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| Works by
Charles Hayes (Writer) |
Tripping: An Anthology of True-Life
Psychedelic Adventures (2000)
The psychedelic experience has been both demonized
and mythologized, but what is it really like to trip?
Tripping: An Anthology of True-Life Psychedelic Adventures, the
first major compilation of personal testimonies about psychedelic
experiences, contains narratives by 50 people of various nationalities and
walks of life about their most unforgettable altered states -- from the
heavenly to the horrific. In gripping, often suspenseful tales suffused
with a high sense of adventure, Tripping liberates the psychedelic
experience from the closet of social stigma as well as from the mists of
Sixties counter-cultural idealism.
Relating the harrowing straits and exhilarating peaks of the psychedelic
inner odyssey are many accomplished writers, including former Grateful
Dead lyricist John Perry Barlow, war photographer Tim Page, Beat poet Anne
Waldman, science fiction writer Robert Charles Wilson, thriller writer
Steven Martin Cohen, Ecstasy expert Bruce Eisner, and phenomonologist Paul
Devereux.
Most of the narratives, however, come from “ordinary” people from Sydney
to Belfast to San Francisco, for whom their anonymity brings out an
intensely personal, confessional dimension. The stories, edited mostly
from taped interviews by journalist Charles Hayes,
enable readers to either “trip” vicariously or compare notes on their own
experiences.
Specially featured is a lengthy conversation with the late
Terence McKenna, the
man who many believe inherited
Timothy Leary’s mantle as
the leading spokesman for psychedelics from the late Seventies until his
death in April 2000. A veteran of myriad "heroic doses," McKenna discusses
some of his own trips for the first time, as well as a range of issues,
including his own provocative brand of eschatology, politics, and
anthropology, at the center of which is an abiding faith in the power of
psychedelic drugs.
Tripping's balanced, objective perspective portrays both positive
and negative impacts of psychedelic experiences, depicting both the tolls
and the rewards of such chemically-induced excursions from reality. Types
of episodes run the gamut from encounters with godhead and alien or
discarnate entities; out-of-body experiences, freak-outs, flashbacks,
psychosis (momentary and otherwise), and acts or events of apparent magic
or miracle. The trips described were catalyzed not just by classic
psychedelics such as
LSD, but by a
wide array of psychotropics, from the sacred plants of indigenous peoples
to the latest synthetic “smart drugs.”
Some sample plotlines:
-
At a summer festival, a man on
LSD believes
he’s attending the final celebration of the gods and that his mission is
to mate with his chosen one before the entire tribe moves on to a higher
sphere at the climax of the “orgasm death dance."
-
A young man eats some
peyote
buttons on a hike in the Grand Canyon, and stumbles upon a near-death
experience.
-
A group of army buddies test the limits of their bodies'
endurance during an
acid session
by a campfire.
-
The ministrations of the "shining ones", astral beings
accessed during an
LSD trip,
lure a college student to higher realms of
consciousness.
-
A psychedelic ingested at the notorious Altamont concert
of 1969 triggers a bizarre odyssey through the San Francisco city jail and
mental health system for a fellow who believes he’s an angelic
revolutionary.
-
After a déjà vu of enlightenment during which he begins
speaking in tongues, a tripper plummets into the flipside of that
experience in an episode of horrific eternal recurrence that revisits him
in flashbacks.
-
A wooden carving of Christ speaks out loud to a seminary
student during a church service, reshaping her theology and the depth of
her faith.
The narratives in Tripping are placed in larger
contexts by Hayes’s essays, which include a synopsis of the history and
culture of psychedelics from the ancient Greek mystery rites to today's
Ecstasy-fueled
rave events; an exposition on the kinetics of tripping (what can go right
and wrong on a trip), including basic medical and psychological
background; and a concise index of psychedelic substances.
The illustrations in Tripping are provided by renowned visionary
artist Alex Grey and four computer
graphics masters.
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