Pubdate: Sun, 10 Jan 2016 Source: Appeal-Democrat (Marysville, CA) Column: Bruce's History Lessons Copyright: 2016 Appeal-Democrat Contact: https://appeal-democrat-dot-com.bloxcms-ny1.com/site/forms/online_services/letter/ Website: http://www.appeal-democrat.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1343 Author: Bruce G. Kauffmann THE FATHER OF '60S DRUG CULTURE "If you remember the '60s," the joke goes, "you weren't there." It was a reference to the countless mind-altering "psychedelic" drugs ingested by members of the so-called "Woodstock Generation." Chief among those drugs was lysergic acid diethylamide - LSD or "acid, as it was nicknamed invented by Albert Hoffman, who was born this week (Jan. 11) in 1906. A Swiss chemist doing pharmaceutical research at Sandoz Laboratories in Basel, Switzerland, in 1938, he synthesized LSD in the hopes that it might help with respiratory diseases, but he shelved the project until, in 1943, he decided to re-examine the possible medicinal uses for the drug. In doing so, he accidentally ingested a small quantity of LSD, and later reported he fell into "a not unpleasant intoxicated-like condition, characterized by an extremely stimulated imagination ... I perceived an uninterrupted stream of fantastic pictures, extraordinary shapes with intense, kaleidoscopic play of colors." A few days later, he repeated the experiment, ingesting a slightly larger dose, and as he rode his bicycle home from work that day, he began having visions, followed by flashes of paranoia that alternated with euphoric flashes intense lights and colors. Sometime later, he published his findings on the effects of LSD, and soon tens of thousands of "hippies" and other participants in the counterculture movement that spread throughout America during the 1960s were also taking LSD drug trips "tripping" as it was called into a colorful, kaleidoscopic, psychedelic alternative reality. Some "trips" were pleasant, others horrific. LSD was unpredictable determining the proper dosage was a crapshoot and its potential dangers to the human brain were undeniable. The number of young people in the 1960s whose brains were "fried" because of LSD, and whose lives were never the same afterward, is impossible to determine, but it was a fair number, and the possession and use of LSD was outlawed in 1965. Hoffman excoriated the use of LSD as a recreational drug it has "a terrifying, demonic aspect" he said but he was convinced it would be useful in the field of mental therapy, including psychoanalysis, and a number of scientific studies have borne this out. Interestingly, the second most popular psychedelic drug of the 1960s was the mushroom-compound drug psilocybin (called the "magic mushroom"), which Hoffman also helped create, making him the true father of the '60s drug culture, and he was often asked to lecture on his handiwork, including in March of 2008 at the World Psychedelic Forum. Alas, failing health forced him to cancel that appearance, and he died a month later - of a heart attack, not anything related to his brain - at the ripe old age of 102. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom