red22
Bluelighter
- Joined
- Nov 23, 2009
- Messages
- 1,200
This is a book about psychedelic experience and about babies. The material in this book developed out of the distribution of approximately twelve thousand, 250-microgram doses of LSD over a period of ten years. This distribution was worldwide and included the following cultures:
1. Judeo-Christian: upper and middle classes, peons, dropouts, prison and jail inmates, and mental patients;
2. Moslem: middle and lower classes;
3. Hindu-Buddhist: middle and lower classes, yogis, and monks; and
4. Animist: no class structure.
Members of the community that produced this book have altogether ingested LSD on approximately four thousand occasions in every life situation imaginable. This amounts to a depth and variety of LSD experimentation that no other research venture has approximated. The conclusion of this experimentation is that the LSD experience reactivates the space-time reality and sense perception awareness of childhood, infancy, and interuterine existence. Moreover, the degree to which an LSD user's experience is traumatic is the degree to which the user experienced trauma while in the womb, during birth, and in early childhood.
The Book of the Mother. Shivalila (Children’s Liberation Front), 1977 (Introduction)
1. Judeo-Christian: upper and middle classes, peons, dropouts, prison and jail inmates, and mental patients;
2. Moslem: middle and lower classes;
3. Hindu-Buddhist: middle and lower classes, yogis, and monks; and
4. Animist: no class structure.
Members of the community that produced this book have altogether ingested LSD on approximately four thousand occasions in every life situation imaginable. This amounts to a depth and variety of LSD experimentation that no other research venture has approximated. The conclusion of this experimentation is that the LSD experience reactivates the space-time reality and sense perception awareness of childhood, infancy, and interuterine existence. Moreover, the degree to which an LSD user's experience is traumatic is the degree to which the user experienced trauma while in the womb, during birth, and in early childhood.
The Book of the Mother. Shivalila (Children’s Liberation Front), 1977 (Introduction)