Category: Zine #4

  • The Early Psychedelic Years with Dr Bill Richards

    The Early Psychedelic Years with Dr Bill Richards

    My unofficial Vital Student Zine features observations from the course and beyond

      Harvard psychology professor Richard       Alpert       after he took LSD and remaned himself    Ram Dass
    Harvard psychology professor Richard Alpert after he took LSD and remaned himself Ram Dass

    Dr Bill Richards is a staple of the modern-day mystery school researching psychedelics. He’s worked alongside Abraham Maslow, Stanislav Grof, Walter Pahnke and more. Now installed at the Johns Hopkins Centre for Psychedelic and Consciousness Research, he passed trade secrets on to Vital students.

    Week four lecturer Dr Bill Richards volunteered for LSD testing as a restless theology student in post-WW2 Germany. He began working alongside Hanscarl Leuner, the German psychologist who invented Guided Affective Imagery (a perverse form of which was used in the brainwashing sequence of A Clockwork Orange), plus added both art and group therapy to LSD tests.

    Richards went on to become the most prolific psychedelic researcher of all time, working alongside Walter Pahnke, Abraham Maslow, Stanislav Grof, and now Roland Griffiths: he was last out of Spring Grove in 1977, first into the fledgling Johns Hopkins Centre for Psychedelic and Consciousness Research in 1999, and is still working today. His book Sacred Knowledge: Psychedelics and Religious Experiences is out now.

    See Bill interviewed here plus a bunch more I put on this YouTube resource channel.

    These five items I pulled from the week’s research are themed along Vital’s natural element-themed structure.

    Approach: The Wisdom of the Human Mind

    Therapy: Healing with Laughter

    Space: Cosmic Midwifery

    Medical: LSD – Did it Ever Go Away?

    Integral: The Wrong Mysteries

    Air provides an overview of approaches to psychedelic use, Fire concerns therapeutic applications, Water covers ‘space holding’ – the art of keeping it together, Earth is where you’ll find medical matters, and Ether discusses integration, the process of bringing psychedelic power into regular life.

    Next issue: The real ‘new psychonaut’ London’s Dr David Luke reboots transpersonal psychology for the 22nd Century

  • Cosmic Midwifery

    Cosmic Midwifery

      Space
    Space

    Psychedelic therapy sets the stage for new life to flourish

       Leonora Carrington,    ‘The Temple of the Word’
    Leonora Carrington, ‘The Temple of the Word’

    The psychedelic therapist offers presence, but doesn’t require reporting on behalf of the client. “At a very high dose, we are beyond words anyway,” advises Dr Richards.

    Guides are “like midwives, they create a container” to encourage the voyager’s “own choreography of the experience.”

    Voyagers should be prepped to “dive into the pupil of the monster” lest one pounce from the shadows of their psyche. Challenging experiences are actually quite unusual (only 40% of users say they’ve had ever one) but “we all have our cross to bear – our trauma” reminds Dr Richards.

    “We are primarily dealing with human consciousness,” says the Maryland and Spring Grove veteran, “a meaningful process unfolding from within.” He says objects to examine and inspire, personal or otherwise, can be offered to the voyager who appears inquisitive.

    “We are primarily dealing with human consciousness”

    Guides practising in legally permitted conditions from my study group say music is a fine changer of mood, especially with those who may have difficulty expressing their mystical sides. These “external routes to mystical consciousness” as Dr Richards dubs them, like the rose bud of lost era lore, or family photos used by silver age guides, can ‘make the energy dance’ like Alfred North Whitehead suggested. Suddenly everything is important, but somehow irrelevant, and both are absolutely fine. Unless they’re not.

    “Philosophy is the self-correction by consciousness of its own initial excess of subjectivity,” wrote Whitehead in Process and Reality: An Essay on Cosmology, “[it] may not neglect the multifariousness of the world — the fairies dance, and Christ is nailed to the cross.“ Quite.

  • Healing with Laughter

    Healing with Laughter

      Therapy
    Therapy

    It’s okay to get the giggles says the space’s most storied therapist

        David Shrigley,      ‘You are Very Important’
    David Shrigley, ‘You are Very Important’

    It’s okay to have a chuckle, or a cry, ‘in ceremony’. We could all probably do with one.

    “Some patients have an intuitive understanding of the transcendent. Some just giggle,” says Dr Richards.

    “For many of us intellectualisation is our primary form of armouring,” continues the seasoned psychedelic therapist, “tell participants to appreciate their thinking minds, but let themselves go out and play. See your patient going through states of wisdom, vulnerability…” and be prepared for pranksterism. The voyager might not be feeling especially mystic today, and that’s their prerogative. “A playful experience may actually be what’s needed,” says Richards. The god of laughter deserves reverence also.

    “We are primarily dealing with human consciousness, a meaningful process unfolding from within”

    Reverence is appropriate to tradition, but welcome to the aeon where do what we wilt, not least out of necessity. Fortune favours the brave: the two-guide format, for example, began because researchers couldn’t hold their subject’s hand and change the record on the turntable at the same time. There’s an anecdote that might get you some laughs in over-intellectualising psychedelic circles.

  • Guess who’s back?

    Guess who’s back?

      Medical
    Medical

    Everything you need to now about this season’s essential LSD revivial trend

       Dolce & Gabbana      men’s spring/summer ‘22 collection      catwalk show
    Dolce & Gabbana men’s spring/summer ‘22 collection catwalk show

    The psychedelic renaissance wrote LSD off as impractical, fuddy-duddy, and just so, like long as to be downright subversive.

    But tastemakers are trumpeting LSD’s versatility, while trendsetters are mining its aesthetic.

    “To my mind, LSD is the best, the purest” declared Beckley Foundation’s Lady Amanda Fielding at the 2022 Psych Summit held at London’s National Gallery.

    After all only the bohemian elite would have the time, right? And time is money more than ever before (usual disclaimers re: existence and/or nature of time).

    One shudders to think that LSD is the new jet set drug of choice. Beckley are actually conducting the first serious test into microdosing with LSD. The old fave has also found favour with the restless rabble. MindMed’s stage two tests for ADHD are underway at 20µg of LSD twice a week, hot on the heels of its success with LSD for anxiety. MindMed’s base of Switzerland is the home of LSD after all.

    Meanwhile, Milanese glamour powerhouse Dolce & Gabbana offers the trip-wear of choice for sartorial psychonauts in its spring/summer 2022 menswear collection. See you at the sample sale.

       Dolce & Gabbana      men’s spring/summer ‘22 collection      catwalk show
    Dolce & Gabbana men’s spring/summer ‘22 collection catwalk show
  • Kool-Aid Corner #4

    Kool-Aid Corner #4

    To finish: trippy clippings, merry pranks, and psychedelic student life

    Graph/visual aid of the Week

    The first patent for MDMA

       From: The Rave: Spiritual Healing in Modern Western Subcultures by  Scott R Hutson (Anthropological Quarterly, January 2000)
    From: The Rave: Spiritual Healing in Modern Western Subcultures by Scott R Hutson (Anthropological Quarterly, January 2000)

    My bookshelf weighs a ton

    Notable new purchases for the occult library. Strictly second hand snap-ups only. This week: The Archaic Revival by Terrence McKenna.

       £25 usually £100+
    £25 usually £100+

    Stories of space narcotics by major authors collected by druid of derring-do Michael Parry (d. 2014) , including The New Accelerator by H G Wells, Subjectivity by Norman Spinrad and What to Do Until the Analyst Comes by Frederik Pohl.

    Plus a superb cover naturally.

    If you like this sort of thing and haven’t read The Employees, a 2020 Booker Prize nominee by Danish author Olga Ravn, a ‘disconcertingly quotidian space opera’ (The Guardian), do so at light speed.

    I can’t look at books like this without being hauntd by a sci fi short story about a co-ed college on a space station where the boys get these pets called teasels. I couldn’t find any reference to it online which was chilling in itself.

    Next issue: Dr Rick ‘The Strass’ Strassman goes further than ever before… several times