Chapter 4 The Nature of Psychedelic Experience |
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Books - Psychedelic Drugs Reconsidered |
Written by Lester Grinspoon |
It will be questioned when the sun rises do you not see a round disc of fire somewhat like a guinea—Oh no, no, no, I see an innumerable company of the heavenly host crying, -Holy, holy, holy is the Lord God Almighty.- —William Blake
We are to find in his dream all human possibilities—for out of that human nature, that psychological plasm, which swims dark and deep beneath the surface of the meagre words, the limited acts, the special mask, of one man's actual daytime career, all history and myth have arisen—victim and conqueror, lover and beloved, childhood and old age—all the forms of human experience. —Edmund Wilson on Finnegans Wake
The Lord whose oracle is at Delphi neither speaks plainly nor conceals, but discloses through hints. —Heraclitus
In this situation we are all like the blind men in the fable groping at an elephant for the first time. It is too easy to mistake the experience of one person or a few people for the whole. The psychedelic trip journal has become a familiar literary form, with its origins in De Quincey's and Baudelaire's opium and hashish tales; in the 1960s, especially, millions took trips and thousands wrote about them. As a result, many people think they know more than they do about the nature and limits of the experience. For example, some of the best-known literary accounts, such as those of Huxley and Watts, hardly touch on the most profound effects. Having a few psychedelic trips and reading a few descriptions of them does not justify anyone in believing that he knows what it is all about any more than recalling a few dreams and reading ' a few descriptions of them qualifies anyone to understand everything about dreams. If we remember that expansion does not necessarily mean enrichment or improvement, the term -consciousness expanding" is accurate enough: it is as though more of the neurophysiological activity of the brain is passing the usual defensive barriers and coming into awareness. One scientist has called the word "expansion" as used here "a metaphor without a physiological home." In a way that is true, but it is also true of most other language used for mental states, including Freud's spatial and mechanical metaphors. Expansion of t awareness in this sense is not necessarily desirable. Many students of psychedelic drugs have been attracted by Henri Bergson's picture of the brain as a reducing valve or filtering mechanism that protects us against an overwhelming onslaught of stimuli and so permits us to be the thinking and acting animals we are. Psychedelic drugs can then be said to turn off the reducing valve, producing "an exteriorization and magnification of the conflicts intrinsic to human nature and human experience" (Grof 1975, p. 6). While they thus in an important sense enlarge the realm of the conscious, they also diminish the capacity to think and act in the wonderfully varied adaptive ways we call ordinary. The complaint that consciousness expansion is a misleading metaphor suggests another problem as great as the range and individual variability of the experiences: the difficulty of finding an adequate language for them. In the 1960s an ideological battle was fought partly over questions of terminology. The polemics of the drug culture separated the -heads- and the "straights" into irreconcilable camps between which communication was impossible. The straight Mr. Jones knew that something was happening here, but he didn't know what it was—and he reacted with uncomprehending anger. That was a propagandistic oversimplification of the many subtle differences of opinion that actually existed, but it had a certain limited validity. Opposing terms like psychosis vs. revelation, hallucination vs. vision, regression vs. mystical insight, and sensory distortion vs. sensory enhancement embodied two different attitudes toward the experience and even suggested two different world views. Psychedelic drug users thought that the words of psychiatry and medicine were being used as a weapon against them; some outsiders were annoyed or even horrified at the drug takers' use of the poetic and religious language. Language that sounds silly, boring, exasperatingly self-satisfied, or even mentally disturbed to nonusers can evoke shared experience among drug users. The uninitiated, drug users say, hear only distant and confused noise that can be dismissively tagged with words pertaining to intoxication or mental illness. The experiences produced by the drugs are not entirely new, but they have been reported before, mainly by mystics and poets, who are granted a special status: they are not judged adversely by everyday standards of truth because they are not taken seriously by those standards. The hostile reaction comes only when the formerly esoteric invades the marketplace and makes insistent daims on everyone's attention. There can be no doubt that the language of psychedelic drug users is much more vivid, colorful, eloquent, and seductive than any "neutral" analytic terms. Most attempts at rephrasing to eliminate the emotional charge produce results that seem inept, impoverished, and fragmented—like a dull literary analysis that drains the meaning out of an exciting poem or story. That "neutral" kind of analysis would have to justify itself by some superior power of explaining or explaining away the drug effects. Explanation is hard to define in this field, but a growing consensus about the nature of the drug experience would be one sign that we were moving closer to it. Unfortunately, no consensus has appeared. That is one reason for the intuition that most analytic language is being imposed as a means of denial and dismissal. On the contrary, it is the drug users' language that suggests a potential consensus, as of travelers to different parts of the same country. It would be wrong to dismiss the meaning the experience has for a person who undergoes it in the name of a broader "coherent" theory that no one has been able to produce anyway. Whatever modifications we may introduce, we must begin by taking seriously on its own terms what the drug users say. That means looking closely at a great deal of language that at first sounds idiosyncratically rhetorical to find the common features. Many analysts of psychedelic drug effects shrink from doing this. For instance, here is the justification for a book recording the rather dull fragmentary communications from subjects under the influence of LSD in a laboratory in conditions of minimum sensory and emotional stimulation: "These are not blurred retrospective descriptions tempered by time and modified by the wish to appear eloquent and literary" (Pollard et al. 1965, p. 198). This reveals a wish to diminish the whole phenomenon. It is like preferring the confused running commentary in the mind of a participant in a historical event to his later coherent account of it viewed in the perspective of the rest of his life and times. Fear of the full force of psychedelic narratives also appears in the insistence that those who provide the most eloquent accounts are so atypical that they are telling us only about their own imaginative powers. This belief is based on a correct insight: Aldous Huxley's trip, as we have emphasized, is not Joe Smith's, much less Charles Manson's. But the obverse of the great variability of psychedelic experiences is their basis in common features of the human mind. So the gifted man, the ordinary man, and the madman are traveling through the same regions, and their tales are recognizably similar. Although all have something to contribute, we are not wrong to pay most attention to the most learned, articulate, wise and emotionally balanced witness at a time when he is recollecting in tranquillity. If his experience of psychedelic drugs is somewhat different from that of other people, so is his experience of everything else; its universal relevance is never denied for that reason. The verbally fluent may have more power to distort and falsify with words, but they also have more power to tell the most important truths. As long as we assume a substratum of shared experience, there is no reason for a bias toward the inarticulate. Are deaf-mutes the best witnesses because they tell no lies? The opposite complaint is also sometimes heard: that too much of the rhetoric inspired by psychedelic drugs is commonplace. But so is most religious rhetoric, or for that matter most conversation; most people lack literary talent, but that is not regarded as a reflection on the authenticity of the experience they aim to convey, and they are not asked to justify the importance of what they say by the standards of great poetry. All this criticism of drug takers' words as too eloquent to be genuine or too banal to be worthy of attention indicates an unwillingness to attend to what they are talking about, some haltingly and some fluently, with the authority of (partially) shared knowledge. In fact, there is a sense in which psychedelic experiences do not defeat words but magnify their power. By bringing unconscious material into awareness, the drugs give language or, at least, symbols a grip on phenomena that are ordinarily incommunicable because they do not take a symbolic form. A psychedelic drug trip is one kind of raid on the inarticulate, and often it produces unexpected exaltation and eloquence of language. There are repeated references to a tendency to talk—usually after the experience is over—with unaccustomed poetic facility. These supposedly ineffable experiences have always engendered a strong urge to talk and write about them; it is as though words are never more necessary than when we approach the limits of language. The surplus of meaning does not just make people conscious of the inadequacy of language; it may also convince them that for the first time they are having an experience for which certain dimly understood words (for example, ecstasy and awe) are appropriate. The common recourse to capital letters in psychedelic and mystical literature expresses this feeling that certain words have come into their own as much as it does the feeling that something more than ordinary words is needed. These remarks about language are partly an excuse and partly a justification for relying heavily on quotations from articulate drug users to describe the psychedelic experience. Despite various other observations, tests, and experiments, without their words very little of what is going on is available to us. We will consider three ways of classifying this almost too rich material. One is to discuss discrete aspects of consciousness like mood, time and space perception, speech, visual and auditory effects, learning, memory, and so on. The evidence can be set out for inspection in this fragmented way, but it proves to be unsatisfying for analytical purposes. A more interesting approach is to correlate the effects of the drug with personality types. And still another kind of analysis tries to make explicit the hidden consensus among drug takers about the countries of the mind they are traveling in, preserving the integrity of the narratives by treating the various aspects of the experience as different stages and byways of a voyage into the unconscious. Whatever classification is imposed, the words of psychedelic users cannot be treated merely as raw material for analysis; they transcend all analytic categories, and they should be the primary object of attention. Our dependence on words to identify this language-transcending experience is made clear by the fact that experiments on animals tell us so little about it. Studies of conditioned learning and other work based on behaviorist models are not very revealing, since the heart of the psychedelic effect is a complex change in consciousness rather than any consistent peculiarities of behavior (see Boissier 1974). Other animal experiments have produced variable and puzzling results that do not provide much evidence for a general theory of psychedelic drug effects. General stress or excitement probably causes many of the observed symptoms, but specific ones include the following: under LSD or mescaline Siamese fighting fish move slowly, as if in a trance, and their color darkens; guppies swim until they hit the wall of the tank and then keep trying to swim; carp rise to the surface of the water (Witt 1975). Under the influence of LSD, spiders weave more geometrically regular webs with a smaller surface, and weave them more slowly; chronic exposure causes abnormal web structures. Mescaline, strangely, seems to produce irregular webs even in a single dose (Groh and Lemieux 1968). Higher animals show unusual movements, seem to hallucinate, and may even have delusions. Monkeys and apes apparently react very much as human beings do, with the same large individual variability among animals of a single species. Rhesus monkeys, macaques, baboons, and chimpanzees show symptoms like grimaces of fear, difficulty in orientation, stereotyped movements, time and space disturbances, unusual tameness, and other "inappropriate- behavior, and apparent visual hallucinations or illusions (Black et al. 1969; Siegel et al. 1974). It would be interesting to administer a psychedelic drug to one of the chimpanzees that has been taught the rudiments of language and see if it could give any coherent report. One striking feature of the experiments is that in every animal tested, from spiders to chimpanzees, LSD is far more potent than mescaline and psilocybin (Witt 1975, p. 604); this suggests that the drugs affect some neurophysiological function that operates in the same way in all creatures with a central nervous system. In human beings, with the distinctions made possible by words, the full complexity of psychedelic experiences becomes apparent. The most common way of categorizing them is the somewhat artificial one of changes in perception, mood, thought patterns, and intellectual and physical performance. Perceptual effects are among the earliest and most obvious. Underlying them is a heightened intensity of awareness or subjective sensitivity; whether or not objective tests show a "real" increase in sensory acuity seems laughably irrelevant to the drug user in the face of this. Vision is the sense most profoundly affected. The look of everyday things takes on a tinge of the marvelous; in the words of Blake borrowed by Aldous Huxley for the title of a book, "The doors of perception are cleansed." People and objects become as fascinating as if they were the first of their kind ever seen; they look like pictures created and framed in their space by a genius. Anything in the environment—a painting on the wall, a pattern in the carpet—may become a universe to be entered and explored; drug users say that they understand what Blake meant by "the world in a grain of sand and heaven in a wild flower." Colors seem dazzlingly bright and intense, depth perception heightened, contours sharpened, and relief clearer; details usually overlooked become intensely interesting. It is but a short step from sensory enhancement to perceptual distortion. Everything may seem bathed in a theatrical or lunar light or illuminated from within. Objects change their shape and size; walls and floors undulate as if breathing; spatial perspective is distorted into exaggerated depth or flatness; stationary objects look as though they are in motion (without seeming displaced in space); faces become younger, older, or caricatured in various ways. Fully formed persons or objects may appear in external space as pseudohallucinations. (True hallucinations, in which the image is confused with reality, are rare.) The most celebrated feature of the psychedelic visual world is the dreamlike eidetic images that appear before closed eyes—what the writer Henri Michaux calls "the retinal circus." These visions resemble the hypnagogic imagery that many people see just before falling asleep, but they are incomparably more vivid. They often begin with afterimages of objects seen with eyes open; then come lacework patterns, geometrical forms, architecture, fountains, fireworks, landscapes, persons, animals, historical and mythical scenes, all constantly moving and changing. Heinrich Kliiver has investigated what he calls the form-constants of the elementary images, and he finds themes like httices, cobwebs, tunnels, alleys, and spirals that are also common in hypnagogic images and in the delirium of high fever (Klüver 1966 [1928]; see also Siegel and Jarvik 1975). At first the visions are just an entrancing display without much emotional content, but if the dose is high enough and the drug taker allows it, they can become the gateway to deeper levels of psychedelic experience. Hearing, touch, taste, and smell are heightened in the same ways as sight. There is greater sensitivity to significant background sounds; for example, people who are hard of hearing may find it easier to pick out the meaning of spoken words. Music can assume a previously inconceivable emotional and esthetic intensity. A pleasant taste becomes ambrosial, an unpleasant one disgusting; smells set off equally fierce reactions. Sensitivity to heat, cold, pressure, and other touch sensations is usually increased; yet sensitivity to painful high-intensity stimulation is often greatly reduced. The blending of senses called synesthesia is common, usually in the form of seeing lights or color patterns when a sound is heard, but also in many other combinations: a color has a taste or produces a burning sensation; light shatters and gives out the sound of a bell; a pinprick appears as a circle; a voice that seems cold causes a shiver; the ordinary feeling of the boundaries of one's body turns into an outline image of it before closed eyes. Changes in body feeling and body image are nearly universal. The drug user's own body is often distorted in a way that is esthetically unpleasant or causes anxiety. His foot may seem to be five yards away from his eye or right under his chin, his hand shriveled with age or shrunken to a baby's, his body large enough to cover the landscape from horizon to horizon. The body may feel hollow, boneless, transparent; its substance may seem to change to wood, metal, or glass; it may feel heavy and light at once, or hot and cold at once. There may be orgasmic feelings throughout the body, or no feeling at all. Some drug trips are dominated by purely physical feelings, especially when resistance is strong. Consciousness sometimes appears to be localized or concentrated in some body part; in a generalization of the phenomenon of transferred pain, strange sensations like "nausea in the fingertip" are sometimes reported. People may sense internal organs and physiological processes usually kept out of consciousness. Some drug takers can project images of themselves onto walls; a few see their bodies as if from above or to the side, or even perceive themselves as having left the body behind to travel in the almost immaterial "astral body" of occult literature. One of the most powerful effects of this kind is the total dissolution of the body or some part of it into the environment. Like the emotions associated with distortions of the body image, the sense of transcending the self that often accompanies bodily dissolution can lead on to more profound experiences. Some of the most uncanny effects are on the perception of time. Usually it goes more slowly: people speak of years or even literally an eternity passing in a minute, and events may seem to be without beginning or end. But time can also pass infinitely quickly, or the events of a psychedelic experience may take place in a time outside of time. The world may freeze for a moment like a film when the projector stops. Time may also run backward; past, present, and future events may be experienced as happening all at once; or the whole idea of temporal succession and measurement may seem irrelevant and artificial. These subjective time alterations need not cause any actual misjudgment, since the drug user is often capable of discounting them when asked a question about clock time. Timelessness seems to be an aspect of the release from recollection and anticipation, the concentration on the present moment, that psychedelic drugs produce by crowding so much into immediate awareness. It is impossible to select quotations that illustrate only one aspect of the perceptual effects of psychedelic drugs or even ones that illustrate perceptual effects in general with no reference to their emotional and metaphysical connotations. In the following descriptions, esthetic or sensory experiences predominate, but there are continual intimations of something more. Probably the most purely esthetic kind of sensory psychedelic experience is the closed-eye imagery. One of the earliest accounts of it is Dr. S. Weir Mitchell's 1896 essay on mescaline intoxication in The Lancet. Mitchell drank peyote extract, waited about an hour, and lay down in a dark room with his eyes closed: My first vivid show of mescal colour effects came quickly. I saw the stars, and then, of a sudden, here and there delicate floating films of colour—usually delightful neutral purples and pinks. These came and went—now here, now there. Then an abrupt rush of countless points of white light swept across the field of view, as if the unseen millions of the Milky Way were to flow a sparkling river before the eye. In a minute this was over and the field was dark. Then I began to see zigzag lines of very bright colours, like those seen in some megrims.. .. When I opened my eyes all was gone at once. Closing them I began after a long interval to see for the first time definite objects associated with colours. The stars sparkled and passed away. A white spear of grey stone grew up to huge height, and became a tall, richly finished Gothic tower of very elaborate and definite design, with many rather worn statues standing in the doorways or on stone brackets. As I gazed every projecting angle, cornice, and even the faces of the stones at their joinings were by degrees covered or hung with clusters of what seemed to be huge precious stones, but uncut, some being more like masses of transparent fruit. These were green, purple, red, and orange; never clear yellow and never blue. All seemed to possess an interior light, and to give the faintest idea of the perfectly satisfying intensity and purity of these gorgeous colour-fruits is quite beyond my power. All the colours I have ever beheld are dull as compared to these. . . . After an endless display of less beautiful marvels I saw that which deeply impressed me. An edge of a huge cliff seemed to project over a gulf of unseen depth. My viewless enchanter set on the brink a huge bird claw of stone. Above, from the stem or leg, hung a fragment of some stuff. This began to unroll and float out to a distance which seemed to me to represent Time as well as immensity of Space. Here were miles of rippled purples, half transparent, and of ineffable beauty. Now and then soft golden clouds floated from these folds, or a great shimmer went over the whole of the rolling purples, and things, like green birds, fell from it, fluttering down into the gulf below. Next, I saw clusters of stones hanging in masses from the claw toes, as it seemed to me miles of them, down far below into the underworld of the black gulf. . . . But it were vain to find in words what will describe these colours. Either they seemed strangely solid, or to possess vitality. They still linger visibly in my memory, and left thefeeling that I had seen among them colours unknown to my experience... . For the psychologist this agent should have value. To be able with a whole mind to experiment mentally upon such phenomena as I have described is an unusual privilege. Here is unlocked a store house of glorified memorial treasures of one kind. . I predict a perilous reign of the mescal habit when this agent becomes attainable. The temptation to call again the enchanting magic will, I am sure, be too much for some men to resist after they have once set foot in this land of fairy colours, where there seems to be so much to charm and so little to excite horror or disgust. (Mitchell 1896, pp. 1626-1628) Here is another description of closed-eye images: Then began the images I had wanted to see, brilliantly colored and drenched in white and golden light. Also, objects in the images seemed to generate a light of their own and cast off glowing and pulsating or rippling waves of color. The first image I remember was of an Egyptian tomb made of granite, alabaster and marble. Behind it great golden sculptures of pharaohs rose to awesome heights and there was the fragrance of eucalyptus burning in brass bowls mounted upon tripods of iron that had the feet of falcons. Priests in ornate headdress ringed the tomb and raised their arms to greet a procession of many brightly robed figures bearing torches and with faces obscured by masks resembling the heads of various beasts. Funerary orations seemed to blend into marriage ceremonies where fruit and great platters of meat, even the forbidden pig, were served up by fierce glistening black slaves. The platters were placed upon massive stone steps leading to a dais upon which were seated royal figures in carved black chairs whose arms were the heads of solemn cats. . . In many of the images that came to me I saw myself, sometimes with my wife, more often alone. I was a fur-capped Mongol huntsman, cold-eyed and cruel, bow in hand, striking down a running rabbit from the back of a racing, gaunt half-wild stallion. I was a stark black-robed figure, protected by an amulet suspended from a heavy gold chain that was worn about my neck, somberly wandering, lost in bitter ascetic reflection, among the crumbling walls of old temples overgrown by thick, twisted and gnarled vines. At other times there were legions of warriors, darkening deserts or in ranks that extended across immense bone-littered plains. There were broWn-cowled monks, pacing cloisters in silent, shared but unadmitted desperation. Image after image after image, flowing in succession more rapid than I would have wished, but all exquisitely detailed and with colors richer and more brilliant than those either nature or the artist has yet managed to create. (Masters and Houston 1966, pp. 8-9) Other marvels appear before the open eyes. In his last novel, Island, Aldous Huxley used his experience with mescaline and LSD to describe the effects of the utopian drug moksha-medicine, named from the Sanskrit word for liberation. Here is how things looked under the drug's influence: ... he opened his eyes. The inner illumination was swallowed up in another kind of light. The fountain of forms, the colored orbs in their conscious arrays and purposefully changing lattices gave place to a static composition of uprights and diagonals, of flat planes and curving cylinders, all carved out of some material that looked like living agate, and all emerging from a matrix of living and pulsating mother-of-pearl. .. a bubble of explanation rose into consciousness. He was looking, Will suddenly perceived, at a small square table, and beyond the table a rocking chair, and beyond the rocking chair at a blank wall of whitewashed plaster. (Huxley 1972 [1962], p. 278) Another kind of visual effect is represented in this quotation: S is told to look at the flowered fabric of the couch on which he is sitting and to relate what he sees there. He perceives a great number of faces and scenes, each of them belonging to a different environment and to a variety of times: some to the American Gay Nineties, some to the nineteen twenties, some later. There are Toulouse Lautrec cafe figures, Berlin nightlife scenes and German art from the late twenties and mid-thirties. Here and there, a "Black Art- appears and he recognizes the work of Félicien Rops and drawings like those of the artist who has illustrated Michelet's Satanism and Witchcraft. There are various Modigliani figures, a woman carrying a harpoon, and persons such as appear in the classical Spanish art of the seventeenth century. Most interesting to him are "paintings" like those of Hieronymus Bosch, and he describes a great complex of sprawling yet minutely detailed figures which combine to make up a larger complex of a mountain scene of trees and snow. In another variation, this same complex consists of "a great face with the trunk of an elephant that is blowing liquid on the face of a demon whose body has been trampled into the ground. The elephant is blowing liquid on the face of the demon either in an attempt to revive him or as a gesture of contempt. A herculean male figure rises next to the elephantine face. He is trapped to the waist in stone and this marbled stone looks like sea foam, it is so delicate and lacy. Everything blends into everything else. The herculean figure is also the ear of a face and the elephant-like trunk is the bridge of the nose of another larger, still more complicated figure." (Masters and Houston 1966, pp. 27-28) Much psychedelic art is a dim reproduction of visions like these. The Allegro was revealing itself as an element in the great present Event, a manifestation at one remove of the luminous bliss. Or perhaps that was putting it too mildly. In another modality this Allegro was the luminous bliss; it was the knowledgeless understanding of everything apprehended through a particular piece of knowledge. . . . Another report on music under the influence of LSD: Ordinarily, I am not particularly susceptible to music. This time, lying on the cot, I became acutely aware of the Montoya record playing. This was more than music: the entire room was saturated with sounds that were also feelings—sweet, delicious, sensual—that seemed to be coming from somewhere deep down inside me. I became mingled with the music, gliding along with the chords. . . . This was pure synesthesia, and I was part of the synthesis. I suddenly -knew- what it was to be simultaneously a guitar, the sounds, the ear that received them, and the organism that responded, in what was the most profoundly consuming esthetic experience I have ever had. (Richardson 1970, p. 53) Art Kleps, who calls himself Chief Boo-Hoo of the Neo-American Church, on the effect of 500 mg of mescaline: Every single word emanating from the radio got a magnificent image to go with it, as if the trivia being spoken had been the life's work of generations of media technicians on planets given over to the production of such artistic wonders—all for the purpose of this one showing in Art Kleps' one man screening room. (Kleps 1977, p. 13) Humphry Osmond, on 400 mg of mescaline: I looked into the glass of water. In its swirling depths was a vortex which went down to the center of the world and the heart of time. . . . A dog barked and its piercing reverberant howl might have been all the wolves in Tartary. . . . At one moment I would be a giant in a tiny cupboard, and the next, a dwarf in a huge hall. In spite of everything, I could behave almost normally. . . . I experienced my friend's criticism of me as physical discomfort. . . and this jarring was sometimes accompanied by a burning taste and smell. (Osmond 1970, pp. 26-27) A mescaline taker is reading about the death of Archimedes at the hands of a Roman soldier: . . Suddenly noises reach his ears, close-by, loud, resounding noises—the noises of the battle. Terrifying screams. Swords clashing. He hears violent blows striking the shields, walls collapsing, stones falling. As though he were out there in the open, in that city, in 212 B.C. It is the groans of the wounded, in particular, that have taken him to the spot. The uproar leaves him dizzy. . . . The psychologist Stanley Krippner, taking psilocybin at Harvard: I seemed to be in the middle of a three-dimensional Vermeer painting. . . . I felt overwhelmingly tuned in to the -true nature of things.- An apple. . . had been placed in my hand by one of the others. I bit into it and was astounded by the extraordinarily delicious taste, the perfection of it. -This is ambrosia, the food of the gods,- I declared, urging the others to sample the apple. . . . My mouth was a mammoth cavern and I seemed to be able to visualize the mastication, the swallowing, and the descent of the apple pulp through the esophagus. A San Francisco LSD devotee of the late 1960s summarizes as a spokesman for the drug culture: You haven't eaten, you haven't tasted, you haven't fucked, you haven't seen colors, your fingers haven't touched rock and soil until you've had acid, and then you know you're alive and you know what life is. (von Hoffman 1968, p. 143) Changes in body image and body feeling are described in these reports from four different subjects: Any part of the body may then seem "changed," and in a changed position. . . . Confronting the image in the mirror, I knew and yet did not know that this image was my own (although, oddly, it seemed to me later that there was, in the face of this tiger, something of my face). I reacted to the image, partly anyhow, as if it might be another tiger with whom I had come unexpectedly face to face. Yet something in me questioned the reality of the image, and I recall my bafflement when I ran my claws across the glass and touched the hard, flat surface. All the while I was making spitting and snarling noises and my muscles were tensed in readiness for combat. Finally, I turned away from the mirror and padded restlessly around the apartment, still making those sounds that somehow indicated to me bafflement and rage. (Masters and Houston 1966, pp. 76-77) ... what I saw was my own face in transition: in rapid succession, there were all the expressions I had ever seen before in a mirror—and many that I had not. A quizzical gaze turned quite sad, contemplative, amused, broke into a broad grin, and then changed to mournful, tragic, and finally tearful (real tears, it seemed)—all these faces within just a few seconds, and never the same face for longer than a brief moment.... As the faces changed, I also became older, younger, and then older again, each face with a different expression and a different age. (Richardson 1970, pp. 53-54) ... I became aware of the body that encased me as being very heavy and amorphous. Inside it, everything was stirring and seemed to be drawing me inward. I felt that I could count the beats, the throbbing of my heart, feel the blood moving through my veins, feel the passage of the breath as it entered and left the body, the nerves as they hummed with their myriad messages. Above all, I was conscious of my brain as teemingly alive, cells incredibly active, and my mental processes as possessing the unity of perfect precision. Yet this last, I suspected, was not really true and instead my mind, "drunk on its own ideas," was boastfully over-estimating its prowess. Slowed time or timelessness is a pervasive aspect of psychedelic experience, but the following report is somewhat unusual. It comes from Christopher Mayhew, a British M.P. and former journalist who took 400 mg of mescaline before television cameras in 1955 under the guidance of Humphry Osmond; After brooding about it for several months, I still think my first, astonishing conviction was right—that on many occasions that afternoon I existed outside time. He goes on to say that it is as if all events were in effect simultaneous for him and therefore could be experienced in any order. But the part of him that "knew" the future was unable to speak and could not foretell it for the people in the room. There was more: At irregular intervals—perhaps twice every five minutes at the peak of the experiment—I would become unaware of my surroundings, and enjoy an existence conscious of myself, in a state of breathless wonderment and complete bliss, for a period of time which—for me—simply did not end at all. It did not last for minutes or hours but apparently for years. During this period I would be aware of a pervasive bright, pure light, like an invisible sun snow. After five years, Mayhew called this experience the most interesting and thought-provoking of his life (Crocket et al. 1963, p. 173). A common interpretation of the perceptual effects is that an unusual number of sensory stimuli from outside and within the body are reaching the centers of awareness in the brain, which can no longer code and integrate them in the ordinary way (see Bradley and Key 1963). Anticipation, recollection, and all forms of functional classification that serve the needs of action and survival are eclipsed; formerly familiar phenomena are either neglected as irrelevant or actually not perceived, like the chair that Huxley had to struggle to recognize through a metaphysical-esthetic prism as the utilitarian object it normally was. The controlling, designing, and planning (executive) ego becomes otiose and tends to dissolve: combined with a heightened awareness of body sensations, this may cause the body to seem to melt into its surroundings. Here are some observations on how this perceptual disorganization-enhancement affects thought and speech: The profound links which create the authentic union are missing because administrative thinking, incessantly synthesizing and resynthesizing, is missing, thinking which in the course of writing considers the various possibilities of the sentence and selects. . . The guide asks a question and S responds that it is very difficult to give an answer entirely his own because it is almost impossible to eliminate the implied, suggested answer from a question. When he attempts to answer he finds that, simultaneously his mind "goes out" to find what the guide is asking for; he feels "closing in" on his mind and influencing him what he feels would be the guide's answer to the question; and "irrational impulses and instincts" come up "out of nowhere" to influence his answer and also in revolt against his feeling that an answer is being imposed from some external source. S remarks that these processes probably go on under nondrug conditions, but one is unaware of them. (Masters and Houston 1966, p. 28) . . The scraps of the sentence do not converge, I cannot force them to do so, words are like cliff faces, cliff units which do not interact, do not truly join. Why? Because in dealing with words, joining is always joining with a view to something (an idea, a need) which prevails over the others, or which the others will serve. And there is always someone who makes them join, makes them serve. .. someone whom this pleases, who finds it appropriate, who is its author, or at least its arranger. This "someone," here, can no longer do this. (Michaux 1974 [1966], pp. 31-32) Soon trains of thought started to appear between every word of every sentence. The speed of these thoughts seemed to promote euphoria, but it was a different matter when I tried putting my thoughts into words for H--'s benefit, and found intruding ideas between each pair of syllables; this can have a very demoralizing effect on a would-be speaker. I would begin a sentence, and by the time I had finished, sa many thoughts had piled up that I was at a total loss where to begin the next sentence. And by the time the next sentence was begun, such a further backlog of ideas would have accumulated that finishing it would be out of the question. Psychiatrists sometimes call this -thought blocking--wrongly, according to some drug users: When. . . he reads the words which he has spoken [apparently a transcript of a recording], he scarcely recognizes what has happened to him. . . . The stranger who, on reading these incoherent, unfinished, broken sentences, should attribute them purely and simply to a corresponding state of mental incoherence, would be almost wholly mistaken. A vast movement of coherence underlay the words. . . It is not sufficiently realized how unnatural it is to observe oneself aloud, not only in this particular case. Commenting on the spot is putting oneself in the way of what one feels. It is losing touch with it. (Michaux 1963 [1961], pp. 43-44) To separate the changes in perception and thought from emotional effects is somewhat artificial; new sights and sounds, new meanings, and new feelings come together. As in dreams, names and things merge magically, words become suffused with the qualities of the objects they designate, puns take on great significance, and the mechanisms of condensation and displacement operate. The flow of associations speeds up and moves erratically, thoughts are projected as images, meaningful connections appear between seemingly unrelated objects. Feelings with overtones of metaphysical insight arise: glimpses of the primordial and absolute, sensations of unreality or superreality. The need for explanation imposed by the intensified sense of significance may cause what appear to be ideas of reference, delusions of grandeur, and other paranoid reactions. It is as though the autonomy of the organizing systems of mood and perception, like that of the separate senses, breaks down, so that their impact on each other is greatly heightened. As objects become charged with symbolic meanings, they incorporate emotions, often of a religious nature; for example, the sun, becomes worthy of worship as the source of all light and heat, or a woman sees it as a cosmic lover. The enhanced impact of emotion is most striking in the way human beings are seen. A passing mood, a prominent physical feature, or an association with some imagined character trait can turn a face into a caricature; for example, someone known to be interested in Indians begins to look like an Indian, a person with a slightly porcine face looks like a pig, anguish or sadness distorts the drug taker's features in the mirror. Each person, including the drug user, tends to become something more than himself: sometimes himself at all ages, or the representative who symbolically incorporates all the features of some human group, or a mythical archetype embodying an important human characteristic, or a character out of history or fiction. Although strangers often look ugly, vicious, or ludicrous, the drug user usually knows that they are not really like that. But he may anxiously read distorted perceptions of his own face as a vision of his true character. Love or friendship for another is often translated into a beauty that the drug taker regards as symbolic of the loved person's inner nature. People may be seen surrounded by tangles of wires, loops, and electrical and color emanations that are regarded as representations of their complexity in visual form. A feeling that one is merging with another person may be associated with a vision of organic fibers connecting the two bodies. Even apart from perceptual distortions, feelings toward other people become unusually intense. The drug taker becomes painfully or pleasurably sensitive to their gestures, voice inflections, and facial expressions; he is likely to read volumes of meaning into a casual phrase or movement. He may feel emotional isolation to the point of terror, or intense empathy to the point of literally identifying with another person. A sense of deep, wordless, almost telepathic communication or a feeling (often overvalued and overcelebrated) of universal love for mankind is not uncommon. Users of MDA especially, not hampered by anxiety-provoking perceptual distortions and mood changes, often sense this empathic awareness of others' thoughts. Mescaline and LSD enhance primary suggestibility (defined as execution of movements or experience of cognitive or perceptual change in response to repeated suggestions by another person that they will occur) in the same way hypnosis does (Sjoberg and Hollister 1965). This heightened responsiveness toward others makes the role of the guide or therapist who supervises a psychedelic trip particularly important. The emotional atmosphere of a psychedelic session is spectacularly unstable. A minor change in the environment—a noise, the appearance of a new person on the scene, the sun passing behind a cloud—often creates an entirely new mood. Giggly euphoria, irritability, fear, depression, boundless love and joy pass in swift succession. There may also be intense emotions without any apparent object, or several conflicting emotions at once; tests show high scores on ambivalence (Katz 1970). Drug users refer to emotions or combiriations of emotions they have never felt before. These changes in feeling appear at the lowest doses, even before perceptual effects: 20 micrograms of LSD produce euphoria and unmotivated smiling (Vojtéchovsk5r et al. 1972). (This exaggerated sense of the amusing can accelerate into what is sometimes called posmic mirth.) The dominant emotional tone of a trip depends, of course, on set and setting; but no one would use the drugs if the experience were not often pleasant. In one experiment, subjects were given 100 to 200 micrograms of LSD and later asked to classify eighteen experiences in the order of their prominence. The first eight were euphoric relaxation, understanding, mystical wonder, esthetic sensations, empathy, religious feelings, alertness, and perceptual disturbances; the last five were depression, delusions, hostility, anxiety, and hallucinations (Ditman and Bailey 1967); 80 percent of the subjects enjoyed the trip. In another experiment with different people in different circumstances, about half had a more or less euphoric reaction and half a more or less depressive one (Levine et al. 1955b). But terms like pleasant and unpleasant, good trip and bad trip, are too crude to reveal much about this complicated experience. They suggest a kind of holiday for the mind, about which the appropriate question is whether you had a good time. But psychedelic trips, even when they begin as holiday tours, often turn into voyages of exploration filled with hardship; the appropriate question then is not whether you suffered but whether it was worth- i while. The emotional territory traversed by psychedelic voyagers includes regions to which they give names like Limbo, Chaos, the Desert, the Ice Country, and, of course, Heaven and Hell. Often they are perceived as actual places or -spaces,- an expression that has passed into ordinary language as a metaphor for emotional states but can be felt during an LSD trip with the weight of the literal. To list, classify, and rate as pleasant or unpleasant the emotions of a psychedelic experience is no easier or more useful than trying to list, classify, and rate all human emotions; in fact, it is the same task. The following two quotations, one long and one short but evocative, illustrate the multifarious ways in which the senses and the emotions impinge on each other under the influence of psychedelic drugs: And suddenly—destruction! The air was thick with the ammonia smell of death. Noxious vapors stung the eyes and choked the throat. The stench of the Apocalypse rose up with the opening of the graves of the new and old dead. It was the nostrils' view of the Night on Bald Mountain, an olfactory Walpurgisnacht rite. The world had become a reeking decay. Then I heard R rebuking someone with the words: "Christ, Timmy, couldn't you have used your sandbox?" Timmy was the cat and the apocalyptic smell had issued from a single turd he had deposited in the middle of the floor. I pick up a book. Hard to read. I skip a chapter. Suddenly the shadow of the pages I have turned, shifting, becomes large, too large, falls across me, across my life. A shadow that is unbearable, heavy, crushing, which I must be rid of as soon as possible. (Michaux 1974 [1966], p. 68) . . . Two subjects, S-7 and S-8, were participants in a group session. Previous to the session these two men had only a nodding acquaintance. But during the session they But this sense of sharing may be merely a projection: For example, during a group LSD session, a male subject, S-18, told a female friend: "Walls are falling away from me. My walls are crumbling down.- He then observed her closely for a while and added: "And your walls are falling away, too. You're not so damned enigmatic as you usually are. I feel for the first time that I really know you." S told the guide later in the session that he had felt an intense communion with his friend, "a communion much closer than any sexual communion." Masters and Houston describe how twins (it is implied but not stated that they were identical) found themselves taking the same trip and -became- one person: For the first hour or two of the session, the pair kept up their customary bickering. Then they became absorbed in their altered sense perceptions and images and soon began comparing notes. To their astonishment each was experiencing almost the same changes of perception and the same images experienced by the other. They repeatedly inquired of the three other subjects in the room what those subjects were experiencing; and found, somewhat to their dismay, that the others were having quite different and highly individualized experiences. Psychedelic feelings are often so profound, and so inseparable from the accompanying thoughts, that they turn into proofs of some metaphysical or ethical wisdom. In a letter Huxley describes his experience with mescaline in a group session: For five hours I was given a series of luminous illustrations of the Christian saying, -Judge not that ye be not judged- and the Buddhist saying, "To set up what you like against what you dislike, that is the disease of the mind." (Bedford 1974, p. 564) Another metaphysical emotion expressed by Huxley was "an unspeakable gratitude for the privilege of being born into this universe ('Gratitude is heaven itself,' said Blake—and I know now exactly what he was talking about)" The writer Alan Harrington describes similar metaphysical emotions during one of his trips: Why was the experience so rewarding? The inner space traveler feels invaded by a huge force. He felt the walls of consciousness opened by an enormous thrust, and he was cast out of time. .. . He felt that he was reliving the history of the species, and only incidentally of himself. Crying out, he groped and crawled over a soft living-room rug, his ancient mud and swamp, before he was able to stand erect and think again. When he came back down to the present, and the do-it-yourself brain-washing was over, he felt clean and marvelously refreshed. The ecstatic and sometimes hellish passage also provided an atheist with what can be described as a religious or anyway metaphysical insight, and this has not dimmed. To one who has never thought in terms of lotuses, reincarnations, stages of existence, etc., and who through the years has been irritated by the enthusiasts of Eastern philosophy, the LSD journey brought evidence of recurring personal death and rebirth. It made possible a vision of eternity not unlike those of Blake and Swedenborg. (Harrington 1966, P. 73) Everything that I could think about was insanely and pitiably funny. The world. The universe. All the poor sweet pitiful people I knew. Myself. What a scene! Filled with noble, ridiculous people! The world, the world! A dying unbeliever breaks out into religious emotion: Quite early in the session Matthew felt an intense need for warmth and reached for Joan (the second author). She responded immediately and held and cradled him for more than four hours. He continued listening to the music in this way with an ecstatic expression on his face; his features showed an unusual mixture of infantile bliss and mystical rapture. He was uttering seemingly disconnected sentences that sounded alternately like excerpts from Buddhist texts and accounts of Jewish and Christian mystics: "One world and one universe. . all is one. .. nothing and everything ... everything and nothing. . . nothing is everything. . . let it go when it's time. . . it does not make any difference. . . disease. . . injury. . it is either the real thing or it is not . lower forms and higher forms. .. the glittering extremities of his majesty's possession . . . so I am immortal. . . it is true! . R. Gordon Wasson on the Mazatec Indian psilocybin mushroom rite: It permits you to see, more clearly than our perishing mortal eye can see, vistas beyond the horizons of this life, to travel backward and forward in time, to enter other planes of existence, even (as the Indians say) to know God. It is hardly surprising that your emotions are profoundly affected, and you feel that an indissoluble bond unites you with the others who have shared in the sacred agape. All that you see during this night has a pristine quality; the landscape, the edifices, the carvings, the animals—they look as though they had come straight from the Maker's workshop. This newness of everything—it is as though the world had just dawned—overwhelms you and melts you with beauty.. .. All these things you see with an immediacy of vision that leads you to say to yourself, "Now I am seeing for the first time, seeing direct, without the intervention of mortal eyes.". . . Michaux tries to convey the purity, intensity, and infinite quality of some of his feelings: Absence. Long absence. He "comes to himself" sitting on a bench. The harmony which now fills him is indescribable. He experiences a rightness, a rightness of extraordinary scope, a rightness of which he had no idea. Michaux conveys his experience of self-loathing by describing the vision of a demon: As soon as I am in difficulty, there appears that repulsive face which I have already seen thirty or forty times, that face which I immediately turn away from, rushing off to throw water over my hands and forehead, that horrible, grimacing face which exultingly follows my thoughts, the thoughts of a man at bay. It is not God, it is the demon who sees man, who is man's conscience. (Michaux 1975 [1964], p. 144) The grimaces of the demon are an experimental phenomenon. In my normal state and even in dreams I had never in my life seen such an unbearable Luciferian face. It is these metaphysically tinged emotions, rather than mere hallucinations or finite delusions, that make the worst trip. Being pursued by visionary demons and monsters is nothing compared with the following experiences. It should be emphasized that such things are not very common; if they were, no one would ever use the drugs. William Braden, a religious journalist, describes the effect of 500 mg of mescaline: A majestic Beethoven chord exploded inside my brain, and I instantly disappeared. My body no longer existed, and neither did the world. . . . I could feel the pressure of the earphones; but in the space between the phones, where my head should have been, there was absolutely nothing. . . nothing! I was mind alone, lost in an icy blue grotto of sound. . . . The notes danced along a silver staff of music that stretched from one eternity to another, beyond the planets and the stars and then I myself was one of the notes. I was being swept along on the silver staff, at twice the speed of light, rushing farther and farther away from my home back there in the Milky Way. In desperation, at the last possible moment, I reached up with hands I did not own, and I tore off the earphones. (Braden 1968 [1967], p. 193) The experience becomes deeper: ... I was Being. I was the vibrant force that filled the room. I was the world, the universe. I was everything. I was that which always was and always would be. I was Him, and Jim was me, and we were everybody else; and everybody else was us.... Having been reunited with the Ground of my Being, I wanted urgently to be estranged from it again as quickly as possible.... I don't want to be God, I said. I don't even want to be city editor. But it did no good to laugh, and I stopped trying. Of course, I wasn't God. But I was All That There Was, and I didn't want to be that, either.... I was Everybody, the Self. And now I knew what the little selves were for, I thought. They were a fiction designed to protect the Self from knowledge of its own Being—to keep the Self from going mad.... Notice that Braden is able to preserve some detachment—even to the point of being able to joke about it—at the height of his metaphysical terror. This persistence of the detached observing ego is common even in the most intense psychedelic experiences. But it can be overwhelmed, as the following classic bad trip shows: The room darkened and the music faded. I was lying on my back on the floor. Then the room itself vanished and I was sinking, sinking, sinking. From far away I heard, very faintly, the word "death." I sank faster, turning and falling a million light years from the earth. The word got louder and more insistent. It took shape around me, closing me in. "DEATH ... DEATH ... DEATH." I thought of the dread in my father's eyes in his final hours. At the last instant before my own death I shouted, "No." Absolute terror, total horror. With immense effort I began to lift myself back to life. It seemed to take an eternity. John Lilly, the dolphin scientist and psychic explorer, after taking 300 micrograms of LSD: Suddenly I was precipitated into what I later called the "cosmic computer." I was merely a very small program in somebody else's huge computer. There were tremendous energies in this computer. There were fantastic energy flows and information Allen Ginsberg took ayahuasca in Peru in 1960 and lay down expecting God knows what other pleasant vision and then I began to get high—and then the whole fucking Cosmos broke loose around me, I think the strongest and worst I've ever had it nearly. . . . First I began to realize my worry about the mosquitoes or vomiting was silly as there was the great stake of life and Death—I felt faced by Death, my skull in my beard on pallet on porch rolling back and forth and settling finally as if in reproduction of the last physical move I make before settling into real death—got nauseous, coughed and began vomiting, all covered with snakes, like a Snake Seraph, colored serpents in aureole all around my body, I felt like a snake vomiting out the universe. . . my death to come—everyone's death to come—all unready—I unready—all around me in the trees the noise of these spectral animals and other drinkers vomiting (normal part of the Cure sessions) in the night in their awful solitude in the universe. . . . The whole hut seemed rayed with spectral presences all suffering transfiguration with contact with a single mysterious Thing that was our fate and was sooner or later going to kill us. . . . I was frightened and simply lay there with wave after wave of death-fear, fright, rolling over me till I could hardly stand it, didn't want to take refuge in rejecting it as illusion, for it was too real and too familiar . . . finally had a sense that I might face the Question there and then, and choose to die and understand—and leave my body to be found in the morning. . . decided to have children somehow, a revolution in the Hallucination—but the suffering was about as much as I could bear and the thought of more suffering even deeper to come made me despair. . . . Córdova-Rios' last ayahuasca trip in the jungle: I broke out in a dripping, running sweat, and a terrible nausea coupled with deep abdominal convulsions blotted out all other sensations. I remember groping for one control mechanism, but they all escaped me. . . sinister menacing tentacles began to form and extend toward me. Each became a hideous viper with flashing eyes and tongue. I was incapable of moving and found myself writhing on the ground enveloped in their undulating coils. . . . The visions of his family caused him to leave for home, where he became a healer and continued to use ayahuasca. I had been up for three days and two nights working on a manuscript. That was the first mistake. The room where the -experiment- was to take place was a dirty, dingy, insanely cluttered pesthole. That was the second mistake. I was told that I would see God. That was the third and worst mistake of all. The sexual effects of all psychoactive drugs are variable because the central nervous system is connected with sexual functions in such a complicated and indirect way. For obvious reasons, that is even more true of psychedelic drugs than others. The basic rule, for stronger psychedelic drugs as for marihuana, is that they heighten sexual interest and enjoyment only when the user is already inclined that way. They are anything but a stimulus to indiscriminate activity. Nevertheless, if temperaments, mood, and circumstances are right, they can produce an extraordinary intensification, prolongation, and elaboration of sexual experience, as they can for almost any experience. A book published in the 1960s was entitled The Sexual Paradise of LSD (Alexander 1967). Timothy Leary, suiting his remarks to the audience, has described LSD for Playboy as -basically a sexual experience,- as -the most powerful aphrodisiac ever discovered by man,- and as a panacea for impotence, frigidity, and homosexuality; he speaks of -electric and erotic- touch and -cellular orgasm- (Leary 1973). This is not just an attempt to recruit the Playboy readership for the drug revolution. About the quality of psychedelic sex, some say that it often has a kind of Edenic innocence, others that it becomes symbolically charged; a sexual partner may change in age or appearance, take on the features of mythical and historical figures, and sometimes come to represent all men, all women, or natural features like landscapes, rivers, and oceans. But psychedelic drugs are not a reliable way to increase sexual pleasure any more than to achieve other emotional states. They not only enhance sexuality but transform it, often to the point where it becomes hardly recognizable; and they can be as powerfully anaphrodisiac as aphrodisiac. In the varying moods of the drug trip, intense sexual desire may suddenly turn into equally intense disgust or fear, or it may be transcended in a feeling of all-embracing cosmic love that makes mere sexual pleasure seem trivial and irrelevant. A 1975 study of drugs and sex in Haight-Ashbury throws some light on this subject. Hippies interviewed there regard LSD and -mescaline- (probably LSD or PCP) as more effective sexual drugs than any others except cocaine and marihuana. Psychedelic drugs are said to enhance tactile sensitivity, general sensuality, the quality and number of orgasms, and the capacity to act out sexual fantasies. The main problems they create are in maintaining an erection and sustaining sexual desire. Low doses are recommended; high doses are said to take the user beyond sex as well as most other mundane preoccupations. In spite of its powers, taking LSD is followed by sexual intercourse fewer than one out of eight times; the experience is simply too intense, they say, for greater frequency (Gay et al. 1975). Nowadays MDA has a particularly high reputation as a sexual drug, since it is believed to produce psychedelic sensuality and intimacy without perceptual distortions and wild emotional swings. Ram Dass (Richard Alpert) remarks: Tim is absolutely right about LSD enhancing sex. Before taking LSD, I never stayed in a state of sexual ecstasy for hours on end, but I have done this under LSD. . . . Each caress or kiss is timeless. (Playboy Panel 1970) Art Kleps is less enthusiastic: Personally, I have found acid to be as sexually distracting as it is intensifying, although grass almost always makes a sexual experience more sensual and luxurious than it would be otherwise, as it does all direct and immediate experience we usually cloud over with game-planning. . . . Acid, although producing exactly the same intensifications of present experience and abolition of perceptual and sensual inhibitions as marijuana, is always pushing beyond—like a geisha who, once she has her customer well enchanted, starts reading from the Tale of Genji and manifesting glorious visions on the surface of the carp pool in her moonlit garden. Under such circumstances, getting laid seems like something you might as well put off until tomorrow. If you insist anyway, it's absolutely true that the experience is in a class by itself, especially on a visionary level. Enough variety to satisfy the most jaded palate, one might say. It's like taking on central casting. But people who routinely use acid in this way are tamasic [approximately, -inertial.] types in almost every case, I have found: devoid of higher aspirations or interests beyond the satisfaction of their personal needs. (Kleps 1977, p. 104) The following account is by a twenty-five-year-old married woman (notice the guilt she feels) who went with her lover, an art student, to a national park on the Pacific Coast for her first LSD experience (he did not take any drug): I first noticed the effects of the drug when I opened my compact and caught a glimpse of myself in the small mirror. Staring back at me was an old, wizened face mottled with warts and whiskers. The eyes were sunk deep in the sockets, the mouth was puckered like the ring of an orange peel, and the skin was blotched by a dull brown color. "Would I look like this when I grew old?" I asked myself. I had once seen a film where a beautiful young girl had been instantly transformed into a wrinkled old hag. That scene immediately came back to my mind and, although I realized that the image I saw was the effect of the drug, I couldn't help feeling depressed at the thought of aging. The transformation of sexual feeling can go even further. Michaux describes a sexual fantasy, or rather an experience for which the words "sexual" and-fantasy,- the closest ones available, seem totally inadequate: Great gushes of bodies stream past me, interlinked, interlocked, astraddle, adrift, trunks intertwined, holding on to each other. . Earth, waters, mountains, trees writhe in riots of debauchery. All is fashioned by delight, for delight, but delight of a superhuman variety, ranging from the most excited rapture to a kind of half-death where searing pleasure yet seeps in.... When mescaline at its highest point of intensity throws itself upon one who is naturally voluptuous, who was hoping to play the game of love with the drug, when it abruptly releases its galvanizing trance, its amazing multiplied quiverings, into the stream of languishments, into the cradle of the gentle current, which immediately becomes like a torrent, like a cataract, intersecting through thousands of pin-points, which it divides and atomizes, then it is really no longer a question of sensuality, but of something quite different. . . . (Michaux 1975 [1964], p. 174) The following passages from two descriptions of psychedelic experiences by a writer, Daniel Breslaw, embody a number of themes we have mentioned. First, psilocybin taken in an experiment: The three of them stiffened audibly. Audibly, because of the new acuity of my senses. The rustling of their clothes sounded in my head as someone crumpling cellophane behind my ear. Recalling Superman's ability to detect the footfall of an ant a thousand miles away, I strained to do likewise. And then I imagined a dull boom as the ant's foot struck the earth, and I began to throb with muffled laughter.... Second, mescaline: There is no describing my state, except as one of pain. Not pain about anything, for any thought that crossed my mind proved equally distressing; all thoughts were drawn from a reservoir that was the essence of pain itself. As for its intensity, the mind reels: I should have preferred any degree of physical torture. I began to walk. . . . Each block that I covered I strongly visualized as a mile into Hell.... Finally, one of Timothy Leary's trips: The Timothy Leary game was suspended and the needle point of consciousness was free to move into any one of thirteen billion nerve cells or down any one of a billion billion genetic-code networks. . . I opened my eyes. I was in heaven. Illumination. Every object in the room was a radiant structure of atomic-god-particles. Radiating. Matter did not exist. There was just this million-matrix lattice-web of energies. . . . Everything hooked up in a cosmic dance. Fragile. Indestructible. . . . Tests of perceptual, psychomotor, and cognitive capacity under the influence of psychedelic drugs are difficult to execute and interpret, partly because subjects tend to regard the testing with emotions ranging from annoyed indifferefice to derision and scorn. One subject described his impression of the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory as "redundant, offensive, and ambiguous baby-talk" (Fischer 1972, p. 187). For this reason it is impossible to tell whether the lowered scores on various functions are caused by impaired capacity or decreased interest. Someone who is experiencing all-absorbing interest in a crack on the opposite wall, or a feeling that his body and ego are about to melt away is unlikely to be able to concentrate on counting backward by sevens from one hundred. If he is persuaded to try to do it, he may become so fascinated by the implications of the magic number seven that he can no longer count at all, much less count correctly. Whether we say he -cannot- or -does not want to- count backward makes little difference; what matters is the specific content of the emotion or perception that is preventing it. Nevertheless, there is a large body of experimental work on this topic. In general, it confirms the enormous individual variability of reactions. None of these experiments involves amounts larger than about 100 micrograms of LSD or the equivalent, because it is impossible to test anyone under the influence of a dose large enough to produce the most profound effects. The testing itself also prevents deeper exploration. According to some studies, psychedelic drugs not only heighten the senses subjectively but actually enhance measurable perceptual sensitivity on tests like color discrimination and the response to visual and auditory stimuli of low intensity (Silverman 1971). Other researchers deny this (Hartman and Hollister 1963; Hollister 1974). Sensitivity to high-intensity stimulation and especially to pain is usually reduced. Psychedelic drugs seem to increase the level of critical flicker fusion (CFF), the speed at which a flashing light begins to look like a steady one. An image stabilized in one spot on the retina of the eye, which normally fades from sight quickly, is retained longer under the influence of psychedelic drugs (Jarvik 1967). The effect of moderate doses on intellectual capacity is usually to impair simple problem-solving, recognition, short-term memory, verbal comprehension, verbal memory, abstract thinking, and numerical calculation as measured by tests (Sankar 1975, pp. 348-350; Barr et al. 1972, pp. 46-51; Levine et al. 1955a; Jarvik et al. 1955). The drugs slow manual response to color and word signals (Abramson et al. 1955b) and in some tests impair hand-eye coordination (Abramson et al. 1955a). Disturbances also occur on word association tests. LSD produces more "close" associations (rhymes, repetition of the stimulus word, definitions) than a placebo; but unlike schizophrenia and manic-depressive psychosis, it does not also produce more "distant" associations like proper names and references to oneself. It also has the unusual property of causing as many uncommon or pathological responses to neutral words like "farm" as to words with high traumatic content, like "breast." LSD subjects give the most common responses less often and respond more slowly,(Weintraub et al. 1959). Raters who try to fill in deleted words from written samples of spontaneous speech do much better with placebo subjects than with LSD subjects; this suggests that LSD reduces the predictability and information content of speech (Amarel and Cheek 1965). H. L. Barr, R. J. Langs, and their colleagues found that lists of aggressive and sexual words were learned faster than lists of neutral words by LSD subjects but not by placebo subjects; they concluded that LSD impaired the autonomy of cognitive functions so that aggressive and sexual drives took over an organizing and selecting role (Barr et al. 1972, pp. 54-59). On the Rorschach test, they found that LSD affected form more than content; in psychoanalytical terms, this suggested changes in ego function rather than id expres sion (Barr and Langs 1972, p. 79). On Rorschach responses, LSD impaired the more sophisticated controls like remoteness (seeing a man in skirts and describing him as a Scot in kilts) and context (seeing a sexual organ and calling it an anatomical drawing); it increased the use of "primitive" defenses like perceptual vagueness, retraction, and denial, and reduced use of intellectualizing defenses like obsessional thinking (Barr and Langs 1972, p. 76). As the gulf between these experimental results and the excerpts quoted indicates, study of psychedelic reactions by such methods is obviously inadequate. The subtle interplay between the drug and the mind requires other approaches. One is to correlate drug effects with the personality of the user as determined by tests and clinical observations. That is what Barr, Langs, and their colleagues did in a study published in 1972, using psychoanalytic theory for interpretation. They administered 100 micrograms of LSD to thirty young men (separately) in a special laboratory room draped in black. Staff members observed each subject during the experiment; questionnaires and psychological tests were given before, during, and after it. The moderate dose, the continual testing, and the rather forbidding environment prevented the most striking emotional extremes, fantasy, regression, and insight; but the experimenters were able to identify several classes of drug reaction and associate them with different personality types. From responses to questionnaires and staff ratings during the sessions, four symptom clusters were derived and the subjects' degree of reaction in each category judged. The four clusters were: A. Elation, loss of inhibitions, loss of control of attention, and perceiving new meanings The subjects fell into seven groups defined by questionnaire and rating results on these scales; six of them resembled groups determined by personality tests beforelhe drug session. These were: I. Emotionally open, narcissistic, exhibitionistic men with high self-esteem, intellectual, introspective, creative, colorful in their use of words, willing to accept their impulses. In their drug sessions the emphasis was on self-knowledge and sensuous pleasure; Scale A symptoms were dominant, and they shifted easily from rich fantasies to performing experimental tasks. II. Poorly integrated, schizoid personalities, with low self-esteem, stereotyped thinking, inability to express anger verbally, and a tendency to somatize (manifest psychological problems in physical symptoms). The impact of LSD on this inadequately defended group was tremendous. Scale A and B symptoms were dominant. A great deal of unconscious (primary-process) material broke through into consciousness. They felt manic elation and often lost their ego boundaries and power to test reality; they saw fascinating or frightening visions, and their thinking was seriously impaired. Nevertheless, most of them enjoyed the experience and wanted to take LSD again. III. A group characterized by passive-aggressive attitudes, inner turmoil, suppressed sensuality, and a tendency to submit to paternal figures. The peculiarity of their drug reaction was that it was powerful but quickly over. Scale B and Scale D symptoms were dominant: silliness, uncontrolled laughter, and anxiety. Cognitive functioning remained more or less intact, as in Group I. IV. Obsessional, emotionally bland and defensive, verbally aggressive men, rebels who tended to anticipate exploitation and externalize blame. They felt mainly Scale C and especially Scale D effects: infantile helplessness and a flood of anxiety over rising hostile feelings. The men in their drawings became smaller, weaker, older, and less sexual; the women became more active and acquired hostile facial expressions. V. Poorly integrated personalities who tended to be anxious, paranoid, withdrawn, and obsessional but not overtly depressed or hostile; they were also creative and introspective, and they liked to indulge in hypomanic role-playing or clowning. Their ego functioning was poor. Under LSD they scored very high on Scales C and D, especially the former. In their drawings males became less sexual, females more sexual. They produced very earLy memories, but their intellectual capacity remained intact. VI. Independent, assertive, practical men, low in fantasy and sensuality, with some tendency toward defensiveness and a feeling of being unloved. Their reaction was slight: scores on all four symptom scales were low; drawings and Rorschach tests changed little. They felt only some fluctuations of mood and minor physical symptoms. Strong defensive needs and matching capacities limited the tendency to regress. The authors believe that LSD acts mainly by altering ego defenses in individually characteristic ways, thereby confirming the theory, sometimes challenged, that stable and persistent personality traits are as important as the immediate situation in determining behavior. In this experiment the use of a single moderate dose, the laboratory setting, a certain uniformity in the subjects (all were male, all were unemployed actors, and an unusually large proportion were homosexual), and the absence of expectations, advice, or guidance created serious limitations. To do justice to the spectacular qualities of some psychedelic drug trips, classifications based on wider experience are needed. Timothy Leary has devoted some attention to this subject, especially in his popular Baedeker for drug voyagers, The Psychedelic Experience: A Manual Based on the Tibetan Book of the Dead (1964). Other accounts have been given by R. E. L. Masters and Jean Houston, and more recently by Stanislav Grof. Masters and Houston guided more than two hundred individual LSD sessions, using fairly high doses of up to 300 micrograms. The setting was more like a living room than a laboratory; they prepared the subjects by explanations, and they provided props (music, art, flowers, and so on) and suggestions during the trip. For analytic purposes they divide the experience into four stages or levels: the sensory, the recollective-analytic, the symbolic, and the integral. The sensory level encompasses the common mood alterations and changes in the look, sound, smell, taste, and feel of things, including the closed-eye imagery in its early stages. Since this is the most accessible part of the experience and the most familiar, its importance is often overestimated. The dose may be too low to push things further, or the drug taker may avoid deeper exploration by finding distractions. But if the dose is high enough to force the issue, or the drug taker chooses to experience more, he can move on to the recollective-analytic level. Here an upsurge from the unconscious produces a recovery of forgotten childhood events, age-regression, and a release of repressed feeling through abreaction (discharge of emotion by means of recall). The emotional problems and conflicts of childhood are revived and childhood experiences like weaning, toilet training, and early sexual incidents may be relived. At this stage deep underlying emotions often dominate consciousness: low self-esteem, infantile dependency or rage, demands for attention, need for dominance or submission. Sometimes these feelings are opposed to the everyday character patterns of the subject: timid and anxious people become hostile and aggressive, those who feel inferior become grandiose and overconfident, autocratic characters display a deep insecurity, and macho men reveal doubts about their masculinity. Such experiences are often elicited in therapy, and this is the level where cures of neurotic symptoms are said to occur. Some examples of these relivings, recollections, and emotional abreactions: Dr. Hanscarl Leuner, of Goettingen, Germany, tells of a patient who had an attack of violent nausea under LSD and was oppressed with the smell of a particular antiseptic. As he drifted further into the experience he seemed to be surrounded by a milky fluid or fog; he became aware that he was a baby, but even more aware of a pain in his stomach and the feeling that he was dying. Checking later with his parents and doctors, the man discovered that when he was about six months old he had been ill with colic and had almost died. Doctor and parents alike identified the antiseptic they had used as the one he had smelled under LSD. (Caldwell 1969 [1968], p. 74) ... Richard suddenly deeply regressed into infancy and experienced himself as a one-year-old baby swaddled in a blanket and lying on the grass by a field, while the adults were harvesting grain. He saw a cow approach him, graze in the immediate proximity of his head, and then lick his face several times with her huge, rough tongue. During the reliving of this episode, the head of the cow seemed gigantic and almost filled the session room. Richard found himself gazing helplessly into the monstrous salivating mouth of the cow and felt her saliva flowing all over his face. After having relived the happy ending of this situation, in which the adults discovered what was happening and rescued the baby, Richard felt enormous relief and a surge of vitality and activity. He laughed for a solid five minutes and was able to joke about his shocking encounter with the cow. (Grof 1975, p. 59) Experiences of this kind in therapy are often produced by MDA: At this point a reminiscence gradually began to dawn on him. "Something happened with the gardener—there was a gardener in the house—and something happened, I don't remember what—. I see myself sitting on his lap—can this be true?" Then there was an image of the gardener's penis and his sucking it, then a feeling of his face being wet, all of a sudden, and his perplexity. All this had something to do with little pictures which came in cigarette packages, and he gradually remembered that this man gave them to him in exchange for sexual manipulations. And he did not want them for himself. . . no, for his sister. . . yes, for his sister he would do this, so that she would have these little prints for her collection. . . for she was competing with his older brother, and this brother (now he remembers the important part) . . . his brother caught him! He remembers him looking into the garage, and he remembers his own fear—his brother would tell his parents! Another MDA therapy session: The verbal kind of communication we were having did not seem to put him in touch with his ongoing experience at the moment, so I turned to the non-verbal level. I asked him to let his body do whatever it wanted most at the moment, without questioning it, and he went back to the couch. . . . After two pleasant hours— At this point, his enthusiasm was clouded by a different feeling... . I repeatedly instructed him to express and elaborate on his experience of the moment, but this he rejected more and more: "It is not this, it is not this moment, but something in my past. Something happened to me, and I don't know what." From the recollective-analytic level the subject may pass on, with or without suggestion from a guide, to the symbolic level—what Leary calls, after Hermann Hesse, the "magic theater.- The drug taker's self merges more and more with the imagery until it is actually participating in the scenes passing before the closed eyes. Image and emotion become one as unconscious material appears in the form of symbolic objects and metaphorical allusions. One patient in psycholytic therapy felt herself become "literally—a closed-up clam at the bottom of the sea, the music of a violin, Botticelli's 'Birth of Venus,' an evil fur thing, a scared sperm; and in one magnificent episode. . . the very Energy that exists before it is translated into Matter- (Newland 1962, p. 20). The drug user takes part imaginatively in exotic rites and ceremonies, assumes the character of famous historical figures, lives through the archetypal adventures described in myths and fairy tales, symbolically acts out childhood fantasies of murder, cannibalism, and incest, relives his own conception and birth. A therapist or friend can play the role of Virgil on these symbolic interior journeys, suggesting ways to direct the fantasy in more illuminating and tranfiguring directions, The symbolic adventures seem to convey the same meanings as dreams, myths, and fairy tales, but they are unusually vivid and explicit in their application to the individual's life. Masters and Houston even speak of "transparent allegory- in which the meaning of the fantastic journeys is explained to the subject by visualized diagrams or cartoons. Among the mythical themes they and others have found are the Child-Hero, the Creation, the Eternal Return, Paradise and the Fall, the Sacred Quest, and Prometheus-Faust. They devote a section to the enchanted forest, with its fairytale creatures out of Celtic and Teutonic mythology, as the symbolic abode of the childhood self of many American subjects. In this state consciousness is even more protean than in dreams. The subject is both actor and observer, both child and adult, both himself and the mythical hero. We have already quoted some accounts that touch on the symbolic level, but there is much more. Here is an example of early memories and unconscious drives projected in symbolic form, from a book on psychedelic drug therapy: One of the commonest mother archetypes in psychedelic therapy is the so-called mystic mother. . . . My voice died away. My soul had entered heaven but I was perfectly aware that a facade remained in that room, a facade that must appear at every moment more and more curious to the observer. But then the music swept through me, and I cared no more. Exalted and urgent, I was struggling up and up, through the clouds of blue-green evening sky, where the stars hung low and bright. I didn't know what I was seeking, but I felt its immanence, and it seemed an answer to every hunger I had ever known. At the final triumphant chords the heavens parted. Before me, radiant in a glory of light, stood an altar covered with pink roses. On it lay a child; behind it, great wings of indigo, royal blue, and purple extended outward to the ends of the earth. In their center was an angel whose face I could not see, an angel whose presence breathed the clearest light of tenderness and compassion that I had ever known. Another symbolically transformed memory from the same source: Suddenly 1 found myself standing on a desert of white sand and ashen rocks. The sky was burned to a metallic gray by the blinding sun. The sturdy cactus, the lifeless sage, the very air seemed to wither at its touch. The stillness itself was a horror. No leaf would ever stir; no rain would fall; no scream of anguish would change that pitiless silence of heat and shimmering light. I seemed to face a doom of slow attrition, of agonized waiting for something that would never occur. . . . Sexual fantasies are common: She had just finished incorporating the male aspects of her psyche into consciousness, and she gasped at the strength that flooded her body, flexing her muscles in the sudden access of power .. . she fantasied a sexual act in which she was both male and female. The beauty and power were both hers. And while she exulted in this union of her psydhe, she realized that she was one thing more. For out of the union of herself with herself issued a child, a product of the creation who was also herself, transformed, renewed, recreated from the lost, locked energies and limbos of the subconscious. (Caldwell 1969 [1968], p. 267) Some time ago I observed a patient trying to resolve an impotence problem. As is sometimes helpful, he fantasied himself in the sex act, to observe what imaginary complications might occur. They were not long in appearing. Oppressed by a sudden fear, he looked to find an enormous black spider spreading a web about the head of the bed. .. . Instead of attacking him, as he had expected, the spider advanced toward the patient's fantasied sexual partner. While the patient watched in a sweat of horror, the spider .. . slowly and stealthily placed its stinger in her womb and injected the black poison of death. By this time the patient was in torment, but psychedelic therapy is not for the fainthearted and he would not not back away. "Who is it?" he groaned. . . it turned into a hideous old crone. . . the old woman had turned into a girl. "It's a girl!" he said, staring intently into the inner space of his psyche. "Oh, my God, it's me! It's a girl me! I was jealous of all the women, my mother and grandmother and my sister. The girl is myself fighting a battle of supremacy with the other women, just as I fought the battle with males. How could it be?" Nobody knows quite how it can be, but it is. Nearly every psychedelic patient hits on the fact eventually. (Caldwell 1969 [1968], pp. 222-223) First he lingered on the female anatomy, finding excitement in the female vagina. Later the center of attraction shifted to the anus. As he explored these associations it seemed that the attraction to the female body was but a projection of his own sensual excitement; and his attention turned to his own penis. . . . Then he found himself staring head on at a penis in a most unusual fantasy. All he could see of it was the tip, with the small opening in the center where the urethra emerges. The sexual feeling was approaching a new peak when suddenly his whole psychic field of consciousness erupted. While the very walls of awareness cracked and dissolved about him, he observed the orb of the penis expand and soften, while the aperture in the center closed and protruded into a soft red button: the penis had become his mother's breast, and a breast alive with an awesome sensuality, before which the former excitement was as nothing. .. . Man's first contact with this feeling is at mother's breast. There is a madness of identity-dissolving delight. Hence the orgiastic feeling, if felt deeply and strongly enough in sex, always includes an element of self-transcendence, of blinding release into the primitive selfless psyche of the infant. (Caldwell 1969 [1968], p. 235) Aggressive fantasies also appear: Somewhere in the therapy nearly every patient stumbles into an almost boundless reservoir of hidden antisocial urges. At this point the devil may appear. Half man, half beast, almost reptilian in his stealthy muscular grace, the figure breathes not only malevolence but the reckless courage of defiant will and exultant self-assertion. If one enters the archetype and becomes the devil an almost delirious demonic strength floods body and mind. (Caldwell 1969 [19681 p. 136) . . . No one who has not done it (and most patients in psychedelic therapy have) can describe the drunken glory of crushing whole cities with a fist, of wiping out nations in one fiery breath, or shattering paper-thin earth like a nutshell. These fantasies are dreadful to ordinary consciousness, but they are accurate indications of universal desires. They help explain trivial things like the joy our youngsters find in monster movies. More seriously, they help explain the sudden orgies of violence that erupt when social bulwarks crumble. (Caldwell 1969 [1968], pp. 163-164) Mythical adventures may be enacted: S described himself as having been a spiritually precocious child and adolescent, much given to prayer and meditation as well as to theological reflection. The death of his father when S was twenty-one years old left him the sole support of his mother and six brothers and sisters all much younger than himself. Thus, instead of being able to pursue the career in literature and philosophy that he had planned, S was forced to take over his father's business interests. . . . The fisherman and his wife raise him, and at the age of four: . They tell me I must avenge myself on the sea monster who tried to destroy me and bit off my fisher-father's leg. I dive into the water to go and find the sea monster. Masters and Houston interpret this adventure in Jungian fashion as an allegory of the battle of the self in its search for wholeness against the invading external world and the engulfing unconscious. Several years after this session, the person who went through it still regarded the child-hero as the activating symbolic agent" that preserved him as the whole man he had become. The consciousness of confronting something underlying and eternal, at the very heart of oneself and the universe, is present to some degree at all levels of psychedelic experience but becomes wholly dominant at what Masters and Houston call the integral level. Subjects find only religious language adequate to convey what is happening in these intense confrontations with what can be named only in terms like the "Primordial Essence" or the "Ground of Being." Like the resolution of a symbolic drama, such an experience can be felt as a turning point in the life of one who undergoes it. Stanislav Grof has examined this and other aspects of the psychedelic experience longer and more closely than anyone else. As a psychiatrist working with LSD, DPT, and other psychedelic drugs since 1956, first in Czechoslovakia and then in the United States, he has had far more opportunity than most investigators to observe the full range of their effects. He has repeatedly guided patients through many LSD sessions and observed the transformations in their form and content as therapy proceeds. The changes over time in the experiences of a single person prove to be even more striking than the variations among personality types recorded by Barr and Langs. (Analysis of psychedelic drug effects based on a single session or a few sessions is like interpreting a single incident in someone's life without knowing anything of his biography.) Grof began using a psychoanalytic framework but gradually became convinced by his own and his patient's experiences that radically new concepts were demanded. He distinguishes four types of psychedelic experience: abstract and esthetic, psychodynamic, perinatal ("around birth"), and transpersonal. The chief theoretical novelty lies in the last two categories and in the relationship between the psychodynamic and the perinatal. Grof says that the relatively superficial abstract and esthetic experiences, which dominate most street drug trips, rarely appear at advanced stages of therapy. At the psychodynamic or Freudian level, the familiar material of psychoanalysis is revealed either in direct reliving or in symbolic form. In this realm of the personal unconscious, patients are said to display structures of unconscious memory that Grof calls "systems of condensed experience," or COEX systems. Hanscarl Leuner, an- other European LSD therapist, has suggested a similar idea independently (Leuner 1962). The COEX systems are described as constellations of memories linked by a single theme and associated with a single powerful emotion or situation: humiliation, anxiety, emotional rejection, threat to physical survival, violence, and so on. Each COEX system is related to a particular defense mechanism and definite clinical symptoms, and each is based on some infantile "core experience." Each personality is said to have several COEX systems; some are beneficial, but most are emotionally crippling, at least in the psychiatric patients treated by Grof. Grof believes that the most profound traumatic experiences are associated not with emotional disasters but with physical damage and threats to physical survival. Although these tend to be neglected by psychoanalysts, he says, they assume great importance for patients in LSD therapy. When the emotional cathexes attached to a memory prove to be far out of proportion to its objective importance, it is because the incident has been assimilated symbolically with similar traumatic experiences in the same COEX system. Whatever interpretation of the details is accepted, clearly LSD has the capacity to induce regression in the presence of a more or less intact observing ego beyond the level usually achieved in psychoanalysis. One of the most interesting discoveries of psychedelic drug research is that this regression appears to go all the way back to birth. An apparent reliving of biological birth during LSD sessions is reported independently, often with some embarrassment and self-doubt, by many psychotherapists and illicit drug users (cf. Abramson 1960, pp. 94-98). Often, both for those who undergo them and for those who watch, these experiences seem genuine, with physical symptoms adding their own suggestions of authenticity: fetal postures, agonizing pain, facial oontortions, gasping for breath, heart palpitations, cyanosis (bluish skin from deficient oxygenation), tremors, sweating, vomiting, production of mucus and saliva, fear of losing control of urethral and anal sphincters. Sometimes unusual physical details of a particular birth remembered under the drug's influence are reported to be confirmed by independent evidence from adults pr'esent at the birth; and some patients are said to suggest, either in words or through their behavior, an accurate knowledge of physiology and embryology far beyond their adult learning or their powers of fantasy and fabrication. In these crises the birth agony is often felt as somehow the same as a death agony, and the end of life as well as the beginning is pictured in the accompanying imagery. The events are often described as a death and rebirth. (see, e.g., Pope 1971, pp. 36-38) This clinical material suggests a level of the unconscious corresponding to Otto Rank's theory of the birth trauma. Freud admitted the possibility of a birth trauma but denied that it could be brought to awareness or used to interpret patient problems, and psychoanalysts generally have followed him by treating imagery and thoughts connected with birth and the womb as fantasy to be interpreted in relation to early childhood events. The evidence from the deep regression produced by psychedelic drugs suggests that maybe the issue ought to be reexamined. We present Grof's framework and some of his cases here, not because his work is the only source of this material or because we are convinced that his explanations are correct, but because no one else has had so much clinical experience with it or devoted so much theoretical attention to it. Any explanatory system at this stage is bound to be inadequate; what really matters is whether the narratives imply that there is something important to be explained. Grof attaches great importance to the birth trauma both therapeutically and theoretically. He regards it as the template or matrix of the -systems of condensed experience- that produce neurosis, and the place where studies of psychopathology can best illuminate normal psychology. He also sees it as the point of intersection between individual and transpersonal psychology, and between psychology and religion. In analyzing the birth symbolism of LSD trips, he refers to four stages of birth as "basic perinatal matrices," or BPMs. BPM I is the peaceful and satisfied condition of the fetus in the womb, associated with oceanic ecstasy and a blissful sense of cosmic unity; it is disturbed only by the mother's disease or emotional distress. Here are some examples: When I was able to give up my analytical thinking and accept the experience for what it was, the nature of the session changed dramatically. The feelings of sickness and indigestion disappeared, and I was experiencing an ever-increasing state of ecstasy. This was accompanied by a clearing and brightening of my visual field. It was as if multiple layers of thick, dirty cobwebs were being magically torn and dissolved, or a poor-quality movie projection or television broadcast were being focused and rectified by an invisible cosmic technician. The scenery opened up, and an incredible amount of light and energy was enveloping me and streaming in subtle vibrations through my whole being. On one level, I was still a fetus experiencing the ultimate perfection and bliss of a good womb or a newborn fusing with a nourishing and life-giving breast. On another level, I became the entire universe. I was witnessing the spectacle of the macrocosm with countless pulsating and vibrating galaxies and was it at the same time.... Everything in this universe appeared to be conscious. After having had to accept the possibility of fetal consciousness, I was confronted with an even more startling discovery: consciousness might actually pervade all existence.... Pantheistic religions, Spinoza's philosophy, the teachings of the Buddha, the Hindu concepts of Atman-Brahman, Maya and lila [divine play]—all these suddenly came alive and were illuminated with new meaning. . . . On one occasion, the good-womb experience seemed to open into time instead of space. To my utter astonishment, I relived my own conception and various stages of my embryological development. While I was experiencing all the complexities of the embryogenesis, with details that surpassed the best medical handbooks, I was flashing back to an even more remote past, visualizing some phylogenetic vestiges from the life of my animal ancestors. The scientist in me was struck by another riddle: can the genetic code, under certain circumstances, be translated into a conscious experience? (Grof 1975, pp. 113-114) The session started with a feeling of "pure tension" that was building up to higher and higher levels. When the tension was transcended, Michael had an experience of overwhelming cosmic ecstasy; the universe seemed to be illuminated by radiant light emanating from an unidentifiable supernatural source. The entire world was filled with serenity, love and peace; the atmosphere was that of "absolute victory, final liberation, and freedom in the soul." The scene then changed into an endless bluish-green ocean, the primordial cradle of all life. Michael felt that he had returned to the source; he was floating gently in this nourishing and soothing fluid, and his body and soul seemed to be dissolving and melting into it. . . BPM II is described as the fetus' experience of the contractions of the uterine wall at the onset of delivery: endless, hopeless, intolerable, and yet inescapable anxiety, pain, and misery. Life seems monstrous and meaningless; there is a sense of pervasive insanity and guilt. The visions are of religious hells, condemnation at the Last Judgment, engulfment by maelstroms or monsters, and descent to the underworld. The subject feels himself to be all dying soldiers, all victims of persecution, or a robot in a world of robots. Grof calls this matrix the basis for psychological systems dominated by a feeling of constriction and oppression or helpless passivity before an overwhelming destructiv6 force, especially one that threatens life. An example follows: The sickness enveloping me was at first very subtle. Mild feelings of nausea and tension were making themselves manifest. Soon the nausea and tension were intensified to a point where every cell seemed to be involved. It is difficult indeed to describe this experience: it was so all-encompassing. The slightly humorous description of every cell in my body being drilled by a dentist begins to convey the atmosphere of impending disaster, emergency, and excruciating pain that for me seemed to last for eternity. Although I saw no images, I began to think of Petronius, Seneca, Sartre, and other philosophers who deemed suicide the only meaningful death. I had the fantasy of lying in a bath of warm water and my life's blood flowing out from my veins. In fact, I am quite convinced that had I the means at that time, I would have killed myself. I was totally submerged in a situation from which there would be no escape except through death. And like life, the absurdity of it all, the exhaustion of carrying my pain-filled body through days, years, decades, a lifetime, seemed insane. . . .This state persisted for hours. I thought I would never leave that place, yet even though there was an element of strangeness about this state of consciousness, I recognized it as something familiar. It was a state that I had experienced before in various forms; in fact, it seemed to be the underlying matrix which has influenced my world view and my mode of existence. To live it so intensely, if only for a few hours, in the form of an amplified hell from which there was no escape was an important lesson. (Grof 1975, p. 123) In the next stage, BPM III, uterine contractions continue but the hopeless feeling of entrapment is said to disappear, since the cervix is dilated and the fetus is being propelled through the birth canal. It struggles against mechanical crushing pressures and the threat of suffocation as it begins the difficult journey to the outside, where it comes into contact with blood, mucus, urine, and feces. The encounter with death now takes the form of a titanic struggle with associated visions including earthquakes, tornadoes, exploding stars, nuclear bombs, and tidal waves. The agony and tension often turn into a kind of rapture that Grof calls volcanic ecstasy, as opposed to the oceanic ecstasy of BPM I. The release of destructive and self-destructive energy is sometimes manifested in powerful sadomasochistic fantasies. Subjects identify with ruthless tyrants and mass murderers; they take all the roles in historical and mythical scenes of torture and execution and are surprised to find a resemblance between the torturer's state of mind and his victim's. There may be hours of overwhelming sexual ecstasy accompanied by images of participation in wild orgies and fertility rites and identification with historical and fictional characters famous for their sexuality. The mixture of the exhilarating with the macabre can be reminiscent of saturnalia and witches' sabbaths. Visions of blood, urine, and feces are often accompanied by strikingly realistic taste and smell sensations. Grof writes, -The combination of perverted sex, sadomasochism, scatology, and an emphasis on death, with elements of blasphemy, inverted religious symbolism, and a quasi-religious atmosphere, is characteristic of BPM III (Grof 1975, p. 133). Here is an example: The experience of being born was very, very confused. I never really clearly saw the birth canal or the process of birth or the relief of birth. I only knew that I was being pushed and crushed and wildly confused. The clearest part of my role as baby was being immersed in what seemed to me like filth and slime that was all over me and in my mouth choking me. I tried and tried to spit it out, to get rid of it and finally managed to clear my mouth and throat with a huge scream, and I began to breathe. That was one of the major moments of release in the session. Another aspect of the birth experience was the confusion resulting from the fact that the genitals and thighsof the woman were the place of sex and love and also the place this nightmare of birth and filth had happened. In the final stage of delivery, which Grof calls BPM IV, the child is expelled from the womb, takes its first breath, and completes its physical separation from the mother with the cutting of the umbilical cord. Here, accord- One of my patients was a man who on 400 micrograms nearly became unconscious, in a twilight state. He screamed and sighed a lot, and after an hour or more, suddenly came to his senses and cried for his wife. I turned the light on in the room and asked him what had happened. He said, don't know what happened, but there is something about my left arm which changed. I don't know, but my left arm was never normal. I always had a feeling that my left arm was somehow blocked. I don't know what happened now." He waved his left arm, a look of bewilderment on his face, and said, Symbolically BPM IV is manifested as death and rebirth: total annihilation—biological, psychological, and moral—followed by visions of blinding white light, expansion of space, and an atmosphere of liberation, salvation, and reconciliation. The subject feels purged of guilt, anxiety, and aggression. The associated images are heroic victories over demons and monsters, deities symbolizing death and resurrection (especially Christ on the cross), admission to Valhalla or Olympus, visions of the Supreme Being as a cosmic sun or pure spiritual energy, and the reuniting of individual self (Hindu Atman) with its divine source in the universal self (Hindu Brahman). Other symbols include the overthrow of tyrants, the end of wars, and survival of natural disasters. The natural imagery is of oceans after storms, budding trees, spring meadows, sunny mountain peaks successfully ascended, and newborn animals: beauty, safety, and fertility. Grof considers BPM IV to be the matrix for all later memories of the satisfaction that follows the end of conflict in a discharge of tension. Some passages describing scenes from this realm follow: The best way of describing this roller coaster and this entrance into the loss of control would be to compare it to walking on a slippery, very slippery surface. There would be surfaces all over the place and finally all of them would become slippery and there would be nothing left to hold on to. One was slipping, slipping and going further and further down into oblivion. The scene that finally completed my death was a very horrible scene in a square of a medieval town. . . . While the animals, the humans, the demons pressed in upon me in the square before these Gothic cathedrals, I began to experience intense agony and pain, panic, terror, and horror. There was a line of pressure between the temples of my head, and I was dying. I was absolutely certain of this—I was dying, and I died. My death was completed when the pressures overwhelmed me, and 1 was expelled into another world. Here is a complete account of a psychedelic birth experience: After the vulture-mother ordeal, I have the sensation of having died. When MB and WR move my body on the couch, I perceive it as my corpse being placed in the grave. However, I experience the placing of the corpse in the grave as simultaneous with the placing of the egg in the womb. It is not death but birth that terrifies me. I am standing before a frightful tunnel, again the vision of one of those fiery, infernal organs in Hieronymous Bosch's The Garden of Delights (the identification of hell with the womb is pervasive throughout the drug-session). Pervasive and total is also the knowledge that man's greatest trauma is birth, not death, that it takes no courage to die but infinite courage to be born. Grof admits that he is trying to construct an orderly sequence from experiences that often arrive chaotically and in interrupted flashes. The succession of perinatal matrices varies greatly from person to person and from LSD session to LSD session, and the birth experience can be repeated many times on different levels. But he says that one common path for severely disturbed patients is this: after working through the traumatic memories of the personal unconscious, they reach the -no exit- stage, BPM IL, later they come to the life-and-death struggle of BPM III and then to the rebirth of BPM IV, finally passing over into the blissful cosmic unity of BPM I and on to the transpersonal level. Passage through the death-rebirth experience is said to be easier for those who are less emotionally disturbed and therefore need to do less work on the psychodynamic level. In the last ten years the word -transpersonal- has become established as a name for certain states of consciousness; there is even a Journal of Transpersonal Psychology. The transpersonal encompasses the Jungian collective unconscious, reincarnation phenomena, mystical ecstasy, and other experiences in which the mind seems to transcend the boundaries of the individual self or the limitations of time and space. It is open to challenge whether transpersonal psychology is a proper field of study with a distinct subject matter. Many psychiatrists and psychologists would relegate the phenomena it is concerned with to odd (and often pathological) corners of individual consciousness. And the convergence of its investigations with religious traditions is not reassuring to those who are concerned about the status of psychology as a science. Whether it makes sense to speak of transpersonal psychology, the experiences on which the idea is based require interpretation. As we have seen, intimations of this form of consciousness appear at many points during LSD Past-incarnation experience is one form in which the mind seems to transcend ordinary time limitations. The drug user believes that he is remembering, or rather reliving, what happened to him in another body, at another place and time; he has a sense of knowing beyond doubt that he has been here before and that these are memories of a past life. Even sophisticated persons who had previously considered reincarnation a superstition find these experiences hard to dismiss. And even when they reject reincarnation as an explanation, the strangely compelling quality of the memories may make them unwilling to accept the more conventional psychiatric interpretations. They often talk in language that recalls the Hindu ideas of karmic law and liberation from karmic bonds. Experiences of this kind can of course be produced without drugs—for example, by hypnosis. They are evidently the basis for the reincarnation doctrines that are a central part of many religions including Hinduism, Buddhism, Plato's theology, the mystery cults of Greece, and some In the advanced stage of Renata's psycholytic therapy, an unusual and unprecedented sequence of events was observed. Four consecutive LSD sessions consisted almost exclusively of scenes from a particular historical period. She experienced a number of episodes that took place in Prague during the seventeenth century. . . . Grof considers these observations difficult to explain in any conventional way, but he does not provide enough information to exclude the possibility that her father's genealogical research had been registered in her mind as a young child. Here, the relived life belongs to someone who might be a biological ancestor of the drug user. If taken at face value, it would suggest genetic transmission of acquired memories; and, as Grof points out, in this case there is also the even more unlikely implication that the memory of a death agony could be genetically transmitted. Another case of reliving an ancestor's life follows: . . To my great surprise, my ego identity was suddenly changed. I was my mother at the age of three or four; it must have been the year 1902. I was dressed up in a starched, fussy dress and hiding undei:neath the staircase; my eyes were dilated like those of a frightened animal, and I felt anxious and lonely. I was covering my mouth with my hand, painfully aware that something terrible had just happened. I had said something very bad, was criticized, and someone roughly put their hand over my mouth. From my hideout, I could see a scene with many relatives—aunts and uncles, sitting on the porch of a frame house, in old-fashioned dresses characteristic of that time. Everybody seemed to be talking, unmindful of me. I had a sense of failure and felt overwhelmed by the unrealistic demands of the adults—to be good, to behave myself, to talk properly, not to get dirty—it seemed so impossible to please them. I felt excluded, ostracized, and ashamed.- Millions of Hindus take the transmigration of souls just as much for granted as orthodox Christians do the existence of heaven. Psychedelic drugs are apparently capable of giving even unbelievers some sense of the persuasive force of the experiences on which these doctrines are based. Despite attempts at empirical confirmation by a few serious Western researchers (e.g., Stevenson 1974, 1977), it seems just as difficult to incorporate the notion of reincarnation as it is to incorporate the notion of heaven into a scientific explanation. The rare psychiatric term "" cryptomnesia," hidden or disguised memory, is sometimes used for such experiences; it suggests that they are personal memories and preoccupations that have been symbolically distorted. An explanation might be founded on the sense of displacement in time or freedom from ordinary temporality often produced by LSD, combined with the characteristically vivid psychedelic imagery in which the drug user can lose himself. Belief in reincarnation has also been regarded as a defense against fears of death (although in fact the prospect of multiple rebirths is regarded by Buddhism, and often experienced during psychedelic drug trips, as a source of anguish rather than relief). In any case, the immediate question is not whether these phenomena are what they seem to be, but why they are so powerful, convincing, and (apparently) potentially universal, and what they tell us about the human mind. In collective and racial experiences, the subject participates in episodes from various contemporary or past cultures, sometimes allegedly displaying an inexplicable knowledge of exotic customs. Masters and Houston report the following case, in which they admittedly provided considerable suggestion: . . This subject, 5-1 (100 micrograms LSD), was a high-school graduate whose reading matter rarely extended beyond the daily newspapers and an occasional popular magazine. Collective experience, whether it takes a ritual form or not, can include the whole of a racial or cultural group or the whole of mankind. Some consider it evidence in favor of Jung's theory of the collective unconscious. Others may prefer to believe that these experiences with their corroborative details are the product of forgotten readings of magazine articles and historical novels combined with fantasy and suggestion. But in any case they suggest how much of what we have felt and thought is registered permanently in the brain and accessible to consciousness in various transmutations. The ordinary limits of consciousness are also transcended in animal identifications associated with a feeling of regression in time which may be interpreted as phylogenetic memory; in the rare experience of identification with plants; in a sense of oneness with all life or with inorganic objects; and especially in the heightened awareness of internal body processes, which sometimes goes so far that the drug user imagines he is feeling his own body organs, tissues, and cells from within, as though they had minds of their own. Here is Grof's account of plant identification: . . . An individual tuned in to this area has the unique feeling of witnessing and consciously participating in the basic physiological processes of plants. He can experience himself as a germinating seed, a leaf in the course of photosynthetic activity, or a root reaching out for water and nourishment. On other occasions, a subject might identify with the venus flytrap or other carnivorous plants, become plankton in the ocean, and experience pollination or cellular divisions occurring during vegetable growth. Subjects have also reported that they witnessed botanical processes on a molecular level. . . . A vision from within of conception and embryonic development: . . The middle part of my back was generating rhythmical impulses, and I had the feeling of being propelled through space and time toward some unknown goal; I had a very vague awareness of the final destination, but the mission appeartd to be one of the utmost importance. After some time I was able to recognize to my great surprise that I was a spermatozoid and that the explosive regular impulses were generated by a biological pacemaker and transmitted to a long flagella flashing in vibratory movements. I was involved in a hectic super-race toward the source of some chemical messages that had an enticing and irresistible quality. By then I realized that the goal was to reach the egg, penetrate it, and impregnate. In spite of the fact that this whole scene seemed absurd and ridiculous to my sober scientific mind, I could not resist the temptation to get involved in this race with all seriousness and full expenditure of energy. . . . These fantastic visions of biological processes are not confined to scientists with a detailed knowledge of the processes involved. The conception fantasy, for example, occurs repeatedly in all kinds of people. Here is Timothy Leary again, on related subjects: . . . confrontation with and participation in cellular flow;. . . visions of microscopic processes; strange, undulating multi-colored tissue patterns; being a one-celled organism floating down arterial waterways. . . recoiling with fear at the incessant push, struggle, drive of the biological machinery. (Leary 1968 a, p. 301) The breakdown of macroscopic objects into vibratory patterns, the awareness that everything is a dance of particles. . . visions of the void, of world-ending explosions, of the cyclical nature of creation and dissolution. (Leary 1968 a, p. 296) Grof recounts a rare voyage to a distant place: In this situation, it suddenly occurred to me that I do not have to be bound by the limitations of time and space and can travel in the timespace continuum quite deliberately and without any restrictions. This feeling was so convincing and overwhelming that I wanted to test it by an experiement. . . . I continued thinking in terms of directions and distances and approached the task accordingly. All of a sudden it occurred to me that the proper approach would be to make myself believe that the place of the session was actually identical with the place of destination. When I approached the task in this way, I experienced peculiar and bizarre sensations. I found myself in a strange, rather congested place full of vacuum tubes, wires, resistors, and condensers. After a short period of confusion, I realized that I was trapped in a TV set located in the corner of the room of the apartment in my native city where I had spent my childhood. I was trying, somehow, to use the speakers for hearing and the tube for seeing. ... At the moment when I realized and firmly believed that I could operate in the realm of free spirit and did not have to be restricted even by the velocity of light or other types of electromagnetic waves, the experience changed rapidly. I broke through the TV screen and found myself walking in the apartment of my parents. I did not feel any drug effect at that point, and the experience was as sober and real as any other experience of my life. .. . Psychedelic drugs produce not only these disarrangements of space, time, and human identity but also intensely realistic encounters with disembodied entities: astral bodies, spirits of the dead, angelic guides, deities, inhabitants of other universes, and so forth. John Lilly tells of a meeting with guardian spirits after taking 300 micrograms of LSD in an isolation tank: I became a bright luminous point of consciousness, radiating light, warmth, and knowledge. I moved into a space of astonishing brightness, a space filled with golden light, with warmth, and with knowledge. .. . A visit to the underworld under the influence of LSD: After we crossed the threshold of life and death, I found myself in an uncanny and frightening world. It was filled with fluorescent ether of a strangely macabre nature. There was no way of assessing whether the space involved was finite or infinite. An endless number of souls of deceased human beings were suspended in the luminescent ether; in an atmosphere of peculiar distress and disquieting excitement, they were sending me nonverbal messages through some unidentifiable extrasensory channels. They appeared unusually demanding, and it seemed as if they needed something from me. In general, the atmosphere reminded me of the descriptions of the underworld that I had read in Greek literature. But the objectivity and reality of the situation was beyond my imagination—it provoked a state of sheer and utter metaphysical horror that I cannot even start describing. My father was present in this world as an astral body; since I entered this world in union with him, his astral body was as if superimposed over mine. . . . It was by far the most frightening experience of my life; in none of my previous LSD sessions did I encounter anything that would come close to it. (Grof 1975, p. 196) It is at the intermediate levels of the personal unconscious that psychedelic drugs, more than any others, accentuate human individuality and variability. Beyond that, apparently, lies common human ground, if not something still more universal. This is most evident in the most profound of the experiences described as transpersonal: identification with the Universal Mind, the reality underlying all realities, the formless, dimensionless, ineffable sat-chit-ananda(being-awareness-bliss) of Hinduism, compared with which all ordinary consciousness appears as maya, illusion. Here matter, space, time, and other partial realities are wholly transcended, and the basic questions of ontology and cosmology seem momentarily answered, once and for all. The ultimate fullness of the Universal Mind can also be experienced, paradoxically, as the pri- This is an appropriate place to illustrate some of the varieties of psychedelic mystical experience. The selection is necessarily limited and includes only drug-induced experiences, but passages similar in content and style can be found not only all through the annals of psychedelic drug trips but also throughout the millennia-old world literature of mysticism. First, William James' classic description of the anesthetic revelation provided by nitrous oxide, with his rueful commentary: With me, as with every other individual of whom I have heard, the keynote of the experience is the tremendously exciting sense of an intense metaphysical illumination. Truth lies open to the view in depth beneath depth of almost blinding evidence. The mind sees all the logical relations of being with an apparent subtlety and instantaneity to which its normal consciousness offers no parallel, only as sobriety returns, tbe feeling of insight fades, and one is left staring vacantly at a cadaverous-looking snow peak from which the sunset glow has just fled, or at the black cinder left by an extinguished brand.... Here is a report of a ketamine trip which should prove that people much less articulate than James can experience an equally profound sense of illumination: . . . First the outer sensory apparatus disappears so you begin to feel—I haven't been in one—but what Lilly discusses when he talks about the [sensory] deprivation tank. .. . A revelation that emphasizes the intellectual aspect, this time an LSD experience: I was experiencing directly the metaphysical theory known as emanationism in which, beginning with the clear, unbroken and infinite light of God, the light then breaks into forms and lessens in intensity as it passes through descending degrees of reality. . . . The emanation theory, and especially the elaborately worked out layers of Hindu and Buddhist cosmology and psychology had heretofore been concepts and inferences. Now they were objects of the most direct and immediate perception. I could see exactly how these theories would have come into being if their progenitors had had this experience. But beyond accounting for their origin, my experience testified to their absolute truth. (Pahnke and Richards 1966, p. 179) Drug users often speak of seeing the Clear Light or White Light, a familiar landmark in psychedelic country: The most impressive and intense part of this experience was the white light of absolute purity and cleanness. It was like a glowing and sparkling flame of incandescent whiteness and beauty, but not really a flame—more like a gleaming white-hot ingot, yet much bigger and vaster than a mere ingot. The associated feelings were those of absolute awe, reverence, and sacredness. Just before this experience I had the feeling of going deep within myself to the self stripped bare of all pretense and falseness. It was the point where a man could stand firm with absolute integrity—something more important than mere physical life. The white light experience was of supreme importance—absolutely self-validating and something worth staking your life on and putting your trust in. (Pahnke and Richards 1966, p. 180) Finally, here are passages that illustrate loss of self and the need for paradoxical language. The first two quotations are from an essay by Wilson Van Dusen, the chief clinical psychologist in a mental hospital in California. (After taking LSD he became interested in occult and mystical subjects and eventually wrote a book about the eighteenth-century Swedish visionary Emanuel Swedenborg.) Suddenly and totally unexpectedly the zenith of the void was lit up with thé blinding presence of the One. How did I know it? All I can say is that there was no possibility of doubt.... How could I be both God and man at the same time? My conventional concept of myself had been shattered in a few moments. .. . Gradually there was no longer an "I" or a "me." There was no them. There was just vast, total nothing. . . . There was nothing to see but there was seeing of this nothing to see. There was a being in process, or moving in a process. But there was no "process." There was just being. No inside or outside but the "other one." Dualities ceased, there was just a wonderful moving in nothing—empty, still, and quite nothing. There was hearing of the sound of no sound. (Van Dusen 1961, p. 13) Voltaire described apparitions as -supernatural visions permitted to him or her who is gifted by God with the special grace of possessing a cracked brain, a hysterical temperament, a disordered digestion, but above all, the art of lying with effrontery.- Blake responded that in the face of the reality of visionary experience such mockery was futile—in his famous image, sand thrown against the wind. Although few people today would be as ill-mannered or sarcastic about it as Voltaire, his remark succinctly embodies one kind of rationalistic attitude toward the experiences we have been describing. Claims to knowledge derived from this source have always been an annoyance to those who are unsympathetic to religious feeling and religious doctrine. Therefore most of the discussion about them has centered on the question of authenticity: whether knowledge gained through vision and mystical intuition is real knowledge, or whether drug-induced mysticism is somehow inferior to other kinds. An overwhelming feeling of conviction is notoriously no guarantee of truth. When someone says that under LSD he has relived a past life as an ancient 'Egyptian embalmer and produces an accurate formula for constructing a mummy (Grof 1975, p. 170), he has probably read the formula somewhere, even if he cannot remember doing so. When he speaks of meetings with the spirits of dead ancestors or floating away from his own body, it is obviously not evidence for a separable spirit or soul. And when he maintains that he has been blissfully united with the ground of the universe, we may be inclined to say (and he may be inclined to admit) that he literally does not know what he is talking about. We could easily have littered our descriptions with quotation marks to indicate suspension of belief, but that would be beside the point. To insist on posing the question in terms of real versus delusional, authentic versus inauthentic, is to turn the investigation into a sterile ideological debate between opposing party lines. We do not have to choose between Voltaire and Blake at this level. Besides, there is a parallel here with the problem of talking about an experience that supposedly reveals the inadequacy of words. How can we estimate the truth or reality of phenomena that are alleged to demand a revision in the very standards by which we are accustomed to judging truth and reality? Instead, we must ask what it means to see a spirit, why visions of past lives or relivings of birth have a special quality and significance, and what aspect of reality is encountered in mystical revelations. In other words, these phenomena deserve to be placed in a theoretical framework rather than dismissed with casual psychiatric epithets and ad hoc explainings-away on the one hand or affirmed as self-evident revelations of the highest truth on the other. William James was implicitly responding to critics like Voltaire when he attacked the genetic fallacy that certain sources are by their very nature too impure to produce any genuine contribution to knowledge. He wrote of such experiences that they are no more or less subject to evaluation and correction than what comes to us from the external senses. As their name suggests, psychedelic drugs manifest universal native capacities of the mind and permanent possibilities of human experience. For most people the drugs may be the easiest way to elicit them, but religious tradition testifies that they are available to consciousness in other ways as well. To judge whether these experiences have any value as sources of knowledge, we have to provide a psychological context for them. In the twentieth-century West the favored context has been Freud's depth psychology of the personal unconscious, and some investigators of the deeper psychedelic experiences believe they can be fully accounted for in Freud's categories. But to others, psychoanalytical explanation has seemed at best an unfulfilled promise, evaded by dismissive terminology and a premature reductionism. Even Barr and Langs concluded that their LSD experiments required basic revisions in psychoanalytic theory. Others who began as more or less orthodox psychoanalysts have found themselves going beyond the Freudian conception of the unconscious to Rank's theories about the birth trauma, to Jungian notions about archetypes and the collective unconscious, and finally to the psychology and cosmology of the Eastern religions. It would be easy to dismiss such explorations as voyages to the wilder shores of fantasy proving only that LSD can make its investigators as suggestible as its users, if it were not for the fact that so many people experimenting with psychedelic drugs move in the same direction. There is a tendency to consensus both among psychedelic drug researchers and between these researchers and more venerable investigatory and therapeutic traditions. Undoubtedly the tendency is limited, leaving much room for oddities of interpretation and plain nonsense; the consensus is far from being solid enough to constitute a science. Yet it is something more than a cult phenomenon requiring sociological analysis or a kind of mass suggestion. Not everyone admits this. It is common to domesticate the strangeness of these experiences and depreciate their importance by insisting that they are merely the effect of a therapist's preconceptions or the expectations created by a pervasive cultural atmosphere on a mind made unusually suggestible by the drug. As an analogy the observation is sometimes offered that the patients of Freudian and Jungian psychoanalysts obligingly produce dreams that confirm Freudian and Jungian theories, respectively. The issue is a genuine one. Heightened suggestibility is especially important in determining both the adverse effects and the therapeutic uses of psychedelic drugs. But it is of limited value in explaining the deepest content of psychedelic experiences. This is clear in the case of a psychiatrist like Grof, who started with no special interest in Jungian or Hindu ideas and therefore cannot be accused of filling his patients' heads with them. It was the other way around: his patients' experiences made him take those ideas seriously. As for the expectations and cultural biases of the drug users themselves, the same argument holds. Although some of the specific symbols and myths are culturally (or individually) determined, certain general themes seem to recur at the deeper levels of psychedelic experience irrespective of the drug user's social background and previous knowledge. In many cases it is quite implausible to talk of suggestion. Some people who use language and concepts reminiscent of Indian religion to describe what is happening to them have never heard these ideas before, or, like Alan Harrington in the quotation cited previously, have always been -irritated by the enthusiasts of Eastern philosophy.- The experience of death and rebirth that occurs in so many forms also appears to be spontaneous. In any case, suggestibility can never explain why, of all the ideas in the air, psychedelic experiences seem repeatedly to promote interest in some and not others. Expectations and cultural atmosphere reinforce these phenomena and modify their details and the language in which they are discussed, but the expectations and the cultural atmosphere themselves could not exist without a basis in untutored experience. Another objection to this use of the idea of suggestion is that it creates more problems than it solves. The term -hypnotic suggestibility,- for example, is notoriously a label rather than an explanation. Of some psychedelic phenomena it must be said that if suggestion can produce these states of mind, it must be a far larger and more complex matter than we have imagined, requiring a much deeper analysis than we usually give it. In other words, if we are going to demand so much work of suggestion, we will have to give it a much larger theoretical role in psychology—a role so large that analyzing suggestion will be as difficult as, or even largely the same thing as, analyzing psychedelic experience. There have been few serious attempts to make theoretical sense of the full range of psychedelic experiences in terms that do justice to the understanding of those who undergo them. Psychologists and psychiatrists have chosen to ignore and dismiss most of this impressive clinical material, possibly because it seems so hard to incorporate into any acceptable theory of the mind.° But we should not treat an experience as meaningless or demanding no explanation just because our present explanatory powers are inadequate to it. We ought to take these matters more seriously and at least try to find ways of investigating them as we do more familiar and intellectually comfortable aspects of our world. Neither Voltaire's dismissive mockery nor Blake's poetic affirmation is an adequate response; here we should follow James. The present disreputable status of psychedelic drug research has been created partly by unwillingness to confront these phenomena intellectually and emotionally. This unwillingness not only obstructs advances in the relatively narrow field of psychopharmacology, but also limits the improvement of our general understanding of human nature and experience. 'An exception is Fingarette (1963), who offers an interesting synthesis of psychoanalytical and Buddhist ideas without referring to psychedelic drugs. |