The Secret Chief: Conversations with a Pioneer of the
  Underground Psychedelic Therapy Movement
      Myron J. Stolaroff
            PROLOGUE by Stanislav Grof, M.D.
          This excerpt from The Secret Chief appears in The Psychedelic Library by permission of the publisher.
                After the publication of the first clinical paper on LSD by Walter A. 
Stoll in 1947, Albert Hofmann's serendipitous discovery of the 
psychedelic effects of LSD became practically an overnight sensation 
in the world of science. Never before had a single substance held so 
much promise in such a wide variety of fields of interest.
    
For neuropharmacologists and neurophysiologists, the discovery of 
LSD meant the beginning of a golden era of research that could solve 
many puzzles concerning the intricate biochemical interactions 
underlying the functioning of the brain. 
    
Experimental psychiatrists saw this substance as a unique means for 
creating a laboratory model for naturally occurring psychoses, 
particularly schizophrenia. They hoped that it could provide 
unparalleled insights into the nature of these mysterious disorders 
and open new avenues for their treatment.
    
LSD was also highly recommended as a unique teaching device that 
would make it possible for clinical psychiatrists and psychologists to 
spend a few hours in the world of their patients and as a result of it 
to understand them better, be able to communicate with them more 
effectively, and improve their ability to help them.
    
Early experiments with LSD revealed its unique potential as a 
powerful tool offering the possibility of deepening and accelerating 
the psychotherapeutic process, as well as extending the range of 
applicability of psychotherapy to categories of patients that 
previously had been difficult to reach such as  alcoholics, narcotic 
drug addicts, and criminal recidivists.
    
Particularly valuable and promising were the early efforts to use LSD 
psychotherapy with terminal cancer patients. These studies showed 
that LSD was able to relieve severe pain, often even in those patients 
who had not responded to medication with narcotics. In a large 
percentage of these patients, it was also possible to alleviate or even 
eliminate the fear of death, increase the quality of their lives during 
the remaining days, and positively transform the experience of 
dying.
    
For the historians and critics of art, the LSD experiments provided 
extraordinary new insights into the psychology and psychopathology 
of art, particularly various modern movements as well as paintings 
and sculptures of native cultures.
    
The spiritual experiences frequently observed in LSD sessions 
offered a radically new understanding of a wide variety of 
phenomena from the world of religion, including shamanism, the 
rites of passage, the ancient mysteries of death and rebirth, the 
Eastern spiritual philosophies, and the mystical traditions of the 
world.
    
LSD research seemed to be well on its way to fulfilling all the above 
promises and expectations when it was suddenly interrupted by 
unsupervised mass experimentation of the young generation and the 
ensuing repressive measures of a legal, administrative, and political 
nature.
    
However, the problems associated with this development, blown out 
of proportion by sensation-hunting journalists, were not the only 
reason why LSD and other psychedelics were rejected by the Euro-
American culture. An important contributing factor was also the 
attitude of technologized societies toward non-ordinary states of 
consciousness.
    
All ancient and pre-industrial societies held these states in high 
esteem and they devoted much time and energy trying to develop 
safe and effective ways of inducing them. Members of these social 
groups had the opportunity to repeatedly experience non-ordinary 
states in a variety of sacred and secular contexts.
    
Because of their capacity to provide experiential access to the 
numinous dimensions of existence and to the world of archetypal 
realms and beings, non-ordinary states represented the main vehicle 
of the ritual and spiritual life of the pre-industrial era. They also 
played an essential role in the diagnosing and healing of various 
disorders and were used for cultivation of intuition and extrasensory 
perception.
    
By comparison, the industrial civilization has pathologized non-
ordinary states, developed effective means of suppressing them 
when they occur spontaneously, and has rejected or even outlawed 
the contexts and tools that can facilitate them. Because of the 
resulting naivete and ignorance concerning non-ordinary states, 
Western culture was unprepared to accept and incorporate the 
extraordinary mind-altering properties and power of psychedelics.
The sudden invasion of the Dionysian elements from the depths of 
the unconscious and the heights of the superconscious was too 
threatening for the Puritanical values of our society. In addition, the 
irrational and transrational nature of psychedelic experiences 
seriously challenged the very foundations of the world-view of 
Western materialistic science. The existence and nature of these 
experiences could not be explained in the context of the mainstream 
theories and seriously undermined the metaphysical assumptions on 
which Western culture is built. 
    
For most psychiatrists and psychologists, psychotherapy meant 
disciplined discussions or free-associating on the couch. The intense 
emotions and dramatic physical manifestations in psychedelic 
sessions appeared to them to be too close to what they were used to 
considering to be psychopathology. It was hard for them to imagine 
that such states could be healing and transformative and they did 
not trust the reports about the extraordinary power of psychedelic 
psychotherapy. 
    
In addition, many of the phenomena occurring in psychedelic 
sessions could not be understood within the context of theories 
dominating academic thinking. The possibilities of reliving birth or 
episodes from embryonal life, obtaining accurate information from the
collective unconscious, experiencing 
archetypal realities and karmic memories, or perceiving remote 
events in out-of-body states, were simply too fantastic to be 
believable for an average professional.
    
Yet those of us who had the chance to work with psychedelics and 
were willing to radically change our theoretical understanding of the 
psyche and practical strategy of therapy were able to see and 
appreciate the enormous potential of 
psychedelics, both as therapeutic tools and as substances of 
extraordinary heuristic value.
    
In one of my early books, I suggested that the potential significance 
of LSD and other psychedelics for psychiatry and psychology was 
comparable to the value the microscope has for biology and medicine 
or the telescope has for astronomy. My later experience with 
psychedelics only confirmed this initial impression. These substances 
function as unspecific amplifiers that increase the energetic niveau in 
the psyche and make the deep unconscious dynamics available for 
conscious processing.
    
This unique property of psychedelics makes it possible to study 
psychological undercurrents that govern our experiences and 
behaviors to a depth that cannot be matched by any other methods 
and tools available in modern mainstream science. In addition, 
psychedelics offer unique opportunities for healing of emotional and 
psychosomatic disorders, for positive personality transformation, and 
consciousness evolution.
    
Naturally, tools of this power carry with them greater potential risks 
than more conservative and far less effective tools currently 
accepted and used by mainstream psychiatry, such as verbal 
psychotherapy or tranquilizing medication. However, past research 
has shown that these risks can be minimized through 
responsible use and careful control of the set and setting.
    
The legal and administrative sanctions against psychedelics did not 
deter lay experimentation, but they did terminate all legitimate 
scientific research of these substances. For those of us who had the 
privilege to explore the extraordinary potential of psychedelics, this 
was a tragic loss for psychiatry, psychology, and psychotherapy.
These unfortunate developments wasted what was probably the 
single most important opportunity in the history of these disciplines. 
Had it been possible to avoid the unnecessary mass hysteria and 
continue responsible research of psychedelics, they could have 
become a tool that would make it possible to 
radically revise the theory and practice of psychiatry. This research 
would have brought a new understanding of the psyche and of 
consciousness that could become an integral part of a comprehensive 
new scientific paradigm of the twenty-first century.
    
Most of the LSD researchers grudgingly accepted the legal and 
political sanctions against psychedelics and reluctantly returned to 
mainstream therapeutic practices. A few attempted to develop non-
drug methods for inducing non-ordinary states of 
consciousness with the experiential spectrum and healing potential 
comparable to psychedelics. And then there were those who, like 
Jacob, the "Secret Chief," refused to accept legal sanctions that they 
considered irrational, unjustified, or even unconstitutional.
    
These researchers saw the extraordinary benefits that LSD therapy 
offered to their clients and decided not to sacrifice the well-being of 
these people to scientifically unsubstantiated legislation. In addition 
to the therapeutic value of psychedelics, they were also aware of the 
entheogenic potential of these 
substancesÑtheir capacity to induce profound spiritual experiences. 
For this reason, they understood their work with LSD to be not only 
therapeutic practice, but also religious activity in the best sense of 
the word. From this perspective, the legal sanctions against 
psychedelics appeared to be not only unfounded and misguided, but 
also represented a serious infringement of religious freedom.
    
Jacob painfully weighed the pros and cons and made the decision to 
challenge the law, continue his work with psychedelics, and assume 
personal responsibility for his activity. He has already passed the 
judgment of his "family," the friends and 
clients whose lives he has profoundly changed. They remember him 
with great love and gratitude. It remains to be seen how he will be 
judged by history. It is certainly wise to obey the laws if our primary 
concern is personal safety and comfort. 
    
However, it often happens 
that in retrospect, history places higher value on those individuals 
who violated questionable laws of their time because of foresight and 
high moral principles than those who had issued them for wrong 
reasons.
	Stanislav Grof, M.D. 
	Mill Valley, California
The Secret Chief is published by MAPS
The Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies
and may be ordered from the MAPS website
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The Secret
Chief Page
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