WESAK 2008 - New Age Festival of Spiritual Unity and Blessings
Lectures, Teaching & Meditation On 17th,18th May 2008,9:30 am to 5:30 pm
venue: The auditoriam of the Indian Society of International Law, opposite the supreme Court 9, Bhagwan Dass Road, New Delhi.
Moon Light Meditation
19th May 2008, 6:30pm to 9:30pm Venue:97-A Eastern Avenue, Sainik Farm,New Delhi. For Reg:Poonam Sharma: 919313034752,Snigdha Nanda: 919818291375. More Detail>>
When we pursue happiness, it eludes you. However, when you recognise that happiness is the natural state of the soul, all you need is to eliminate all that comes between your happiness and you.
For most, the psychedelic generation is thankfully
dead and buried under heaps of marijuana ash and acid drops. But the ghost of
that era may still have a few spiritual lessons for New Age
...On
one level, I was still a fetus experiencing the ultimate perfection of a good
womb. On another level, I became the universe; I was witnessing the macrocosm
with countless pulsating galaxies and was it at the same time...
...I expanded all at once into a glowing conscious circle, growing larger and
larger, until a maximum was reached, the 'I' remaining as it was, but instead
of a confining unit, now encompassed by a shining globe of vast dimensions...
The excerpts given above describe two spiritual-mystical experiences-one
resulting from meditation
and the other from a drug 'trip'. Can you figure out which is which? In
all probability, you can't, unless you have either come across these passages
earlier or are plain lucky. Or, of course, if you have had what is popularly
known as the 'psychedelic experience' and can recognize a high when you
see one.
The similarities between a drug-induced experience and a mystical vision
are far too alarming for our anti-drug conditioned mind to completely
appreciate. It is a historical fact that, all over the world, drug visions
have always been considered redundant, if not downright heretical, by
established mainstream spiritual traditions. Over the years, the term
'drug' itself has been successfully stigmatized by society. Not without
cause, as is evident in the havoc wreaked by drugs on the world's youth
from the '60s till today.
Yet, it is also a historical fact that for centuries, psychedelic drugs
such as marijuana, mescaline and psilocybin have been integral to the
spiritual practices of various tribal cultures and yogic traditions respected
even today for their wisdom. Shamans
of South America's Yaqui tribe use psilocybin and mescaline extensively
during meditation. In India, the Aghora
sect of Tantra and a significant section of Shaivite Tantrics ritually
partake of marijuana as part of their sadhana (spiritual exercise).
The third most important deity in the Vedas,
after Indra and Agni, is Soma, symbolized by the intoxicating plant soma
and its juice. Even the first sutra of Kaivalya Pada in Patanjali's Yoga
Sutra recognizes the path of drugs thus: "Janmaushadhi-mantra-tapah-samadhi-jah
siddhayah (The siddhis (occult powers) are the result of birth,
drugs, mantra, austerities or samadhi)."
What we term as 'drugs'substances whose use (or abuse) leads to
physical and/or psychological addictionare technically known as
psychoactive drugs. These can roughly be divided into three groups:
Sedative/HypnoticThis group includes tranquilizers, barbiturates,
opium and its derivatives such as heroin or brown sugar. The potential
for physical addiction here is particularly high and the results are
far from healthy.
StimulantsThis comprises caffeine, nicotine, cocaine,
anti-depressants and amphetamines. All these drugs, although low on
physical dependence, range from moderate to high in the psychological
dependence scale.
PsychedelicsThe drugs in this category include cannabis
and its various derivatives (hashish, marijuana, bhang, charas
and ganja), LSD
(lysergic acid diethyl amide), psilocybin
(found in magic mushrooms) and mescaline
(found in the peyote cactus). The potential for physical dependence
on these drugs is nil, and the psychological dependence ranges from
moderate to zero. Most spiritual traditions that use drugs concentrate
primarily on this group, because of their vision-generating capacities.
According to Pradeep Guha, a senior journalist based in New Delhi,
India, who has been studying the world of psychedelics both in theory
and practice for the past 30-odd years, the stigma attached to the
word 'drug' today is unwarranted. "There are the 'hard drugs' such
as morphine, heroin or opiates," he explains, "and there are the 'soft
drugs', which include not only the well-known cannabis family, but
also alcohol, caffeine, nicotine, and cocaine. All these drugs, when
abused, definitely have bad effects. But this does not justify the
moralistic tenor the word 'drug' itself has been burdened with. Why
should society condone alcohol and cigarettes and shiver at the mere
thought of ganja?"
In fact, according to a news report published in the New
Scientist magazine (February 21, 1998), a December 1997 study
by the World Health Organization noted that cannabis use is much safer
than alcohol or tobacco. The article, however, adds that the relevant
section never saw the light of day, thanks to pressure from the US
National Institute on Drug Abuse and the UN International Drug Control
Program!
Says Dr Amiya Banerjee, a psychiatrist at the New Delhi-based Vidyasagar
Institute of Mental Health and Neuroscience (VIMHANS): "Traditionally,
in India, we had a good adaptation to cannabis and opium, which was
sufficiently low in potency. But then the western chemist came upon
the wonder plant of opium, brought it to exceedingly purified levels,
and began marketing it. The resultant addiction havoc worried the
Big Brother of the West so much that it decided to clamp down on the
drug source." The result: a bane on the word 'drug' and the gradual
death of a significant, albeit peripheral, spiritual means.
But are the psychedelics really that spiritual? Can they be passports
to the ultimate highthat every spiritual seeker thirsts for? Or are they a load of
dangerous rubbish packaged in the mystique of myth and tall tales?
"With the first drag, Shiva (a Hindu deity) made the sky. With the
second, he made the earth and with the third he made this world." This,
according to Dr Molly Kaushal, research officer at the Indira Gandhi National
Centre for the Arts in New Delhi, is how the Gaddi tribals of the northern
Indian hill state of Himachal Pradesh describe the act of Creation. The
'drag' here, of course, refers to a puff of cannabis.
As she tells me this, an excited Madhusudan Baul, a folk singer from the
eastern Indian state of West Bengal, chips in: "These three puffs are
extremely important. There is a proper ritual involved in taking them.
There should be a gap of at least 90 seconds between each puff. And the
high that you reach after three puffs is the climax. No further smoking
will make any difference."
And
what does he feel when he is on such a high? Madhusudan closes
his eyes in bliss as he recalls: "We all know that God resides everywhere.
But we see Him in bits and pieces. Cannabis makes me see God in His
entirety. It is a sight of such unalloyed joy that tears well up in
my eyes."
A junkie's gobbledygook? Not quite, points out Madhu Khanna, New Delhi-based
Tantra scholar. "When you are on the spiritual path," she explains,
"your body energies and vital centers are already in a heightened state
of awareness. At this point, when you take ganja, you become
completely in harmony. The drug allows you to get focused." But such
a harmony comes with a rider: that of ritualized discipline. You can't
reach this state of divine bliss in a disco, merrily tripping on a joint.
A mystical experience with psychedelics demands a complete overhaul
of your attitude towards life.
Come to think of it, almost every serious psychedelic tradition has
underscored the importance of discipline in using drugs. As Nicholas
Saunders, the man known to popularize the synthetic drug Ecstasy,
once said: "Spiritual experiences are special events. There is no known
way that they can be induced reliably, although various religious techniques,
such as meditation, can help to create a situation where they are more
likely to occur."
In this context, Saunders uses the words 'set' and 'setting'both
terms popularized in the '60s by psychedelic guru Timothy Leary. 'Set'
means the proper frame of mind for a spiritual experience through drugs.
Ideally, says Saunders, the mind should be thirsting for the experience
and should be completely at peace. Next comes the 'setting', the physical
state. The aspirant should be relaxed, and in a comfortable situation
and place. Over and above, Saunders emphasizes the need for a proper
'sitter', a guide who will help the aspirant through the 'trip'.
The importance of a proper guide is nowhere more highlighted than in
the works of enigmatic anthropologist-turned-sorcerer Carlos
Castaneda. The acolyte of Yaqui Indian shaman don Juan, Castaneda
began his journey into the mystical world by eating the mescaline-rich
peyote
cactus given by his guru. The resulting bizarre visions that make up
his books apparently helped open the floodgates of his own consciousness.
There
is no place for frivolity in a serious psychedelic experience. Even author
and scholar Aldous
Huxley, whose path-breaking book The
Doors Of Perception was one of the first works to highlight the
spiritual element in psychedelic drugs, cautioned: "There is a feeling
that the experience is so transcendentally important that it is in no
circumstance a thing to be entered upon light-heartedly or for enjoyment."
Somewhere down the line, however, the emphasis on discipline got swept
away by the manic intensity and the accessibility of the experience. In
1943, a Swiss chemist called Albert Hofmann accidentally discovered the
chemical LSD, colloquially known as 'acid' and by far the strongest psychedelic
drug around. Huxley, whose experience with mescaline had made him a serious
student of psychedelics, experimented with LSD and extolled its virtues
in his later books Heaven and Hell and Island. The last
book, in fact, envisioned a world where a psychedelic drug called moksha
blended with the ideology of Eastern mystical works such as the Tibetan
Book of the Dead and the Bhagavad
Gita to create an intellectual utopia. Although his books instilled
sufficient interest in the youth of the time to move east and discover
marijuana, the final psychedelic boom was still waiting in the wings in
the form of a maverick professor of psychologyTimothy
Leary.
Together with another psychologist Richard Alpert (who later shifted more
towards spirituality to become Baba
Ram Dass) and a bunch of eager students, Leary soon launched a full-scale
study called the Psilocybin Project at Harvard University, USA. The aim
of this project was, in the words of Robert Forte, editor of Timothy
Leary: Outside Looking In, to "understand the revelatory potentials
of the human nervous system and to make these insights available to others".
During this period, Leary also conducted the controversial Good
Friday Experiment, which "produced religious insights under psilocybin
in theology students that were indistinguishable from those of the most
renowned mystics and saints". The aim of this experiment, which took place
in 1962 on Good Friday at Boston University, USA, was to gauge the spiritual-mystical
effects of psychedelic drugs. Service was conducted in the main chapel
of the university, while the experiment took place in another chapel linked
by a loudspeaker. One and a half hours before the service, all the 20
volunteers were given identical looking capsules. While half contained
psilocybin, others were placebos. The experiment was conducted in standard
double blind fashion: neither researchers nor participants knew who had
the 'real thing'.
With the success of the Good Friday Experiment and the popularity of the
Psilocybin Project, what had begun as research soon turned into outright
advocacy. In 1963, Leary was expelled from Harvard, thrusting him and
the drugs he promoted into national prominence. He became a teen icon
of sorts, touting LSD as the wonder drug of the century. His oft-quoted
words 'turn on, tune in, drop out' became the slogan for a youth tired
of Vietnam, conventional education and morally uptight religion. The boom
had begun in earnest.
"The early trips of the 1960s were done reverently," recalls Tal Brooke,
a member of the psychedelic generation who later became a close disciple
of Sathya Sai Baba in India, and then libeled him in his book Lord
of the Air. "People would read Jung,
Blake, Emerson and Martin Buber
and then proceed in a woody setting. But by 1967, people were taking off
in droves, like hordes of lemmings. They would OD (overdose) at rock festivals
or watching a film... In shopping plazas stoned people were getting the
cosmological eye and could discern nuances of truth from the most pedestrian
things." Unable to control the effect of the LSD-generated visions and
without prior preparation, many people began committing suicide. Often,
an overdose led to a comatose state that continued for hours. The storm
triggered by Leary claimed far too many victims.
Despite the negative backlash, which finally led to a widespread ban on
all psychedelic drugs, the movement did help open the portals of consciousness
for many. When the pharmaceutical giant Sandoz began manufacturing LSD,
the drug's main clients were psychologists and psychotherapists. Their
interest in this, and similar psychedelic drugs, stemmed from the element
of schizophrenia present in the drug-induced visions. Not surprisingly,
the community most shaken by the mystical tenor of the visions comprised
leading clinical psychologists, such as
Dr Stanislav Grof and Dr Walter Huston Clark. Notes Dr Grof in his
seminal book on LSD research, Realms of the Human Unconscious:
"There are numerous indications that the maps of consciousness emerging
from my LSD work are fully compatible and sometimes parallel with other
existing systems. Examples of this can be found in Jung's analytical psychology,
Roberto Assagioli's psychosynthesis
and Abraham Maslow's
studies of peak experiences, as well as religious and mystical schools
of various cultures."
Was it possible, then, that psychedelic drugs were indeed the ideal guides
on a journey through the mind? To answer this query, it is first necessary
to know why these drugs affect the mind the way they do. Although a large
amount of research has been conducted on the chemical properties of psychedelics,
science is still a bit foggy on the issue. Different theories have been
floated on how the primary chemical in cannabis, a compound called tetra-hydro-cannabinol
(THC) that's found in the leaves and flowers of the shrub Cannabis
sativa, precisely works in the body. One theory states that THC binds
itself to certain receptors in the brain and the liver and this creates
hallucinations. Another theory argues that THC reacts with the brain cells
to create abnormal sensations.
Opinions also vary in the case of LSD, which apparently 'mimics' the serotonin
already present in the brain to give abnormal messages to the body's neuro-sensory
system. The precise reaction of mescaline and psilocybin is still being
studied. Overall, the scientific impression is that psychedelics have
chemicals that act upon the brain cells to produce 'visions' disparate
from the real world. But what is the meaning of these visions? Science
cannot answer this question.
Obvious questions arise in this context. If a shift from reality is the
reason for psychedelic use, is not a transcendence of reality the aim
of meditation? If a psychedelic 'trip' can give you an experience similar
to that of sages and mystics, why not go for it? Is there any harm if
nirvana comes in the form of a reefer? Die-hard psychedelic advocates
such as scholar Terence Mckenna
see no harm in using the 'psychedelic experience' as a synonym for spirituality.
"What the psychedelic experience really is," he said, "is opening the
doorway into a lost continent of the human mind." Mckenna saw in this
doorway the path to a cosmic comprehension.
Perhaps he is not far from the truth. Famous Indian saints such as Baba
Muktananda and Neem
Karoli Baba do not deny the mystical potential, albeit dangerously
limited, of psychedelics. In one of his discourses, as recorded in Satsang
With Baba, Muktananda states: "It is not correct to say that LSD helps
you evolve spiritually. However, LSD draws the mind inward and it is then
able to have some inner experiences, seeing sights of the inner worlds."
But, he adds, this is possible as long as the effect of the drug
lasts. After that, it is back to square one.
Neem Karoli Baba forwarded a similar view when he was asked by one
of his disciples whether taking hashish helps spiritual development. "You
should smoke hashish like Lord Shiva," he said, "only to be with God.
But smoking hashish is not necessary to reach God. The effect only lasts
a short while. Devotion to God is an addiction that lasts all the time."
The whole drugs versus spirituality argument has been synthesized by author
and founder of Creative Psychology Robert S.D. Roth in his well-known
book The Master Game. "The high ends of Creative Psychology," he
says, "can no more be attained by taking drugs than the high ends of art
can be achieved by slopping paint about at random. However, if psychedelics
are taken under the right conditions, with proper preparation, under the
supervision of one who knows how to guide the explorer in the territory
he will enter, they can, on occasions at least. challenge the traveler,
saying: 'These are the peaks of the mountains. They really exist. Now
make up your mind. Are you strong and persistent enough to try to climb
them?'"
If that were the case, perhaps it is time the psychedelic experience is
retrieved from the cobwebs of a justifiable, though alarmist, legislation
and social mindset to breath free in the next millennium. There are pitfalls
on the psychedelic path. You may never even reach your destination. But
then, haven't saints around the world declared frequently: "There are
as many paths to the ultimate High as there are beliefs"?