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Harvard Psychedelic Club: 1956 Footage Of Housewife's Acid Trip

DwayneHoover

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As one of the comments points out, its actually kinda sad. But I would guess as time gave her more chance to make sense of certain aspects of the trip she likely got positive insight out of them and dwelled less in the emotional rollercoaster aspect... isn't that the typical process after all? - DH

from http://www.huffingtonpost.com/don-lattin/harvard-psychedelic-club-1950s_b_809392.html

by Don Lattin - Author of 'Jesus Freaks' and 'The Harvard Psychedelic Club'

Here's some rare footage of an experimental LSD session that I came across doing research for my next book, a group biography of British writer Aldous Huxley, philosopher Gerald Heard, and Bill Wilson, the co-founder of Alcoholics Anonymous. It's from a television program, circa 1956, about mental health issues.

The researcher, Dr. Sidney Cohen, was dosing volunteers at the Veteran's Administration Hospital in Los Angeles. Aldous Huxley, who first tried mescaline in 1953 and wrote about it in his seminal book, The Doors of Perception, got Gerald Heard interested in the spiritual potential of psychedelic drugs.

Heard then turned on Bill Wilson, guiding him on an LSD trip supervised by Dr. Cohen in the summer of 1956 -- perhaps in the same room we see in this video. Wilson, who started AA in the 1930s, thought LSD could help alcoholics have the "spiritual awakening" that is such an important part of the twelve-step recovery program he popularized.

Heard and Huxley set the stage for better-known psychedelic research of Timothy Leary, Richard "Ram Dass" Alpert, Huston Smith and Andrew Weil, who are profiled in my 2010 book, The Harvard Psychedelic Club.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V5d4wWGK4Ig&feature=player_embedded

Info on the book from http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/pr...37/ref=dp_proddesc_0?ie=UTF8&n=283155&s=books

The Harvard Psychedelic Club: How Timothy Leary, Ram Dass, Huston Smith, and Andrew Weil Killed the Fifties and Ushered in a New Age for America [Hardcover]
Don Lattin (Author)
4.2 out of 5 stars See all reviews (27 customer reviews)


Editorial Reviews
From Publishers Weekly
Starred Review. It's hard for folks who didn't live through the 1960s to imagine what it was like to live in a drug- and sex-soaked culture, one where traditional values were drowned in a rush of hedonism and hippiedom. Names like Timothy Leary and Ram Dass bring back all the memories and all the conflicts. In this beautifully constructed study, Lattin (Jesus Freaks) brings together four of the most memorable figures from that period. Each comes across as a flawed genius and irrepressible fanatic. The author says of Leary that he activate[d] conservative anxiety in America, but this could easily describe any of the players in this grim and gritty story. Laying out their stories side by side in roughly chronological form, the author traces the lives of each of the players, exposing a kind of dysfunctional relationship among them that is not part of our corporate memory. This is a fast-moving, dispassionate recounting of a seminal period in our history, and all in all, a wonderful book. (Jan.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
From Booklist
*Starred Review* This would be a terrific social history of a fascinating historical period even if it didn’t star some of the most important influences on today’s culture. But Andrew Weil remains a guru of alternative medicine and nutrition, and Huston Smith’s books on world religion are required reading at almost every college, while Timothy Leary and Ram Dass are icons of consciousness exploration through drugs and Eastern religions, respectively. So this energetic study of the time all four were together at Harvard tells much about today’s culture. Lattin’s quasifictional techniques (most notably, reconstructed dialogue) bring to life the antics of trickster Leary, who once said that he’d turned seven million people on and only 100,000 ever thanked him, and seeker Ram Dass (originally Richard Alpert), who helped bring awareness of meditation and other Indian religious techniques to the West. Smith, son of Christian missionaries in China and early on a fellow traveler with Leary and Alpert, determined that drugs constituted but a shortcut to the religious ecstasy he sought, while Weil’s opposition was instrumental in ending Leary’s and Alpert’s tenures at Harvard (although he was himself experimenting with the same drugs). Some laugh-aloud passages make this an entertaining read, but the underlying exploration of the sociocultural reasons for the extravaganza that was the 1960s merits attention, especially from those interested in the period. --Patricia Monaghan
Review
Many of the stories in this book have been told elsewhere, but Lattin tells them with new energy and weaves them together to create a satisfying narrative that re-creates and explains the era. (San Francisco Chronicle Book Review )

“With equal parts keen historicity and great humor, Lattin… chronicles how these founding fathers of the so-called New Age movement in the U.S. and worldwide met at Harvard in the early 60s and - despite rivalries, infighting and backstabbing - managed to change the spiritual landscape for generations to come.” (Chicago Sun-Times )

“Don Lattin’s recent Harvard Pychedelic Club is a wryly tumultuous history… [that] focuses sharply on the group that began in Cambridge.” (The Huffington Post )

“Informative and entertaining” (HistoryWire.Com )

“Lattin… deftly captures the intoxicated spirit of the 1960s zeitgeist… [The Harvard Psychedelic Club is] a fresh, expertly written text that serves to remind Leary’s generation of their past while providing a new generation with some context of where today’s pervasive drug culture came from.” (The Daily Californian )

“The Harvard Psychedelic Club, takes a lucid look at four founding fathers of a movementthat changed the world.” (East Bay Express )

In this beautifully constructed study, Lattin brings together four of the most memorable figures from that period…this is a fast-moving, dispassionate recounting of a seminal period in our history, and all in all, a wonderful book. (Publishers Weekly (starred review) )

“[An] unexpectedly grounded story...makes sense of a complicated movement so often reduced to its parody-ready costumes, haircuts, and groovy lingo. And [Lattin] does it with authority and an evenhanded understanding of the good, the bad, and the crazy of it.” (The New York Times Book Review )

“Lattin satisfyingly places the parallel and interconnected lives of these four titans along a timeline, drawing in a cast of minor characters as fascinating as its stars.” (BookReporter.com )

“The Harvard Psychedelic Club sets the record straight: Four extraordinary personalities crossed paths, and the result was electrifying.” (Portland Oregonian )

“Lattin weaves the biographies of these brilliant men into a compelling tale of possibilities and disappointments, angels and demons, triumph and tragedy… a page-turner that can stand proudly alongside its fictional counterparts.” (Northern Dutchess News )

“[T]horoughly engaging… Packing his book with strange, wonderful scenes, Lattin argues that America would never be the same because of an unlikely quartet that did time — and drugs — at Harvard in the early 1960s.” (New York Post )

“Lattin’s new book The Harvard Psychedelic Club takes a lucid look at four founding fathers of a movement that changed America and thus the world.” (PsychologyToday.com )

“The Harvard Psychedelic Club’s intimate, revealing vista makes the book soar, and, as Lattin hopes, just might inspire today’s idealists to carve a new path and profoundly change the world as these four dynamic visionaries once did.” (Miami Herald )

“Lattin’s snappy conversational prose and poignant insights into his subjects’ often-tortured personal lives make his book worth the trip.” (Washington City Paper )

“...raucous, witty and licentious... [Lattin] has created a post-Kerouac road scholar classic.” (The Edge )

“A fast, funny, and savvy book that dishes about some of the most celebrated figures in the American counterculture.” (Jewish Journal of Los Angeles )

“In ‘The Harvard Psychedelic Club’ Lattin adds depth, breadth and surprises to the story. Searchers, thinkers, philosophers and occasional wackos fill the pages of this entertaining book with their quests and questionable behavior. The book is a fast, often delightful read… This is a good one.” (San Mateo County Times )

“Don Lattin tells the story with panache…[he is] fascinated by these men, but he’s also a fierce judge of their trespasses and their lapses from authenticity. (So we’re glad to have him tell the story.)” (The Los Angeles Times )

With care and considerable humor, Don Lattin shows us how the interwoven relationships of four charismatic visionaries contributed to the expansion of mind that changed American culture forever. The way we eat, pray, and love have all been conditioned by their lives and teachings. (Mirabai Bush, co-founder and Senior Fellow of the Center for Contemplative Mind in Society, co-author (with Ram Dass) of Compassion in Action )

The Harvard Psychedelic Club is not only a great read, it’s also an unforgettable head trip. Lattin weaves a masterful tale of 1960s-style spirituality, professional jealousy, and out-of-body experiences. Lattin has done his homework and it shows. Read this book and expand your mind. No hallucinogenics required. (Eric Weiner, author of The Geography of Bliss )

I suspect I’m not the only person who thought the psychedelics-at-Harvard story had been pretty well settled, but Lattin’s work has widened my perspective considerably. By focusing on Huston Smith and Andrew Weil as well as Leary and Alpert, he’s created a stimulating and thoroughly engrossing read. (Dennis McNally, author of A Long Strange Trip: The Inside History of the Grateful Dead, and Desolate Angel: Jack Kerouac, the Beat Generation, and America )

“Lattin succeeds where less accomplished chroniclers of this period have failed.” (San Jose Mercury News and Contra Costa Times )

“Don Lattin, one of America’s most-respected religion newswriters in recent years, has been devoting his considerable skills to unearthing and fully reporting some of these milestone stories. This Harvard book is his latest revelation.” (ReadtheSpirit.com )

“A rousing tale of jealousy, drugs, betrayal, vengeance, careerism and academic intrigue with a Harvard accent-it also carries the moral that brains alone won’t make you holy.” (Shelf Awareness )

“Outstanding book.” (Cleveland Plain-Dealer )

“...[T]hese stories provide the psychedelic movement with context and continued relevance-important elements for a generation of readers trained to laugh at stock hippie characters and stoner epiphanies.” (The Onion )

“Lattin artfully weaves [the stories] together,creating a stronger, more compelling narrative that enlightens as much as it informs. ...Mind-blowing.” (Religion News Service )

“[A] colorful tale.” (Boston Globe )

A revealing account of four iconic personalities who helped define an era, sowed seeds of consciousness, and left indelible marks in the lives of spiritual explorers to this day. The Conclusion is alone worth the price of the book. (Dan Millman, author of The Peaceful Warrior )

A terrific social history of a fascinating historical period . . . laugh-aloud passages make this an entertaining read. (Booklist (starred review) )
Product Description
This book is the story of how three brilliant scholars and one ambitious freshman crossed paths in the early sixties at a Harvard-sponsored psychedelic-drug research project, transforming their lives and American culture and launching the mind/body/spirit movement that inspired the explosion of yoga classes, organic produce, and alternative medicine.

The four men came together in a time of upheaval and experimentation, and their exploration of an expanded consciousness set the stage for the social, spiritual, sexual, and psychological revolution of the 1960s. Timothy Leary would be the rebellious trickster, the premier proponent of the therapeutic and spiritual benefits of LSD, advising a generation to "turn on, tune in, and drop out." Richard Alpert would be the seeker, traveling to India and returning to America as Ram Dass, reborn as a spiritual leader with his "Be Here Now" mantra, inspiring a restless army of spiritual pilgrims. Huston Smith would be the teacher, practicing every world religion, introducing the Dalai Lama to the West, and educating generations of Americans to adopt a more tolerant, inclusive attitude toward other cultures' beliefs. And young Andrew Weil would be the healer, becoming the undisputed leader of alternative medicine, devoting his life to the holistic reformation of the American health care system.

It was meant to be a time of joy, of peace, and of love, but behind the scenes lurked backstabbing, jealousy, and outright betrayal. In spite of their personal conflicts, the members of the Harvard Psychedelic Club would forever change the way Americans view religion and practice medicine, and the very way we look at body and soul.

About the Author
Don Lattin is one of the nation's leading journalists covering alternative and mainstream religious movements and figures in America. His work has appeared in dozens of U.S. magazines and newspapers, including the San Francisco Chronicle, where he covered the religion beat for nearly two decades. Lattin has also worked as a consultant and commentator for Dateline, Primetime, Good Morning America, Nightline, Anderson Cooper 360, and PBS's Religion & Ethics NewsWeekly. He is the author of Jesus Freaks: A True Story of Murder and Madness on the Evangelical Edge, and Following Our Bliss: How the Spiritual Ideals of the Sixties Shape Our Lives Today, and is the coauthor of Shopping for Faith: American Religion in the New Millennium.
 
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!!!

Thank you so much for this. Great find.

What an interesting process. Personally I would have gotten a little anxious just sitting there. Now to clarify was she under the influence of 100ug or 1000ug? (1 hit compared to 1 strip?). IF it were just 100ug, that was obviously some potent, clean LSD, and I am envious =]
 
Thankyou Dwayne. Wow, this girl is having a spectacular time <3 Talk about makes you want to trip.

By the way, I wouldn't mind getting my mittens on a copy of that book. Does your publisher have it distributed internationally?
 
!!!

Thank you so much for this. Great find.

What an interesting process. Personally I would have gotten a little anxious just sitting there. Now to clarify was she under the influence of 100ug or 1000ug? (1 hit compared to 1 strip?). IF it were just 100ug, that was obviously some potent, clean LSD, and I am envious =]

I'm pretty sure 100 gamma = 100ug.

Nice post. I enjoyed the video and will look into getting the book.

@ Survived Abortion: Amazon.co.uk have it.
 
My publisher? Shoulda clarified... put the text in quotes, I'll edit OP now.

If you go to the first link, youd see the text is from a page at hufffingtonpost.com that is the blog of:

Don Lattin - Author of 'Jesus Freaks' and 'The Harvard Psychedelic Club'

SOOOO... I'd guess you could google his name or the name of the book. Or check Amazon.com

Oh allright, I'll also add info on the book to the original post from Amazon.com, see above
 
I'm amazed at how such a positive experience came with someone with so little experience with chemicals. Acid in today's society always seems to be of a higher tier, were other drugs must be experienced before the person should try - so they are prepared. This woman took it and appears to have had a life changing experience in such a calm way, I'm pretty amazed.
 
It is 100 mics. In the beginning the narrator says 100 gamma = 1/10 of a mg. I love this video. The only thing I don't care for is the doctor at the end saying that subjects commented that "death might be fun [if its like an LSD trip]". I can see the anti-drug crusaders taking that one out of context and associating LSD use with suicidal ideation.
 
I'm amazed at how such a positive experience came with someone with so little experience with chemicals. Acid in today's society always seems to be of a higher tier, were other drugs must be experienced before the person should try - so they are prepared. This woman took it and appears to have had a life changing experience in such a calm way, I'm pretty amazed.

I enjoy when she talks about being able to see molecules etc. It resonates with me quite well. Quite often I feel like i can see atoms and molecules when I'm under the influence.



offtopic, but SpecialK_, any chance youre from the old p.box at GC? your name rings a bell.
 
great find =D

I really like what Dr. Cohen has to say at the end of it, sums it up nicely I think
 
Seeing much more drug naive generations react to LSD is far less superficial that the terminology than you can hear on the street nowadays. This is an amazing video! She appears to dislike the mans questions, the way he's asking them. I suppose the dose they gave her was sub-massive? considering the 40's and 50's and LSD testing on human subjects.

"It would be perfect if you weren't here" - Awkward...

But really if any kind nice person took a similar dose side by side with her they would likely be able to empathize with her and share her trip.

His questions did suck. flat out. Should have set it up in a different way perhaps getting her to draw and or write about the trip, using less vague terms than "It", "how is it" I've had friends forget they dosed and prying at them asking "is it pleasurable or not pleasurable" they just could not have fathomed my intent.

But the researcher had no clue what he was up against. LSD, great enigma!
 
Seeing much more drug naive generations react to LSD is far less superficial that the terminology than you can hear on the street nowadays.

Definitely. It's refreshing to see someone taking a psychedelic with this kind of humility, and revelling in the splendor of the moment.
 
Awesome! :D
thanks for sharing

I did see all kinds of black shit flying through the air I wonder how he missed it. Don't know what color she was talking about though there was none.
 
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