If our employers and industry talking heads are interested in creating a new technical revolution in Silicon Valley or elsewhere, they would lobby to change the scheduling laws of LSD and other psychedelics. We will use our access to LSD to live more healthfully and creatively than ever.
I would be skeptical of the objectivity of this given the time period, as well as the quality of the LSD. Mid 70s had a lot of homebrew drugs going on, and cutting and mixing were just ramping up.
In addition to testing of their stomach contents, urine, and blood (pp184-185), "A white flaky material (208mg) was confiscated by police and identified as the large quantity of powder used at the party. Analysis by thin layer chromatography, fluorescent analysis, mass spectrography and the melting point and mix melting point identified this substance as almost pure (80 to 90 percent) D-lysergic acid diethylamide tartrate." p185.
Keeping LSD around in powder form, especially not clearly labelled is so irresponsible.
There are all these mythical stories floating around of people 'thumbprinting' LSD (effectively pouring dozens or hundreds of milligrams of LSD onto a surface, licking your finger, smearing your finger in the pile of LSD, and then pressing your thumb into your mouth - dosing yourself with many hundreds or thousands of times the conventional dose of LSD), usually in the folklore surrounding the people that followed the Grateful Dead. I'm not sure how many of these stories are real, but they are certainly interesting.
Also, FTA: "mescaline (the psychoactive compounds in magic mushroom)". Come on CNN, spending five seconds to search for mescaline on Wikipedia will show you that that isn't true.
I have bipolar disorder. I have taken LSD. It didn't cure me. I have met other bipolar people in treatment. A lot of them have taken LSD, some of them in huge amounts (e.g. while manic, when "no" is temporarily removed from your vocabulary) and as far as I can tell, the ones who have taken the most acid have the worst problems: more frequent cycling, higher highs, lower lows, more agitated depression (very bad because it can cause suicide), and more frequent loss of contact with reality.
And the article is pretty insensitive about bipolar disorder in general. It says literally nothing about what it's like to have it, or how to cope with it, or that you can lead a relatively normal life in spite of it. It certainly says nothing about the good parts to having bipolar disorder, that the disease imparts certain talents, and that some bipolar people would opt not to cure themselves if they had the choice.
In the article bipolar disorder is just this generic bad thing that sets the stage for the healing power of acid.
Frankly, my life, and the lives of the other people I've met, are just a lot more interesting than that.
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[ 3.0 ms ] story [ 40.6 ms ] threadThey are interested in money and power. The tech is simply a tool to get those things
wired: evidence based psychedelic pharmacotherapy
inspired: macrodosing
Turn on
Tune in
Drop out
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1129381/
Hey, I love LSD as much as the next guy, but that sounds like a dangerous combination of status effects.
Could probably replace the LSD with anything that makes you go thru an ordeal without lasting damage. You’ll feel great due to the endorphins alone.
There are all these mythical stories floating around of people 'thumbprinting' LSD (effectively pouring dozens or hundreds of milligrams of LSD onto a surface, licking your finger, smearing your finger in the pile of LSD, and then pressing your thumb into your mouth - dosing yourself with many hundreds or thousands of times the conventional dose of LSD), usually in the folklore surrounding the people that followed the Grateful Dead. I'm not sure how many of these stories are real, but they are certainly interesting.
Also, FTA: "mescaline (the psychoactive compounds in magic mushroom)". Come on CNN, spending five seconds to search for mescaline on Wikipedia will show you that that isn't true.
I have bipolar disorder. I have taken LSD. It didn't cure me. I have met other bipolar people in treatment. A lot of them have taken LSD, some of them in huge amounts (e.g. while manic, when "no" is temporarily removed from your vocabulary) and as far as I can tell, the ones who have taken the most acid have the worst problems: more frequent cycling, higher highs, lower lows, more agitated depression (very bad because it can cause suicide), and more frequent loss of contact with reality.
And the article is pretty insensitive about bipolar disorder in general. It says literally nothing about what it's like to have it, or how to cope with it, or that you can lead a relatively normal life in spite of it. It certainly says nothing about the good parts to having bipolar disorder, that the disease imparts certain talents, and that some bipolar people would opt not to cure themselves if they had the choice.
In the article bipolar disorder is just this generic bad thing that sets the stage for the healing power of acid.
Frankly, my life, and the lives of the other people I've met, are just a lot more interesting than that.