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- Ketamine: Trick or treat?
- First published: The Face, June 1992
-
- (c) Peter McDermott
- peter@petermc.demon.co.uk
-
-
- "Ecstasy hinted at how powerful the mind could be, and once first gear
- was mastered, there was a second gear, and a third.
- Compared to MDMA, Vitamin K was tenth gear."
- Jay Stevens, Storming Heaven: LSD and the American Dream.
-
- LSD seemed just right for the sixties. It's appearance coincided with an
- economic boom and in ideological crisis. For many, the drug was a
- catalyst, but the the changes that acid produced were shaped by wider
- influences. It didn't matter if you saw God, quit your job and took the
- journey to India. There were plenty more jobs to come back to when you
- spent all your money and caught hepatitis. At the time, some people
- believed that the drug had changed their lives immeasurably, that they
- had gained profound insights into the human condition, but by and
- large, the major impact of LSD was cultural. The drug created a new
- style, a new language. It also created new markets and that style was
- appropriated by hip young entrepreneurs and used to shift new
- products to the new drug subculture.
-
- The era also gave birth to a whole array of new social problems. As
- users got bored with acid, methedrine came along to take it's place.
- Over the last five years, Ecstasy has had an even bigger impact. During
- 1990 and 1991 it seemed anybody who ever smoked a joint was taking
- Ecstasy. As in the sixties, many people felt that the drug had
- transformed their lives.
-
- And to some extent, perhaps it did. MDMA does produce a euphoric state.
- For a couple of hours a week, the problems that confront young people
- in Thatcher's Britain, the problems of class and race and gender
- differences, the difficulty of negotiating safe sex in the shadow of AIDS,
- that sense of being alienated and alone -- all were temporarily resolved
- while in clubs and warehouses, marquees and beaches, service stations
- and open fields all across the country, hundreds of thousands of people
- synchronized their psychic and emotional states and began to dance.
-
- Raving resembled a huge, religious ritual, and like other such rituals it
- gave many people an insight into a transcendental state. Yet the
- bargain that we make with drugs may well have a Faustian quality.
- When a new drug arrives in a society, it is like an infant taking a
- screwdriver to a clock. Perhaps we can take it apart, but can we put the
- thing back together again. This was the mystery behind the biblical
- account of the Fall. Forbidden knowledge often has a great cost.
-
- Ecstasy first hit the UK in a big way around 1988. Five years later,
- people are just beginning to recognize that there are problems
- associated with the drug. The physical and psychological problems may
- or may not be fewer and less serious than the problems associated with
- other drugs, but who knows what kind of problems the cultural changes
- will produce?
-
- For the last few years, the papers have been full of stories about Love
- Doves, Disco Biscuits and Dennis the Menaces, and now they bring you
- Special K, Vitamin K, Kit-Kat? Journalists, desperate to break the story
- on the latest trend in designer drugs are desperately hyping Ketamine
- as the drug to take over from Ecstasy.
-
- Until last year, virtually nothing was known about Ketamine in the UK.
- The is that the drug is a general anaesthetic with analgesic properties,
- produced by Parke-Davies and marketed as Ketalar. Because the drug is
- less likely to depress the respiratory system, it has been marketed as
- particularly useful for young children, and the aged. However, they
- take it under controlled conditions, while their heart, blood pressure,
- and respiration is being monitored -- not in a nightclub in unknown
- doses.
-
- So where did the drug appear from? According to Jay Stevens,
- investigation into the psychedelic drugs has continued unbroken since
- the sixties. In the USA a loose network of people who Stevens terms 'the
- neuro-consciousness frontier' have continued to systematically explore
- the effects of mind altering drugs upon the human psyche. As the laws
- were changed to prohibit the use of certain tools, they moved into other
- substances that were still within the law. Anyway, by the time Stevens
- book was published in 1987, the network had devised or discovered a
- whole new pharmacopoeia with strange sounding names. Names like
- Adam, Eve, Venus, Intellex and 2CB. Stevens asked many of his sources,
- what was their tip for the top, and the two drugs that kept coming up
- most frequently were MDMA (Ecstasy) and Ketamine.
-
- The Psychedelics Encyclopedia lists nine families of different
- psychedelic drugs. The family that includes Ecstasy, the
- phenylethylamines, has almost 200 different member drugs. Ketamine
- isn't even a member of any of the nine families. The drug it most
- closely resembles is PCP, an animal tranquilliser. Now there's a
- recommendation. If speed will turn you into your parents, PCP might
- turn you into James Brown. This is a drug that makes people seriously
- psychotic. All that those LA police officers had to say to get acquitted of
- beating Rodney King was they believed he had been using PCP. Not
- guilty. The jury believe that they used the tools that were necessary to
- keep him under control.
-
- Californian neuroscientist John Lilly may have done most to bring
- Ketamine to our attention. Lilly is the man responsible for such crucial
- scientific breakthroughs as the invention of the isolation tank and
- communication between human beings and dolphins. The model for the
- character in the film, "Altered States", Lilly in his autobiographical
- novel, "The Scientist", tells how he was given the drug by a doctor to
- cure a recurring migraine. He found that K allowed him to "look across
- the border into other realities" and went on to take the drug every day
- for one hundred days. Talk about using a sledge-hammer to crack a nut!
-
- Lilly believes that while he was in the 'K state', he made repeated
- contact with extraterrestrials, the beings who manage Earth
- Coincidence Control, your local branch of Cosmic Coincidence Control.
- These entities are placed on earth to manage coincidences in such a way
- as to inch us gradually along the evolutionary path, and while on
- Ketamine, Lilly was able to communicate with these extraterrestrials,
- who informed him that they had removed DNA samples from Earth and
- transported them to another planet. There, they proceeded to
- genetically engineer all of Earth's large-brained mammals - primates,
- dolphins and whales - which the entities then replanted, fully evolved,
- back on earth.
-
- Other Ketamine users also report being plugged in to information
- networks while in K cyberspace. They have been reported as spending
- a great deal of time analysing conversations that they have held with
- the various Ketamine entities. These beings offer great insights into
- life, the universe and everything. In the words of one such traveller
- into the realm of the hyper-real, "It is no great accomplishment to hear
- a voice in the head. The accomplishment is to make sure that it is telling
- you the truth."
-
- So how does the drug work? Ketamine's major consistent effect is
- dissociation, the adoption of an objective or dispassionate perspective.
- Classic dissociative phenomena include out of body experiences, astral
- travel, near-death and rebirth type experiences. For these reasons,
- Ketamine has been explored as an adjunct to psychotherapy.
- Researchers at the Psychoneurological Research Institute in St.
- Petersburg are using the drug in doses one tenth of those used in
- surgical anaesthesia to try to cure people suffering from depression
- and phobias. But they recognize that even under controlled conditions,
- the process of losing one's sense of individuality can produce ecstatic or
- horrifying results.
-
- People who have taken the drug report a range of effects from the
- unpleasant, to the downright dangerous. Reports from America offer
- numerous examples of users who get trapped in repeated, compulsive
- administration of the drug giving rise to incidents usually associated
- with bad acid trips, with people believing that they can fly or
- attempting to get out of moving vehicles. Others have suffered paranoia
- or severe delusional states. In the last few months, it has been
- increasingly evident that such incidents are no longer limited to the
- USA. Having the Ketamine entities lie to us may be the least of our
- worries.
-
- It isn╒t just drug use that causes unforseen problems, drug prohibition
- also has an unintended impact. If police success causes marijuana
- shortages, then people use other drugs to compensate. In Scotland,
- where there is a shortage of imported heroin, people abuse
- pharmaceutical drugs, that invariably do more damage than heroin
- ever could. The combination of a massively expanded market for Ecstasy
- and a shortage of supply, has led to Ketamine making it's first
- appearance on the British black market. In the past, the only sources of
- the drug were tiny supplies that afficionados diverted from medical use.
- In the early part of 1990 during the first great Ecstasy draught,
- Ketamine came to light in police analysis of seizures of tablets sold as
- Ecstasy in nightclubs in various parts of England and Scotland.
-
- One user, in his thirties with a vast experience of illegal drug use came
- across the drug in this way. He bought a quantity believing they were
- Ecstasy, but when he tried them found that they were another drug
- completely.
-
- "They were nothing like MDMA. If you took one and closed your eyes
- there was slight colour and patterning, but no euphoria, no stimulation,
- no desire to dance. All that they did was made the room slightly wobbly.
- A few nights later, I took three or four at once, to see what happened. It
- was like entering another dimension. All of a sudden, you╒re no longer
- there. You can't move, you can't think, you can't function -- all you can
- do is experience. It's only as you begin to come out of the Ketamine state
- that you begin to appreciate where you are or where you've been.
- Eventually, the world begins to reform, and you get some insight into
- the relationships between various parallel dimensions."
-
- :The closest thing that I can compare it to is the film, Tron. I felt as
- though I was stuck in this network or maze of electronic impulses. At
- first, I had no sense of being there, or rather, I was there and not there
- at the same time, a sort of annihilation of the ego. As the drug wore off,
- and I became more aware of being inside my body, I felt like Robocop,
- or Terminator, some kind of mutant cyborg. My face seemed to be made
- up of a mass of needles or spikes or electrical impulses. The slightest
- movement would be accompanied by an intense sense of mechanical
- activity in my body. It wasn't pleasant or unpleasant, and it wasn't
- frightening, it just was."
-
- This Ketamine user reported no desire to take the drug again. "It isn't a
- social drug like Ecstasy, and it isn't a stimulant, so you don't have any
- desire to dance. It isn't even euphoric, it's just very, very weird. I've
- had the experience a couple of times -- just to use the tablets up. It was
- interesting, but I've no desire to repeat it.
-
- Twelve months later, this users experience is being replicated all over
- the country, sometimes intentionally Ketamine is a damn sight easier to
- produce than Ecstasy - the precursor chemicals are easier to get hold of,
- and because it isn't illegal, you are unlikely to do time if you get caught.
- So some unscrupulous drug dealers are still trying to pass Ketamine off
- as "E". Others, no doubt working on the basis that you can't fool all of the
- people, all of the time, have thought ahead and worked out a clever
- marketing strategy. Our experience of a drugs is shaped by the
- interplay of three factors -- the pharmacology of the drug, the mind set
- of the user and the setting in which the drug is used. In order to
- promote a rebirthing mind-set, some "K" dealers are providing jars of
- babyfood and dummies to drive the point home. Dummies have since
- caught on as a fashion accessory at raves, but whether the trend was
- sparked by the emergence of Ketamine, or whether it's just a way to
- keeping the gurning under control is lost to myth and drug folklore.
-
- But trick or trend, Ketamine is beginning to have nasty consequences.
- There have been several hospitalizations in the North West over the
- past few months, people who entered catatonic states after taking what
- they believed were "E" but turned out to be "K".
-
- Now everybody is jumping on the Ketamine bandwagon. At an
- upcoming rave in Scotland, the flyer lists "Special K" as a featured
- attraction along with laser flowers, brain machines and gyroscopes.
- This is particularly ironic given that at least three people were
- hospitalized after taking Ketamine at the same venue. There have also
- been at least five hospitalizations in the North West recently, all people
- who became catatonic states after taking what they thought was Ecstasy.
- Last week, I was told about a club that closed an hour and a half early,
- because the organizers were so freaked out by the number of collapses.
-
- It appears that the second Summer of Love may have spawned another
- monster. Liverpool drug researcher, Alan Matthews argues that any
- discussion of Ketamine is pointless. "Kids no longer talk about buying
- an "E", they say they had "a tablet". They have cottonned on to the fact
- that the dealers come up with a different brand name every week. Over
- the last few weeks, we've had Phase Fours, Phase Fives, Turbo's,
- Flatliners, Shamrocks. It's all completely meaningless. The tablets
- change every week, and even the people who are selling them don't
- know what's in them. Ecstasy, Ketamine, it's all a red herring. The
- important point to bear in mind is that every weekend, tens of thousands,
- perhaps hundreds of thousands of people are taking tablets containing
- unknown substances. God only knows what the long-term consequences will
- be."
-
- In light of this, anybody who takes strange tablets should observe
- certain basic precautions. Firstly, don't drink or mix your drugs --
- Ketamine is a general anaesthetic for god's sake. You shouldn't even
- eat, let alone get pissed. Secondly, Ketamine has a slow onset taken
- orally, so if your tablet doesn't work, don't drop a few more and cross
- your fingers. Go home, and patronize a different dealer next week.
-
- Whether Ketamine will gain an informed constituency in this country
- remains to be seen. I suspect it is unlikely. The most likely scenario is
- that we will see an initial surge of Ketamine experimentation fuelled by
- media articles like this one, warning us of the "new devil drug", and the
- renewed enthusiasm for quasi-psychedelics prompted by Ecstasy that
- has overtaken us in recent years. However, as Ketamine lacks the
- euphoric and social properties that led to the widespread use of MDMA,
- the drug is likely to disappear as suddenly as it seems to have emerged.
- At the end of the day, debates over whether we are taking Ecstasy or
- Ketamine may prove to be a moot point. Every weekend now, tens of
- thousands, perhaps hundreds of thousands of people are taking tablets
- containing unknown substances and God alone knows what the real
- long-term consequences of that are likely to be.
-