Monday, March 9, 2009

Skinny Dipping in Reality

Bageant Goes Trippin'

http://theragblog.blogspot.com/2009/02/bageant-goes-trippin.html

http://www.joebageant.com/joe/2009/02/skinny-dipping-in-reality.html

Skinny Dipping in Reality:
A coot's account of the great hippie LSD enlightenment search party

By Joe Bageant
February 17, 2009

There's nothing better that 250 mics of good acid to kick start the
cosmic coonhunt for Enlightenment. It takes juice. After all sonny
boy, you don't knock down stars with a bee bee gun. -- Mad Dog
Howard, Hippie Doper/Philosopher

First LSD trip, 1965: Tumbling, tumbling, tumbling inward with eyes
closed, I could hear the spider plant hanging in the basket overhead
singing in its green subatomic plant language, a hymn to the sunlight
charging my bedroom atmosphere. On the back of my eyelids spun a
great wheel of existence, turning both ways simultaneously generating
an unearthly mournful chant that seemed to be composed of every human
voice on earth. It rose in some unknown universal tongue singing,
"Wheel of life, wheel of death, Bangladesh, Bangladesh. Wheel of
life, wheel of death, Bangaladesh, Bangaladesh." Millions of starving
faces, young men, girls, old men, babies, crones, materialized in
uncountable swarms, each face transfigured by some unnamable mutual
understanding that I could not share. Then they atomized, leaving the
room filled with the scent of wood smoke, shit and citrus blossoms
(an odor I would instantly recognize decades later in poverty
stricken Central American villages.)

No words can describe an LSD trip, but let me say that at the end of
this one, I sat down and cried. For happiness. My deepest hope and
suspicion, the one to which I dared not cling, had been confirmed.
Life could indeed be significant, piercing and meaningful.

I first took LSD in Winchester, Virginia, thanks to my gay friend
George, who was being "treated" for his homosexuality with lysergic
acid and enjoying every minute of treatment. Ever since reading about
LSD in a Life magazine article a year before, both of us had wanted
some of the stuff. Then one day George walked into my basement
apartment and threw a cellophane packet onto the kitchen table.
"There it is Bageant," he said. Next day, after creating a small
meditative space with plants, a Tibetan mandala, and classical music
on the turntable, we took it. Five years later I was still taking it
at least once a week, and to this day I consider LSD the promethean
spark of whatever awakening I have managed to accomplish in the life.

Hard as it is to imagine today, LSD was perfectly legal at the time.
Legal and apparently not dangerous. In fact, it never even interfered
with my job at a microbiological laboratory in the local Shraft's
frozen food plant, but seemed to improve work. Often I arrived there
still under the influence of the previous night's psychotropics and
still managed to impress the hell out of the lab boss, Ray Trotta,
for my ability to note extremely subtle differences in cultured
bacterial colonies. Of course, when we put our eye to the same lens
of the dark field colony counter, we were by no means looking at the
same colony, as I skimmed across and through the colorful landscapes
and towers of teeming metropoli of bacterial civilizations.

For the first time in years, my life in that small town was very
enjoyable. In fact Winchester soon spawned its own small psychedelic
scene, one among thousands in heartland America at the time. We never
hear about them today, the media having since trivialized the entire
Sixties (which actually ran into the Seventies) into a handful of
newsreel snippets of the Haight Ashbury, Kent State, long hair,
Vietnam and the Beatles.

In Winchester, an assortment of perhaps fifty artists, gays,
hillbilly hipsters, academics from a nearby college of music, passing
beatniks, and psychedelic enthusiasts had accumulated around town,
hanging out at a marvelous old "dinner and juke joint" in the poor
section. Winchester's good Southern burghers couldn't help but notice
all this "suspicious happiness," as the mayor once called it. But
because the sons and daughters of local doctors, lawyers and
authorities, including the daughter of the town's prosecuting
attorney, were in the mix, and because the queer son of a state
senator hung out there, a hands-off policy prevailed for the first
couple of years. Finally, the good fundamentalist Christians and
Republican business community just couldn't take it any more.

Meanwhile, I'd gained a profile for myself through openly espousing
consciousness expansion and by working to racially integrate the all
white Shraft's frozen food plant, which was later accomplished when
the plant got a liberal New York manager named Hank. It was hairy for
a while, but together we got it done.

As an aside, last year, some forty years later, I again saw the first
Negro we hired (I use the non-PC word because it was the term of the
day and feels right in this telling of the times), Ted, a religious
man with a spark in his eye and built like a small tank. As we sat in
his little house in Winchester's still-black section, Ted, now
completely white haired and with one of those post cancer bowel bags
attached, recalled that "Them was the days of Jim Crow, but they
wasn't the worst thing to come along." "How's that?" I asked.
"Crack," he answered. "Crack be destroyin' this generation. But if
God took us through Jim Crow, he can take us through crack." We
clasped our hands and closed our eyes in a short prayer.

Given that I openly advocated LSD and psychedelics, my uh, notoriety,
grew, resulting in becoming the town's first pot bust. Tittilating as
it was for the readers of The Winchester Star, the regular fare of
which featured such things as potatoes that looked like Bob Hope and
large unidentified bugs brought into its offices by local farmers,
the trial itself was a dismal little thing, completely uninteresting
in retrospect, even to the arrestee, despite that I was facing 15 years.

Anyway, several months later I was acquitted, partly for the fact
that it was one of the few pot sales I didn't make around town, but
mostly because of a hard boozing old Southern attorney named Massey,
who sported white linen suits and carried a load of buckshot in his
ass acquired while climbing out the window after screwing some guy's
wife years before. Ever savvy, he selected blacks for the jury,
people who for good reasons had no fondness for Winchester's lily
white judicial system and law enforcement. Massey personally did not
have much use for "cullids," and believed, as we were taught in
schools then, that blacks were lazy and inferior because their
culture evolved in a warm climate where fruit fell out of the trees
and in the absence of the need for work, they just fucked all day. At
the same time he understood that "the sight of cullids in the jury
box is unnerving as hell for any prosecutor, the way they sit there
blinkin' so inscrutable and all. You never know what they are
thinking, but you know it ain't good for the prosecution. And
besides, the commonwealth's prosecuting attorney is gonna have his
hands full just keeping his daughter's name from coming up in your
marijuana adventures. Nachully, you are gonna mention it every chance
you get, and I'm gonna give you plenty. And we're lucky as hell, boy,
that he's incompetent to boot." This all turned out to be sheer prophecy.

The verdict was "not guilty." Still, there was no living in
Winchester after being all over the front pages of the paper. In
fact, there was no living there during the long wait for the trial
anyway because waiting for anything is boring as hell in an already
boring place. So I moved to a tent in Resurrection City, the Poor
People's Campaign camp on Washington's national mall, to wait for the trial.

After acquittal of the charge, I was gassed up, greased and ready to
hit the road. I knew there was a big-time counter-culture out there
somewhere, thanks to regular trips to D.C. to get publications such
as Paul Krassner's The Realist, and by damned my wife and infant
child and I were going to join them for good. Several months later,
after a stint in New Orleans' French Quarter at the invitation of a
junkie jazz man named Ed, who'd blown through Winchester earlier with
his hooker wife, Kathy, after being released from Leavenworth.
N'awlins was a scene in itself, given that we lived across the street
from a hippie storefront church whose sole ritual was dropping acid.

Later, while headed for San Francisco, I found myself and my little
family in Boulder, Colorado. Definitely this was a culture counter to
the rest of America. Hell, they were hawking LSD out loud and openly
on the streets! At least a dozen of them looked at us and asked, "Do
you need a place to crash brother?" Or call out, "Brother and sister,
come share food with us." We wanted for very little as we worked
toward buying the old psychedelic school bus, a 1947 Dodge, that
became our home. Not that we lounged about in drugged out ecstasy
(though there was some of that involved too). I was working at a car
wash from the first week there. Also beginning a serious attempt at
writing -- at first for the small alternative weeklies, dealing a
little dope now and then, but increasingly I got assignments from the
larger slick magazines as years went by.
* * * * *

By 1970, the great hippie wave had years before broken on the West
Coast, and the backwash had reached its high water mark, flooding the
streets of Boulder and surrounding mountain canyons. There, thousands
of similar minded young people sat up all night discussing
metaphysics, the illusory nature of the "straight" world, and the
coming revolution in American consciousness and politics we all felt
was coming. Here in this self dubbed "Himalayas of the New World,"
midnight oil burned in mountain cabins and attic apartments of the
town below. From the ponderosa pine's edge, mule deer pricked their
ears and looked on at the noisy outdoor camps of America's new
culture gypsies --restless strange young nomads with psychotropically
morphed street names and identities such as Cloud, Spaco Mike,
Berkeley Betty, John The Baptist, Deputy Dawg, Chrisie the Shrimp
Girl, STP John, Wabbit, Goldfinger, The Glass Man. They smoked
homemades, screwed and read a lot, and diced up reality beyond
recognition under the influence of bootleg insight. A weird
electricity arched over everything, as blown away rap sessions drove
into the starry night while sanity cowered in the back seat. Yup,
this was paradise all right.
* * * * *

It's a mortal sin for writers to paraphrase their betters in the
craft, but I'd have to echo the late Hunter S. Thompson in his
sentiment that, I wouldn't recommend drugs and mayhem to anyone, but
it's always worked for me. For starters, LSD resolved, dissolved
might be a better word, my bleak black/white, right/wrong
judgmentalism forged in a fundamentalist childhood. But not the way
one might think. As anyone who has used much of the stuff knows, acid
can melt away painful lifelong imprints with a single blast of
insight. But not usually. And it's potential is never quite the same
for any two people, and definitely different for a redneck kid who'd
been raised on Christian fundamentalism. You start discovering from
the space and life experience you already know. For me, LSD began to
power deep meditations upon the meaning of Christian symbols,
especially of the holy cross. Not motionless sitting meditations, but
physically active ones, in this case woodcarving. As the product of
generations who worked with their hands, to this day my hands must
always be in motion, either playing guitar, tapping the keyboard --
"talking with my hands." So for hours, days and weeks I carved every
sort of cross imaginable -- plain ones, Coptic ones, Celtic ones,
coarse ones and gold leafed ones, just sitting in our school bus home
by dim lantern light carving, sometimes on peyote or acid.

And often the soft presence of a gentle and loving Christ would fill
the air with a sense of transcendent peace. Despite my many personal
conflicts with the Police Court Jehova of Christian fundamentalism,
it was becoming clear that Christ was a guy whose actions were worth
deep consideration, even if you considered yourself an atheist.
Police Court Jehova be damned. Other times would come zappy symbolic
glimpses of quasi cosmic order: Aha! The upright bar of the cross
represents the onrushing spirit and mind of man through eternity, and
the horizontal crossbar stands for undifferentiated matter. And where
they meet one another all we know is made manifest -- all pain, all
ecstasy and everything in between. Pure existence. Years later I
related this to one of the numerous Asian Buddhist masters who passed
through Boulder. He crinkled up his face and laughed in recognition.
This mysticism, if that's what it is, was clearly not new.

LSD, by way of a discussion with Tim Leary, also delivered the
question within a question: What is the question to which my life is
the answer? Right away I knew I'd rather peel that metaphysical onion
the rest of my life than grovel before a hollow religious institution
which flails its cowering followers with the question WHY? Why does
the world exist? Why does god take little children, or allow natural
disasters? Why did god put so much fucking hair on my back?

So finally, I figured out that "Why?" was never the question. "Why?"
was a bullshit ontological query Christianity forced upon its
followers, so its priests could pretend they had the answer, and thus
control the longing masses by withholding the answer. It's sure as
hell worked. People raised in Christian cultures are still asking it.
And still not getting an answer because there is no answer to a non
question. I was very lucky in that I never completely inherited the
quest for that question, despite coming from a fundamentalist family
loaded with preachers. But be damned if I wasn't forced to go out and
find some other unanswerable question anyway, because I did inherit
their essential grim religiosity in approach to life -- the dirty
cultural/spiritual genetics of misery the loving Protestant European peasantry.

Of hundreds, I only had one bad LSD trip, one in which I felt I could
not get my breath and was being smothered to death. It turned out
that I actually couldn't breathe, I'd always had bad lungs and I was
experiencing the onset of COPD lung disease, which would later limit
my life severely. If you've never experienced suffocation under the
influence of a powerful mind altering substance, I'm telling you dear
hearts, you can well grasp the horror of things like waterboarding
and the kind of people who'd sanction such a thing. But even that
experience taught me something, showed me once again the face of
mortality. Eternity. Eternity without Joe Bageant in it. We may
dance, make love and argue passionately, eat, shit and extrude
children onto the floor of spinning speck of cosmic dust. But the
universe yawns at the whole affair.

Nevertheless, once you've seen the face of eternity, you are left
with the question of what to do about it. How to respond. "How will I
live my life, in light of what I have seen?" I'm still wrestling with
that question -- but then that's what I had wanted, wasn't it? That
Great Question which would lead to the Great Answer? LSD doesn't give
answers, just questions. But used with directed and sincere effort --
to the degree that is even possible -- it can make you ask the Great
Questions, the only important ones. Such as "What are you going to do
to eliminate human suffering? What are you going to do, Joe Bageant,
now that you have seen the faces in the Great Wheel that turns both
ways simultaneously? What will be your direct action?" If you really
give a shit about the world, LSD will "serious your ass up real
fast," as we used to say.

Grave as such propositions appear, one must, to my mind at least, be
both serious AND silly about exploring consciousness to get results,
do it in the spirit of enlightened philosophical levity. Even after
all these years, that spirit ­ when and if it happens to be available
at the moment -- still gets me through the day. It enables me to face
the increasing sorrows that come with age. One of the nasty little
truths about life is that it gets harder with age, not easier, and
that there is no prize at the bottom of the box of crackerjacks. But
the good news, as I see it, is that we are inherently capable of
becoming stronger and more deeply resonant with the world in a way
that swamps personal misery into insignificance. Denial ceases to be
the first reaction to uncomfortable truths. There are billion dollar
industries in this country based upon denial and our refusal to
acknowledge mortal entropy. Even death is supposed to be more or less
negotiable through fitness, medical science -- and we are lied to
that we are as young as well feel and act. There is no inherent
virtue in being either young or old. We are young when we are young
and old when we are old, and any attending virtue comes with whether
or not we actualize truth

Enter Buddhism. It is damned near impossible for any literate person
to launch off on a teleological trajectory without being sucked into
the gravitational force of Buddhism. Especially if the launch is
powered by LSD, which is the difference between a journey on foot and
a ride in a rocket sled. By the way, there is no Buddhist commandment
that says, "Do not take drugs," though most Buddhists do not. Nor is
there one that says, "Do not drink," though it's not the most
recommendable thing to do. Buddhist leader Trungpa Rinpoche, founder
of Boulder's Naropa Institute, got drunk often, got laid too, and was
very controversial for it. Our American Calvinism makes us equate
morality and rightness with prohibition, especially of pleasure. The
Christian church has always been about controlling its followers.
Buddhism is not so much about prohibition, except for harming life.
It's not even about religion, but more about the ultimate order of
the world and liberation.

There are many, many forms of Buddhism, but they all fall roughly
into two types. If I may vastly over simplify -- Mahayana and
Theravada, "big boat" and little boat" Buddhism. Big boat aims at the
enlightenment, over many incarnations, of all sentient beings
through, among other things, selfless love. Little boat holds that
you are alone responsible for your own enlightenment through your
actions, and may possibly achieve liberation in a single lifetime --
enlightenment being the liberation from the desires that create
unhappiness and pain in mankind. As I said, I am vastly
oversimplifying here, which is sure to put American trust fund babies
in ashrams around the country and elderly Theravadan gurus into a
snit, generating an onslaught of disputative email, but the essence
is correct as far as I'm concerned.

There is a lineage of Buddhism which translates as "crazy wisdom." It
is the antithesis of what westerners usually think of in conjunction
with religion, and it's purposefully full of irreverence, goofiness,
shifting perspectives and absurdity. Crazy Wisdom has been described
as the unifying metaphysical force field of "poets, philosophers,
artists and gurus and other crazy fools gushing with wisdom." In one
variant, the great Japanese poet monk Ikkyu found antidote to Zen
formality in whorehouses and bars, i.e., "Her mouth played with my
cock the way a cloud plays with the sky." For whatever reasons, the
"People of the Book," Judaism, Christianity and Islam, opted out of
the wine and blowjobs, which may partly explain the general
crabbiness and vindictiveness that inspires them to enthusiastically
kill other people who disagree with them, not to mention each other
during such things as The Crusades, or more recently in Gaza.

By no means am I an adept at crazy wisdom, thus I am sure thousands
of folks sitting zazen in Boulder and San Francisco are livid at my
sloppy explanation and less than deeply dedicated application of its
principles. "Using crazy wisdom as an excuse to escape the discipline
of Buddhism," is the usual charge. Which is much the same discipline
ridden thinking as that of my Baptist-Pentecostal boyhood. Lawdy Miss
Claudy, the American system instills a psycho-sexual love of
discipline in all of us. No sex in the park bushes, no marijuana for
Americans, but rather debt slavery and airport cavity searches by
direct orders from the Christian police court Yaweh, whose face is
now the Department of Homeland Security. It all comes down to just
how much discipline is the right amount for an individual. A thirsty
man needs but one drink of water to continue his journey, not the
whole tank. Drinking the tank not only halts the journey, but in all
likelihood kills the traveler. At any rate, as the years go by, what
I take or mistake to be crazy wisdom continuously opens inner doors,
even given my poor discipline (and small intermittent doses of it at that).

Crazy Wisdom was brought to Boulder in early 1971 by Chogyam Trungpa
Rinpoche, a remarkable Chinese/Tibetan guru whose confrontational,
unpredictable teaching style was smart, and controversial. Rinpoche
("The Rinp") put away quarts of Johnnie Walker scotch, possessed an
overwhelming charisma and humor, and turned your mind inside out,
emptying it of its conditioned defenses. Rinpoche was both an
enlightened teacher and an intentional charlatan, which if you think
about it, is exactly in the spirit of crazy wisdom. He never doubted
for a moment that all who came within his presence benefited from the
experience. I remember an occasion when he arrived in town dead
broke, though already with a couple of followers. "The Rinp" was
invited to dinner at the Pygmy Farm, an early commune in Boulder.
Upon leaving, Rinpoche gave the commune members a bill for his
attendance. Which makes perfect sense when you consider that Crazy
Wisdom forces change through confronting convention at every turn and
by any means available. Another one of those things you either get or
don't get. Although it's about the purest wordless kind of awareness,
being literate does help you start to get it, which is why it
attracts so many highly intelligent people.
* * * * *

By no means am I stretching things to say ours was a more literate
generation. Most of the hippies I hung with in Boulder followed the
contemporary literary scene, had read Hesse, Joyce and Mann, Hobbes,
Faulkner, Freud, Jung, Huxley, and had a passing knowledge of such
things as Zen and Sufism. Not to mention an expanded consciousness.
So when Rinpoche explained how the "mind is emptiness, the true world
is empty" and that "the emptiness is permanent and all else is merely
passing mental display" they could get their heads around it. And
have room to spare.

At the time however, I too often judged Rinpoche from my
born-and-bred American perspective and background, so I missed a
great learning opportunity, many in fact, regarding Rinpoche Trungpa.
If nothing else, I owe Trungpa, for several things, some of them
minor, such as coming to understand that the Tibetan Book of the Dead
is a manual for living. And some of them major, such as that I'd
lived most of my life in my head in an effort to avoid suffering.

All these years later I am beginning to understand the effect living
for a decade or so in a genuinely free time and place had on my life.
Thanks to an ongoing a ttempt to understanding human consciousness,
everything has changed over time. Yet nothing has changed at all,
except my attitude toward everything. And yes, LSD had everything to
do with it. When it comes to rewiring one's own neuro-circuitry
toward ecstatic understanding and perception and playful wisdom, and
real compassion, LSD and Buddhism can certainly jump start the
awakening. Paradoxically, that awakening is to a dream. You come to
see very clearly that the "It is the dream that is dreaming the
dreamer." Such liberating insights are big as stars. And like Mad Dog
says, "You don't knock down stars with a bee bee gun."
* * * * *

But if I never get another look at the face of God on acid or pick up
another splinter of insight for the rest of my life, it'll be too
goddamned soon for me! Life may be a shit sandwich all right, but
brain damage ain't ketchup either! -- The Mad Dog in retrospection

Then that arc of electricity in the Himalayas of the New World
snapped, and thus began what I call Enlightenment Fire Sale. For
almost a decade change had come down like rain through the ozone (we
still had some ozone left in those days) and Boulder found itself
morphing into a metaphysical beachhead, a seething marketplace of
salvation salesmen and exotic snake oil peddlers -- hawkers of truth
and burning skyfulls of revelation. The Ten Commandments played in
the park, consciousness tramps did Sufi slapstick in the alleys,
while more introverted souls curdled their brains as they saw fit,
for about a buck a dose. In the throes of the new consumerism Boulder
consumed every cosmic thing imaginable, short of a giant asteroid,
even though it was surely contemplated during the comet Kahotek. But
still no avatars. No ship of deliverance. No change in the price of
bananas or sidewinder missiles.

Desire turned to demand, then exhaustion, disillusionment or plain
boredom. Having lifted veil upon veil, mortality still grinned across
the void, offering no new deals. The Cold War was thriving as much as
ever. The murdering bastards in charge still had the upper hand.

The hippie generation represented a massive threat to Cold War
America, already hell bent on Global Empire, but not acknowledging
such. The harder you looked around at America, the more terrible the
shock. Slow leaks in the bucket of our national destiny. Within that
advanced core of the most optimistic, best educated and most
visionary generation America ever produced, belief seeped away. Yet
it nevertheless launched the ecological movement, the health food
movement, and attempted to open up the closed darkness of American
power politics, which made it avant-garde.

Avant-gardes are, by definition, small. Despite the claims of
graybeard stock brokers and aging realtors at cocktail parties, the
majority of the generation never took part in the movement. They were
the same as they are today, concerned more with sports, pussy and
bling. Oh, they smoked pot, talked the talk, but that's about all.
Thomas Frank documented this very well in The Marketing of Cool.
Still, they were more open than the previous generation, and
certainly more open than they are now.

Meanwhile, many, if not most, of those dedicated to the movement did
not grow so fat and well-heeled as they aged. I can name many dozens
who've remained true to their beliefs at great personal cost to their
lives and families. A few still live on their humble organic
back-to-the-land plots, or spent their lives teaching in school
systems that keep on rotting despite their own best efforts, because
the schools are themselves part of a degraded Empire of the type
against which they fought. Or working in social services or the
ecology and earth movement. (Speaking of which, I still hold the
Rainbow Family and its gatherers to be among the highest order of men
and women in America.) Many, if not most of the true blue hippies now
suffer the gloom and depression of any intelligent and soulful person
in this age. But they endure. Few of them as there are compared to
the 300 million American other-minded souls around them, they endure.

Often at my speaking engagements or readings, I see one or more of
them in the audience -- long gray hair, loose fitting sensible well
worn clothing, soft eyes, and perhaps an herbal amulet around the
neck or in the hair. I look very directly at them from the podium,
until that old electric flash of mutual recognition pops. Immediately
after the reading or talk or whatever, I seek them out if at all
possible (press agents sometimes screw this up). Always there is the
big smile and the hug.

And we are again brothers and sisters," as we used to sincerely
address each other on the street. And again I have been granted the
gift, that brief spark of unquestioned mutual love and goodwill in a
darkening time.
--

For Cindy, who drove the getaway car, and Tim, who rode shotgun
during the entire affair.

.

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