LSD guru 1960's counter-culture figure Timothy Lear is interviewed on " Later with Bob Costas" which aired on May 29th, 1991 part 1 of 2 episodes.
22:17 min
CLEAR ALL
Ralph Metzner, circa 1966, discussing the use of yoga to integrate the LSD experience into normal life.
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A small community of experimental psychotherapists—along with self-medicating users—have been using acid and mushrooms to treat mental health conditions for years, with promising results.
Ayelet Waldman is the author of several novels, and A Really Good Day, a book that documents a month microdosing LSD as a radical solution to a life of suicidal depression. With humor and candor she introduces us to this story and describes the outcome.
Learn how to microdose acid (LSD) or magic mushrooms in this educational whiteboard video. Produced by Mark from After Skool and Brandon from OnePercentBetter.
Microdosing is when you take a tiny amount of psychedelic drugs - LSD or magic mushrooms usually - as part of your ordinary day. The drugs are illegal, and there is no medical evidence to say what the benefits or harms of it may be.
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By the mid-1950s, LSD research was being published in medical and academic journals all over the world. It showed potential benefits in the treatment of alcoholism, drug addiction, and other mental illnesses. This film explores those potential benefits, and the researchers who explored them.
The creation of LSD was unlikely. On April 19, 1943, young chemist Albert Hoffmann took the first intentional acid trip of all time. He came out of the experience realizing he had creating something extraordinary. Thousands of psychedelic users worldwide now commemorate this epic day as Bicycle Day.
Another interview where Ken Kesey reflects on why people are so afraid of LSD.
Drugs like LSD and MDMA are generating new interest among doctors for use in psychotherapy.