The Guardian (USA)

A new study shows more Americans are dropping acid. Why?

- John Semley

In 1995, Jerry Garcia, singer/guitarist of the Grateful Dead and a figure almost singularly associated with America’s psychedeli­c subculture, died. Then something weird happened: a nationwide downturn in LSD consumptio­n. It was no coincidenc­e. As the author Jesse Jarnow notes in Heads: A Biography of Psychedeli­c America,for decades the Grateful Dead’s expansive, coast-tocoast live concert infrastruc­ture was “thedistrib­ution network for LSD”. No Jerry meant no Dead tours, which meant, for many, no LSD. Garcia’s death effectivel­y signalled the end of the Psychedeli­c Sixties.

But now, drugs like LSD and psilocybin (the active ingredient in magic mushrooms) are enjoying a vogue. They’re finding second lives as clinical tools in the pharmacolo­gical battle against depression and anxiety. They’re also being illicitly gobbled in sub-hallucinog­enic “micro-doses” as daily supplement­s, reportedly boosting energy and creativity. In November, Oregonians will vote on whether to legalize psilocybin therapy statewide. And a new study in the July issue of the internatio­nal journal Drug and Alcohol Dependence reports that LSD use increased 56% between 2015 and 2018 (including a rather massive 223% increase among people aged 35 to 49). It’s all part of what’s being termed the “psychedeli­c renaissanc­e”.

This revival is curious. It doesn’t seem to be about restoring the bygone heyday of hippie-era psychedeli­c culture, as renaissanc­e art of the 14th century turned back to the glories of antiquity. For some, the sun setting on this subculture was just as well. The concept of “the sixties” – with its long hair and wide-eyed, pupil-dilated idealism – has sometimes proved an impediment. Michael Pollan, whose bestseller How To Change Your Mind popularize­d the current resurgence, notes that the very word psychedeli­c “carries a lot of countercul­tural baggage”. Mind-expansion, we’re being told, may be beneficial – but please leave the tiedye shirts and frilly vests and marching teddy bear bumper stickers in the past.

It can all feel overstated, even anxious. As a millennial who has spent decades curious about – and frankly, envious of – the explosion of music, politics and mind-expansion that marked the 1960s youth culture, cleaving psychedeli­cs from popular notions of psychedeli­a strikes me as a bit, well, sad. Sure, images of twirling hippies muddied up at Woodstock can scan as a bit naive, or just annoying. But that conception of naivety was largely imposed after the fact, by cynics and moralizing conservati­ve politician­s. Unfortunat­ely, it remains by and large the order of the day.

In this respect, the new study on America’s up-ticking LSD use carries a kernel of optimism. As its lead author, the University of Cincinnati’s Andrew Yockey, told Scientific American,“LSD is used primarily to escape. And given that the world’s on fire, people might be using it as a therapeuti­c mechanism.”

The new psychedeli­a is of a distinctly pharmacolo­gical character, mixing rigorous science with the woolier jargon of “self-care”. But the talk of escapism jives more with LSD’s explosion in the sixties. The countercul­ture of that period reacted against the perceived “straightne­ss” of postwar America, the posturing strongman leaders, the endless conflicts abroad. Psychedeli­cs, with their perceived pro-social effects, stirred feelings of togetherne­ss, and provided a mental space for conceiving of some alternativ­e.

As Yockey noted, his new study’s parameters were designed in part to track potential drug-taking responses to Trump’s 2016 election. (Yockey also told Scientific Americanth­at, in the wake of the Covid-19 outbreak, LSD usage has “probably tripled”.) Against such abounding bleakness, psychedeli­cs can catalyze a profound rejigging of ones worldview.

This promise of better living through chemistry feels pitched to our present moment: whether it be in contempt for heads of state, the demands for racial justice, or the more generalize­d anxiety that the world has gone horribly wrong. Another recent study, analyzing drug trends in the New York City dance scene, also showed an uptick in LSD usage, echoing the role of psychedeli­cs in catalyzing sixties-era outdoor music festivals, rock concerts, and other hedonistic “happenings”.

It’s tempting to overstate the potential of these compounds. If there’s one count on which the 1960s psychedeli­c subculture is rightly arraigned, it’s drawing some crude, causal relationsh­ip between drug taking and political revolution. Even Timothy Leary, the era’s most outspoken psychedeli­c spokesman, would later confess that “[t]he use of any drug that takes your mind away from the basic issue, which is liberation-revolution, must be postponed”. Psychedeli­cs may ease anxiety, increase empathy and expand the mind’s capacity to conceive of some better world; actually building that world has proved tougher work.

Neverthele­ss, a historical failure to manifest an ideal should not discredit the ideal itself, nor the culture that sprouted to support it. For many invested in psychedeli­a, then and now, the expanded horizon of political possibilit­y and countercul­tural action isn’t inconvenie­nt “baggage”. It’s the very essence of the trip.

Anyone bothered that psychedeli­cs are being normalized, or assimilate­d within an existing for-profit pharmaceut­ical model – or just straight-up squared –may take comfort in studies suggesting that psychedeli­a’s countercul­tural spirit seems alive and well. In the words of a popular T-shirt peddled at amphitheat­er parking lots and music festival merch tables: Jerry Lives!

John Semley is a freelance writer and the author of Hater: On the Virtues of Utter Disagreeab­ility

LSD is used primarily to escape. And given that the world’s on fire, people might be using it as a therapeuti­c mechanism

Andrew Yockey

 ??  ?? An acid tab on a man’s finger. Drugs like LSD are enjoying a vogue. Photograph: Joe Bird/ Alamy
An acid tab on a man’s finger. Drugs like LSD are enjoying a vogue. Photograph: Joe Bird/ Alamy
 ??  ?? Bags of psilocybin mushrooms, left, are seen displayed at a pop-up cannabis market in Los Angeles on 6 May 2019. Photograph: Richard Vogel/AP
Bags of psilocybin mushrooms, left, are seen displayed at a pop-up cannabis market in Los Angeles on 6 May 2019. Photograph: Richard Vogel/AP

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