sea lilies in the depths, that scarcely trembled from the beat of the
- surf. Time was active in this creation-it had circled it, whirled about
- it, wreathed it, as if imaginary coins rapidly piled up one on top of
- another. The abundance of space revealed itself in the fiber work, the
- nerves, which stretched and unfolded in the height, in a vast number of
- filaments.
-
- Now a breath of air affected the vision, and softly twisted it about the
- shaft like a dancer. Moltner uttered a shout of surprise. The beams and
- lattices of the wondrous flower wheeled around in new planes, in new
- fields. Myriads of molecules observed the harmony. Here the laws no longer
- acted under the veil of appearance; matter was so delicate and weightless
- that it clearly reflected them. How simple and cogent everything was. The
- numbers, masses and weights stood out from matter. They cast off the
- raiments. No goddess could inform the initiates more boldly and freely.
- The pyramids with their weight did not reach up to this revelation. That
- was Pythagorean luster. No spectacle had ever affected him with such a
- magic spell.
-
- This deepened experience in the aesthetic sphere, as it is described here in
- the example of contemplation of a haze of blue smoke, is typical of the
- beginning phase of LSD inebriation, before deeper alterations of conscious
- begin.
-
- I visited Ernst Junger occasionally in the following years, in Wilfingen,
- Germany, where he had moved from Ravensburg; or we met in Switzerland, at my
- place in Bottmingen, or in Bundnerland in southeastern Switzerland. Through
- the shared LSD experience our relations had deepened. Drugs and problems
- connected with them constituted a major subject of our conversation and
- correspondence, without our having made further practical experiments in the
- meantime.
-
- We exchanged literature about drugs. Ernst Junger thus let me have for my drug
- library the rare, valuable monograph of Dr. Ernst Freiherrn von Bibra, Die
- Narkotischen Genussmittel und der Mensch [Narcotic pleasure drugs and man]
- printed in Nuremburg in 1855. This book is a pioneering, standard work of drug
- literature, a source of the first order, above all as relates to the history
- of drugs. What von Bibra embraces under the designation "Narkotischen
- Genussmittel" are not only substances like opium and thorn apple, but also
- coffee, tobacco, kat, which do not fall under the present conception of
- narcotics, any more than do drugs such as coca, fly agaric, and hashish, which
- he also described.
-
- Noteworthy, and today still as topical as at the time, are the general
- opinions about drugs that von Bibra contrived more than a century ago:
-
- The individual who has taken too much hashish, and then runs frantically
- about in the streets and attacks everyone who confronts him, sinks into
- insignificance beside the numbers of those who after mealtime pass calm
- and happy hours with a moderate dose; and the number of those who are able
- to overcome the heaviest exertions through coca, yes, who were possibly
- rescued from death by starvation through coca, by far exceed the few
- coqueros who have undermined their health by immoderate use. In the same
- manner, only a misplaced hypocrisy can condemn the vinous cup of old
- father Noah, because individual drunkards do not know how to observe limit
- and moderation.
-
- >From time to time I advised Ernst Junger about actual and entertaining events
- in the field of inebriating drugs, as in my letter of September 1955:
-
- . . . Last week the first 200 grams of a new drug arrived, whose
- investigation I wish to take up. It involves the seeds of a mimosa
- (Piptadenia peregrina Benth,) that is used as a stimulating intoxicant by
- the Indians of the Orinoco. The seeds are ground, fermented, and then
- mixed with the powder of burned snail shells. This powder is sniffed by
- the Indians with the help of a hollow, forked bird bone, as already
- reported by Alexander von Humboldt in Reise nach den Aequinoctiat-Gegenden
- des Neuen Kontinents [Voyage to the equinoctial regions of the new
- continent] (Book 8, Chapter 24). The warlike tribe, the Otomaco,
- especially use this drug, called niopo, yupa, nopo or cojoba, to an
- extensive degree, even today. It is reported in the monograph by P. J.
- Gumilla, S. J. (Et Orinoco Itustrado, 1741): "The Otomacos sniffed the
- powder before they went to battle with the Caribes, for in earlier times
- there existed savage wars between these tribes.... This drug robs them
- completely of reason, and they frantically seize their weapons. And if the
- women were not so adept at holding them back and binding them fast, they
- would daily cause horrible devastation. It is a terrible vice.... Other
- benign and docile tribes that also sniff the yupa, do not get into such a
- fury as the Otomacos, who through self-injury with this agent made
- themselves completely cruel before combat, and marched into battle with
- savage fury."
-
- I am curious how niopo would act on people like us. Should a niopo session
- one day come to pass, then we should on no account send our wives away, as
- on that early spring reverie [The LSD trip of February 1951 is meant
- here.], that they may bind us fast if necessary....
-
- Chemical analysis of this drug led to isolation of active principles that,
- like the ergot alkaloids and psilocybin, belong to the group of indole
- alkaloids, but which were already described in the technical literature, and
- were therefore not investigated further in the Sandoz laboratories.
- [Translator's note: The active principles of niopo are DMT
- (N,Ndimethyltryptamine) and its congeners. DMT was first prepared in 1931 by
- Manske.] The fantastic effects described above appeared to occur only with the
- particular manner of use as snuff powder, and also seemed to be related, in
- all probability, to the psychic structure of the Indian tribes concerned.
-
-
- Ambivalence of Drug Use
-
- Fundamental questions of drug problems were dealt with in the following
- correspondence.
-
-
- Bottmingen, 16 December 1961
-
- Dear Mr. Junger,
-
- On the one hand, I would have the great desire, besides the natural-
- scientific, chemicalpharmacological investigation of hallucinogenic
- substances, also to research their use as magic drugs in other
- regions.... On the other hand, I must admit that the fundamental question
- very much occupies me, whether the use of these types of drugs, namely of
- substances that so deeply affect our minds, could not indeed represent a
- forbidden transgression of limits. As long as any means or methods are
- used, which provide only an additional, newer aspect of reality, surely
- there is nothing to object to in such means; on the contrary, the
- experience and the knowledge of further facets of the reality only makes
- this reality ever more real to us. The question exists, however, whether
- the deeply affecting drugs under discussion here will in fact only open an
- additional window for our senses and perceptions, or whether the spectator
- himself, the core of his being, undergoes alterations. The latter would
- signify that something is altered that in my opinion should always remain
- intact. My concern is addressed to the question, whether the innermost
- core of our being is actually unimpeachable, and cannot become damaged by
- whatever happens in its material, physical-chemical, biological and
- psychic shells-or whether matter in the form of these drugs displays a
- potency that has the ability to attack the spiritual center of the
- personality, the self. The latter would have to be explained by the fact
- that the effect of magic drugs happens at the borderline where mind and
- matter merge-that these magic substances are themselves cracks in the
- infinite realm of matter, in which the depth of matter, its relationship
- with the mind, becomes particularly obvious. This could be expressed by a
- modification of the familiar words of Goethe:
-
- "Were the eye not sunny,
- It could never behold the sun;
- If the power of the mind were not in matter,
- How could matter disturb the mind."
-
- This would correspond to cracks which the radioactive substances
- constitute in the periodic system of the elements, where the transition of
- matter into energy becomes manifest. Indeed, one must ask whether the
- production of atomic energy likewise represents a transgression of
- forbidden limits.
-
- A further disquieting tht)ught, which follows from the possibility of
- influencing the highest intellectual functions by traces of a substance,
- concerns free will.
-
- The highly active psychotropic substances like LSD and psilocybin possess
- in their chemical structure a very close relationship with substances
- inherent in the body, which are found in the central nervous system and
- play an important role in the regulation of its functions. It is therefore
- conceivable that through some disturbance in the metabolism of the normal
- neurotransmitters, a compound like LSD or psilocybin is formed, which can
- determine and alter the character of the individual, his world view and
- his behavior. A trace of a substance, whose production or nonproduction we
- cannot control with our wills, has the power to shape our destiny. Such
- biochemical considerations could have led to the sentence that Gottfried
- Benn quoted in his essay "Provoziertes Leben" [Provoked life]:
- "God is a substance, a drug!"
-
- On the other hand, it is well known that substances like adrenaline, for
- example, are formed or set free in our organism by thoughts and emotions,
- which for their part determine the functions of the nervous system. One
- may therefore suppose that our material organism is susceptible to and
- shaped by our mind, in the same way that our intellectual essence is
- shaped by our biochemistry. Which came first can indeed no better be
- determined than the question, whether the chicken came before the egg.
-
- In spite of my uncertainty with regard to the fundamental dangers that
- could lie in the use of hallucinogenic substances, I have continued
- investigations on the active principles of the Mexican magic morning
- glories, of which I wrote you briefly once before. In the seeds of this
- morning glory, that were called otoliuhqui by the ancient Aztecs, we
- found as active principles lysergic acid derivatives chemically very
- closely related to LSD. That was an almost unbelievable finding. I have
- all along had a particular love for the morning glories. They were the
- first flowers that I grew myself in my little child's garden. Their blue
- and red cups belong to the first memories of my childhood.
-
- I recently read in a book by D. T. Suzuki, Zen and Japanese Culture, that
- the morning glory plays a great role in Japan, among the flower lovers, in
- literature, and in graphic arts. Its fleeting splendor has given the
- Japanese imagination rich stimulus. Among others, Suzuki quotes a three-
- line poem of the poetess Chiyo (1702-75), who one morning went to fetch
- water from a neighbor's house, because . . .
-
- "My trough is captivated
- by a morning glory blossom,
- So I ask after water."
-
- The morning glory thus shows both possible ways of influencing the
- mind-body-essence of man: in Mexico it exerts its effects in a chemical
- way as a magic drug, while in Japan it acts from the spiritual side,
- through the beauty of its flower cups.
-
-
- Wilflingen, 17 December 1961
- Dear Mr. Hofmann,
-
- I give you my thanks for your detailed letter of 16 December. I have
- reflected on your central question, and may probably become occupied with
- it on the occasion of the revision of An der Zeitmauer [At the wall of
- time]. There I intimated that, in the field of physics as well as in the
- field of biology, we are beginning to develop procedures that are no
- longer to be understood as advances in the established sense, but that
- rather intervene in evolution and lead forth in the development of the
- species. Certainly I turn the glove inside out, for I suppose that it is a
- new world age, which begins to act evolutionarily on the prototypes. Our
- science with its theories and discoveries is therefore not the cause,
- rather one of the consequences of evolution, among others. Animals,
- plants, the atmosphere and the surfaces of planets will be concerned
- simultaneously. We do not progress from point to point, rather we cross
- over a line.
-
- The risk that you indicated is well to be considered. However, it exists
- in every aspect of our existence. The common denominator appears now here,
- now there.
-
- In mentioning radioactivity, you use the word crack. Cracks are not merely
- points of discovery, but also points of destruction. Compared to the
- effects of radiation, those of the magical drugs are more genuine and much
- less rough. In classical manner they lead us beyond the humane. Gurdjieff
- has already seen that to some extent. Wine has already changed much, has
- brought new gods and a new humanity with it. But wine is to the new
- substances as classical physics is to modern physics. These things should
- only be tried in small circles. I cannot agree with the thoughts of
- Huxley, that possibilities for transcendence could here be given to the
- masses. Indeed, this does not involve comforting fictions, but rather
- realities, if we take the matter earnestly. And few contacts will suffice
- here for the setting of courses and guidance. It also transcends theology
- and belongs in the chapter of theogony, as it necessarily entails entry
- into a new house, in the astrological sense. At first, one can be
- satisfied with this insight, and should above all be cautious with the
- designations.
-
- Heartfelt thanks also for the beautiful picture of the blue morning glory.
- It appears to be the same that I cultivate year after year in my garden. I
- did not know that it possesses specific powers; however, that is probably
- the case with every plant. We do not know the key to most. Besides this,
- there must be a central viewpoint from which not only the chemistry, the
- structure, the color, but rather all attributes become significant....
-
-
- An Experiment with Psilocybin
-
- Such theoretical discussions about the magic drugs were supplemented by
- practical experiments. One such experiment, which served as a comparison
- between LSD and psilocybin, took place in the spring of 1962. The proper
- occasion for it presented itself at the home of the Jungers, in the former
- head forester's house of Stauffenberg's Castle in Wilflingen. My friends, the
- pharmacologist Professor Heribert Konzett and the Islamic scholar Dr. Rudolf
- Gelpke, also took part in this mushroom symposium.
-
- The old chronicles described how the Aztecs drank chocolatl before they ate
- teonanacatl. Thus Mrs. Liselotte Junger likewide served us hot chocolate, to
- set the mood. Then she abandoned the four men to their fate.
-
- We had gathered in a fashionable living room, with a dark wooden ceiling,
- white tile stove, period furniture, old French engravings on the walls, a
- gorgeous bouquet of tulips on the table. Ernst Junger wore a long, broad, dark
- blue striped kaftan-like garment that he had brought from Egypt; Heribert
- Konzett was resplendent in a brightly embroidered mandarin gown; Rudolf Gelpke
- and I had put on housecoats. The everyday reality should be laid aside, along
- with everyday clothing.
-
- Shortly before sundown we took the drug, not the mushrooms, but rather their
- active principle, 20 mg psilocybin each. That corresponded to some twothirds
- of the very strong dose that was taken by the curandera Maria Sabina in the
- form of Psilocybe mushrooms.
-
- After an hour I still noticed no effect, while my companions were already very
- deeply into the trip. I had come with the hope that in the mushroom
- inebriation I could manage to allow certain images from euphoric moments of my
- childhood, which remained in my memory as blissful experiences, to come alive:
- a meadow covered with chrysanthemums lightly stirred by the early summer wind;
- the rosebush in the evening light after a rain storm; the blue irises hanging
- over the vineyard wall. Instead of these bright images from my childhood home,
- strange scenery emerged, when the mushroom factor finally began to act. Half
- stupefied, I sank deeper, passed through totally deserted cities with a
- Mexican type of exotic, yet dead splendor. Terrified, I tried to detain myself
- on the surface, to concentrate alertly on the outer world, on the
- surroundings. For a time I succeeded. I then observed Ernst Junger, colossal
- in the room, pacing back and forth, a powerful, mighty magician. Heribert
- Konzett in the silky lustrous housecoat seemed to be a dangerous, Chinese
- clown. Even Rudolf Gelpke appeared sinister to me; long, thin, mysterious.
-
- With the increasing depth of inebriation, everything became yet stranger. I
- even felt strange to myself. Weird, cold, foolish, deserted, in a dull light,
- were the places I traversed when I closed my eyes. Emptied of all meaning, the
- environment also seemed ghostlike to me whenever I opened my eyes and tried to
- cling to the outer world. The total emptiness threatened to drag me down into
- absolute nothingness. I remember how I seized Rudolf Gelpke's arm as he passed
- by my chair, and held myself to him, in order not to sink into dark
- nothingness. Fear of death seized me, and illimitable longing to return to the
- living creation, to the reality of the world of men. After timeless fear I
- slowly returned to the room . I saw and heard the great magician lecturing
- uninterruptedly with a clear, loud voice, about Schopenhauer, Kant, Hegel, and
- speaking about the old Gaa, the beloved little mother. Heribert Konzett and
- Rudolf Gelpke were already completely on the earth again, while I could only
- regain my footing with great effort.
-
- For me this entry into the mushroom world had been a test, a confrontation
- with a dead world and with the void. The experiment had developed differently
- from what I had expected. Nevertheless, the encounter with the void can also
- be appraised as a gain. Then the existence of the creation appears so much
- more wondrous.
-
- Midnight had passed, as we sat together at the table that the mistress of the
- house had set in the upper story. We celebrated the return with an exquisite
- repast and with Mozart's music. The conversation, during which we exchanged
- our experiences, lasted almost until morning.
-
- Ernst Junger has described how he had experienced this trip, in his book
- Annahenngenrogen und Rausch [Approaches-drugs and inebriation] (published by
- Ernst Klett Verlag, Stuttgart, 1970), in the section "Ein Pilz-Symposium" [A
- mushroom symposium]. The following is an extract from the work:
-
- As usual, a half hour or a little more passed in silence. Then came the
- first signs: the flowers on the table began to flare up and sent out
- flashes. It was time for leaving work; outside the streets were being
- cleaned, like on every weekend. The brush strokes invaded the silence
- painfully. This shuffling and brushing, now and again also a scraping,
- pounding, rumbling, and hammering, has random causes and is also
- symptomatic, like one of the signs that announces an illness. Again and
- again it also plays a role in the history of magic practices.
-
- By this time the mushroom began to act; the spring bouquet glowed darker.
- That was no natural light. The shadows stirred in the corners, as if they
- sought form. I became uneasy, even chilled, despite the heat that emanated
- from the tiles. I stretched myself on the sofa, drew the covers over my
- head.
-
- Everything became skin and was touched, even the retina-there the contact
- was light. This light was multicolored; it arranged itself in strings,
- which gently swung back and forth; in strings of glass beads of oriental
- doorways. They formed doors, like those one passes through in a dream,
- curtains of lust and danger. The wind stirred them like a garment. They
- also fell down from the belts of dancers, opened and closed themselves
- with the swing of the hips, and from the beads a rippling of the most
- delicate sounds fluttered to the heightened senses. The chime of the
- silver rings on the ankles and wrists is already too loud. It smells of
- sweat, blood, tobacco, chopped horse hairs, cheap rose essence. Who knows
- what is going on in the stables?
-
- It must be an immense palace, Mauritanian, not a good place. At this
- ballroom flights of adjoining rooms lead into the lower stratum. And
- everywhere the curtains with their glitter, their sparkling, radioactive
- glow. Moreover, the rippling of glassy instruments with their beckoning,
- their wooing solicitation: " Will you go with me, beautiful boy?" Now it
- ceased, now it repeated, more importunate, more intrusive, almost already
- assured of agreement.
-
- Now came forms-historical collages, the vox humana, the call of the
- cuckoo. Was it the whore of Santa Lucia, who stuck her breasts out of the
- window? Then the play was ruined. Salome danced; the amber necklace
- emitted sparks and made the nipples erect. What would one not do for one's
- Johannes? [Translator's note: "Johannes" here is slang for penis, as in
- English "Dick" or "Peter."] -damned, that was a disgusting obscenity,
- which did not come from me, but was whispered through the curtain.
-
- The snakes were dirty, scarcely alive, they wallowed sluggishly over the
- floor mats. They were garnished with brilliant shards. Others looked up
- from the floor with red and green eyes. It glistened and whispered, hissed
- and sparkled like diminutive sickles at the sacred harvest. Then it
- quieted, and came anew, more faintly, more forward. They had me in their
- hand. "There we immediately understood ourselves."
-
- Madam came through the curtain: she was busy, passed by me without
- noticing me. I saw the boots with the red heels. Garters constricted the
- thick thighs in the middle, the flesh bulged out there. The enormous
- breasts, the dark delta of the Amazon, parrots, piranhas, semiprecious
- stones everywhere. Now she went into the kitchen-or are there still
- cellars here? The sparkling and whispering, the hissing and twinkling
- could no longer be differentiated; it seemed to become concentrated, now
- proudly rejoicing, full of hope.
-
- It became hot and intolerable; I threw the covers off. The room was
- faintly illuminated; the pharmacologist stood at the window in the white
- mandarin frock, which had served me shortly before in Rottweil at the
- carnival. The orientalist sat beside the tile stove; he moaned as if he
- had a nightmare. I understood; it had been a first round, and it would
- soon start again. The time was not yet up. I had already seen the beloved
- little mother under other circumstances. But even excrement is earth,
- belongs like gold to transformed matter. One must come to terms with it,
- without getting too close.
-
- These were the earthy mushrooms. More light was hidden in the dark grain
- that burst from the ear, more yet in the green juice of the succulents on
- the glowing slopes of Mexico. . . . [Translator's note: Junger is
- referring to LSD, a derivative of ergot, and mescaline, derived from the
- Mexican peyotl cactus.]
-
- The trip had run awry-possibly I should address the mushrooms once more.
- Yet indeed the whispering returned, the flashing and sparkling-the bait
- pulled the fish close behind itself. Once the motif is given, then it
- engraves itself, like on a roller each new beginning, each new revolution
- repeats the melody. The game did not get beyond this kind of dreariness.
-
- I don't know how often this was repeated, and prefer not to dwell upon it.
- Also, there are things which one would rather keep to oneself. In any
- case, midnight was past....
-
- We went upstairs; the table was set. The senses were still heightened and
- the Doors of Perception were opened. The light undulated from the red wine
- in the carafe; a froth surged at the brim. We listened to a flute
- concerto. It had not turned out better for the others: How beautiful, to
- be back among men." Thus Albert Hofmann.
-
- The orientalist on the other hand had been in Samarkand, where Timur
- rests in a coffin of nephrite. He had followed the victorious march
- through cities, whose dowry on entry was a cauldron filled with eyes.
- There he had long stood before one of the skull pyramids that terrible
- Timur had erected, and in the multitude of severed heads had perceived
- even his own. It was encrusted with stones.
-
- A light dawned on the pharmacologist when he heard this: Now I know why
- you were sitting in the armchair without your head-I was astonished; I
- knew I wasn't dreaming.
-
- I wonder whether I should not strike out this detail since it borders on
- the area of ghost stories.
-
- The mushroom substance had carried all four of us off, not into luminous
- heights, rather into deeper regions. It seems that the psilocybin inebriation
- is more darkly colored in the majority of cases than the inebriation produced
- by LSD. The influence of these two active substances is sure to differ from
- one individual to another. Personally, for me, there was more light in the LSD
- experiments than in the experiments with the earthy mushroom, just as Ernst
- Junger remarks in the preceding report.
-
-
- Another LSD Session
-
- The next and last thrust into the inner universe together with Ernst Junger,
- this time again using LSD, led us very far from everyday consciousness. We
- came close to the ultimate door. Of course this door, according to Ernst
- Junger, will in fact only open for us in the great transition from life into
- the hereafter.
-
- This last joint experiment occurred in February 1970, again at the head
- forester's house in Wilflingen. In this case there were only the two of us.
- Ernst Junger took 0.15 mg LSD, I took 0.10 mg. Ernst Junger has published
- without commentary the log book, the notes he made during the experiment, in
- Approaches, in the section "Nochmals LSD" [LSD once again]. They are scanty
- and tell the reader little, just like my own records.
-
- The experiment lasted from morning just after breakfast until darkness fell.
- At the beginning of the trip, we again listened to the concerto for flute and
- harp by Mozart, which always made me especially happy, but this time, strange
- to say, seemed to me like the turning of porcelain figures. Then the
- intoxication led quickly into wordless depths. When I wanted to describe the
- perplexing alterations of consciousness to Ernst Junger, no more than two or
- three words came out, for they sounded so false, so unable to express the
- experience; they seemed to originate from an infinitely distant world that had
- become strange; I abandoned the attempt, laughing hopelessly. Obviously, Ernst
- Junger had the same experience, yet we did not need speech; a glance sufficed
- for the deepest understanding. I could, however, put some scraps of sentences
- on paper, such as at the beginning: "Our boat tosses violently." Later, upon
- regarding expensively bound books in the library: "Like red-gold pushed from
- within to without-exuding golden luster." Outside it began to snow. Masked
- children marched past and carts with carnival revelers passed by in the
- streets. With a glance through the window into the garden, in which snow
- patches lay, many-colored masks appeared over the high walls bordering it,
- embedded in an infinitely joyful shade of blue: "A Breughel garden-I live with
- and in the objects." Later: "At present-no connection with the everyday
- world." Toward the end, deep, comforting insight expressed: "Hitherto
- confirmed on my path." This time LSD had led to a blessed approach.
-
-
-
- 8. Meeting with Aldous Huxley
-
- In the mid-1950s, two books by Aldous Huxley appeared, The Doors of Perception
- and Heaven and Hell, dealing with inebriated states produced by hallucinogenic
- drugs. The alterations of sensory perceptions and consciousness, which the
- author experienced in a self-experiment with mescaline, are skillfully
- described in these books. The mescaline experiment was a visionary experience
- for Huxley. He saw objects in a new light; they disclosed their inherent,
- deep, timeless existence, which remains hidden from everyday sight.
-
- These two books contained fundamental observations on the essence of visionary
- experience and about the significance of this manner of comprehending the
- world-in cultural history, in the creation of myths, in the origin of
- religions, and in the creative process out of which works of art arise. Huxley
- saw the value of hallucinogenic drugs in that they give people who lack the
- gift of spontaneous visionary perception belonging to mystics, saints, and
- great artists, the potential to experience this extraordinary state of
- consciousness, and thereby to attain insight into the spiritual world of these
- great creators. Hallucinogens could lead to a deepened understanding of
- religious and mystical content, and to a new and fresh experience of the great
- works of art. For Huxley these drugs were keys capable of opening new doors of
- perception; chemical keys, in addition to other proven but laborious " door
- openers" to the visionary world like meditation, isolation, and fasting, or
- like certain yoga practices.
-
- At the time I already knew the earlier work of this great writer and thinker,
- books that meant much to me, like Point Counter Point, Brave New World, After
- Many a Summer, Eyeless in Gaza, and a few others. In The Doors of Perception
- and Heaven and Hell, Huxley's newly-published works, I found a meaningful
- exposition of the experience induced by hallucinogenic drugs, and I thereby
- gained a deepened insight into my own LSD experiments.
-
- I was therefore delighted when I received a telephone call from Aldous Huxley
- in the laboratory one morning in August 1961. He was passing through Zurich
- with his wife. He invited me and my wife to lunch in the Hotel Sonnenberg.
-
- A gentleman with a yellow freesia in his buttonhole, a tall and noble
- appearance, who exuded kindness- this is the image I retained from this first
- meeting with Aldous Huxley. The table conversation revolved mainly around the
- problem of magic drugs. Both Huxley and his wife, Laura Archera Huxley, had
- also experimented with LSD and psilocybin. Huxley would have preferred not to
- designate these two substances and mescaline as "drugs," because in English
- usage, as also by the way with Droge in German, that word has a pejorative
- connotation, and because it was important to differentiate the hallucinogens
- from the other drugs, even linguistically. He believed in the great importance
- of agents producing visionary experience in the modern phase of human
- evolution.
-
- He considered experiments under laboratory conditions to be insignificant,
- since in the extraordinarily intensified susceptibility and sensitivity to
- external impressions, the surroundings are of decisive importance. He
- recommended to my wife, when we spoke of her native place in the mountains,
- that she take LSD in an alpine meadow and then look into the blue cup of a
- gentian flower, to behold the wonder of creation.
-
- As we parted, Aldous Huxley gave me, as a remembrance of this meeting, a tape
- recording of his lecture "Visionary Experience," which he had delivered the
- week before at an international congress on applied psychology in Copenhagen.
- In this lecture, Aldous Huxley spoke about the meaning and essence of
- visionary experience and compared this type of world view to the verbal and
- intellectual comprehension of reality as its essential complement.
-
- In the following year, the newest and last book by Aldous Huxley appeared, the
- novel Island. This story, set on the utopian island Pala, is an attempt to
- blend the achievements of natural science and technical civilization with the
- wisdom of Eastern thought, to achieve a new culture in which rationalism and
- mysticism are fruitfully united. The moksha medicine, a magical drug prepared
- from a mushroom, plays a significant role in the life of the population of
- Pala (moksha is Sanskrit for "release," "liberation"). The drug could be used
- only in critical periods of life. The young men on Pala received it in
- initiation rites, it is dispensed to the protagonist of the novel during a
- life crisis, in the scope of a psychotherapeutic dialogue with a spiritual
- friend, and it helps the dying to relinquish the mortal body, in the
- transition to another existence.
-
- In our conversation in Zurich, I had already learned from Aldous Huxley that
- he would again treat the problem of psychedelic drugs in his forthcoming
- novel. Now he sent me a copy of Island, inscribed "To Dr. Albert Hofmann, the
- original discoverer of the moksha medicine, from Aldous Huxley."
-
- The hopes that Aldous Huxley placed in psychedelic drugs as a means of evoking
- visionary experience, and the uses of these substances in everyday life, are
- subjects of a letter of 29 February 1962, in which he wrote me:
-
- . . . I have good hopes that this and similar work will result in the
- development of a real Natural History of visionary experience, in all its
- variations, determined by differences of physique, temperament and
- profession, and at the same time of a technique of Applied Mysticism - a
- technique for helping individuals to get the most out of their
- transcendental experience and to make use of the insights from the "Other
- World" in the affairs of "This World." Meister Eckhart wrote that "what is
- taken in by contemplation must be given out in love." Essentially this is
- what must be developed-the art of giving out in love and intelligence
- what is taken in from vision and the experience of self-transcendence and
- solidarity with the Universe....
-
- Aldous Huxley and I were together often at the annual convention of the World
- Academy of Arts and Sciences (WAAS) in Stockholm during late summer 1963. His
- suggestions and contributions to discussions at the sessions of the academy,
- through their form and importance, had a great influence on the proceedings.
-
- WAAS had been established in order to allow the most competent specialists to
- consider world problems in a forum free of ideological and religious
- restrictions and from an international viewpoint encompassing the whole world.
- The results: proposals, and thoughts in the form of appropriate publications,
- were to be placed at the disposal of the responsible governments and executive
- organizations.
-
- The 1963 meeting of WAAS had dealt with the population explosion and the raw
- material reserves and food resources of the earth. The corresponding studies
- and proposals were collected in Volume II of WAAS under the title The
- Population Crisis and the Use of World Resources. A decade before birth
- control, environmental protection, and the energy crisis became catchwords,
- these world problems were examined there from the most serious point of view,
- and proposals for their solution were made to governments and responsible
- organizations. The catastrophic events since that time in the aforementioned
- fields makes evident the tragic discrepancy between recognition, desire, and
- feasibility.
-
- Aldous Huxley made the proposal, as a continuation and complement of the theme
- "World Resources" at the Stockholm convention, to address the problem "Human
- Resources," the exploration and application of capabilities hidden in humans
- yet unused. A human race with more highly developed spiritual capacities, with
- expanded consciousness of the depth and the incomprehensible wonder of being,
- would also have greater understanding of and better consideration for the
- biological and material foundations of life on this earth. Above all, for
- Western people with their hypertrophied rationality, the development and
- expansion of a direct, emotional experience of reality, unobstructed by words
- and concepts, would be of evolutionary significance. Huxley considered
- psychedelic drugs to be one means to achieve education in this direction. The
- psychiatrist Dr. Humphry Osmond, likewise participating in the congress, who
- had created the term psychedelic (mind-expanding), assisted him with a report
- about significant possibilities of the use of hallucinogens.
-
- The convention in Stockholm in 1963 was my last meeting with Aldous Huxley.
- His physical appearance was already marked by a severe illness; his
- intellectual personage, however, still bore the undiminished signs of a
- comprehensive knowledge of the heights and depths of the inner and outer world
- of man, which he had displayed with so much genius, love, goodness, and humor
- in his literary work.
-
- Aldous Huxley died on 22 November of the same year, on the same day President
- Kennedy was assassinated. From Laura Huxley I obtained a copy of her letter to
- Julian and Juliette Huxley, in which she reported to her brother- and
- sister-in-law about her husband's last day. The doctors had prepared her for a
- dramatic end, because the terminal phase of cancer of the throat, from which
- Aldous Huxley suffered, is usually accompanied by convulsions and choking
- fits. He died serenely and peacefully, however.
-
- In the morning, when he was already so weak that he could no longer speak, he
- had written on a sheet of paper: "LSD-try it-intramuscular-100 mmg." Mrs.
- Huxley understood what was meant by this, and ignoring the misgivings of the
- attending physician, she gave him, with her own hand, the desired
- injection-she let him have the moksha medicine.
-
-
-
- 9. Correspondence with the Poet-Physician Walter Vogt
-
- My friendship with the physician, psychiatrist, and writer Walter Vogt, M.D.,
- is also among the personal contacts that I owe to LSD. As the following
- extract from our correspondence shows, it was less the medicinal aspects of
- LSD, important to the physician, than the consciousness-altering effects on
- the depth of the psyche, of interest to the writer, that constituted the theme
- of our correspondence.
-
-
- Muri/Bern, 22 November 1970
- Dear Mr. Hofmann,
-
- Last night I dreamed that I was invited to tea in a cafe by a friendly
- family in Rome. This family also knew the pope, and so the pope sat at -
- the same table to tea with us. He was all in white and also wore a white
- miter. He sat there so handsome and was silent.
-
- And today I suddenly had the idea of sending you my Vogel auf dem Tisch
- [Bird on the table]-as a visiting card if you so wish-a book that remained
- a little apocryphal, which upon reflection I do not regret, although the
- Italian translator is firmly convinced that is my best. (Ah yes, the pope
- is also an Italian. So it goes. . . .)
-
- Possibly this little work will interest you. It was written in 1966 by an
- author who at that time still had not had any shred of experience with
- psychedelic substances and who read the reports about medicinal
- experiments with these drugs devoid of understanding. However, little has
- changed since, except that now the misgiving comes from the other side.
-
- I suppose that your discovery has caused a hiatus (not directly a
- Saul-to-Paul conversion as Roland Fischer says . . .) in my work (also a
- large word) - and indeed, that which I have written since has become
- rather realistic or at least less expressive. In any case I could not have
- brought off the cool realism of my TV piece "Spiele der Macht" [Games of
- power] without it. The different drafts attest it, in case they are still
- lying around somewhere.
-
- Should you have interest and time for a meeting, it would delight me very
- much to visit you sometime for a conversation.
- W. V.
-
-
- Burg, i.L. 28 November 1970
- Dear Mr. Vogt,
-
- If the bird that alighted on my table was able to find its way to me, this
- is one more debt I owe to the magical effect of LSD. I could soon write a
- book about all of the results that derive from that experiment in 1943....
- A. H.
-
-
- Muri/Bern, 13 March 1971
- Dear Mr. Hofmann,
-
- Enclosed is a critique of Junger's Annahenngen [Approaches], from the
- daily paper, that will presumably interest you....
-
- It seems to me that to hallucinate-to dream-to write,stands at all times
- in contrast to everyday consciousness, and their functions are
- complementary. Here I can naturally speak only for myself. This could be
- different with others - it is also truly difficult to speak with others
- about such things, because people often speak altogether different
- languages....
-
- However, since you are now gathering autographs, and do me the honor of
- incorporating some of my letters in your collection, I enclose for you the
- manuscript of my "testament" - in which your discovery plays a role as
- "the only joyous invention of the twentieth century...."
- W. V.
-
-
- dr. walter vogts most recent testament 1969 I wish to have no special
- funeral only expensive and obscene orchids innumerable little birds with
- gay names no naked dancers but psychedelic garments loudspeaker in every
- corner and nothing but the latest beatles record [Abbey Road] one hundred
- thousand million times and do what you like ["Blind Faith"] on an endless
- tape nothing more than a popular Christ with a halo of genuine gold and a
- beloved mourning congregation that pumped themselves full with acid
- [acid = LSD] till they go to heaven [From Abbey Road, side two] one two
- three four five six seven possibly we will encounter one another there
-
- most cordially dedicated to Dr. Albert Hofmann Beginning of Spring 1971
-
-
- Burg i.L., 29 March 1971
- Dear Mr. Vogt,
-
- You have again presented me with a lovely letter and a very valuable
- autograph, the testament 1969....
-
- Very remarkable dreams in recent times induce me to test a connection
- between the composition (chemical) of the evening meal and the quality of
- dreams. Yes, LSD is also something that one eats....
- A. H.
-
-
- Muri/Bern, 5 September 1971
- Dear Mr. Hofmann,
-
- Over the weekend at Murtensee [On that Sunday, I (A. H.) hovered over the
- Murtensee in the balloon of my friend E. I., who had taken me along as
- passenger.] I often thought of you-a most radiant autumn day. Yesterday,
- Saturday, thanks to one tablet of aspirin (on account of a headache or
- mild flu), I experienced a very comical flashback, like with mescaline (of
- which I have had only a little, exactly once)....
-
- I have read a delightful essay by Wasson about mushrooms; he divides
- mankind into mycophobes and mycophiles.... Lovely fly agarics must now be
- growing in the forest near you. Sometime shouldn't we sample some?
- W. V.
-
-
- Muri/Bern, 7 September 1971
- Dear Mr. Hofmann,
-
- Now I feel I must write briefly to tell you what I have done outside in
- the sun, on the dock under your balloon: I finally wrote some notes about
- our visit in Villars-sur-Ollons (with Dr. Leary), then a hippie-bark went
- by on the lake, self-made like from a Fellini film, which I sketched, and
- over and above it I drew your balloon.
- W. V.
-
-
- Burg i.L., 15 April 1972
- Dear Mr. Vogt,
-
- Your television play "Spiele der Macht" [Games of power] has impressed me
- extraordinarily.
-
- I congratulate you on this magnificent piece, which allows mental cruelty
- to become conscious, and therefore also acts in its way as "consciousness-
- expanding", and can thereby prove itself therapeutic in a higher sense,
- like ancient tragedy.
- A. H.
-
-
- Burg i.L., 19 May 1973
- Dear Mr. Vogt,
-
- Now I have already read your lay sermon three times, the description and
- interpretation of your Sinai Trip. [Walter Vogt: Mein Sinai Trip. Eine
- Laienpredigt [My Sinai trip: A lay sermon] (Verlag der Arche, Zurich,
- 1972). This publication contains the text of a lay sermon that Walter Vogt
- gave on 14 November 1971 on the invitation of Parson Christoph Mohl, in
- the Protestant church of aduz (Lichtenstein), in the course of a series of
- sermons by writers, and in addition contains an afterword by the author
- and by the inviting parson. It involves the description and interpretation
- of an ecstatic-religious experience evoked by LSD, that the author is able
- to "place in a distant, if you will superficial, analogy to the great
- Sinai Trip of Moses." It is not only the "patriarchal atmosphere" that is
- to be traced out of these descriptions, that constitutes this analogy;
- there are deeper references, which are more to be read between the lines
- of this text.] Was it really an LSD trip? . . . It was a courageous deed,
- to choose such a notorious event as a drug experience as the theme of a
- sermon, even a lay sermon. But the questions raised by hallucinogenic
- drugs do actually belong in the church-in a prominent place in the church,
- for they are sacred drugs (peyotl, teonanacatl, ololiuhqui, with which LSD
- is mostly closely related by chemical structure and activity).
-
- I can fully agree with what you say in your introduction about the modern
- ecclesiastical religiosity: the three sanctioned states of consciousness
- (the waking condition of uninterrupted work and performance of duty,
- alcoholic intoxication, and sleep), the distinction between two phases of
- psychedelic inebriation (the first phase, the peak of the trip, in which
- the cosmic relationship is experienced, or the submersion into one's own
- body, in which everything that is, is within; and the second phase,
- characterized as the phase of enhanced comprehension of symbols), and the
- allusion to the candor that hallucinogens bring about in consciousness
- states. These are all observations that are of fundamental importance in
- the judgement of hallucinogenic inebriation.
-
- The most worthwhile spiritual benefit from LSD experiments was the
- experience of the inextricable intertwining of the physical and spiritual.
- "Christ in matter" (Teilhard de Chardin). Did the insight first come to
- you also through your drug experiences, that we must descend "into the
- flesh, which we are," in order to get new prophesies?
-
- A criticism of your sermon: you allow the "deepest experience that there
- is" - "The kingdom of heaven is within you"-to be uttered by Timothy
- Leary. This sentence, quoted without the indication of its true source,
- could be interpreted as ignorance of one, or rather the principal truth of
- Christian belief.
-
- One of your statements deserves universal recognition: "There is no
- non-ecstatic religious experience." . . .
-
- Next Monday evening I shall be interviewed on Swiss television (about LSD
- and the Mexican magic drugs, on the program "At First Hand"). I am curious
- about the sort of questions that will be asked. . .
- A. H.
-
-
- Muri/Bern, 24 May 1973
- Dear Mr. Hofmann,
-
- Of course it was LSD - only I did not want to write about it explicitly, I
- really do not know just why myself.... The great emphasis I placed on the
- good Leary, who now seems to me to be somewhat flipped out, as the prime
- witness, can indeed only be explained by the special context of the talk
- or sermon.
-
- I must admit that the perception that we must descend "into the flesh,
- which we are" actually first came to me with LSD. I still ruminate on it,
- possibly it even came "too late" for me in fact, although more and more I
- advocate your opinion that LSD should be taboo for youth (taboo, not
- forbidden, that is the difference . . .).
-
- The sentence that you like, "there is no nonecstatic religious
- experience," was apparently not liked so much by others for example, by my
- (almost only) literary friend and minister-lyric poet Kurt Marti. . . .
- But in any case, we are practically never of the same opinion about
- anything, and notwithstanding, we constitute when we occasionally
- communicate by phone and arrange little activities together, the smallest
- minimafia of Switzerland.
- W. V.
-
-
- Burg i.L., 13 April 1974
- Dear Mr. Vogt,
-
- Full of suspense, we watched your TV play "Pilate before the Silent
- Christ" yesterday evening.
-
- . . . as a representation of the fundamental man-God relationship: man,
- who comes to God with his most difficult questions, which finally he must
- answer himself, because God is silent. He does not answer them with words.
- The answers are contained in the book of his creation (to which the
- questioning man himself belongs). True natural science decipherin of this
- text.
- A. H.
-
-
- Muri/Bern, 11 May 1974
- Dear Mr. Hofmann,
-
- I have composed a "poem" in half twilight, that I dare to send to you. At
- first I wanted to send it to Leary, but this would make no sense.
-
- Leary in jail
- Gelpke is dead
- Treatment in the asylum
- is this your psychedelic
- revolution?
- Had we taken seriously something
- with which one only ought to play
- or
- vice-versa . . .
- W. V.
-
-
-
- 10. Various Visitors
-
- The diverse aspects, the multi-faceted emanations of LSD are also expressed in
- the variety of cultural circles with which this substance has brought me into
- contact. On the scientific plane, this has involved colleagues-chemists,
- pharmacologists, physicians, and mycologists-whom I met at universities,
- congresses, lectures, or with whom I came into association through
- publication. In the literary-philosophical field there were contacts with
- writers. In the preceding chapters I have reported on the relationships of
- this type that were most significant for me. LSD also provided me with a
- variegated series of personal acquaintances from the drug scene and from
- hippie circles, which will briefly be described here.
-
- Most of these visitors came from the United States and were young people,
- often in transit to the Far East in search of Eastern wisdom or of a guru; or
- else hoping to come by drugs more easily there. Prague also was sometimes the
- goal, because LSD of good quality could at the time easily be acquired there.
- [Translator's Note: When Sandoz's patents on LSD expired in 1963, the Czech
- pharmaceutical firm Spofa began to manufacture the drug.] Once arrived in
- Europe, they wanted to take advantage of the opportunity to see the father of
- LSD, "the man who made the famous LSD bicycle trip." But more serious concerns
- sometimes motivated a visit. There was the desire to report on personal LSD
- experiences and to debate the purport of their meaning, at the source, so to
- speak. Only rarely did a visit prove to be inspired by the desire to obtain
- LSD when a visitor hinted that he or she wished once to experiment with most
- assuredly pure material, with original LSD.
-
- Visitors of various types and with diverse desires also came from Switzerland
- and other European countries. Such encounters have become rarer in recent
- times, which may be related to the fact that LSD has become less important in
- the drug scene. Whenever possible, I have welcomed such visitors or agreed to
- meet somewhere. This I considered to be an obligation connected with my role
- in the history of LSD, and I have tried to help by instructing and advising.
-
- Sometimes no true conversation occurred, for example with the inhibited young
- man who arrived on a motorbike. I was not clear about the objective of his
- visit. He stared at me, as if asking himself: can the man who has made
- something so weird as LSD really look so completely ordinary? With him, as
- with other similar visitors, I had the feeling that he hoped, in my presence,
- the LSD riddle would somehow solve itself.
-
- Other meetings were completely different, like the one with the young man from
- Toronto. He invited me to lunch at an exclusive restaurant-impressive
- appearance, tall, slender, a businessman, proprietor of an important
- industrial firm in Canada, brilliant intellect. He thanked me for the creation
- of LSD, which had given his life another direction. He had been 100 percent a
- businessman, with a purely materialistic world view. LSD had opened his eyes
- to the spiritual aspect of life. Now he possessed a sense for art, literature,
- and philosophy and was deeply concerned with religious and metaphysical
- questions. He now desired to make the LSD experience accessible in a suitable
- milieu to his young wife, and hoped for a similarly fortunate transformation
- in her.
-
- Not as profound, yet still liberating and rewarding, were the results of LSD
- experiments which a young Dane described to me with much humor and fantasy. He
- came from California, where he had been a houseboy for Henry Miller in Big
- Sur. He moved on to France with the plan of acquiring a dilapidated farm
- there, which he, a skilled carpenter, then wanted to restore himself. I asked
- him to obtain an autograph of his former employer for my collection, and after
- some time I actually received an original piece of writing from Henry Miller's
- hand.
-
- A young woman sought me out to report on LSD experiences that had been of
- great significance to her inner development. As a superficial teenager who
- pursued all sorts of entertainments, and quite neglected by her parents, she
- had begun to take LSD out of curiosity and love of adventure. For three years
- she took frequent LSD trips. They led to an astonishing intensification of her
- inner life. She began to seek after the deeper meaning of her existence, which
- eventually revealed itself to her. Then, recognizing that LSD had no further
- power to help her, without difficulty or exertion of will she was able to
- abandon the drug. Thereafter she was in a position to develop herself further
- without artificial means. She was now a happy intrinsically secure person-thus
- she concluded her report. This young woman had decided to tell me her history,
- because she supposed that I was often attacked by narrow-minded persons who
- saw only the damage that LSD sometimes caused among youths. The immediate
- motive of her testimony was a conversation that she had accidentally overheard
- on a railway journey. A man complained about me, finding it disgraceful that I
- had spoken on the LSD problem in an interview published in the newspaper. In
- his opinion, I ought to denounce LSD as primarily the devil's work and should
- publicly admit my guilt in the matter.
-
- Persons in LSD delirium, whose condition could have given rise to such
- indignant condemnation, have never personally come into my sight. Such cases,
- attributable to LSD consumption under irresponsible circumstances, to
- overdosage, or to psychotic predisposition, always landed in the hospital or
- at the police station. Great publicity always came their way.
-
- A visit by one youn American girl stands out in my memory as an example of the
- tragic effects of LSD. It was during the lunch hour, which I normally spent in
- my office under strict confinement-no visitors, secretary's office closed up.
- Knocking came at the door, discretely but firmly repeated, until eventually I
- went to open.it. I scarcely believed my eyes: before me stood a very beautiful
- young woman, blond, with large blue eyes, wearing a long hippie dress,
- headband, and sandals. "I am Joan, I come from New York-you are Dr. Hofmann?"
- Before I inquired what brought her to me, I asked her how she had got through
- the two checkpoints, at the main entrance to the factory area and at the door
- of the laboratory building, for visitors were admitted only after telephone
- query, and this flower child must have been especially noticeable. "I am an
- angel, I can pass everywhere," she replied. Then she explained that she came
- on a great mission. She had to rescue her country, the United States; above
- all she had to direct the president (at the time L. B. Johnson) onto the
- correct path. This could be accomplished only by having him take LSD. Then he
- would receive the good ideas that would enable him to lead the country out of
- war and internal difficulties.
-
- Joan had come to me hoping that I would help her fulfill her mission, namely
- to give LSD to the president. Her name would indicate she was the Joan of Arc
- of the USA. I don't know whether my arguments, advanced with all consideration
- of her holy zeal, were able to convince her that her plan had no prospects of
- success on psychological, technical, internal, and external grounds.
- Disappointed and sad she went away. Next day I received a telephone call from
- Joan. She again asked me to help her, since her financial resources were
- exhausted. I took her to a friend in Zurich who provided her with work, and
- with whom she could live. Joan was a teacher by profession, and also a
- nightclub pianist and singer. For a while she played and sang in a fashionable
- Zurich restaurant. The good bourgeois clients of course had no idea what sort
- of angel sat at the grand piano in a black evening dress and entertained them
- with sensitive playing and a soft and sensuous voice. Few paid attention to
- the words of her songs; they were for the most part hippie songs, many of them
- containing veiled praise of drugs. The Zurich performance did not last long;
- within a few weeks I learned from my friend that Joan had suddenly
- disappeared. He received a greeting card from her three months later, from
- Israel. She had been committed to a psychiatric hospital there.
-
- For the conclusion of my assortment of LSD visitors, I wish to report about a
- meeting in which LSD figured only indirectly. Miss H. S., head secretary in a
- hospital, wrote to ask me for a personal interview. She came to tea. She
- explained her visit thus: in a report about an LSD experience, she had read
- the description of a condition she herself had experienced as a young girl,
- which still disturbed her today; possibly I could help her to understand this
- experience.
-
- She had gone on a business trip as a commercial apprentice. They spent the
- night in a mountain hotel. H. S. awoke very early and left the house alone in
- order to watch the sunrise. As the mountains began to light up in a sea of
- rays, she was perfused by an unprecedented feeling of happiness, which
- persisted even after she joined the other participants of the trip at morning
- service in the chapel. During the Mass everything appeared to her in a
- supernatural luster, and the feeling of happiness intensified to such an
- extent that she had to cry loudly. She was brought back to the hotel and
- treated as someone with a mental disorder.
-
- This experience largely determined her later personal life. H.S. feared she
- was not completely normal. On the one hand, she feared this experience, which
- had been explained to her as a nervous breakdown; on the other hand, she
- longed for arepetitionof the condition. Internally split, she had led an
- unstable life. In repeated vocational changes and in varying personal
- relationships, consciously or unconsciously she again sought this ecstatic
- outlook, which once made her so deeply happy.
-
- I was able to reassure my visitor. It was no psychopathological event, no
- nervous breakdown that she had experienced at the time. What many people seek
- to attain with the help of LSD, the visionary experience of a deeper reality,
- had come to her as spontaneous grace. I recommended a book by Aldous Huxley to
- her, The Perennial Philosophy (Harper, New York & London, 1945) a collection
- of reports of spontaneous blessed visions from all times and cultures. Huxley
- wrote that not only mystics and saints, but also many more ordinary people
- than one generally supposes, experience such blessed moments, but that most do
- not recognize their importance and, instead of regarding them as promising
- rays of hope, repress them, because they do not fit into everyday rationality.
-
-
-
- 11. LSD Experience and Reality
-
-
- Was kann ein Mensch im Leben mehr
- gewinnen
- Als dass sich Gott-Natur ihm offenbare?
-
- What more can a person gain in life
- Than that God-Nature reveals himself to
- him?
- Goethe
-
-
- I am often asked what has made the deepest impression upon me in my LSD
- experiments, and whether I have arrived at new understandings through these
- experiences.
-
-
- Valious Realities
-
- Of greatest significance to me has been the insight that I attained as a
- fundamental understanding from all of my LSD experiments: what one commonly
- takes as "the reality," including the reality of one's own individual person,
- by no means signifies something fixed, but rather something that is
- ambiguous-that there is not only one, but that there are many realities, each
- comprising also a different consciousness of the ego.
-
- One can also arrive at this insight through scientific reflections. The
- problem of reality is and has been from time immemorial a central concern of
- philosophy. It is, however, a fundamental distinction, whether one approaches
- the problem of reality rationally, with the logical methods of philosophy, or
- if one obtrudes upon this problem emotionally, through an existential
- experience. The first planned LSD experiment was therefore so deeply moving
- and alarming, because everyday reality and the ego experiencing it, which I
- had until then considered to be the only reality, dissolved, and an unfamiliar
- ego experienced another, unfamiliar reality. The problem concerning the
- innermost self also appeared, which, itself unmoved, was able to record these
- external and internal transformations.
-
- Reality is inconceivable without an experiencing subject, without an ego. It
- is the product of the exterior world, of the sender and of a receiver, an ego
- in whose deepest self the emanations of the exterior world, registered by the
- antennae of the sense organs, become conscious. If one of the two is lacking,
- no reality happens, no radio music plays, the picture screen remains blank.
-
- If one continues with the conception of reality as a product of sender and
- receiver, then the entry of another reality under the influence of LSD may be
- explained by the fact that the brain, the seat of the receiver, becomes
- biochemically altered. The receiver is thereby tuned into another wavelength
- than that corresponding to normal, everyday reality. Since the endless variety
- and diversity of the universe correspond to infinitely many different
- wavelengths, depending on the adjustment of the receiver, many different
- realities, including the respective ego, can become conscious. These different
- realities, more correctly designated as different aspects of the reality, are
- not mutually exclusive but are complementary, and form together a portion of
- the all-encompassing, timeless, transcendental reality, in which even the
- unimpeachable core of self-consciousness, which has the power to record the
- different egos, is located.
-
- The true importance of LSD and related hallucinogens lies in their capacity to
- shift the wavelength setting of the receiving "self," and thereby to evoke
- alterations in reality consciousness. This ability to allow different, new
- pictures of reality to arise, this truly cosmogonic power, makes the cultish
- worship of hallucinogenic plants as sacred drugs understandable.
-
- What constitutes the essential, characteristic difference between everyday
- reality and the world picture experienced in LSD inebriation? Ego and the
- outer world are separated in the normal condition of consciousness, in
- everyday reality; one stands face-to-face with the outer world; it has become
- an object. In the LSD state the boundaries between the experiencing self and
- the outer world more or less disappear, depending on the depth of the
- inebriation. Feedback between receiver and sender takes place. A portion of
- the self overflows into the outer world, into objects, which begin to live, to
- have another, a deeper meaning. This can be perceived as a blessed, or as a
- demonic transformation imbued with terror, proceeding to a loss of the trusted
- ego. In an auspicious case, the new ego feels blissfully united with the
- objects of the outer world and consequently also with its fellow beings. This
- experience of deep oneness with the exterior world can even intensify to a
- feeling of the self being one with the universe. This condition of cosmic
- consciousness, which under favorable conditions can be evoked by LSD or by
- another hallucinogen from the group of Mexican sacred drugs, is analogous to
- spontaneous religious enlightenment, with the unio mystica. In both
- conditions, which often last only for a timeless moment, a reality is
- experienced that exposes a gleam of the transcendental reality, in vihich
- universe and self, sender and receiver, are one. [The relationship of
- spontaneous to drug-induced enlightenment has been most extensively
- investigated by R. C. Zaehner, Mysticismacred and Profane (The Clarendon
- Press, Oxford, 1957).]
-
- Gottfried Benn, in his essay "Provoziertes Leben" [Provoked life] (in
- Ausdnckswelt, Limes Verlag, Wiesbaden, 1949), characterized the reality in
- which self and world are separated, as "the schizoid catastrophe, the Western
- entelechy neurosis." He further writes:
-
- . . . In the southern part of our continent this concept of reality began
- to be formed. The Hellenistic-European agonistic principle of victory
- through effort, cunning, malice, talent, force, and later, European
- Darwinism and "superman," was instrumental in its formation. The ego
- emerged, dominated, fought; for this it needed instruments, material,
- power. It had a different relationship to matter, more removed sensually,
- but closer formally. It analyzed matter, tested, sorted: weapons, object
- of exchange, ransom money. It clarified matter through isolation, reduced
- it to formulas, took pieces out of it, divided it up. [Matter became] a
- concept which hung like a disaster over the West, with which the West
- fought, without grasping it, to which it sacrified enormous quantities of
- blood and happiness; a concept whose inner tension and fragmentations it
- was impossible to dissolve through a natural viewing or methodical insight
- into the inherent unity and peace of prelogical forms of being . . .
- instead the cataclysmic character of this idea became clearer and clearer
- . . . a state, a social organization, a public morality, for which life is
- economically usable life and which does not recognize the world of
- provoked life, cannot stop its destructive force. A society, whose hygiene
- and race cultivation as a modern ritual is founded solely on hollow
- biological statistics, can only represent the external viewpoint of the
- mass; for this point of view it can wage war, incessantly, for reality is
- simply raw material, but its metaphysical background remains forever
- obscured. [This excerpt from Benn's essay was taken from Ralph Metzner's
- translation "Provoked Life: An Essay on the Anthropology of the Ego,"
- which was published in Psychedelic Review I (1): 47-54, 1963. Minor
- corrections in Metzner's text have been made by A. H.]
-
- As Gottfried Benn formulates it in these sentences, a concept of reality that
- separates self and the world has decisively determined the evolutionary course
- of European intellectual history. Experience of the world as matter, as
- object, to which man stands opposed, has produced modern natural science and
- technology- creations of the Western mind that have changed the world. With
- their help human beings have subdued the world. Its wealth has been exploited
- in a manner that may be characterized as plundering, and the sublime
- accomplishment of technological civilization, the comfort of Western
- industrial society, stands face-to-face with a catastrophic destruction of the
- environment. Even to the heart of matter, to the nucleus of the atom and its
- splitting, this objective intellect has progressed and has unleashed energies
- that threaten all life on our planet.
-
- A misuse of knowledge and understanding, the products of searching
- intelligence, could not have emerged from a consciousness of reality in which
- human beings are not separated from the environment but rather exist as part
- of living nature and the universe. All attempts today to make amends for the
- damage through environmentally protective measures must remain only hopeless,
- superficial patchwork, if no curing of the "Western entelechy neurosis"
- ensues, as Benn has characterized the objective reality conception. Healing
- would mean existential experience of a deeper, self-encompassing reality.
-
- The experience of such a comprehensive reality is impeded in an environment
- rendered dead by human hands, such as is present in our great cities and
- industrial districts. Here the contrast between self and outer world becomes
- especially evident. Sensations of alienation, of loneliness, and of menace
- arise. It is these sensations that impress themselves on everyday
- consciousness in Western industrial society; they also take the upper hand
- everywhere that technological civilization extends itself, and they largely
- determine the production of modern art and literature.
-
- There is less danger of a cleft reality experience arising in a natural
- environment. In field and forest, and in the animal world sheltered therein,
- indeed in every garden, a reality is perceptible that is infinitely more real,
- older, deeper, and more wondrous than everything made by people, and that will
- yet endure, when the inanimate, mechanical, and concrete world again vanishes,
- becomes rusted and fallen into ruin. In the sprouting, growth, blooming,
- fruiting, death, and regermination of plants, in their relationship with the
- sun, whose light they are able to convert into chemically bound energy in the
- form of organic compounds, out of which all that lives on our earth is built;
- in the being of plants the same mysterious, inexhaustible, eternal life energy
- is evident that has also brought us forth and takes us back again into its
- womb, and in which we are sheltered and united with all living things.
-
- We are not leading up to a sentimental enthusiasm for nature, to "back to
- nature" in Rousseau's sense. That romantic movement, which sought the idyll in
- nature, can also be explained by a feeling of humankind's separation from
- nature. What is needed today is a fundamental reexperience of the oneness of
- all living things, a comprehensive reality consciousness that ever more
- infrequently develops spontaneously, the more the primordial flora and fauna
- of our mother earth must yield to a dead technological environment.
-
-
- Mystery and Myth
-
- The notion of reality as the self juxtaposed to the world, in confrontation
- with the outer world, began to form itself, as reported in the citation from
- Benn, in the southern portion of the European continent in Greek antiquity. No
- doubt people at that time knew the suffering that was connected with such a
- cleft reality consciousness. The Greek genius tried the cure, by supplementing
- the multiformed and richly colored, sensual as well as deeply sorrowful
- Apollonian world view created by the subject/object cleavage, with the
- Dionysian world of experience, in which this cleavage is abolished in ecstatic
- inebriation. Nietzsche writes in The Birth of Tragedy:
-
- It is either through the influence of narcotic potions, of which all
- primitive peoples and races speak in hymns, or through the powerful
- approach of spring, penetrating with joy all of nature, that those
- Dionysian stirrings arise, which in their intensification lead the
- individual to forget himself completely.... Not only does the bond between
- man and man come to be forged once again by the magic of the Dionysian
- rite, but alienated, hostile, or subjugated nature again celebrates her
- reconciliation with her prodigal son, man.
-
- The Mysteries of Eleusis, which were celebrated annually in the fall, over an
- interval of approximately 2,000 years, from about 1500 B.C. until the fourth
- century A.D., were intimately connected with the ceremonies and festivals in
- honor of the god Dionysus. These Mysteries were established by the goddess of
- agriculture, Demeter, as thanks for the recovery of her daughter Persephone,
- whom Hades, the god of the underworld, had abducted. A further thank offering
- was the ear of grain, which was presented by the two goddesses to Triptolemus,
- the first high priest of Eleusis. They taught him the cultivation of grain,
- which Triptolemus then disseminated over the whole globe. Persephone, however,
- was not always allowed to remain with her mother, because she had taken
- nourishment from Hades, contrary to the order of the highest gods. As
- punishment she had to return to the underworld for a part of the year. During
- this time, it was winter on the earth, the plants died and were withdrawn into
- the ground, to awaken to new life early in the year with Persephone's journey
- to earth.
-
- The myth of Demeter, Persephone, Hades, and the other gods, which was enacted
- as a drama, formed, however, only the external framework of events. The climax
- of the yearly ceremonies, which began with a procession from Athens to Eleusis
- lasting several days, was the concluding ceremony with the initiation, which
- took place in the night. The initiates were forbidden by penalty of death to
- divulge what they had learned, beheld, in the innermost, holiest chamber of
- the temple, the tetesterion (goal). Not one of the multitude that were
- initiated into the secret of Eleusis has ever done this. Pausanias, Plato,
- many Roman emperors like Hadrian and Marcus Aurelius, and many other known
- personages of antiquity were party to this initiation. It must have been an
- illumination, a visionary glimpse of a deeper reality, an insight into the
- true basis of the universe. That can be concluded from the statements of
- initiates about the value, about the importance of the vision. Thus it is
- reported in a Homeric Hymn: "Blissful is he among men on Earth, who has beheld
- that! He who has not been initiated into the holy Mysteries, who has had no
- part therein, remains a corpse in gloomy darkness." Pindar speaks of the
- Eleusinian benediction with the following words: "Blissful is he, who after
- having beheld this enters on the way beneath the Earth. He knows the end of
- life as well as its divinely granted beginning." Cicero, also a famous
- initiate, likewise put in first position the splendor that fell upon his life
- from Eleusis, when he said: " Not only have we received the reason there, that
- we may live in joy, but also, besides, that we may die with better hope."
-
- How could the mythological representation of such an obvious occurrence, which
- runs its course annually before our eyes-the seed grain that is dropped into
- the earth, dies there, in order to allow a new plant, new life, to ascend into
- the light-prove to be such a deep, comforting experience as that attested by
- the cited reports? It is traditional knowledge that the initiates were
- furnished with a potion, the kykeon, for the final ceremony. It is also known
- that barley extract and mint were ingredients of the kykeon. Religious
- scholars and scholars of mythology, like Karl Kerenyi, from whose book on the
- Eleusinian Mysteries (Rhein-Verlag, Zurich, 1962) the preceding statements
- were taken, and with whom I was associated in relation to the research on this
- mysterious potion [In the English publication of Kerenyi's book Eleusis
- (Schocken Books, New York, 1977) a reference is made to this collaboration.],
- are of the opinion that the kykeon was mixed with an hallucinogenic drug. [In
- The Road to Eleusis by R. Gordon Wasson, Albert Hofmann, and Carl A. P. Ruck
- (Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, New York, 1978) the possibility is discussed that
- the kykeon could have acted through an LSD-like preparation of ergot.] That
- would make understandable the ecstatic-visionary experience of the
- DemeterPersephone myth, as a symbol of the cycle of life and death in both a
- comprehensive and timeless reality.
-
- When the Gothic king Alarich, coming from the north, invaded Greece in 396
- A.D. and destroyed the sanctuary of Eleusis, it was not only the end of a
- religious center, but it also signified the decisive downfall of the ancient
- world. With the monks that accompanied Alarich, Christianity penetrated into
- the country that must be regarded as the cradle of European culture.
-
- The cultural-historical meaning of the Eleusinian Mysteries, their influence
- on European intellectual history, can scarcely be overestimated. Here
- suffering humankind found a cure for its rational, objective, cleft intellect,
- in a mystical totality experience, that let it believe in immortality, in an
- everlasting existence.
-
- This belief had survived in early Christianity, although with other symbols.
- It is found as a promise, even in particular passages of the Gospels, most
- clearly in the Gospel according to John, as in Chapter 14: 120. Jesus speaks
- to his disciples, as he takes leave of them:
-
- And I will pray the Father, and he shall give you another Comforter, that
- he may abide with you forever;
-
- Even the Spirit of truth; whom the world cannot receive, because it seeth
- him not, neither knoweth him: but ye know him; for he dwelleth with you,
- and shall be in you.
-
- I will not leave you comfortless: I will come to you. Yet a little while,
- and the world seeth me no more; but ye see me: because I live, ye shall
- live also.
-
- At that day ye shatl know that I am in my Father, and ye in me, and I in
- you.
-
- This promise constitutes the heart of my Christian beliefs and my call to
- natural-scientific research: we will attain to knowledge of the universe
- through the spirit of truth, and thereby to understanding of our being one
- with the deepest, most comprehensive reality, God.
-
- Ecclesiastical Christianity, determined by the duality of creator and
- creation, has, however, with its nature-alienated religiosity largely
- obliterated the Eleusinian-Dionysian legacy of antiquity. In the Christian
- sphere of belief, only special blessed men have attested to a timeless,
- comforting reality, experienced in a spontaneous vision, an experience to
- which in antiquity the elite of innumerable generations had access through the
- initiation at Eleusis. The unio mystica of Catholic saints and the visions
- that the representatives of Christian mysticism-Jakob Boehme, Meister Eckhart,
- Angelus Silesius, Thomas Traherne, William Blake, and others describe in their
- writings, are obviously essentially related to the enlightenment that the
- initiates to the Eleusinian Mysteries experienced.
-
- The fundamental importance of a mystical experience, for the recovery of
- people in Western industrial societies who are sickened by a one-sided,
- rational, materialistic world view, is today given primary emphasis, not only
- by adherents to Eastern religious movements like Zen Buddhism, but also by
- leading representatives of academic psychiatry. Of the appropriate literature,
- we will here refer only to the books of Balthasar Staehelin, the Basel
- psychiatrist working in Zurich. [Haben und Sein (1969), Die Welt als Du
- (1970), Urvertrauen und zweite Wirklichkeit (1973), and Der flnale Mensch
- (1976); all published by Theologischer Verlag, Zurich.] They make reference to
- numerous other authors who deal with the same problem. Today a type of
- "metamedicine," "metapsychology," and "metapsychiatry" is beginning to call
- upon the metaphysical element in people, which manifests itself as an
- experience of a deeper, duality-surmounting reality, and to make this element
- a basic healing principle in therapeutic practice.
-
- In addition, it is most significant that not only medicine but also wider
- circles of our society consider the overcoming of the dualistic, cleft world
- view to be a prerequisite and basis for the recovery and spiritual renewal of
- occidental civilization and culture. This renewal could lead to the
- renunciation of the materialistic philosophy of life and the development of a
- new reality consciousness.
-
- As a path to the perception of a deeper, comprehensive reality, in which the
- experiencing individual is also sheltered, meditation, in its different forms,
- occupies a prominent place today. The essential difference between meditation
- and prayer in the usual sense, which is based upon the duality of
- creatorcreation, is that meditation aspires to the abolishment of the
- I-you-barrier by a fusing of object and subject, of sender and receiver, of
- objective reality and self.
-
- Objective reality, the world view produced by the spirit of scientific
- inquiry, is the myth of our time. It has replaced the ecclesiastical-Christian
- and mythical-Apollonian world view.
-
- But this ever broadening factual knowledge, which constitutes objective
- reality, need not be a desecration. On the contrary, if it only advances deep
- enough, it inevitably leads to the inexplicable, primal ground of the
- universe: the wonder, the mystery of the divine-in the microcosm of the atom,
- in the macrocosm of the spiral nebula; in the seeds of plants, in the body and
- soul of people.
-
- Meditation begins at the limits of objective reality, at the farthest point
- yet reached by rational knowledge and perception. Meditation thus does not
- mean rejection of objective reality; on the contrary, it consists of a
- penetration to deeper dimensions of reality. It is not escape into an
- imaginary dream world; rather it seeks after the comprehensive truth of
- objective reality, by simultaneous, stereoscopic contemplation of its surfaces
- and depths.
-
- It could become of fundamental importance, and be not merely a transient
- fashion of the present, if more and more people today would make a daily habit
- of devoting an hour, or at least a few minutes, to meditation. As a result of
- the meditative penetration and broadening of the natural-scientific world
- view, a new, deepened reality consciousness would have to evolve, which would
- increasingly become the property of all humankind. This could become the basis
- of a new religiosity, which would not be based on belief in the dogmas of
- various religions, but rather on perception through the "spirit of truth."
- What is meant here is a perception, a reading and understanding of the text at
- first hand, "out of the book that God's finger has written" (Paracelsus), out
- of the creation.
-
- The transformation of the objective world view into a deepened and thereby
- religious reality consciousness can be accomplished gradually, by continuing
- practice of meditation. It can also come about, however, as a sudden
- enlightenment; a visionary experience. It is then particularly profound,
- blessed, and meaningful. Such a mystical experience may nevertheless "not be
- induced even by decade-long meditation," as Balthasar Staehelin writes. Also,
- it does not happen to everyone, although the capacity for mystical experience
- belongs to the essence of human spirituality.
-
- Nevertheless, at Eleusis, the mystical vision, the healing, comforting
- experience, could be arranged in the prescribed place at the appointed time,
- for all of the multitudes who were initiated into the holy Mysteries. This
- could be accounted for by the fact that an hallucinogenic drug came into use;
- this, as already mentioned, is something that religious scholars believe.
-
- The characteristic property of hallucinogens, to suspend the boundaries
- between the experiencing self and the outer world in an ecstatic, emotional
- experience, makes it possible with their help, and after suitable internal and
- external preparation, as it was accomplished in a perfect way at Eleusis, to
- evoke a mystical experience according to plan, so to speak.
-
- Meditation is a preparation for the same goal that was aspired to and was
- attained in the Eleusinian Mysteries. Accordingly it seems feasible that in
- the future, with the help of LSD, the mystical vision, crowning meditation,
- could be made accessible to an increasing number of practitioners of
- meditation
-
- I see the true importance of LSD in the possibitity ofproviding material aid
- to meditation aimed at the mystical experience of a deeper, comprehensive
- reality. Such a use accords entirely with the essence and working character of
- LSD as a sacred drug.
-
-