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July 6, 2019 52 mins

Idolized by some and reviled by others, Timothy Leary remains an icon of 1960s counterculture and psychedelic self-exploration. But who was this rebel, psychologist and celebrity? What did he reveal about LSD’s power and potential? Join Robert and Christian for a special two-part look at the man, the time and the drug he championed. Turn on, tune in, drop out... (originally published Sep 19, 2017)

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:05):
Hey, welcome to Stuff to Blow your Mind. My name
is Robert Lamb and I'm Joe McCormick. In It's Saturday.
Time to go into the old vault, this time for
an episode that you and Christian did back. I think
this was published originally in September of that's right. Since
we're doing this series on psychedelics, I thought it'd be
good to revisit these older episodes that Christian I did

(00:27):
on Timothy Leary. Looking at Timothy Leary, his biography and
the role he played in the the history of psychedelics,
which is kind of a you know, a double edged
sword here, I guess you know. It's on one hand,
he he was at the forefront of the counterculture movement,
but he undoubtedly did a lot of damage to the

(00:47):
reputation of psychedelics. Interesting that he has a controversial legacy,
not just among people who were opposed to psychedelics, but
among a lot of psychedelic supporters, people who are involved
in psychedelic rely search there there's a lot of I
don't know if you'd say anger, but even in contemporary accounts,
you read about people who are who just kind of

(01:09):
hang their head and they're like man, Timothy really really
made things difficult for us. Yeah. Indeed, and we discussed
some of that in the Psychedelics episodes that that are
publishing right now. So let's go ahead and jump into
this one, part one of a two thousand seventeen look
at Timothy Leary. Welcome to Stuff to Blow Your Mind

(01:31):
from how Stuffwork dot com. Hey, welcome to Stuff to
Blow your Mind. My name is Robert Lamb and I'm
Christian Seger. And this week we're talking about Timothy Leary.
Now we're not just gonna talk about Timothy Leary. We're
also going to talk about science of LSD, the history

(01:53):
of LSD, the use of LSD and psilocybin in various
UH research projects, what these substance is actually due to
the mind to the brain. But we're going to use
Timothy Learry as kind of, you know, sort of a
guiding principle, I guess for this episode. And if you're
if you're out there and you're thinking, well, I love
Timothy Larry, Well, then strap in. If you're out there

(02:15):
and you're you're thinking yourself, well, I don't know that
I like this Timothy Learry guy, well, strap in as well. Yeah,
I think we've got something for everybody here. We were
basically sheltered during a hurricane this week, and so Robert
and I just binge read about Timothy Leary for four
days straight. We've got a lot to share with you.
My eyes are bleeding a little, but I think you're

(02:37):
going to be interested in this so much so that
we're going to do this as a two parter, yes now,
just to refresh anybody out there, and to and to
inform anyone who just who doesn't know who Timothy Learry is. Well.
Timothy Leary was an American psychologist, author, and a key
figure of the nineteen sixties counterculture and psychedelics you know
movement in general. You live and he managed to run

(03:01):
a foul of pretty much every organization he was a
part of. Uh. He was arrested u enough times that
he supposedly saw the inside of thirty six different prisons.
He he earned the ire of many Americans, even as
he was able to submit a reputation as also kind
of a you know, a counterculture leader uh his and

(03:22):
I think the reason is because he has this message
of inner exploration of anti establishment thinking and this this
resonated with folks and continues to resonate his writings, his soothing,
sage like voice on numerous audio recordings. His his his
irresistible celebrity allure. It all made him just impossible to ignore,
love him or hate him. Plus he was not the

(03:45):
sort of guy to let the limelight go away new
and well and we'll get into all that he uh, yeah,
he he clung to it and people gravitated to him
as well. He was more than willing to rub elbows
with scientists like Carl Sagan, artists like h Geeger, performers
like John Lennon. Uh, and you know such show luminaries
as Alan Ginsburg, Al Just Huxley, William Burrows, Jack Kara Whack,

(04:09):
and Kim Ksy. He even kept the company of former
enemies when it benefited him, such as Watergate Burglar and
later conservative radio talk show host G. Gordon Liddy. Yeah,
so this guy has been widely influential. He was. I
have a derogatory saying that I say sometimes about about

(04:30):
people like Leary, although I think Leary was doing this
before this guy. He was the Cato Kalin of his time.
Like he was famous for being famous. He was. Yeah, Um,
it wasn't because of a very specific thing he did,
and we learned this through the research. But I have
to be honest that, like my experience with him was
basically thinking, oh, this was an academic who had done

(04:52):
some studies and then sort of became a guru like figure,
much like Sasha Shulgin when we talked about him during
our two parter on M M A. Now, Sasha Shulgin
was a practicing chemist who is in his laboratory up
until he died, right, Uh, Leary was not. He did
do some interesting studies in the fifties and sixties, and

(05:13):
we're gonna get into all of that stuff, but first
I think we should probably talk about his influence on music. Yeah.
I have to say that before I knew anything about
Timothy Leary, I knew the Moody blues song Legend of
the Mind. Okay, this is the has the chorus Timothy
Learies Dead you know and so forth. Wonderful, wonderful track.
I listened to it several times while researching this episode.

(05:36):
Other fan music fans out there might recognize the the
the sampling of his voice in various recordings, probably most
notably a live version of Tools Third Eye, where they
have the bit to think for yourself, question authority. Um.
And then you'll find numerous other musical projects that make
use of his soothing voice, and in fact, he was

(05:58):
involved in several of these product as well. Uh, there's
an ambient instrumental like Situr distortion album the titled turn
onto an End Dropout, which was one of his catch phrases.
And that's actually like really good listening. I fired up
every now and then you just kind of, you know,
chill out and and you know, don't think about what's
being said too much. But um, the interesting thing is

(06:22):
we've alluded to is that there is this kind of
surface level pop culture idea of Leary, and it doesn't
it doesn't necessarily hold up when you start going into
the details of who he was, the sorts of research
projects he was involved in. Um. Like, I really wanted
him to be more in line with with another counterculture

(06:44):
controversial character that we've talked about, John C. Lily, But
there's not really a lot to compare the two besides
the LSD connection, right, And that's actually kind of what's
happening with this episode is we're getting a convergence of
two types of episodes that we normally do. We have
history of doing these two parters on specific psychedelics and

(07:04):
looking at their scientific and medical applications. But then we
also have a history of doing episodes like the John C.
Lily one or the Sasha Shulgin one. We call them
our psychedelic Avengers. And we thought, oh, we're gonna emerge
Tim Leary in this l s D psilocybin research together
and it will be really interesting. It turns out that

(07:25):
that he wasn't actually contributing to the research, but I
think it does come together in a really interesting way
thematically when we get to the whole piece of this,
and in that I think he was a barometer for
America's acceptance of the idea of researching acid as being
a medical tool. Yeah, it's interesting how he was is

(07:48):
this will just discuss he was, you know, a spokesperson
for this. He represented that the supposedly a a learned
academic who was who was advocating LSD A is this
this powerful tool? And yet at the same time he
also was such um an inflammatory individual as part of
the counterculture heat Uh. A lot of people point to

(08:08):
the harm he did as one of one of the
key figures, um more so than John C. Lily Uh
who who vilified the counterculture and vilified the use of
psychedelics and one of the reasons that psychedelics were not
studied for for decades. Yeah, there are multiple researchers in
the notes here that we'll talk about throughout the course

(08:28):
of these two episodes who point to Leary as being
the reason why we haven't been able to use l
s D in medically approved studies for going on thirty
plus years now. Longer than that, I think even it was.
It's in the notes here somewhere, but it was in
the mid sixties when it was banned. So, yeah, strap in,

(08:49):
because that's the other thing. We're going to get into
a real basic primer for you on what LSD is,
what's the difference between LSD and psilocybin, and then will
roll into the Leary experience. Okay, So to go back
to the very beginning here, let's just go to the
the the origins of l s D itself, since that's

(09:10):
the main substance that we're gonna be discussing here. So
Swiss chemist Albert Hoffman synthesized l s D and a
sandas pharmaceutical lab on November six, uh Sanders was working
on a research project involving a parasitic fungus called ergot
that grows on rye. Now you may remember that Joe

(09:33):
and I recorded an episode titled The Psychedelic Nightmare of
Ergotism that dealt with the ergot and that that is
the same substance that we're discussing here. And you know,
aside from a noteworthy and truly horrifying breakouts of ergot
poisoning in Europe, it has been linked to various supernatural
rights as well as as well as allegedly individual artist

(09:55):
and artistic traditions throughout history, though I think and sometimes
those are mere theories, right, Yeah, And so just to
be clear here, Sandaws was a pharmaceutical company that started
in eighteen eighties six, and they began researching for more
novel kind of drugs in nineteen seventeen. They were basically
looking for therapeutic leads based on natural products. So they

(10:16):
turned to ergot. Why well, they had an example that
they had already created called ergotamine. That was a drug
that they had created for treating migraine headaches. So Hoffman
came along and he started looking at ergot and he
saw the lisergic acid in it, and he thought, well,
maybe this LSD that I can synthesize out of this
will be a good respiratory stimulants. So, for instance, make

(10:38):
maybe if you have asthma, you take some LSD and
it will help you breathe better. Yeah. So he ended
up deriving different compounds from lysergic acid, and he developed
several medicines, including drugs that lowered blood pressure and improved
brain function of the elderly. And in eight he derived
the twenty five in a series of these derivatives. It
was lysergic acid dithalamide, or LSD, and he thought that

(11:02):
LSD stimulate breathing circulation, but test didn't show anything special
and Sandaz abandoned further study. But then five years later,
Hoffman's thoughts returned to LSD potential and he felt that
it hadn't been fully explored, so he took the perhaps
unusual step of synthesizing another batch further testing, and during

(11:23):
the process he began to feel strange. Um. The rest
is history. He discovered the properties of LSD, and I've
heard it described as his his problem child like it.
Basically the rest of his life he kept coming back
to LSD and and trying to figure out, like, you
know what what it can be used for and how
you know, what are the true properties of this. At

(11:45):
the same time, there's this kind of roller coaster of
of cultural awareness of it taking place in the background. Yeah. Yeah,
And he has that infamous bicycle ride as well, right
after he takes it for the first time that has
been sort mythologized over the years. Yes. Now, l s D,
to be clear, is a psychedelic drug, meaning that it

(12:05):
alters perceptions of reality, the shape of thoughts, the connections
that one forms. I can't stress enough that one should
set aside any cinematic ideas of what acid trips consists of,
because it's it's rare to find a film that truly
feels trippy in a way that matches up with the
actual experience of LSD. You don't. You don't see imaginary

(12:28):
elves or anything. It's if you watch just films and TV,
you just assume that an LSD trip is a dream sequence,
and a dream sequence is just an LSD trip, that
these are in just interchangeable, uh altered states of reality. Right, Yeah, exactly.
I remember like growing up when kids would start talking

(12:49):
about l s D and it being available to us,
just all the like various like bizarre urban myths that
people would tell, you know, like oh, there's this one
guy who took it and he thinks he's an orange
now and he doesn't know how stop being an orange,
or like another one was like this guy took it
and he saw a bunch of everybody looked like giant

(13:09):
white guerrillas to him, and he fought all these guerrillas.
And it's like these sort of spectacular stories. Well, it
does have hallucinogenic properties, there's they're mythologized. Yeah. I always
think back to an episode of Strangers with Candy where
there's a story of a girl who try took alics
D and tried to force herself through a key hole.
You know. Now, that's not to say that nothing bad

(13:31):
can happen while while one is on LSD. We'll have
some examples of that as as we go on here.
But in terms of just like what the experience of
of LSD, that basically, what is the psychedelic experience? Uh,
oddly enough, I'm I want to turn to some of
the words of Timothy Leary, because I thought that that
he actually managed to sum it up rather nicely here

(13:53):
and uh, and I'm gonna go ahead and read it
in my impersonation of Timothy Leary, because it's more fun
that way for me and hopefully for you. Of course,
the drug dose does not produce transcendent experience. It merely
acts as a chemical key. It opens the mind, frees
the nervous system of its ordinary patterns and structures. The

(14:14):
nature of the experience depends almost entirely on set and setting.
Set denotes the preparation of the individual, including his personality, structure,
and his mood. At the same time, setting is physical,
the weather, the room's atmosphere, social feelings of persons present
toward one another, and cultural prevailing views as to what

(14:35):
is real. It is for this reason that manuals are
guide books are necessary. Their purpose is to enable a
person to understand the new realities of the expanded consciousness,
to serve as roadmaps for new interior territories which modern
science has made accessible. So to give you an idea
of what LSD is like outside of the experience, outside

(14:57):
of getting turned on, as Leary would right, it starts
without about an hour of when you first take it,
and it can last up to twelve hours. Uh. There's
a peak about halfway through that experience. And the effects
very widely, but biologically they include dilated pupils, increased blood pressure,
high body temperature, dizziness, sweat, blurred vision, and tingly hands

(15:20):
and feet. The primary effects though, are visual, which is
more what Leary is describing there. You get stronger colors,
brighter lights, trails, halos, and patterns. Overall, people say it
provides a sense of happiness and euphoria. That's very emotional. However, though,
as we said, this can also lead to impulsive behavior

(15:40):
and poor judgment. When you're under the effects of this euphoria. Yeah,
you you feel your body as if it's something new,
something different. You smell and taste the world in a
different way. Visual stimulized, processed in a with new areas
of focus, new details, and and the same can be
said for cognition, and the same can be said for
the basic processing of time. And so indeed, that is

(16:01):
the that is the essential psychedelic experience, uh in a nutshell.
And there's one thing I'd like to point out before
we go further here, which is that we don't actually
know how it affects the brain entirely. And why don't
we know that because there's never been any scientific research
on how it affects the brain, because it has been
banned largely in the United States and some other countries

(16:22):
for for the last couple of decades, as we mentioned,
So this is kind of a problem. We've got this
thing on our hands. Everybody knows about it, we have
a general understanding of it, but we haven't done the research. Yeah,
and we've touched on this. So when we've talked about marijuana,
pslocybin as well as m D m A, you have
these substances that just became banned research into their properties,

(16:44):
right was it the very least professionally taboo for so long.
So Yeah, despite the fact that they clearly have powerful properties,
we don't necessarily understand them all that much. It's believed
that LSD works similar to sarah tonin and neurotraine. It's
made responsible for regulating moods, appetite, muscle control, sexuality, sleep

(17:05):
and since re perception and alice D seems to interfere
with the way the brain serotonin receptors work, so it
may inhibit neurotransmission, stimulated or both. It also affects the
way that the retinas process information and conduct that information
to the brain. So you might be listening to this
and saying, well, hold on, I've never taken any of

(17:25):
this stuff before, and you're just kind of throwing these
terms around. What's the difference between LSD and psilocybin? While
psilocybin is a fun guy, and that's classified by botanists
and my cologists, people who study mushrooms. While they were
used by the Aztecs in religious rituals, the American public
didn't really find out about psilocybin until nineteen fifty seven,

(17:49):
and this was when an article in Life magazine recounted
the adventures of a New York banker in Mexico where
he tried it. Huh yeah, LSD totally different. It is
color us odorless and tasteless and ingesting. Just twenty five
micrograms is enough to feel effects. Now, to give you
an idea of what twenty five micrograms is, that's less
than the weight of too salt grains is very quickly

(18:13):
metabolized by the human body. Now, as previously established, LSD
is a chemical that synthesized in a laboratory setting. Where
a psilocybin is a fungi that's grown in nat one
is natural one is created in a lapp. Several chemicals
that could go into l s D are currently sales
restricted here in America or are monitored by the Drug

(18:35):
Enforcement Agency, And there's all kinds of different recipes on
how to make it. Some start with lysergic acid that's
derived from morning glory seeds. Others use that ergot fungus
that we talked about earlier and how it was discovered.
They culture that and they extract ergot alkaloids from it.
This fungus and LSD itself can break down when exposed

(18:55):
to light, and that's important to note as well. In
this ergot recipe, the solvent and reagents involved are also
very dangerous. They're poisonous, carcinogenic, and explosive. So it's fun.
I would imagine marking on this stuff, like if you've
got your little laboratory, you've got to be really careful.
You know, this is like uh um, some Jesse and

(19:16):
Walter White stuff where you've got to be really careful
about what kind of stuff you're concocting and what you're
breathing in, and whether you're not, you blow up your trailer. Yeah,
this is straight up chemistry. And that's the other different
psilocybin is uh is ultimately Uh, it's it's about I guess,
scavenging or or growing naturally occurring organism. Uh. This is chemistry.
So the way you do it is you synthesize the

(19:38):
ergot alkaloid into a life surgic acid compound, and you
do this by adding chemicals and applying heat. Afterward, you
isomerize the compounds so that the atoms in its molecules rearrange.
This involves some cooling, mixing it with an acid, an
actual acid, not the term acid, also a base, and
then evaporating it. The remnants are i as lysergic dithalamide,

(20:02):
which is then isomerized again and that produces what's called
active LSD. So finally you purify it, you crystallize it. Afterward,
LSD can be made into tablets, or it's dissolved into
liquid or made into gelatine squares. Most often it's dissolved
into ethanol, and then that ethanol is added to sheets
of blotting paper that are then dried, cut up into

(20:24):
little pieces, and people get tabs. Yeah, it looks just
like the candy that you can buy. I'm not really
sure on the history of that. Can you know the
one where it basically looks like blots? Yeah? Like which
came first? That's a good question. This is this like
candy cigarettes or is it just a happy coincidence that
this terrible candy looks like acid? Yeah, that is curious.

(20:45):
If any listeners, no, please let us in on the
secret there A lot of you have probably also heard
about bad trips. We mentioned them earlier. Well, it's not
really clear what causes these bad trips, but they result
in fear and paranoia, and treatment usually requires basically going
to a quiet space so that the user can just
come down, but sometimes you have to administer anti anxiety

(21:06):
medication or tranquilizers, so that that's important to remember as well. Yeah,
this makes me think of a lot of the research
involving psilocybin um that really ultimately kind of backs up
some of what Leary said in that that bit that
I read in that a lot of it comes down
to priming, preparing the individual for what the trip is

(21:28):
going to consist of and then of course personal medical
and personal psychiatric history is going to play into that scenario. Yeah. Absolutely.
Now you've also probably heard of flashbacks, right, this is
the other thing, Like when when I was in high school,
like all the legends, it was like, Oh, he's gonna
see those white guerillas every year for the rest of
his life, right like something like that. Oh yeah, it's

(21:48):
this is something that is that pops up in films
and TV from time to time, and it's either just
completely ridiculous, like the White Guerillas, or even when it
is a lot cooler and more believable, say with the
season of True Detective, there's still a lot a lot
of doubts from some individuals to to what extent this
is a thing or or a realistic depiction of it

(22:09):
if it is. Yeah, here's the deal with flashbacks. There's
no evidence to support the idea that LSD remains in
your body forever in amounts inside your brain or spinal fluid.
People say that, but we don't have any evidence on it.
Why because we really haven't been able to study it. Right. Uh.
Some people think though that this is what causes flashbacks.

(22:30):
The majority of users, the report never having had flashbacks,
and of those who have reported it, many are mentally ill,
and some doctors believe that what they're perceiving is actually
a form of psychosis that emerged due to the l
s D use. There's actually a medically recognized disorder called
hallucinogen persisting perceptive disorder, and this is for people who

(22:53):
constantly experience visual hallucinations after they take LSD. This is
a little different than the idea of halashbacks, right, I mean,
it's also worth noting that the visual hallucinations can occur
for a number of reasons. Um So it's it's entirely
possible that one could could could take l s D
and then what a year later they experienced some sort

(23:14):
of visual hallucination. And one of the main ways they
can describe it is the narrative of acid flashbacks and
then they're going and then that becomes encoded in memory.
So one last thing I want to make clear about
l s D before we we cap off this summary here.
LSD is not an addictive drug. So if somebody tells
you you know you're gonna take that, you're gonna get

(23:35):
hooked on it or something like that, that's just patently untrue. Uh.
The real basic way that it works is that if
you take it a lot, your body is going to
get used to it, and subsequently the effects are going
to lessen over time. So that's the opposite of something
that you become addicted to. It doesn't work in the
same way as something like heroin. Right though then some

(23:57):
people may point out there's the whole idea of that,
like the first time you take heroin is the best,
and then you're always chasing that dragon. Um. But still
the LSD, psilocybin, d m T, any of these psychedelic
substances that we've discussed on the program before, they are
they are not addictive in the the very literal way

(24:17):
that stuff like heroin is. All Right, we're gonna take
a quick break and we come back. We're going to
continue to talk about the psychedelics, and in particular we're
gonna talk about psychedelics in medicine. Alright, we're back. So,
according to Timothy Leary's archivist, a guy named Michael Horowitz,
before Leary, the research being done on psychedelics was mostly

(24:39):
done by the CIA and the Army. Uh makes us
think of again and stranger things yeah, but they were
looking to weaponize it, dosing subjects without their knowledge. Now,
what are he's actually talking about is the CIA's attempts
with stuff like Project Bluebird and Project mk Ultra to
develop mind control techniques. We actually have an episode about

(25:02):
Stranger Things coming up in the next couple of weeks
where we're going to talk more about this stuff. The
basic idea here that I'm gonna boil it down quickly
is that they were inspired by Nazi research experiments in
the Dakow concentration camp. Subsequently, they tested on helpless populations
like prisoners, drug addicts, and mental patients, and at one
point the government reportedly ordered over a hundred million doses

(25:25):
of LSD from sand DAWs, that company that discovered it,
so that they could experiment with contaminating a water supply.
So they wanted to weaponize this and basically see like,
can we put a whole bunch of LSD in one
of our enemies water supplies? You know this really sad
thing about this, uh portion of the story is that
it underlies, uh, you know, a fact about military first research.

(25:51):
You know that essentially military military researchers come in and say, okay,
can we use it to kill people? Better, can we
use it to enable our our our our warfare in
some way, shape or form? And if not, well, then
we're done with it. We see this time and time
again on the show, and whenever we dig deep into topics,
whether it be uh the weaponization of animals we've done

(26:12):
an episode on, or a lot of our space based
stuff is usually related to weaponizing space in some way.
Uh So, Actually, the government Sandas wouldn't supply them that much,
so they turned to another company. They wanted the company
to break sandas is patent and produce the chemical, but
the whole thing never came to pass, and the government
essentially deemed LSD too unpredictable for their general use. Now.

(26:36):
Leary pioneered research into how psychedelics could reveal the nature
of human consciousness and possibly help people with depression and anxiety,
but he also precipitated a backlash against psychedelics that criminalized
them and made it impossible for others to do research
on them. H Leary supporters argue that's not Leary's fault.

(26:57):
This would have happened anyways. He you know, and I
can see you know, I can see both sides of that,
but he was undoubtedly a key figure and in a
in a very um, you know, ultimately a very like
hateable figure. Like part of his his charisma and his charm,
he just worked like poison against people who already had,

(27:20):
you know, a conservative bent. Yeah, it's true, and we're
going to see time and time again people turn against him,
and not the kind of people that you would expect. Right,
So let's back up for a second here. What about
before Leary, how we're scientists and researchers looking at it
before that, Well, in the nineteen fifties, some researchers began
investigating whether psychedelics could treat mental health disorders or addiction.

(27:41):
The federal government funded a hundred and sixteen of these
studies between nineteen fifty three and nineteen seventy three. Again,
I turned to our episode on M D, M A
and Sasha and Shulgin. They're perfect example of this. Along
those lines is kind of what was going on with
psychiatrists and very as researchers working with LSD and patients

(28:03):
to see how it could work. Sandaz was essentially selling
it as a psychiatric product, right, And these and these
were reputable research operations. We had not yet gotten to
the point where Leary comes along or or John C.
Lily comes along and you know, starts giving it to dolphins, Yeah, exactly,
or or giving it to himself while he's hanging out
with dolphins. Uh. Now, the sam Does Company patented it,

(28:27):
but they sold it as a delacid beginning in nineteen
forty seven, and they sold it in twenty five microgram
tablets that were designed for analytical psychotherapy. They suggested that
the psychiatrists themselves take it so that they could better
understand their patients experiences. Now, when they stopped making it,
they said, this is about the fact that there's a

(28:47):
lack of regulation and that there's inaccurate information being perpetuated
about this drug. But between nineteen fifty and nineteen sixty five,
forty thousand patients were given delcid tab Blitz, basically legal LSD,
and Dr Max Wrinkle was the first to bring LSD
to the United States and then test it on a

(29:07):
population of a hundred volunteers. He and his colleague Dr
Paul Hope noted that LSD produced effects that quote mimic
schizophrenic psychosis. So this is you can see what there's
some as Another theme that we come back to over
and over again on the show is like early psychological

(29:27):
theory seems to be very uh generalized and biased, right,
and this is another example of that. They're like, oh,
there's this thing. It just seems to make you schizophrenic,
you know, and there just wasn't enough research behind it.
But recreational drug use increased dramatically in the sixties, such
that as many as two million people had dropped acid

(29:49):
by the nineteen seventies. So by nine sixty five there
were very few researchers who are allowed to possess LSD.
Only six projects were conducted in nineteen sixty nine. In
nineteen seven D the U. S. Congress added psychedelics into
the government War on Drugs, and the federal government declared
these drugs had no medical use. The chairman for New

(30:10):
Jersey's Narcotic Drug Study Commission called l s D the
greatest threat facing the country today, more dangerous than the
Vietnam War. Seems like a little hyperbect By nineteen seventy four,
the National Institutes for Mental Health declared that LSD had
quote no real therapeutic value. So there was a strong

(30:31):
establishment bent against this drug, which Timothy Leary unfortunately did
not help with his antics. UH. Today, though l s
D is a Schedule one drug in the United States,
it's under the Controlled Substances Act. This basically means the
government believes that it has high abuse potential, which we've
already established that's not addictive, UH, has a lack of

(30:53):
accepted safe uses when taken under medical supervision. We'll talk
a little bit about how there actually are some of those,
and that it basically has no current medical use in
their minds. Again, there's evidence that it does. Now. I
want to remind everybody that by placing it as a
Schedule one, they're placing it in the same category as
marijuana and UH, and they're placing it in a stricter

(31:14):
category than Category two, which includes cocaine. Yep. So since then,
only a small number of studies have been conducted. You've
got small sample sizes, so there's not a lot of
research that we can rely on. The early results are broad.
They suggest that when used by people without a family
history or risk of psychological problems, psychedelics can actually make

(31:38):
us kinder, calmer, and better at our jobs. They also
help us solve problems more creatively and make us more
open minded and generous. Yeah, it's it's interesting when you
look at the research here about these digital uses for psychedelics.
One is insolute reminded of meditation because both both meditation

(31:58):
and psilocybin have been shown to shut down the default
fault mode network, that constant stream of worry chat about
past and future in your brain. Um, and that the
brain activity is similar even if the experience you know
obviously isn't going to always be the same though there
there is often a certain amount of crossover um, and
we'll have to get into that more when we do

(32:20):
a focus on meditation in the future. Yeah. I mean
what Robert's referring to is the default mode and network.
This is a group of structures in the brain. They're
found in the frontal and prefrontal cortex. That's what's responsible
for our ego and our sense of self, and it's
why we as humans have very rigid habitual thinking that
let's face it, we can obsess over right on psychedelics

(32:42):
that slows down and the boundaries between the self and
the world dissolve, allowing for therapy sessions that can be
more effective. Yeah. Yeah, there are a number of excellent
studies here. At two thousand and eleven study at Johns
Hopkins University gave high doses of psilocybin to fifty one
test subjects and according to ABC News, a thirty of
these individuals experienced measurable personality changes that lasted more than

(33:07):
a year. So as of a year ago, about five
hundred people have participated informal psilocybin experience. That's not LSD.
It's worth remembering, though, that these volunteers are self selected
and are carefully screened and then are guided by therapists.
So psychedelics used outside of control settings, yes, they can

(33:29):
cause problems, including bad trips where the users feel extremely
anxious and depressed. This doesn't account for the occasional flashbacks
that we talked about earlier, whether that's a real thing
or not. Right, the possible future of research is very promising.
Patients are recommended for treatment by a doctor, for instance,
this might be what we we look at in a
few years. Right, you get recommended for LST or psilocybin

(33:53):
treatment by your doctor, They get you screened for mental illness,
They look at your heart to see if you have
any heart conditions. Then they're prepping you about what to expect.
You're monitored by a medical professional while you're under the effects.
This is someone that they have, you know, established a
trusting relationship with you. It's not just some scary orderly
whose stands there at the whole time. They have to

(34:14):
work with you for at least six to eight hours
ahead of time. Then the experience you have is contained.
So it's something you can build a life around, right,
you can you can figure out how to solve the
problems that you're going in for around this. Across the
board though, like you, we're looking at it. Openness is
one of the key positive results of psaulocybin use some

(34:37):
other hallucinogens that have been explored in these various research programs. Yeah,
and so you look at what are the possibilities here.
If we can get the FDA to reschedule it, what
can we do with it. Well, there have already been
studies that have looked at how psilocybin or LSD can
be used to help terminal patients deal with the end
of life anxiety. You can potentially help people who have

(35:00):
addictive problems. There's been studies that have been done on
smoking cessation and alcoholism related to it. Uh, and then
also psychedelics can potentially help mental wellness. There's been a
number of studies that have been done basically looking at
how it can prolong positive changes in attitude and mood. Um.

(35:20):
When I think about LSD or psilocybin, for myself, I've
never taken either, But when I hear these very controlled
laboratory conditions described as somebody who's never taken it, that's
actually more appealing to me. The idea of it being
done in a controlled setting like that, Well, you know,

(35:42):
the crazy part about it is that like the idea
of of say people or young people taking LSD, pilocybin
or whatever and not really knowing what they're doing and
having you know, maybe a positive experience, maybe a negative
like that's that's not in keeping a with the clinical
use of it. But but all but be with the
with the traditional use of some of these substances, where

(36:05):
you would have not a scientist but a shaman to
administer these things. There were rituals, there were there was
a process. It was communal. Yeah, it was a communal
experience with lots of priming. Yeah. Now, so just from
my perspective because I know I have a history of
depression and anxiety, and my family has a history of
depression and anxiety. I've always worried, well, I don't want

(36:25):
to take this because I might have a bad reaction, right,
Remember what they said some of the setup was because
they needed to screen you for certain things. I'm also
curious though. They say things like it's going to increase
your interest in fantasy and imagination, and I want to
know how much more interested in fantasy and imagination I
can get, because I'm already pretty well down that rabbit hole.

(36:46):
One of the things that these researchers say is that
when they take a look at it, it can help
change your personality if you're having personality problems, right that
the general idea is that personality is fixed after the
age of thirty, but with the help of psychedelics, you
may be able to overcome some you know, boundaries that
you're facing in that respect. And I just think that's interesting.

(37:09):
I've always just kind of anecdotally thought about it about
ten years later than that. Like pretty much everybody I know,
by the time they're forty, they are who they are
and they're going to be that way. I have not
seen anybody make any drastic changes. But it seems like
if they have really difficult emotional problems in life that
they're trying to get over, it seems like there's a
possibility here that if we were only able to study

(37:32):
this further, it might be an option for people like that. Yeah,
I mean, I guess it's one of those things where
you know, we were like, we may think of ourselves
with set in stone after a certain point, but but
we're not. We're not really. I mean, we know that
the mind is in memory is more malleable than that. Uh.
So psychedelics come in as a as a possible means

(37:53):
to loosen things up so that they can be reset. Uh.
And of course that being said, drugs not the only
thing that I think that they can allow a person
to do that. I mean, sometimes something as simple as
say travel new experiences, um, reading a book you wouldn't
have otherwise read this sort of thing. Generally, having a

(38:14):
creative curiosity about life, uh, can can change who you are.
I think one of the interesting things some of these
studies of is that it makes you wonder like, is
the person that has administered the substance, are they the
kind of person that is not a novelty seeker. They're
not They don't seek out new experiences otherwise, Like maybe

(38:36):
that's the kind of individual for whom some potential future
treatment would be best used. Like somebody who's who really
can't shake something negative in their life and they have
a pretty established routine if how things are, but at
the same time they recognize that there's something about that
routine that is dysfunctional for them or for the world around. Yeah,

(38:56):
there's some sort of cycle that needs to be broken. Uh,
there's something needs to be you know, just pulled apart
so it can be put back together in a slightly
different form. Yeah. Yeah, I think that's a good way
to approach it. So why don't we take another break,
and then when we get back, we're going to officially
dive in to the Leary stuff, and we're gonna start
right at the beginning. Alright, we're back, Okay, So we're

(39:22):
gonna talk about Timothy Leary for the rest of this
episode and then into the next episode as well. Uh,
you know, we're gonna start at the beginning because I
think a lot of the stuff that happens on early
on in his life is going to be key. And
it's interesting when we talk about this in terms of like,
at what point is someone's personality set? At what point
is somebody's destiny kind of set? Well, according to Robert Greenfield,

(39:45):
who wrote Timothy Leary at Biography, yeah you can. You
can sort of see a lot of that in Leary's
early life. So he was born October n Springfield, Massachusetts,
to an Irish Catholic family. His father with the strow
as a struggling dentist, and his mother was a working mother.
That's my nick of the woods Saffield, Massachusetts. Yeah, my

(40:06):
uncle works there. It's just my whole family is from
the western part of that state. So I have a
very clear picture in my head now of what his
his young upbringing was like. So according to Greenfield's biography, uh,
you can really attribute a lot of learies rebel, rebellious
spirit to his relationship with his father Tote, an alcoholic

(40:28):
who brought imbalance to the home and depended on charity
from family loans to prop up his struggling dental practice.
And now the young Tim Leary, you know, occasionally stood
up to his father, but was also forced to hide
from him on the roof on some occasions, and then
total left the family when Tim was only fourteen, UH,
leaving him to find solace in books about mythic heroes

(40:49):
and UH legends, and he was determined to become something better,
greater than his father, and his mother obsessed as well
over her her child's future, like how can I engineer
UH somebody for success? And so Greenfield argues that we
see the seeds of Leary's relationships with authority figures throughout
his life, you know, pinpointed in his early life as

(41:12):
well as his relationships with women. He would go through
periods of finding structure within an within an institution, but
would ultimately rebel against its order, and in times of distress,
he'd seek out women and for positive father figures. He
turned to UH, not to his own father, of course,
but to a flamboyant and sometimes dramatic family members. And
he depended on the emotional and financial support UH first

(41:35):
of all of his mother and UH, and in Greenfield
identifies a pattern of his leaving most of them along
the way. Yeah, I mean, I think like one of
the awful themes that we're going to notice by the
time we get to the end of this two parter
is that he left a a wake behind him of
either abused people or dead people. I mean, what we're

(41:59):
gonna get into it. Yeah, there are a number of
self destructive tendencies in Timothy Learry's life al right. So
in terms of his his school and his essentially pre
psychedelics career, uh, Learry attended classical high school alongside American author,
a biographer and historian William Manchester. Some of you might

(42:20):
be familiar with him from a World Lit Only by Fire,
The Medieval Mind and the Renaissance, which is an excellent book.
And he also went to the same school as a
Theodore Geisel or Dr Seuss. He went to the College
of Holy Cross and Worcester. Uh. It's a strict Catholic
school that of course inspired rebellion from Larry. He made

(42:40):
money gambling on sports. He frequently hopped the wall with
other adventure seekers in order to go out drinking in
town and chase girls. My father from Worcester. So also
like this is like connecting the dots. So to give
you an idea here if if you're not familiar with
the messages that all springfields in the western part of
the state, Worcester sort of in the middle between Springfield

(43:01):
and Boston. Okay, so it's not I mean, it's like
forty five minutes probably from where he grew up. All right, Well,
the next place we're going on the map here for
Learry is West Point and this is where he initially
just goes all in on the culture of West Point.
He according to the Greenfield, he's writing back to his
mom with just the maximum amount of West Point lingo

(43:22):
you can possibly use. And this is telling to like
he'll start off really into a culture and then he rebels,
and indeed he does. He returns to his old ways,
even faces a court martial for drunken behavior. He's acquitted,
but then he ends up facing what's known as the Silence,
or was known as the silence. This was a policy
that Australized cadets who broke the honor code, and this

(43:43):
was discontinued in seventy three. And uh. He ultimately ends
up resigning and is honorably discharged by the Army. Then
he applies to colleges across America. The University of Alabama
at Tuscaloosa accepted him first, so that's where he went.
He met Dr Donald Angus Ramsdell, a Harvard psychology PhD,

(44:05):
a man who Leary would later refer to as Dr
D which I found that interesting given our episodes on
The Real Doctor John d. Yeah, and uh yeah. He
soon immersed himself in the study of psychology and in biology,
and now having lost his draft determina deferment, he enrolled
in r OTC to avoid a draft, and then he

(44:27):
also ran a foul of the school here due to
womanizing so much though the dean even accused him of
sullying quote, the honor of Southern womanhood, and he was expelled.
Man Like, just from my point perspective, from you know,
being from up in New England and in the two
thousands moving to the South into a progressive southern city,

(44:49):
I had a lot of culture shock. I'm trying to
imagine what it was like for this guy, you know,
all these years ago, uh, just transitioning and jumping around
and getting into trouble and just really shaking things up
everywhere he went. Well, it's interesting. One of the sort
of side things in in Greenfield's biography that he points
out is that apparently at the time of the university

(45:10):
in Tuscaloosa, you had these various liberal academics and in
many cases homosexual academics who had found sort of a
safe environment in which to thrive. So in a in
a sense like if Timothy Leary was going to go
to anywhere in the American South at that point, Tuscaloose
was probably one of the places to go. And he

(45:31):
did find people who who valued him and embraced him,
you know, initially, but he wasn't quite able to finish
his his academic duties, oh of course not now. On
the advice of Dr d he goes on to a
role in the University of Illinois. He lines up work
in the psychology department, and he eventually completes his education
at Tuscaloosa remotely. But uh yeah, it's one of these

(45:56):
situations where, um, you just see this pattern run over again.
As Greenfield writes, a clear pattern in his life had
already emerged whenever tim Leary began accepting the kind of
success for which he had been programmed since birth by
his mother, he would stop the process by indulging, just
as his father had done before him, in self destructive behavior.

(46:17):
So Leary then goes on to get his master's degree
at the University of Washington. We're talking about Washington State now,
So he's already jumped from New England to Alabama, to Illinois,
and now up to Washington State. He received his doctorate
in psychology in nineteen fifty from the University of California
at Berkeley, So then he jumps down to California. Here
he decided that conventional psychotherapy was useless and he began

(46:41):
experimenting with group therapy and transactional analysis. So this gives
you an idea of like where he was a sort
of academically disciplined wise before he was introduced to psychedelics.
His first wife, Mary Anne, committed suicide during this time.
This was in nineteen fifty five. This left him to
raise their two children alone. We have more on this obviously. Yeah,

(47:05):
this was just a real sad situation for a number
of reasons. But basically, uh, he and Mary Anne had
a very open relationship. Well yeah, but also just a
chaotic relationship but just a lot of according to to
Greenfield's account in the biography, just a lot of negative
vibes in this uh, in this relationship, a lot was

(47:26):
not working. Leary was apparently looking to in the relationship
in the very near future anyway, and then she committed
suicide and it was you know, it's not like Leary
wasn't an unfeeling person like this had a huge effect
on him. Uh, like he would write about it is
just essentially a pit that he wasn't able to emerge

(47:47):
from emotionally for you know, for for decades even, and
then you know, to to say nothing then of the
children as well. Now, the urban legend of this goes,
this is what you know. I can't imagine how many
articles in book Robert and I read for this, but
it probably popped up in every single one of them.
Is that the night before they were having an argument
about their open relationship and about that he was in

(48:10):
a relationship with a woman that he loved more than
Mary and his wife, and that she was upset about
this and she wanted him to break it off, and
he went into the bedroom and said it's your problem,
not mine, and closed the door. When he woke up
in the morning, she was dead. She had suffocated herself
in the garage inside the family car. Yeah. In Greenfield's account,

(48:32):
he he kind of points to the different versions of
the story, so like there's the there's like a slightly
different version that he that he tells the authorities and
then he writes about later and you know, you can
sort of try to find the truth between all of
these uh uh. And yeah, it's just a really ugly
situation with an ugly ending it is, but it's also, unfortunately,

(48:54):
I think, an important sign of things to come with
this guy and and sort of wear his priorities were right. Uh.
And I don't want to end this this episode because
we're about to wrap up our first part here, but
I don't want to end it on such a super downer. Uh.
He went on afterwards to teach at Berkeley, and he
actually was the director of psychological research at the Kaiser

(49:17):
Foundation Hospital in Oakland, California, from nineteen fifty five until
nineteen fifty eight. Now, during this period, um, after his
wife's suicide. Uh, he he also ends up going to
uh to Europe a few times. He goes to Spain,
he goes to Italy, and uh, this is kind of key.
There was this, um, there was this period of time

(49:37):
when he was when he was in Spain and he
suddenly experienced this some sort of mysterious illness, so swelling pain. Uh.
He was attended to buy a Danish doctor and he
ends up passing this night in misery, ends up sending
the kids to stay with another couple of of of
Americans were staying close by, and he says, he's said

(50:00):
that he felt like he died during this time, that
he that he let go and then put the past
behind him. But you know, in a very interesting way,
it was kind of his first psychedelic experience, like a
taste of this altered state, as you know. Not to
be confused with all the times he'd gotten just blindly
drunk in the past, because he had previously and for
a lot of his life, had a severe alcohol problem.

(50:24):
But it's it's shortly after that too that Frank Baron,
who was who was a colleague from Berkeley. Uh. He
he visited Leary during an unproductive stay in Florence, Italy.
He was always going on these trips to try and
you know, to to write various things. And at this
point Baron told him that during his research into creativity,
he had interviewed a psychiatrist who had use magic mushrooms

(50:45):
to produce visions and trances, and that Baron had tried
them as well, resulting in a mystical transcendental insight. Now,
interestingly enough, Leary warned him that he might lose his
scientific credibility and he babbled on about this sort of
thing um with that, my friends, is what we call foreshadowing. Yes,
so in the next episode we will get into the

(51:08):
psychedelic experience of of Leary, basically one continuous psychedelic experience
that lasted his entire life and uh, basically dragged American
culture with. Yeah, please make sure that you tune into
that second part. It's got a lot more of the
juicy details of Timothy Leary's life and the science and
research that he did into LSD and psilocybin. If you

(51:29):
want to reach out to us about this episode and
any of the stuff we brought up today regarding LSD
research or possibly Timothy Leary's history, you can always get
us on social media. We're on Facebook, we're on Twitter,
We're on tumbler, and we are on Instagram. And if
you want to get in touch with the old fashioned way,
just shoot us an email at blow the Mind and
how stuff works dot com for more on this and

(52:00):
thousands of other topics. Is it how stuff works dot com.
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