The Mind of James Donahue Fighting Angels |
|||||
Home | Aaron's Magick | Political Art | Genesis Revised | About Aaron | About James Donahue | Many Things | Shoes | Ships | Sealing Wax | Cabbages | Kings | Sea Is Boiling | Pigs With Wings | Lucifer | Goetia Spirits | Hot Links | Page 2 | Main Page
|
|||||
British Psychiatrists
Call For End Of LSD Taboo By James Donahue January 2006 British psychiatrists
now debate the possibility of using LSD for therapeutic treatment of patients under controlled conditions. They know, as many
psychiatrists including Dr. Timothy Leary knew 30 years ago, that the drug is especially effective at unlocking obsessive
behavior. Leary, who paid for his
fascination with mind altering substances by serving time in prison, proved that certain psychedelic drugs like LSD and psilocybin
mushrooms helped habitual felons break the cycle of repetitive criminal offense. He also used the drugs effectively to alter
undesirable and unwanted behavior patterns. After it was accidentally
“invented” by Swiss Chemist Albert Hofmann in 1938, LSD (lysergic acid diethylamide)
was considered an exciting new tool for not only psychologists, but even the U. S. Military experimented with the drug as
a behavior modifier for military purposes. Even though it showed
exciting promise, the drug was banned by governments as an illegal substance after it became popular as a street drug used
for recreational purposes in the 1960s and 70s. Government propaganda
was circulated about the “dangers” of LSD. Stories were told about people jumping from rooftops to their death,
thinking they could fly, or becoming involved in fatal car crashes while under the influence of the drug. Stories also were
circulated about “bad trips” where users experienced sensations of panic and terror, and sometimes lost their
minds. The information also talked about dangerous “flash backs” by users that put them back into a psychedelic
state weeks or even months after they used the drug. Regular users of LSD,
however, will tell you that none of the stories were based on fact. Dr. Leary, who advocated extensive use of LSD by everybody
as a way of expanding the mind and pushing humanity into a new and exiting spiritual and mental path toward enlightenment,
admitted taking excessive amounts of the drug without experiencing any physical harm. Several famous writers,
including Allen Ginsberg, Jack Kerouac, William Burroughs, Abbie Hoffman and Aldous Huxley, all used LSD at the time they
were producing some of their most creative literature. The drug is a proven enhancer of brain activity and a natural aide
to mental and spiritual evolution, says Psychic Aaron C. Donahue. Inventor Albert Hofmann,
who discovered the effects of the drug by accidentally ingesting a small quantity of it, was an obvious user throughout his
life. Hofmann, who just celebrated his 100th birthday, claims he last used LSD three years ago. Leary, who spent time
in prison for his public stand in support of LSD, died of cancer in 1996. The drug had nothing to do with his death. Now, one British psychiatrist,
Dr. Ben Sessa, is openly risking controversy when he makes a presentation on the possible therapeutic benefits of LSD during
a meeting of the Royal College of Psychiatrists in March. It will be the first time this subject has been openly discussed
by the organization in 30 years. “I really want
to present a dispassionate medical, scientific evidence-based argument, Sessa said. “I do not condone recreational drug
use. Scientists, psychiatrists and psychologists were forced to give up their studies for socio-political reasons. That’s
what really drives me.” Indeed, it should. LSD
is a powerful mind expanding drug that arrived almost as a last-ditch gift to the world at a time when humanity was heading
at breakneck speed toward ecological disaster. Those who used this drug saw the truth, if only briefly, and it sparked a movement
during the 1960s for new environmental laws that forced industry to stop dumping its waste freely into lakes, streams, the
ground and the air. It created government environmental protection agencies that served for a few years as watchdogs over
this problem. What was done then was
not enough. The Hippies of the 60s grew older, the LSD was taken away from them, and humanity settled back into its old lethargic
state. Now we have the Bush Administration in power, and those great environmental laws are being stripped of their teeth,
the environmental protection offices are left ineffective, and the world is rushing once again toward a doomsday scenario. What is worse, few are
awake enough these days to even realize the terrible dilemma they are in. Dr. Sessa should not
be alone in his call for reinstatement of LSD. There should be a thousand Timothy Leary’s out there, all shouting from
the rooftops. Every man, woman and child should be forced to consume a dose of LSD and take a look at the real world. For
them now, it would not be a “recreational trip,” but a true vision of horror. For they would see a dying Mother
Earth and they would see their own demise on the horizon. But they need to look,
and see. And maybe….just maybe….they might collectively agree to do something about their dilemma. |
||||
|
||||