Legend Of A Mind: A Psychedelic Celebration Of Timothy Leary
Drug Abuse
http://www.greendump.net/weburbanist/legend-of-a-mind-a-psychedelic-celebration-of-timothy-leary
[MANY great photos at url above]
Legend Of A Mind: A Psychedelic Celebration Of Timothy Leary
[ By Steve in Gadgets & Geek Art, History & Factoids, Technology & Futurism. ]
Born on October 22nd, 1920, legendary psychedelic pop culture populist Dr. Timothy
Leary would have been 90 years old this year. Leary’s pioneering work on the
beneficial effects of psychoactive drugs was swamped by a conservative current of
fear and paranoia from above: Richard Nixon famously declared him to be “the most
dangerous man in America.” Turn on, tune in, drop out… and check out Timothy
Leary in words and art. The doctor is IN!
Tuning In
(images via: Thecant, Britannica.com and The Tribune)
Though he famously exhorted America’s youth to drop out, Timothy Francis Leary
himself did anything but. Beginning with a stint as a cadet at West Point in 1940,
Leary attended a variety of colleges and universities ending in 1950 with his receiving
a Ph.D. in psychology from the University of California, Berkeley.
(image via: Madame Pickwick Art Blog)
Leary’s education was interrupted by service in World War II, when was a sergeant in
the Medical Corps. Not exactly the resume one would expect from a counterculture
icon but many facts about Timothy Leary’s life defied easy or logical categorization.
On the other hand, Leary was forced to resign from West Point after he was found to
have gotten drunk on whiskey and then lied about it, thus breaking the institution’s
honor code. Leary later declared that his court-martial was “the only fair trial I’ve had
in a court of law”.
(images via: The Daily Beast and Book Soup)
Post-graduation, Leary’s career rapidly progressed. He was an assistant professor at
Berkeley from 1950 to 1955, then moved on to become the director of psychiatric
research at the Kaiser Family Foundation until 1958.
(image via: This Day In Quotes)
Leary finally found his footing in 1959 at Harvard University, where he lectured in
psychology and introduced new treatment concepts revolving around the use of
psychoactive substances and compounds, many of which were legal in the early
1960s. Leary soon moved from theoretical discussion to the practical use of
psychedelic drugs, which resulted in his being fired by Harvard’s management in
1963.
Turning On
(images via: Motifake and EZZAL)
Let’s take a small step back. In the summer of 1960, Leary journeyed to Mexico and
tried psilocybin mushrooms for the first time. Leary later remarked that he “learned
more about the brain and its possibilities, and more about psychology, in the five
hours after taking these mushrooms than in the preceding 15 years of studying and
doing research in psychology.”
(images via: Dangerous Minds and Telegraph UK)
Upon his return from Mexico, Leary initiated the Harvard Psilocybin Project, a
research program intended to analyze and document the effects of synthetic
psilocybin on human subjects who ranged from prisoners to seminary students. The
most tantalizing results came from The Concord Prison Experiment, which monitored
the progress of prisoners treated with psychoactive drugs once they were released
back into society.
(images via: Lysergia and Technoccult)
Leary’s subjects received a combination of drug therapy directly supervised by Leary
combined with social support modeled after the system used by Alcoholics
Anonymous. At that time, the rate of recidivism (return to a criminal lifestyle) among
U.S. prisoners was 60 percent. Prisoners who underwent Leary’s therapy recorded a
much lower recidivism rate of just 20 percent, declaring that they had received a new
understanding of their purpose in life.
(images via: Crucify The Ego, Home in the Holler and Wilson’s Almanac)
One can well imagine how society would have benefited if Leary’s therapy had been
instituted as a standard treatment, but alas it was not to be. In 1963 the FDA and
DEA began severely restricting the medical and scientific use of psychoactive drugs,
regardless of their perceived benefits, and within 5 years possession of even small
amounts of psychoactive drugs could (and did) result in the accused doing
substantial prison time.
Dropping Out
(images via: Ian C Friedman and 60's Further)
Booted out of Harvard and deprived of both salary and funding, Leary and his
associates were given the use of a mansion in Millbrook, New York, by several heirs to
the wealthy Mellon family who encouraged Leary to continue his experiments. “We
saw ourselves as anthropologists from the twenty-first century inhabiting a time
module set somewhere in the dark ages of the 1960s,” said Leary on the Millbrook
years. “On this space colony we were attempting to create a new paganism and a
new dedication to life as art.”
(images via: Step Off and Bruce Eisner’s Vision Thing)
The Millbrook mansion was continually raided by various law enforcement agencies
including the local police under the impetus of district attorney G. Gordon Liddy, who
later rose to prominence in the Watergate Scandal. A series of raids, arrests and drug
busts in the late 1960s saw Leary sentenced to decades in prison – often reduced or
thrown out on appeal as Leary and his lawyers would prove several of the laws used
to convict him were unconstitutional.
(images via: Netting America, U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration and SVToday)
The early 1970s saw Leary in exile after escaping from a forestry and gardening
detail at a lower security prison. He spent time in Algeria, Switzerland, Austria,
Lebanon and Afghanistan before being arrested and flown back to the United States.
“If he is allowed to travel freely, he will speak publicly and spread his ideas,”
remarked the judge at Leary’s remand hearing. Sentenced to 95 years, Leary ended
up in California’s Folsom Prison – at one point he was locked in the cell next to mass
murderer Charles Manson.
Bouncing Back
(images via: YankeePhil, The Edge AM 1400 and CNET News)
In 1976, Leary was released by California Governor Jerry Brown – the same Jerry
Brown now running for governor – and in 1982 began a lecture tour with former
nemesis (and ex-con) G. Gordon Liddy. The tour was hugely successful and helped
bring both Leary and Liddy back into the public eye. The renewed publicity also
boosted sales of Leary’s autobiography, Flashbacks.
(images via: Motifake, Wilson’s Almanac and Abraxas 365)
Never a one-trick pony, Timothy Leary refused to be pigeonholed by his reputation.
By the 1980s he had embraced the thought of space colonization while rejecting
ecologists who, Leary said, were content to remain “in the fouled nest”. He also
remained a fervent proponent of recreational drug use though he was firmly against
drug abuse. One of favorite snacks was a marijuana bud covered with melted cheese
on a cracker.
(image via: Corazonada)
Leary was an early exponent of virtual reality, cyberculture and the Internet,
describing the latter as “the LSD of the 1990s” and he set up one of the very first
websites – which is still online. He also maintained his strong interest in space
exploration and was thrilled by the prospect of having his ashes shot into space.
When told that the capsule containing his ashes would eventually fall from orbit and
burn up in the atmosphere, Leary was enthusiastic: “Finally, I’ll be a space pioneer,
and everyone will know: That will be me. I will be the light.”
Checking Out
(images via: Tau Zero, Answers.com and Lycaeum)
In early 1995, Leary was diagnosed with inoperable prostate cancer. Not surprisingly,
he embraced his looming death as an experience to be explored and shared. In his
remaining months, weeks and days, Leary met with thousands of well-wishers, gave
interviews, and renewed old friendships.
(images via: Audiovisualizers, Travelpod and Metroactive)
Some of the best known photographs and images of Leary come from this time of his
life, as if the great counterculture guru had decided that life was more about giving
than taking. Even as the cancer spread, diminishing his quality of life and causing
him to lose weight, Leary remained open to those who sought his guidance or at
least, his famously mischievous smile. The black & white photo below was taken by
Michael Maloney in San Francisco, where Leary had come to promote an exhibition of
LSD blotter paper art
(image via: Michael Maloney Photography)
Leary’s final journey (or at least, the prelude to it) was made into the 1996
documentary film Timothy Leary’s Dead. On May 31st, 1996, as the end quickly
approached, Leary arranged for his dying moments to be videotaped for posterity
and according to bedside witnesses, his last words were “Beautiful… Beautiful… Why?
Why? Why? Why not?!l”
(images via: Kenny Shackleford, SharedMP3.net and Dominoes)
Timothy Leary – Legend of a Mind, via Intergalaxy
“Timothy Leary’s dead. No, no no no, he’s outside, looking in.” Leary was said to
have liked “Legend Of A Mind”, the first song recorded for the Moody Blues’ 1968
album In Search Of The Lost Chord. Released at the height of sixties psychedelia, the
song endures as a homage to the man who some say was never born, never died,
just visited our planet for a while. We sure could use another visit right about now,
wouldn’t you agree? Happy Birthday, good doctor!
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Last Updated (Thursday, 23 December 2010 22:15)