Timothy
Leary Timothy
Leary
(October 22,
1920 - May 31, 1996) "Six
words:
drop out, turn on, then come back and tune it in...
and then drop out again,
and turn on, and tune it back in... it's a rhythm...
most of us think God made
this universe in nature-subject object-predicate
sentences... turn on, tune in,
drop out... period, end of paragraph. Turn the
page... it's all a rhythm...
it's all a beat. You turn on, you find it inside,
and then you have to come
back (since you can't stay high all the time) and
you have to build a better
model. But don't get caught - don't get hooked -
don't get attracted by the
thing you're building, cause... you gotta drop out
again. It's a cycle. Turn
on, tune in, drop out. Keep it going, keep it
going... the nervous system works
that way... gotta keep it flowing, keep it
flowing..." Okay, so it's a little over six words,
but it's the debut
pop-culture rap delivered by counterculture guru Dr.
Timothy Leary, a man who
gobbled over 5,000 doses of LSD in his lifetime and
inspired President Richard M. Nixon
to call him
"the most dangerous man in America." Leary was an
intelligent, witty,
unabashed hedonist who later in life became an
Internet enthusiast. The government was indeed alarmed by how quickly teenagers flocked to Leary in the sixties and seventies. At the time, television and newspapers were filled with sensationalist tales of young people having horrible, deadly drug experiences. Politicians, police officials, and institutional psychiatrists all denounced LSD and marijuana as the most horrific threats ever confronted by the human race. When Leary sat before Ted Kennedy at a 1966 Senate hearing on LSD, he expressed disappointment at the media's complete absence of stories involving alcohol abuse, or the deaths resulting from Henry Ford's shitty automobiles.
Timothy Leary was a professor at Harvard
University when he began
experimenting with psilocybin, acid, and other
hallucinogens. His test subjects
included prominent Bohemian luminaries like Thelonious
Monk, Aldous Huxley, Allen Ginsberg, William
S.
Burroughs, and Jack Kerouac. After running
low on beatniks, he
switched to prison inmates, homeless people, and
religious students. Leary
argued publicly that hallucinogens could be used to
treat personality
disorders, but ultimately these beliefs got him booted
from Harvard. His
lifelong enthusiasm for tripping out
would quickly overshadow his acclaim as one of
America's most innovative
psychologists. The inevitable goals of LSD sessions
were (a) to discover and
make love with God, (b) to discover and make love with
yourself, and (c) to
discover and make love with a woman. In 1944, while training in Pennsylvania,
he met a woman named
Marianne. They got married, moved to sunny downtown
Berkeley, and had two kids.
Leary earned a doctorate in psychology, and was
appointed Director of
Psychological Research at the Kaiser Foundation. He
came to discover that one
third of patients who receive traditional
psychotherapy get better, one third
get worse, and one third stay exactly the same. He
wondered if people wouldn't
be better off just getting high. Meanwhile, Marianne had been suffering
from post partum
depression, and she began to drink heavily. She and
Leary fought with regularity.
On his 35th birthday, he awoke to find Marianne in a
closed garage with the car
running. She was dead, the first in a series of family
tragedies. Leary would
later experience two more divorces, and the suicide of
his daughter. In 1970, he declared himself a candidate
for governor of
California - but the campaign was cut short after he
got arrested for drug
possession. He and family members were pulled over by
an arresting officer with
a reputation for planting drugs on suspects. When
Leary's traveling companions
were searched, the cops found hash and acid tabs.
Leary pled no contest to
possession of marijuana so authorities would go
lighter on his family. A trial in the most conservative county
in California (and home of
Richard
M. Nixon) yielded a sentence of thirty
years in prison for Dr. Leary, an offense
normally warranting six months
probation. During the appeal process, Leary was sent
directly to jail.
Astonishingly, he was given a prison psychological
test largely based on his
own research, and experts came to the conclusion that
Leary appeared
"healthy" enough to be transferred to a minimum
security prison in
San Luis Obispo. Leary promptly escaped. He
hoisted himself to the rooftop, climbed up a telephone
pole, shimmied along a
cable across the prison yard, and dropped over barbed
wire to the highway
below. He was smuggled out of the country with a fake
ID. He was arrested
several years later, extradited from
Switzerland, and returned to a jail on U.S. soil. At
this point Leary decided
he'd rather snitch on his accomplices than serve time.
He helped finger the man
who helped him escape from jail, recounted the escape
plot, and implicated
numerous others from Los Angeles and Seattle. Nothing
led to a criminal arrest,
and his sentence was reduced to three years. Upon release, Leary discovered his
popularity had waned. He
entered the lecture circuit as a self-proclaimed high
priest of the psychedelic
movement, and continued to evangelize recreational
drug use. Joining him at the
podium was convicted Watergate felon G. Gordon Liddy,
and together
the two embarked upon a modest debating tour,
appearing on college campuses
from coast to coast. The reviews were mixed, and
critics lamented the fact that
Leary, a former Harvard professor, was now a nightclub
comedian. He was fifty-six years old with no home,
no job, no credit, and
dwindling credibility. He moved to Los Angeles, and
started socializing in
Hollywood circles, a natural evolution for those
attempting to alter
perception. He believed that Hollywood and the
Internet would be the LSD of the
90's, empowering people on a massive scale. His lectures became multi-media
extravaganzas with live video and
music, entitled "Just Say Know". His books became
graphic novels,
focusing on the World Wide Web. He increased his daily
diet to consist of 30
cigarettes, one marijuana biscuit, one bonghit, half a
cup of coffee, and a
great deal of nitrous oxide. Dr. Leary died of inoperable prostate cancer,
and he'd
planned an elaborate death ritual for himself. He'd
set up webcams where fans
of his work could watch him commit suicide in real
time. Instead he died in his
sleep, uttering the last words: "why not." Later, his ashes were loaded into the
same 9x12 inch canister
containing the remains of Star Trek creator Gene Roddenberry and
blasted
into space on the Pegasus Rocket. |