Phonothon, spreading his enthusiasm to the other participants. In 1987, he
received the Medical Alumni Association Service Award for having contributed
the most time making Phonothon calls. In November 1988, he was disappointed
that his health prevented him from taking part. He was loved and admired by
all those whose lives he touched. The Alumni office staff remembers him as
soft spoken, warm and caring.
Nancy Olson
Moderator
__________
From: kyyank@aol.com [31]
Date: Tue Apr 20, 2004 8:44am
Subject: Re: [AAHistoryLovers] Dr. Isadore Tuerk
I came across some information that may be useful in the
research of my book "SILKWORTH- The Little Doctor Who Loved
Drunks" that is listed in the back section. Note particularly
the collection of articles from that period of time.
Dale Mitchel
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII
++++Message 1763. . . . . . . . . . . . LSD use by AA members in AA History.
- Compiled
From: NMOlson@aol.com . . . . . . . . . . . . 4/21/2004 4:07:00 AM
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII
From: WCompWdsUnl@aol.com [32]
Date: Tue Apr 20, 2004 7:52 am
Subject: LSD use by AA members in AA History.
Dear AA History Lovers:
In "Pass It On," Bill Wilson's historical documentation of the
actual history of the AA movement, from it's inception, Bill
Wilson records an entire chapter, Chapter 23; Anything that
helps Alcoholics...Bill experiments with LSD but eventually
ceases when controversy stirs within AA. (This chapter describes
how the pioneers of AA, used LSD, to wean or taper, chronic
alcoholics to sobriety.) This is a phenomena similar to the
modern day recovery of heroin addicts, using methadone. (Pages
368 - 378.)
Can anyone provide further information related to the history of
the use of LSD by Bill Wilson and Dr. Bob Smith, with
Alcoholic's, in AA?
Larry W.
Atlanta, GA
From: "Alex H." [33]
Date: Tue Apr 20, 2004 9:13am
Subject: Re: [AAHistoryLovers] LSD use by AA members in AA
History.
I suggest studying the context of the time in which these events
occurred .... LSD initially was looked upon as a beneficial
drug. I am not sure how much was known at the time of its
potential for abuse. That is what I mean by finding out about
the context of the
time. How did normal folks look at LSD at the time?
Alex
From Arthur S:
Hi Larry
First off the book Pass It On is a biography not an
autobiography â€" it’s about Bill W not by Bill W.
The primary author of Pass It On is Mel B who is also a
member of AAHistoryLovers.
The functional comparison to methadone and heroin is a
bit of a stretch. The intent of the LSD experiments was
to induce DTs. If anything, it would likely fall into
the class of "aversion therapy." Also, there is no
linkage of Dr Bob to LSD in Pass It On. There were
postings in February on the topic under the subject of
"Humphrey Osmond." The response I sent in follows:
------ Feb response ------
There are a few other books that go in to the LSD
experiments in more detail than Not God. Mel, by the
way, is the modest and primary author of Pass It On
which covers the matter in some detail. Francis
Hartigan's book Bill W and Nell Wing’s book Glad to
Have Been There offer information as well. The info
below is a composite extract:
British radio commentator Gerald Heard introduced Bill
W to Aldous Huxley and to the British psychiatrists
Humphry Osmond and Abraham Hoffer (the founders of
orthomolecular psychiatry). Humphrey and Osmond were
working with schizophrenic and alcoholic patients at a
Canadian hospital.
Bill W joined with Heard and Huxley and first took LSD
in California on Aug 29, 1956. It was medically
supervised by psychiatrist Sidney Cohen of the Los
Angeles VA hospital. The LSD experiments occurred well
prior to the "hippie era." At the time, LSD was thought
to have psychotherapeutic potential (research was also
being funded by the National Institutes of Health and
National Academy of Sciences).
The intent of Osmond and Hoffer was to induce an
experience akin to delirium tremens (DTs) in hopes that
it might shock alcoholics from alcohol.
Among those invited to experiment with LSD (and who
accepted) were Nell Wing, Father Ed Dowling, (possibly)
Sam Shoemaker and Lois Wilson. Marty M and Helen W
(Bill's mistress) and other AA members participated in
NY (under medical supervision by a psychiatrist from
Roosevelt Hospital).
Bill had several experiments with LSD up to 1959
(perhaps into the 1960's). Pass It On reports that
there were repercussions within AA over these
activities. Lois was a reluctant participant and
claimed to have had no response to the chemical.
Hoffer and Osmond did research that later influenced
Bill, in Dec 1966, to enthusiastically embrace a
campaign to promote vitamin B3 (niacin - nicotinic
acid) therapy. It created Traditions issues within the
Fellowship and caused a bit of an uproar.
The General Service Board report accepted by the 1967
Conference recommended that "to insure separation of AA
from non-AA matters by establishing a procedure whereby
all inquiries pertaining to B-3 and niacin are referred
directly to an office in Pleasantville, NY in order
that Bill's personal interest in these items not
involve the Fellowship."
Please reference the following for more details:
Pass It On - pgs 368-376, 388-391
Not God - pgs 136-138
Bill W by Francis Hartigan - pgs 9, 177-179
Glad To Have Been There - pgs 81-82
Cheers
Arthur S
From Jared Lobdell:
The idea that Chapter 23 of PIO shows the use of LSD to "taper
off" alcoholics from alcohol in a mode of operations "simular"
to methadone for heroin users does not tally with the chapter or
with anything I know about Bill's use of LSD (or, indeed, with
the present uses of methadone). The fact that methadone is a
maintenance rather than a tapering-off program is not relevant
here, but the apparent inaccuracy on LSD is. It is true that LSD
was considered by some as a possible amethystine in the earlier
days of its development, but it is clear from Chapter 23 (and
the account in the not-now-Conference-approved book by Thomsen)
that what intrigued Bill was the possibility of tapping the
chemical component of classical mystical experiences otherwise
occurring through prayer, fasting, meditation, etc (see esp. p.
375) -- in order to aid in spiritual sobriety (through
ego-deflation etc.). Bill's general rule seems to have been that
spiritual aids (including LSD) might be used, but anything that
would turn AAs away from the spiritual path (valium = alcohol in
a pill, for example) should not. (Of course, improved physical
condition could also be sought, through Niacin etc.) -- Jared
Lobdell
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII
++++Message 1764. . . . . . . . . . . . Jack Alexander Article Picture
From: Arthur . . . . . . . . . . . . 4/22/2004 8:55:00 AM
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII
11.0pt;">
*Saturday Evening Post Inside Spread - March 1, 1941*
Bill's
and others' pictures appeared full-face in the Saturday Evening Post
article.
(See Pass It On page 247) from left to right are:
Horace C
(partial view), Helen P, Tom M, Tom B, Ruth Hock, Bill W, Dick S, Ray W,
Lois
W, Gordon M and Bob F.
The
photo caption was 'A typical club house discussion group.''
Arthur
----- Original Message
-----
*From:* Jaime Maliachi
*To:* AAHistoryLovers@yahoogroups.com
*Sent:* Monday, April 19, 2004 4:12 PM
*Subject:* [AAHistoryLovers] Jack Alexander Article pictures.
Bill
W. Told us in A.A. comes of Age, that in the Jack Alexander's _Saturday
Evening Post_ article, some
pictures were required by editors.
*Somebody
knows who were the A. A. members that gave the face in that event?*
*Some
body has any image about?*
* *
*Jaime
F. Maliachi Pedrote.*
*servidory
amigo.*
*57 85
68 00 57 85 68 26*
*fax
57 85 68 44*
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII
++++Message 1766. . . . . . . . . . . . Re: LSD use by AA members in AA
History. - Compiled
From: Cloydg . . . . . . . . . . . . 4/22/2004 12:33:00 PM
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII

I found this short article in relation to questions being asked about Bill
W.'s LSD experience. It is short, concise and I believe it states his
over-all-thoughts. I found it on the Jeeves Answer Brouser by asking: Bill
Wilson, LSD Therapy. I too believe we AA's should remember, that at that
time LSD(d-lysergic acid diethylamide) was invented; circa 1938. Many
clinical uses were being experimented with to discover cures for many
aliments, depression being one of them. I am hopeful we all keep this in
perspective!
NOTE:
The following text is a transcription of Grinspoon & Bakalar's
introduction to the history and use of psychedelics in the field
of psychotherapy, originally published in Current Psychiatric
Therapies in 1981 (20:275-283). Lester Grinspoon is an Associate
Professor of Psychiatry at Harvard University, and James Bakalar
is a Lecturer in Law in the Department of Psychiatry at Harvard
Medical School. One error in reference numbering and one in
spelling (a typo) were corrected.
Ron Koster
October, 1996
Lester Grinspoon, M.D.
James B. Bakalar
The Psychedelic Drug Therapies
Between 1950 and the mid-1960s there were more than a thousand clinical
papers (discussing 40,000 patients), several dozen books, and six
international conferences on psychedelic drug therapy. Almost all
publication and most therapeutic practice in this field have now come to an
end, however, as much because of legal and financial obstacles as because of
loss of interest.
There were two main sources of therapeutic involvement. One of these was the
belief of some experimental subjects that, after taking a psychedelic drug,
they were less depressed, anxious, guilty, and angry and more
self-accepting, tolerant, deeply religious, and sensually alert.1 [34] The
other main interest arose from the possibility that therapeutic use could be
made of the powerful psychedelic experiences of regression, abreaction,
intense transference, and symbolic drama in psychodynamic psychotherapy.
As a result, two polar forms of lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD) therapy
emerged: one emphasized the mystical or conversion experience and its
aftereffects; the other concentrated on exploring the labyrinth of the
unconscious in the manner of psychoanalysis. Psychedelic therapy, as the
first of these was called, involved the use of a large dose of LSD (200 µg
or more) in a single session and was thought to be helpful in reforming
alcoholics and criminals, as well as in improving the lives of normal
people. The second type, psycholytic (literally, mind-loosening) therapy,
required relatively small doses (usually not more than 150 µg) and several
or even many sessions; it was used mainly for neurotic and psychosomatic
disorders.2 [35] ,3 [36]
In the psycholytic procedure, patients may be hospitalized or not; they may
be asked to concentrate on interpretation of the drug-induced visions, on
symbolic psychodrama, on regression with the psychotherapist as a parent
surrogate, or on discharge of tension in physical activity. Props such as
eyeshades, photographs, and objects with symbolic significance are often
used. Music often plays an important part. The theoretical basis of this
kind of psychotherapy is usually some form of psychoanalysis. If birth
experiences are seen as true relivings of the traumatic event, Rank's ideas
may be introduced; if archetypal visions are regarded as genuine
manifestations of the collective unconscious, the interpretations will be
Jungian.
An advantage of psychedelic drugs in exploring the unconscious is that a
fragment of the adult ego usually keeps watch through all the fantasy
adventures. Patients remain intellectually alert and remember their
experiences vividly. They also become acutely aware of ego defenses such as
projection, denial, and displacement as they catch themselves in the act of
creating them. Transference can also be greatly intensified.
Psycholytic therapy has been recommended to speed up psychoanalysis and
psychoanalytically oriented psychotherapy, especially for people with
excessively strict superegos and a lack of self-esteem. It has also been
used to overcome the resistance of severe chronic neurotics with defenses so
rigid that they would otherwise be inaccessible to treatment.
In practice, many combinations, variations, a special applications with some
of the features of both psycholytic and psychedelic therapy have evolved.
Stanislav Grof regards the form of treatment he developed in Czechoslovakia
as a bridge between psycholytic and psychedelic therapy. The unconscious
material brought into consciousness by LSD is said to incorporate the most
significant events in the patient's emotional life and permit a systematic
exploration of personality along Freudian lines. This is followed by
reliving the birth trauma and then passage into the realm of archetypes and
mystical or transpersonal experience.4 [37]
The Chilean psychiatrist Claudio Naranjo has pioneered the use of
psychedelic drugs that do not produce the same degree of perceptual and
emotional disturbance as LSD. Harmaline and ibogaine, which he calls fantasy
enhancers, permit the use of guided fantasy techniques borrowed from Gestalt
therapy to explore unconscious conflicts. The "feeling enhancers," 3,4
methylenedioxyamphetamine (MDA) and the 3-methoxy-4,5 compound (MDMA), give
a heightened capacity for introspection and intimacy along with a temporary
freedom from anxiety and depression.5 [38]
NEUROTIC DISORDERS
One woman described her experience with psycholytic therapy this way:6 [39]
I found that in addition to being, consciously, a loving mother and a
respectable citizen, I was also, unconsciously, a murderess, a pervert, a
cannibal, a sadist, and a masochist. In the wake of these dreadful
discoveries, I lost my fear of dentists, the clicking in my neck and
throat, the arm tensions, and my dislike of clocks ticking in the bedroom.
I also achieved transcendent sexual fulfillment. . . .
At the end of nine sessions, over a period of nine weeks, I was cured of
my hitherto incurable frigidity. And at the end of 5 months, I felt that I
had been completely reconstituted as a human being. I have continued to
feel that way ever since.
These passages were written 3 years after a 5-month period during which she
took LSD 23 times. Before that, she had had 4 years of psychoanalysis, but
it was only after taking LSD that she became fully convinced of the value of
Freud's theories.
Psycholytic therapy has also been reported to be successful in treating
chronic migraine headaches:7 [40]
A 22-year-old woman who had suffered from migraine for 11 years went
through nine LSD sessions. She relived trips to the dentist, her fear when
she was given anesthesia for a tonsillectomy, and her desolation at being
abandoned in a hospital when she was 11 years old. The migraine
disappeared; 3 years later she and her husband wrote that she has felt
less tense, more at peace with herself, and more mature; the migraine
never returned.
Psychedelic drugs can also be used as a treatment for more ordinary forms of
neurotic depression and anxiety and to resolve sexual problems.8 [41] , 9
[42]
Individual case histories, however impressive, can always be questioned;
placebo effects, spontaneous recovery, and the therapist's and the patient's
biases in judging improvement must be considered. Not many studies satisfy
stringent methodological conditions; the most serious deficiencies are
absence of controls and inadequate follow-up. In the case of LSD there is
the special difficulty that a double blind study is impossible, since the
effects of the drug are unmistakable. No form of psychotherapy for neurotics
has ever been able to justify itself under stringent controls, and LSD
therapy is no exception.10 [43] , 11 [44] Most psychiatrists who have done
LSD therapy with neurotics would, however, probably regard all the recorded
controlled experiments as far too brief and superficial to provide a genuine
test, especially where so much may depend on the quality of the therapeutic
relationship.
For LSD therapy, as in psychoanalysis, psychiatrists tend to favor neurotics
with hight intelligence, a genuine wish to recover, a strong ego, and
stable, even if crippling, symptoms. Beyond that, little is clear. Should
the emphasis be on expression of repressed feelings, or working through a
transference attachment to the psychiatrist, or elsewhere? What should the
psychiatrist do during the drug session? How much therapy is necessary in
the intervals between LSD treatments? The fact that there are no general
answers to these questions reflects the complexity of psychedelic drug
effects; for the same reason a dose and diagnosis cannot be specified in the
manner of chemotherapy.
ALCOHOLISM
Assuming that a single overwhelming experience can sometimes change the
self-destructive drinking habits of a lifetime, can psychedelic drugs
consistently produce such an experience?
There is no doubt that LSD often produces powerful immediate effects on
alcoholics; the question is whether these can be reliably translated into
enduring change. Early studies reported dazzling success: about 50% of sever
chronic alcoholics treated with a single high dose of LSD recovered and were
sober a year or two later.12 [45] , 13 [46]
Unfortunately, as the results of more careful research began to come in, the
picture changed. All the early studies had insufficient controls, and most
lacked objective measures of change, adequate follow-up, and other
safeguards.14 [47] When patients were randomly assigned to drug and control
groups, it proved impossible to demonstrate any advantage for LSD. Even the
most enthusiastic advocates of LSD have not been able to produce
consistently promising results.15 [48]
Ludwig et al. at the Mendota State Hospital in Madison, Wisconsin undertook
an elaborate and methodologically adequate study of psychedelic therapy for
alcoholics. The 195 patients were randomly divided into four treatment
groups. All had 30 days of milieu therapy; three groups had in addition, LSD
alone, LSD with psychotherapy, or LSD with psychotherapy and hypnosis. The
results in all four groups were the same after 3, 6, 9 and 12 months; about
75% improved on measures of employment, legal adjustment, and drinking
habits.16 [49]
It would be wrong to conclude that a psychedelic experience can never be a
turning point in the life of an alcoholic. Bill Wilson, the founder of
Alcoholics Anonymous, said that his LSD trip resembled the sudden religious
illumination that changed his life. Unfortunately, psychedelic experiences
have the same weaknesses as religious conversions. Their authenticity and
emotional power are not guarantees against backsliding when the same
frustrations, limitations, and emotional distress have to be faced in
everyday life. When the revelation does seem to have lasting effects, it
might always have been merely a symptom of readiness to change rather than a
cause.
Analogous are the religious ceremonies of the Native American Church, in
which regular use of high doses of mescaline in the form of peyote is
regarded as, among other things, part of a treatment for alcoholism.
Obviously peyote is no panacea; otherwise, alcoholism would not be the major
health problem of Native Americans. Nevertheless, Native Americans
themselves and outside researchers believe that those who participate in the
peyote ritual are more likely to be abstinent.17 [50] Peyote sustains the
ritual and religious principles of the community of believers, and these
sometimes confirm and support an individual's commitment to give up alcohol.
DYING
In a letter to Humphry Osmond, Aldous Huxley recounted a mescaline trip
during which he came to the conclusion that, "I didn't think I should mind
dying; for dying must be like this passage from the known [constituted by
lifelong habits of subject object existence] to the unknown cosmic fact
[p.306]"18 [51] When Huxley was dying, he asked his wife to give him 100 µg
LSD, the drug he had portrayed in his last novel as the liberating moksha
medicine. After that he looked at her with an expression of love and joy but
spoke little except to say, when she gave him a second injection of LSD, and
shortly before he died, "Light and free, forward and up." Laura Huxley, in
the memoirs of her husband writes: "Now is his way of dying to remain for
use, and only for us, a relief and a consolation, or should others also
benefit from it? Aren't we all nobly born and entitled to nobly dying? [p.
308]."18 [51]
There is a new concern today about dying, in full consciousness of its
significance as a part of life. As we look for ways to change the pattern,
so common in chronic illness, of constantly increasing pain, anxiety, and
depression, the emphasis shifts away from impersonal prolongation of
physiological life toward a concept of dying as a psychiatric crisis, or
even, in older language, a religious crisis. The purpose of giving
psychedelic drugs to the dying might be stated as reconciliation: with one's
past, family, and human limitations. Granted a new vision of the universe
and their place in it, the dying learn that there is no need to cling
desperately to the self.
Beginning in 1965, the experiment of providing a psychedelic experience for
Share with your friends: |