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- From: jolivet@ccvax.ucd.ie
- Newsgroups: alt.psychoactives
- Subject: Will Of Nature #2
- Message-ID: <1993Sep24.010518.52193@ccvax.ucd.ie>
- Date: 24 Sep 93 01:05:18 WET
-
- WILL OF NATURE ISSUE 2
-
- EDITORIAL
-
- Welcome to the second issue of WON, with as subject:
- Virtual Reality & Drugs. I would like to emphasize
- the word "Drugs" in a meaning of Mind Expanding
- (a la Nootropics or Psychotropics) NOT in the
- Narcotics way (a la opium poppy derivatives).
- It's interesting to note that the use of Narcotics
- as "Recreational Drugs" are a relatively recent
- phenomena, a tool of destruction for unstable people
- in a unstable society. Now, it's time for a Real Revival
- of the Body/Mind as a True Chemical Plant/Biocomputer
- to re-reach the bond with Nature.
-
- Pierre Jolivet
- jolivet@irlearn.ucd.ie
-
- ABSTRACT 1
-
- Nootropics from the Greek word meaning "acting on the mind":
-
- (*@/// Phenylalanine *)
- (*@/// L-phenylalanine *)
- L-phenylalanine
- - converted into tyrosine which is
- precursor to noradrenaline (NE) and dopamine
- - like all amino acids best taken on empty stomach since it competes
- with proteins to cross the blood brain barrier.
- - requires vitamins C and B-6 for the conversion to NE.
- - Dosage: 500 - 1000mg along with 1g C, 30-50mg B-6
- - phenylalanine also stimulates the release of
- cholecystokinin, which is the body's own appetite-suppressant,
- - can increase sexual interest
- - improves memory and mental alertness
- - antidepressant
- - do not use L-phenylalanine or L-tyrosine if you are
- using MAO inhibitors for depression (it can cause a
- major elevation in blood pressure).
- (*@\\\*)
- (*@/// DL-phenylalanine *)
- DL-phenylalanine
- - combination of synthetic (D) and natural (L) phenylalanine
- - produces endorphins and stimulates their use
- - thus, effective painkiller, often better than the
- opiate derivatives such as morphine.
- - nonaddictive, nontoxic
- - reverse-tolerance effect (pain relief gets better)
- - strong anti-depressant effect
- - can be combined with other pain-killers
- with few bad interactions
- (*@\\\*)
- (*@/// Tyrosine *)
- L-tyrosine
- - precursor to norepinephrine and dopamine
- - non-essential amino acid (since PA is converted into it first)
- - has been studied as an effective aid to cocaine withdrawal
- - (see L-phenylalanine)
- (*@\\\*)
- (*@/// Tryptophan *)
- L-tryptophan
- - precursor to the neurotransmitter serotonin along with
- B6, niacin, and magnesium.
- - (actually immediate precursor to 5-hydroxytryptophan (5HTP)
- which is the precursor to serotonin (5HT))
- - prolongs slow-wave sleep
- - reduces pain sensitivity
- - no effect or increases REMS
- - has some hypnotic effects
- - useful for some types of endogenous depression
- (has been found as useful as imipramine and amitriptyline)
- - aids in reducing anxiety and tension
- - an appetite supressant
- - dosages have been studied up to 15g
- - Major Food Sources:
- Cottage cheese, milk, meat, fish, turkey, bananas,
- dried dates, peanuts, all protein-rich foods.
- (*@\\\*)
- (*@/// Lysine *)
- L-lysine
- - needed for growth and enzyme, hormone, antibody production
- - aids concentration
- - treatment for some sterility problems
- - treatment and prevention for herpes infections
- - aids fatty acid -> energy conversion
- (*@\\\*)
- (*@/// Arginine *)
- L-arginine
- - used to increase sperm counts
- (semen contains up to 80% of arginine)
- - aids immune response and healing of wounds
- - helps stored fat metabolism
- - helps to tone muscle tissue
- - used for weight-loss in combination with L-ornithine
- - one amino acid required for production of growth hormone
- (*@\\\*)
- (*@/// Ornithine *)
- L-ornithine
- - similar to arginine
- - growth hormone (which acts as a fat metabolizer) is
- stimulated to be released by ornithine and arginine.
- - can be used as a slimming technique (while you sleep -
- GH is released by the pituitary gland then)
- (*@\\\*)
- (*@/// Glutamine *)
- L-glutamine
- - converted to glutamic acid, the brain's emergency source of
- energy when glucose is in short supply.
- - precursor to the neurotransmitter GABA
- - neutralizes excess ammonia (which can inhibit proper
- brain function)
- - improves intelligence
- - helps to control alcoholism
- - helps to speed ulcer healing
- - alleviates fatigue, depression, impotence,
- schizophrenia, senility
- (*@\\\*)
- (*@/// Aspartic Acid *)
- L-aspartic acid
- - ammonia neutralizer
- - a study showed improved stamina and endurance in athletes
- (*@\\\*)
- (*@/// Cysteine *)
- L-cysteine
- - cystine is its stable form
- - antioxidant
- - contains sulfur
- - protects cellular membranes from "free radical damage"
- - prevents alcohol and cigarette smoke damage to the brain
- - stimulant to immune system
- - believed to be good for antiaging
- - effective against copper toxicity (eg. Wilson's disease)
- - protects against X-ray and nuclear radiation
- - warning: may affect insulin effectiveness
- (*@\\\*)
- (*@/// Methionine *)
- L-methionine
- - antioxidant
- - contains sulfur
- - prevents damage of brain cells from toxic heavy metals
- - important in producing neurotransmitters and energy
- - lowers blood level of histamine
- (this may help some types of schizophrenia)
- - combined with choline and folic acid, can prevent some
- types of tumors
- - deficiencies: hair loss, atherosclerosis, cholestorol deposits,
- edema, poor urine processing
- (*@\\\*)
- (*@/// Glycine *)
- L-glycine
- - treatment for poor pituitary functioning
- - supplies creatine which is essential for muscle function
- (effective against muscular dystrophy)
- - treatment for hypoglycemia
- - stimulates glucagon which metabolizes glycogen into glucose
- - antacid
- - treatment for low blood pH
- - treatment for leucine imbalance-causing body odor and halitosis
- (*@\\\*)
- (*@/// Leucine *)
- L-taurine
- - nonessential amino acid
- - aids efficient conduction of electrical impulses
- along nerve pathways
- - anticonvulsant (esp in combo with glutamic, aspartic acids)
- (*@\\\*)
- (*@/// Glutathione *)
- L-Glutathione
- - tripeptide amino acid made of cysteine, glutamic acid and glycine
- - "triple threat" antiaging
- - antioxidant
- - anti-tumor agent
- - respiratory accelerator in the brain
- - used in the treatment of: allergies, cataracts, diabetes,
- hypoglycemia, arthritis
- - prevents some side effects of chemotherapy and X-ray radiation
- - protects against some harmful side-effects of cigarette smoke
- and alcohol
- (*@\\\*)
- (*@/// Carnatine *)
- L-carnatine
- - newly discovered amino acid
- - aids stored fat -> energy conversion
- - helps: hypoglycemia, reduces angina attacks, diabetes,
- liver disease, kidney disease
- - deficiency causes heart tissue damage
-
- krawchuk@cpsc.ucalgary.ca
-
- ABSTRACT 2
-
- Psychedelics from the Greek word meaning "mind manifesting":
-
- o PSILOCYBIN
-
- For thousands of years before Europeans set foot in the New World the
- sacred mushroom was in use in native rituals. In the 1950s R. Gordon
- Wasson, a Wall Street banker, participated in a Mexico mushroom
- ceremony and eloquently described the 'Divine Inebriant' in a piece of
- writing which could go some way to explaining the fascination with
- which many people regard psychedelic drugs. These words, of course,
- could really equally apply to any of these substances:
-
- 'There are no apt words ... to characterize your state when you are,
- shall we say, 'bemushroomed.' ... How do you tell a man born blind
- what seeing is like? In the present case, this is especially true
- because superficially the bemushroomed man shows few of the objective
- symptoms of one intoxicated, drunk ... [the mushroom] permits you to
- see, more clearly than our pershing mortal eye can see, vistas beyond
- the horizons of this life, to travel backwards and forwards in time,
- even (as the Indians say) to know God. It is hardly surprising that
- your emotions are profoundly affected, and you feel that an
- indissoluble bond unites you with the others who have shared with you
- in the sacred agape ... All that you see during this night has a
- pristine quality: the landscape, the edifices, the carvings, the
- animals - they look as though they had come straight from the Maker's
- workshop. This newness of everything - it is as though the world had
- just dawned - overwhelms you and melts you with its beauty. Not
- unnaturally, what is happening to you seems to you freighted with
- significance, beside which the humdrum events of everyday are trivial
- ... What you are seeing and what you are hearing appear as one: the
- music assumes harmonious shape, giving visual form to its harmonies,
- and what you are seeing takes on the modalities of music - the music
- of the spheres ... All your senses are similarly affected: the
- cigarette with which you occasionally break the tension of the night
- smells as no cigarette before had ever smelled ; the glass of simple
- water is infinitely better than champagne.'
-
- From 'The Hallucinogenic Fungi of Mexico',
- R. Gordon Wasson in The Psychedelic Reader,
- Ed. Gunther M. Weil et al, Citadel Press Inc., 1973.
-
- Fortunately one does not have to visit Mexico to experience the
- mushrooms, probably the most effective and safest of natural
- psychedelics. Psilocybian mushrooms should not be confused with the
- Fly Agaric (amanita muscaria) a toxic deleriant. The most common
- species of 'Magic Mushroom' found wild in the UK is the increasingly
- popular 'Liberty Cap' (psilocybe senilanceata). Indeed this
- particular species, despite its relative weakness, is prized by the
- South American Indians as one of the best. The Liberty Cap contains
- psilocybin, which is converted to psilocin in the body. Psilocin is a
- close chemical relative of LSD. However, the effects, according to
- many users, are milder, more pleasant and there is said to be less
- risk of bad trips. The greatest danger comes from eating other
- mushrooms -- different poisonous mushrooms picked by mistake.
- Therefore any potential mushroom picker should be quite sure they know
- what to look for (many reference books about mushrooms describe the
- Liberty Cap). The season for the mushroom is between September and
- December. During this time many people, not known for a previous
- interest in fungi, can be seen scanning the grass in fields with bent
- heads. The mushrooms are usually found after heavy rain and a long
- search. After picking they are dried on paper. Although the dried
- mushrooms are less potent than the fresh, if not dried the mushrooms
- might contain flies harmful to the liver.
-
- Some people say mushrooms make them sick, but then I have never had
- any toxic effects from the mushrooms. A test for
- psilocybin-containing mushrooms is to look for a blue colour at the
- end of the stem after they have been picked. Those who want to make
- quite sure can buy a chemical called methaminophenol sulphate from
- photographic positive identification. Add it to twenty times its
- volume in distiled water. Apply to stem of mushroom and wait half an
- hour for a deep purple colour.
-
- The American mushrooms include Psilocybe cubensis and caerulescens and
- are far more potent on a weight basis than the English ones. Whereas
- typical doses of the Liberty Cap are 25-50 dried little mushrooms,
- only a few grams of the American mushrooms ('shrooms) are needed. The
- effects, as with any drug, depend on the individual's body weight as
- well as the size and strength of the mushrooms. The mushrooms have a
- greater effect if a soup is made from them and also if taken on an
- empty stomach. To prepare a soup it is necessary to boil up the
- 'shrooms for ten minutes, add packet soup powder or instant coffee to
- hid the (disgusting) taste then drink the soup and repeat the process
- using the same mushrooms.
-
- The effects start after about twenty minutes for soup and forty-five
- minutes when eaten. At low doses effects last about four hours and at
- higher doses up to six hours. Once the effects start to end they do
- so rapidly, unlike acid which seems to linger on a bit.
-
- Possession of fresh mushrooms, in the UK is not illegal at the
- present. This may well change in the future. Even now possession of
- a preparation or product of the mushrooms is an offence. This
- includes drying mushrooms to a powder, crushing or boiling them.
- Mushrooms which are dried but are still intact are legal (excuse: 'I
- picked them like that, Officer. The sun must have dried them out,
- honest guv'.').
-
- Kits to grow the mushrooms at home in jam jars are available from the
- USA by mail order. 'FS' has a 'Resource Guide' containing information
- about 43 companies selling every thing from mushroom videos to edible
- cultures and spore prints (more than 50!). The address is given in
- the bibliography. Judge Clive Callman ruled in 1983 test case that
- the cultivation of 'magic mushrooms' is legal in the UK, unfortunately
- it's also quite difficult. A friend once tried it and failed due to
- lack of sterile conditions.
-
- o FLY AGARIC
-
- The Fly Agaric ('amanita muscaria') is the well-known red toadstool
- with white spots which appears in illustrations in fairy tales. It is
- not a true psychedelic drug and at best has unpleasant side effects.
- At worst it could kill you.
-
- Effects are said to be dizziness, muscle twitching and possible
- vomiting after a half hour. This is followed by a drunken feeling and
- perhaps a light sleep lasting about two hours. Numbness may be
- present in the extremities. On waking feelings of great strength and
- hallucinations (especially of size) lasting about six hours have been
- reported. Overdoses can lead to convulsions, derangement, coma and
- amnesia. There are reports that this drug can cause ergotism,
- constriction of blood in the extremities of the bodies (e.g. nose,
- fingers etc) leading to gangrene. Death or permanent brain damage is
- possible from overdose (caused by respiratory paralysis). Kidney
- damage is also possible.
-
- Neither the toadstool nor any preparation of it are controlled
- substances. They are not likely to be ever classified as such, since
- hopefully few will be foolish enough to try it.
-
- o MORNING GLORY SEEDS
-
- Ipomoea violacea seeds can be bought in high street shops. Most of
- the British seed packets (e.g. Suttons) say 'Ipomoea' on them and are
- not coated with chemicals. The various strains have evocative names
- such as Heavenly Blue, Pearly gates and Flying Saucers.
-
- Other rather more exotic and potent seeds (Hawaiian Wood Rose and
- rivea corymbosa) can be purchased by mail order from seed merchants.
- All contain Lysergic Acid derivatives. Although these are very close
- relations of LSD their psychoactive effects include a narcotic element
- rather than the euphoric effects typical of other psychedelics. The
- seeds also contain other ergot derivatives which if consumed in
- quantity might theoretically cause ergotism. However there are no
- reports of this happening.
-
- I once consumed a foul tasting infusion of about 300 ground Ipomoea
- seeds. There were no effects for the first five hours, except a
- strange physical feeling of tension in the body, which led the author
- to draw the mistaken conclusion that the seeds had little effect.
- Others have reported vomiting at this point. However, after this time
- LSD-type effects became apparent. My friends have reported positive
- results from it, but I still believe this drug is unreliable in its
- effects and I would recommend acid or mushrooms as being preferable.
-
- o CACTI
-
- The possession of the Peyote cactus (lophophora williamsii) is legal
- in the UK, but not in the USA (unless you are a member of the Native
- North American Church). Peyote and several other cacti, such as San
- Pedro (trichocereus pachanoi), contain mescaline which has very
- similar, if not identical, effects to LSD. Both cacti should both be
- available from Cacti dealers. Someone I knew once ate 5' of San Pedro
- bought in the UK, both the cactus skin and the disgusting pulp found
- inside, to experience very mild effects. The mescaline may well make
- one sick.
-
- o KETAMINE ('Vitamin K', 'Special K')
-
- Ketamine is chemically related to PCP ('Angel Dust'). PCP, a
- dangerous American street drug rather than a psychedelic, is
- characterized by resulting in frequent bad trips, psychotic reactions
- and extreme violence in its users.
-
- But Ketamine appears to be much safer than PCP. It is still used in
- human medicine unlike PCP. Currently Ketamine ('Ketalar') is a
- prescription only medicine rather than a controlled drug in Britain.
- It is a powerful drug used as a general anaesthetic, which has some
- strange psychedelic effects when used at low doses (25-100mg). The
- usual medical form is a liquid when it is injected intramuscularly.
- American street users heat the liquid to obtain a white powder which
- is smoked or snorted. Ketamine may be ineffective when taken by mouth
- - although one report from Denmark claims it to be orally active at
- the 200mg level with the effects becoming apparent slowly.
-
- The effects are stronger and more profound than acid but last only an
- hour or so. The subject should remain still. Experiences of the mind
- leaving the body and floating in space, or even death are common. Bad
- trips are supposed to be absent but there are serious dangers
- following heavy use. Dr John Lilly and his fellow researchers have
- used the drug continuously for weeks. Several believe themselves to
- have contacted alien intelligences and two committed suicide.
- Although non-toxic (unlike PCP) it appears to have potential for
- psychological dependency. K has been used in experimental
- psychotherapy.
-
- In 1991 reports have emerged of K usage by the nightclubbing
- fraternity in New York. This practice has now spread to London where
- K is available for about 100 pounds per gram. I am rather surprised
- by this since clubbers tend to go for stimulating drugs rather than
- those sedative in nature.
-
- o LAUGHING GAS (Nitrous Oxide N O)
- 2
-
- This is also a medical anaesthetic with some psychedelic effects.
- This is most easily found in small green pressurized gas chargers used
- to whip cream and available in many large stores. They fit in soda
- syphons in exactly the same way as the usual CO2 chargers they
- resemble. This should never be breathed directly (it could freeze the
- lungs) but always from a balloon and also diluted with air. There is
- a warning on the box -- 'Do not inhale. Misuse can be dangerous to
- your health'. In fact it seem to be fairly safe. Classic effects of
- N20 are a very short (a few minutes) and intense trip. I found it
- pleasant enough but still a little disappointing - no more than a
- tingling body high.
-
- o CANNABIS
-
- Cannabis is the most common and safest of all 'street drugs'. The
- vast majority of drug offences in most countries are simply the
- possession of small quantities of cannabis. But, as even the police
- admit, the vast majority of cannabis users are never caught. A simple
- solution to 95% of the 'drug problem' in Europe and America would be
- to decriminalise cannabis.
-
- An advantage of cannabis is that it can be readily recognized as
- genuine by its physical appearance. As far as other drugs are
- concerned it must be remembered that any pills or tablets bought on
- the black market may either contain no drug at all or a substitute
- drug. An additional danger is that illegally manufactured drugs may
- contain dangerous impurities. This is less true of which LSD is a
- reasonably good bet. Your tab is most likely to be dosed with acid or
- nothing. A marginal possibility, also, would be the presence of DOB
- in blotter. Ecstasy could have anything in it.
-
- The effects of dope are due to a mixture of many psychoactive
- chemicals. Different sorts of dope contain different quantities of
- these and so have slightly different effects. Studies at St Louis
- Medical School in 1988 have identified the THC receptor, which is
- mainly in the front brain, and discovered that THC caused no damage to
- brain cells. There is some really strong (and therefore dear) weed
- around now, e.g. Thai weed and Semsemilla (seedless). These have
- very high concentrations of THC and can cause strange visual effects
- -- almost like LSD -- if quite a bit is consumed. As a rough rule of
- thumb the more tacky, sticky, darker, wet with resin the cannabis
- material the stronger it is. The negative effects of cannabis
- (confusion, unease, slight paranoia, anxiety and a feeling that you
- are unable of performing the simplest tasks) are very mild usually
- pass quickly and can be overcome by power of will. The only report of
- a death directly attributable to cannabis is of several tons falling
- on one unfortunate man.
-
- Smoking when drunk is a bad idea unless you really want to get smashed
- out of your mind, because you end up being both very drunk and very
- stoned at the same time and liable to pass out. Yeah I have been
- there.
-
- Hash oil can be easily made from hash. Pour an inch of petrol lighter
- fuel into a small test-tube (from any chemist). Add enough hash for a
- spliff. Gently heat with lighter. It's OK to hold since it boils
- quickly, dissolving the chemicals you want and leaving a residue.
- Soak cigarette in fuel and leave five minutes to dry, then smoke
- (without tell tale smell).
-
- An alternative to smoking is to eat dope, which has a different effect
- and lasts longer. It is less economical than smoking. I am told that
- a sixteenth will get eight people buzzed or four heavily stoned. For
- the latter try dissolving about half a gram in enough butter or
- margarine and adding to coffee or the traditional instant chocolate
- brownie mix, since THC is soluble in fat but not water.
-
- o LSD ( 'Acid' )
-
- D-Lysergic acid diethylamide
-
- 'I see the true importance of LSD in the possibility of providing
- material aid to meditation aimed at the mystical experience of a
- deeper, comprehensive reality. Such a use accords entirely with the
- essence and working character of LSD as a sacred drug.' Dr Albert
- Hofmann, the discoverer of LSD.
-
- '... LSD is best understood as a powerful unspecific amplifier, or
- catalyst, of mental processes, which facilitates the emergence of
- unconscious material from different levels of the human psyche. ' Dr
- Stan Grof, Esalen Institute.
-
- LSD is believed to be illegally manufactured in Northern Californian
- and, perhaps also, Holland. An underground lab was also busted in
- England in early 1991. LSD is cheap and widely available. The
- currently hip English name for acid is 'A'. There are many dosage
- forms available: pieces of paper or cardboard ('tabs' -- often with
- colour pictures printed on them), very small pills ('microdots') and
- transparent gelatin sheets ('windowpane'). The doses present in each
- unit are on average 75-125 micrograms (mcg) of very pure LSD. This is
- a quite a strong dose but about half the strength of the 1960s dose.
- This, and the greater public knowledge of the drug, is probably why
- bad trips are less common now than in the past.
-
- The lowest psychedelic dose is 50 mcg -- recommended for beginners.
- Doses below this level have a similar effect to cannabis or MDMA. The
- effects increase with dosage until about 400-500 mcgs where any more
- has no more effect. LSD cannot cause toxic poisoning but in this
- dosage range bad trips are practically certain. The effects last up
- to eight or twelve hours. LSD must be treated with respect. It can
- be a completely overwhelming experience. Nevertheless, contrary to
- popular belief acid will not turn normal people permanently insane.
-
- Since acid came back into fashion the media treatment of the subject
- has been appallingly inaccurate. In September 1989 a English football
- fan fell overboard a ferry to Sweden and was presumably drowned. It
- was reported that this had resulted from LSD use. He had died fifteen
- minutes after taking a tab. However, LSD takes about half an hour to
- an hour to have any effect and, therefore, is unlikely to have
- contributed to his death. What the media had paid less attention to
- was been drinking very heavily. 'Drunk drowns' is obviously an
- inferior headline to 'Trip To Hell'.
-
- o ECSTASY AND OTHER 'DESIGNER DRUGS'
-
- DOM DOB DOI MDA MDMA MMDA DMMDA MDE 2CB 2CE DOET DOPR 2CT2 p-DOT MBDB MMA
- LE-25 etc.
-
- 'At first you can't really say what's happening after you ingest these
- substances. Then suddenly everything is a little brighter,
- conversation is a bit more relaxed, the music is just right and you
- slowly begin fitting into the new environment. It's a fabulous
- feeling.' Dr Alexander T Shulgin, Californian Chemist.
-
- All these new drugs are psychedelics which have been synthesized by
- researchers. They should not be confused, as the press does in its
- ignorance, with other 'designer drugs' which are dangerous narcotics,
- eg. MMMP ('synthetic Heroin') which was produced with an impurity
- (MTMP) that caused Parkinson's disease. The new psychedelics are
- mainly manufactured from crossing a mescaline-type structure with
- amphetamine ('speed'). There are hundreds of these chemicals many of
- which seem to be safe psychedelics when correctly used. There are
- other new psychedelics related to tryptamine and also a more potent
- analogue of LSD. This has not be tested in humans to the best of my
- knowledge.
-
- Some have been manufactured for the black market in North America,
- particularly in Canada. They are very rare and but they are all
- likely to become more popular, as they represent an advance on LSD.
- The drugs seem to have similar effects, which are highly dosage
- dependent and they are best used in low doses where many have been
- described as empathogens -- non-hallucinogenic psychedelics, which
- promote empathy between people and remove fear in the same context.
- Some say there are subtle differences in effects between these drugs,
- however there is little reliable information at the present time.
- Despite the potential usefulness of these drugs they were listed in
- the UK in 1977 as class A and banned in the USA in 1988 under sweeping
- rules.
-
- o MDMA ('Ecstasy')
-
- The N-methyl analogue of MDA
-
- 'It can be compared in its effects to marijuana, to psilocybin devoid
- of the hallucinatory component, or to low doses of MDA.' A T Shulgin.
-
- 'I found it entirely pleasurable and very enlightening. It's a
- diffused sensuality. Everybody became very open about their
- feelings.' American User.
-
- ' ... Grinspoon, who has tried the drug himself, said recently that it
- may prove to be 'the first pharmacologic agent that actually gives a
- patient the capacity for insight. It enhances positive feelings of
- love and trust and seems to facilitate the retrieval of early
- memories.'' David Perlman, San Francisco Chronicle, 10 December 1987
-
- 'Ecstasy, also called MDMA, is methylenedioxymethylamphetamine
- (whew!), a drug synthesized in 1914 as an appetite depressant ... It
- is a short-acting psychedelic that doesn't give bad trips or
- flashbacks, and does reduce anxiety. BUT, although it may not be as
- lethal as crack, like any drug it is intense and dangerous if used in
- a risky way, such as snorting it or injecting it intravenously.' Beth
- Winship, San Francisco Chronicle, 26 June 1988
-
- 'A psychedelic drug nicknamed Ecstasy, invented in laboratories in the
- 1970s and outlawed in 1985, is enjoying a vogue in nightclubs in
- downtown Manhattan, where it is attracting a young and arty following
- and even sparking a wave of Ecstasy theme parties, T-shirts and music
- ... In Ecstasy, a combination of a synthetic mescaline and an
- amphetamine, users believe they have found a mildly hallucinogenic
- stimulant that amounts to the perfect drug ... It is difficult to
- determine how many people are now experimenting with Ecstasy across
- the country. The federal Drug Enforcement Administration says most of
- the drug is made in clandestine laboratories in Texas and California
- ... Ecstasy, a bitter white powder also called MDMA, short for
- 3,4-methylenedioxy methamphetamine, is a chemical variation of
- mescaline, a hallucinogenic drug obtained from the mescal plant, and
- amphetamine, or speed, a drug that stimulates the central nervous
- system.' Lisa W. Foderare, San Francisco Chronicle, 14 December 1988
-
- 'Ecstasy, for example, which is known chemically as MDMA, has been
- ruled by the federal Food and Drug Administration to be useless
- medically and dangerous, although it has been used for many years by a
- few psychiatrists to help their patients talk more freely ... And it
- can in fact lead researchers to important insights into the way the
- mind operates, according to Dr. Reese T. Jones, a psychiatrist at the
- University of California in San Francisco who has conducted
- government- sponsored studies of psychedelic drugs including
- marijuana, LSD, mescaline and cocaine ... Although human studies with
- MDMA are banned, Jones and Dr. Stephen J. Peroutka, a Stanford
- neurologist, noted that some psychiatrists have confirmed its value in
- inducing a sense of serenity in mental patients, an increased sense of
- self-esteem, and a closer, more confident alliance with their
- therapists ... No one knows just how MDMA works. But Jones insisted
- the drug has shown no long-term adverse effects when it is used
- moderately. ... As for using Ecstasy to study how the mind operates
- under the stimulus of profound human emotions, Jones commented:
- 'There's just no way I can study love and lust in a rat, and I'd like
- to study how MDMA works in humans, but it's just not worth the hassle
- with the FDA.' David Perlman, San Francisco Chronicle, 16 January 1989
-
- MDMA is a weaker and less toxic version of a very similar drug MDA
- which is taken in similar doses. It is available in a number of
- forms, usually caps, tablets or a white powder. It has been made in
- the UK but is more commonly manufactured in Holland or America. It
- was first produced for the black-market in America in the early 1970s
- as a then legal substitute for MDA. In 1985 it started to attract
- media attention. It was declared illegal in the USA in the same year.
- Californian psychotherapists, typically of Jungian persuasion, had
- been using MDMA or 'Adam' as they called it together with 2CB and
- Ketamine. Adamson (1985) contains much information on therapeutic
- use.
-
- When used in normal doses of about 100mg it has very mild effects like
- a combination of very low doses of LSD and speed, but with no
- hallucinations or chance of a bad trip. It causes enhancement of the
- senses uses all psychedelics, a loss of inhibitions, emicsy and
- openness between people and lasts about four hours. Despite its mild
- effect it can leave the user with a slight but persistent hangover for
- the following two days! And it is somewhat toxic, unlike cannabis or
- LSD, and can cause sickness and, like speed, a feeling of tension in
- the jaw and grinding of teeth. High doses (200mg+) seem to result in
- LSD-type effects. Doses of 500mg+ of MDA can be fatal. MDA has be
- eclipsed in publicity by MDMA, which is ironic since much MDMA may
- actually be MDA. MDMA is thought to be less toxic than MDA. MDA is
- slightly stronger and lasts longer than MDMA. There are an estimated
- half million users in the UK.
-
- 'E' has become a popular accompaniment to dance music despite its cost
- of around twenty pounds for a dose of about 100mg and despite (or
- perhaps because of) much adverse and inaccurate publicity,
- particularly in the down-market papers. Quarter tabs of acid are also
- used as a far cheaper, but poorer and less reliable substitute. The
- police made 90 seizures of E in 1988 and 570 in 1989. There was one
- bust of 900,000 tabs in Amsterdam during the summer of 1989. In 1990
- 5,500 tablets were seized in London. In 1991 this number had
- increased to 66,200. This suggests European supplies to be
- increasing. Certainly E is cheaper now than when it first reached the
- UK in the early 1980s and demand is very much higher. Black market
- MDMA might actually be MDA or a mixture of the two as they appear in
- the same forms. Also, MDMA has been mixed with speed. And beware,
- very cheap E is more likely to be a cocktail of other drugs, probably
- including speed, than the genuine article.
-
- Experiments in rats show MDA and MDMA lower levels of the
- neurotransmitter serotonin. Even although the rats recover and there
- is no evidence that low serotonin levels are dangerous in humans this
- had led many journalists to spread the 'Ecstasy causes brain damage
- myth'.
-
- Of course you can get screwed up (severe anxiety, depression and
- paranoia) on even a relatively safe drug like Ecstasy if you try
- really hard (10-15 doses per day like some idiots in San Francisco
- did) and taking it as often as three times a week is probably abusing
- it. A very small number of people have died in a heat-stroke reaction
- after taking MDMA, because they were allergic to it. Although,
- allergic responses can be a problem with common medicinal drugs, e.g.
- aspirin or even peanuts, this will no doubt be used as propaganda
- against E. Another media favourite is to describe MDMA as a sex drug,
- in fact a side effect of the drug is to make ejaculation difficult.
- In Adamson users describe it as a 'love drug' which can make
- intercourse unnecessary. Perhaps it is the ideal drug for the
- post-AIDS generation.
-
- Many people seem to use MDMA together with LSD. In general, mixing
- drugs is a bad idea since many have a synergistic effect on each other
- (2+2=5) but this is said to be a good combination. I would expect
- very strong trips to be the result.
-
- MDE ('Eve') is the N-ethyl analogue of MDA and has been available in
- the USA. It is even shorter in action than MDMA and is believed to
- have sedative rather than stimulant effects.
-
- o 2CB
-
- This is the phenylethylamine analog of DOB but it is safer, only
- lasting about 8 hours. It is very similar to MDMA, but it is stronger
- with mild visual effects more common and probably fewer of the
- amphetamine-type side effects. It is supposed to enhance all the
- senses. By 1987 it was available in the USA as 'bromo-mescaline'(sic)
- or 'Venus'. According to The Face magazine it has been found in
- London. It has been described as an 'aphrodisiac' (well it would be,
- wouldn't it?). A dose is about 10-20mg.
-
- o DOB ('Bromo-STP')
-
- 4-Bromo, 2,5-Dimethoxyphenylisopropylamine
-
- This drug first appeared in the UK in the summer of 1973. It is a
- stronger version of the famous 1960s drug DOM (or 'STP'). The drug
- was being sold then as an LSD substitute. DOB commonly appears as
- drops on blotting paper, just as LSD does, since it is so potent.
- Like DOM some producers have been producing dosage units containing
- massive overdoses of the drug, which can last between 24 and 36 hours.
- There have been reports from the USA of really huge overdoses (e.g.
- 75mg) causing ergotism (see Fly Agaric section). However, DOB is
- active at less than 1mg and is, therefore, not toxic and likely to be
- safe at the correct dosage level.
-
- ????
-
- Other drugs on sale on the rave scene are 'Fantasy', 'Fantasia',
- 'M25'. I don't know what these contain. An educated guess would be
- that they were ring-substituted phenylethylamines like the drugs
- previously discussed, related to amphetamine or aspirins.
-
- o E4Euh (Intellex)
-
- This recent addition to the psychedelic underground is a long lasting
- (~14 hours) amphetamine derivative, orally active at about 10-20mg of
- the free base. Claimed to boost intelligence and encourage verbosity
- with some MDMA-like effects. Mixes badly with LSD (unlike MDMA).
-
- o DMT DET DPT DIPT
-
- These are substituted tryptamines which are related to psilocin. The
- first three are not orally active and must be smoked (but not with
- tobacco). They have short lasting intense LSD-type effects. DIPT is
- orally active and is so specific in its action that it only alters
- the perception of music.
-
- Although these are the easiest of the psychedelics to manufacture at
- home the procedure is still difficult with difficult to obtain and
- dangerous chemicals needed. Sometimes available on the American black
- market but rare.
-
- Anonymous from Psychedelics Drugs 1.1 (1992)
-
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- December 21st 1993
- Virtual Reality & BodyArt
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