In 1960 I entered the Graduate program at Harvard. The next year I was recruited by Richard Alpert of the Psychology Department to become a subject in an experimental program involving the ingestion of LSD. He was a young man, not much older than I, with black horn rimmed glasses and an attractive smile. He said the session would last about eight to ten hours. I arrived in the early evening, a little surprised to find that I was the only subject who turned up. He seemed interested in my Native American ancestry. He explained a little of what to expect, though nothing really could have prepared me for the experience.
I won’t say much about the trip I took, except that it was a trip, a trip through a star spangled universe. I remember the colors. I remember years of travel without once feeling tired or bored. I remember grief at having spent so long away from friends and family — it had been years, of course, though surely not decades. I remember wondering if it might have been decades. And I remember the horn rimmed glasses. He asked me to describe what I saw and felt, and, oddly, he told me what he was seeing and feeling . I remember nothing of his vision, but I can still bring to mind certain images and the memory of intense euphoria, tinged with grief.
By 1963 both Alpert and Timothy Leary had been fired from Harvard. Both men appear as ‘editorial consultants’ on the mast head of Psychedelic Review, Issue Number 1.
Toasting our new home with the taste of our old home.
Like a little furry Eloise. Between apartments for two weeks, but we were lucky to find a cat-friendly hotel!
Test.
So I'm settling into this new life in Boston pretty well.
Subway tunes
Lazy Sundays
I am trying to start a sketch and see if this warm grey block will get longer than this.
Nice stones
Design is how it works.