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Tripping: An Anthology of True-life Psychedelic Adventure (2000)

par Charles Hayes

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A collection of transformational, awe-provoking psychedelic experiences.  In Tripping, Charles Hayes has gathered fifty narratives about unforgettable psychedelic experiences from an international array of subjects representing all walks of life--respectable Baby Boomers, aging hippies, young ravers, and accomplished writers such as John Perry Barlow, Anne Waldman, Robert Charles Wilson, Paul Devereux, and Tim Page. Taking a balanced, objective approach, the book depicts a broad spectrum of altered states, from the sublime to the terrifying. Hayes's supplemental essays provide a synopsis of the history and culture of psychedelics and a discussion of the kinetics of tripping. Specially featured is an interview with the late Terence McKenna, who was perhaps the preeminent psychedelic spokesperson of our time. A storehouse of astonishing, often otherworldly tales, Tripping is a compendium of forbidden memories that enables readers to trip vicariously or compare notes on their own experiences.… (plus d'informations)
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Wild colors. Weird sounds. Sensations of the presence of the divine. An acute feeling of the presence of a demon. The range of altered states of consciousness covers a gamut as wide and varied as the people who have taken LSD, DMT or any of the other psychedelic substances. And all those experiences are here, in Charles Hayes’ eye-opening, wonderful, and lovingly edited anthology.

The basic premise of Tripping is simple. Instead of writing yet another tome about how great acid, ecstasy and all the rest are—a project that is inevitably subjective, no matter how thoughtful the author—go out and ask the folks who have taken the drugs what they experienced. What we get, then, is the varieties of psychedelic experience, a kind of informal ethnography.

Hayes interviewed people from all over the world in the compilation of Tripping. It’s an informal ethnography because the interviewees are all English speakers; Hayes doesn’t claim to have been thorough or scientific. He simply went where he could go to get an interview, and was often referred to new sources by people he had previously spoken with. But this doesn’t limit its value as a contribution to the anthropology of the psychedelic experience. “I set out,” he writes in the preface, “to document psychedelic experiences that were transformational, awe-provoking, or otherwise indelible to their subjects” and to sketch the “pagan, aboriginal order in which the spirit [reigns] preeminent.” Hayes uses physicist David Bohm’s word to describe the preeminent reign of spirit as experienced with psychedelic substances: the holomovement within an “invisible web of events and relationships.” Or, as poet Anne Waldman says of her experiences, “things come apart and then reforge”: the web may be invisible, but can be experienced when one is opened to the possibility that it truly exists.

Connectivity is an ancient idea. It’s evident in the most ancient poetry of which we have textual remains. For example, there’s an ancient Mesopotamian poem about the creation of the world in which everything already exists except the gods, who are finally created when humans need them. It’s only later, much later, with the story of the Exodus and the beginnings of holy wars, that humans lost contact with the web of the world and replaced it with projections of our own political organization. Male sky gods dominate in cultures with kings; a single sky god predominates in cultures with kings holding absolute power. The frightening implications of this abound in the U.S., where a Bible-thumping and Old Testament code-talking president claims divine right to rule. What is so striking about the true stories in Tripping is how easy it is to burn away the dross of political organization and the tyranny of monotheism to reveal—profoundly and often overwhelmingly—the implicate order of the animistic universe.

Ruth, for instance (not all of the interviewees reveal their full identity—and who could blame them when “the Godzilla called the War on Drugs” menaces more threateningly than ever?), looks into a mirror while tripping and realizes “You are God, the most enlightened being. There was a bright circle of rainbow light around my head, no doubt a Christian allusion from being raised Catholic.” Ruth sees through the mirror, through the imprint of her upbringing to see the place “where all the spirits are hanging around.” The charm and value of this book is the way the interviewees tell their stories in everyday language. Very few are trying to argue their way to a particular point; they’re not trying to convince us of anything. They’re simply trying to describe what they experienced and they way they felt while tripping.

The peeling away of the monotheistic paint is like a Platonic remembering. Plato argued, in several of his Dialogues, that we are born knowing everything worth knowing but, having drunk from the river of Lethys, the river of forgetting, we don’t remember that we know what we know. Jeremy says, “I… became aware of an overwhelming feeling of déjà vu. I realized that I’d been in this consciousness many times before—that in some ways I’d been here all of my life—that this was that place, and I’d forgotten about it.” Jeremy reminds us that “As a kid, each of is taught, directly and indirectly, that you’ve got to keep yourself under control, that you’ve got to ‘behave,’ that you can’t be in touch with the true nature of the universe all the time.” Clark Heinrich, a writer and ethnobotanist, tells of his experience of reading passages from the Hebrew Bible while tripping with a friend. The thing is, after a while Heinrich stopped reading out loud. But his friend continued to respond in perfectly appropriate ways, as if he could hear Heinrich reading. Social animals that we are, the brain is amazingly tunable: when we free it up to remember what it has always already known, experiences far more powerful than mere empathy are possible, and indeed, common.

Hayes’ book concludes with an informative essay about the varieties of psychedelic substances, and a long conversation with the late, great psychonaut Terrence McKenna. McKenna’s theories provide foundational ideas about why we experience what we do when we trip: the universe is information, he says. To some this sounds like New Age tripe. But skeptics should be reminded that this is precisely what physicists are discovering: “It from bit,” as the great John Wheeler says. The “It” of the universe is informed and evolves from the “bit,” from the signifying relationships between the atoms and galaxies of the universe. This is true at the micro-quantum level, the macro-galactic level, and it is also true at the meso-human level. It from blotter bit!

[Originally published in Curled Up with a Good Book]

Also of interest: Charles Hayes’ Psychedelic Adventures. Tell him Puck sent you! ( )
  funkendub | Sep 30, 2010 |
While reading the pieces in this anthology--skimming some, lingering with others--I was struck by the wide range of differences between contributors; where and when they were from, what they were into now ... and as a former acid head, I felt pleasantly connected while reading, as if in a mind commune (so much less messy than the actual crash pads of Haight-Ashbury and the East Village in 1967).

For some in this anthology, the psychedelic experience was hallucinogenic (for me, like "Jack", I "never had the ultimate experience of seeing things that weren't there and not knowing the difference") ... and/or it was mythic, replete with ancient gods and goddesses (I knew a few of them); and/or spiritual, religious, creative. Or merely (!) eye-opening, with former abstract concepts now REAL, actual, in the moment: an existential (or dissociative) awakening. ("Mother died yesterday, or I think it was yesterday ... ") And in this anthology, more than a few who focused on psychedelics as a catalyst, which in retrospect they feel changed their lives.

Having been through it myself, and put in a lot of years since then thinking and writing about it, I suspect that many of the contributors, reconsidering their experiences--and these pieces--might now have a more nuanced reaction. One more grounded, if (alas) more prosaic. Still, it's good to know there were so many who sought what I thought and still think of as spiritual reality. And that they're still out there. ( )
1 voter copyedit52 | Dec 27, 2008 |
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A vision [is] not, as the modern philosophy supposes, a cloudy vapor or a nothing, but [is] organized ansd minutely articulated beyond all that the mortal and perishing nature can produce. He who does not imagine in stronger and better lineaments, and in stronger and better light than his perishing eye can see, does not imagine at all. -William Blake
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for all who had the courage to share for this book some of the most private, intimate, and momentous details of their lives.
for the spirit of the late Terence McKenna, a true Magellan of the imagination and Copernicus of the hyperreal, who braved the alien otherness of it all and sighted myriad new heavenly bodies in the cosmos of consciousness.
for my mother, that she may finally understand some of the things that so worried her in my student years.
for Mark, Fred, and Iris, who were there when I made my glimpses through the wall and on such occasions helped to spark the ineffable, and
for Doug and Andy, who didn't make it back from the longest trip of all.
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Psychedelics are notorious today because of the rude splash they made in the Sixties and Seventies, when the tidal wave of altered consciousness they unleashed billowed across the social landscape, upsetting many an apple cart, Newtonian and otherwise, along the way.
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A collection of transformational, awe-provoking psychedelic experiences.  In Tripping, Charles Hayes has gathered fifty narratives about unforgettable psychedelic experiences from an international array of subjects representing all walks of life--respectable Baby Boomers, aging hippies, young ravers, and accomplished writers such as John Perry Barlow, Anne Waldman, Robert Charles Wilson, Paul Devereux, and Tim Page. Taking a balanced, objective approach, the book depicts a broad spectrum of altered states, from the sublime to the terrifying. Hayes's supplemental essays provide a synopsis of the history and culture of psychedelics and a discussion of the kinetics of tripping. Specially featured is an interview with the late Terence McKenna, who was perhaps the preeminent psychedelic spokesperson of our time. A storehouse of astonishing, often otherworldly tales, Tripping is a compendium of forbidden memories that enables readers to trip vicariously or compare notes on their own experiences.

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